Fred Ross. The man who found Cesar Chavez

Transcripción

Fred Ross. The man who found Cesar Chavez
38 YEARS
of Publication
1976
2014
1976- 2010
Vol. XXXVIII No. 35
Small businesses
create social
mobility, according
to Latina SBA
administrator
Maria Contreras-Sweet, SBA
director
By Pablo J. Sáinz
Maria Contreras-Sweet is a prime
example that anyone can earn the
American Dream with effort and
dedication.
Since April, she has been the Administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration and a member of
President Barack Obama’s Cabinet.
No small feat for a woman who
immigrated to the United States from
Guadalajara, Mexico, at the age of
five, along with her single mother and
five siblings. She rose through the
corporate world ranks, founding the
first Latino-owned bank in California
in more than 35 years.
“That’s why I love this country,”
Contreras-Sweet said. “I came here
as an immigrant, and now I’m on the
President’s Cabinet. He saw my talents. This not only speaks about how
President Obama values diversity, but
it says a lot about our country. I come
from no economic advantage or corporate background. It really shows
how great our country is.”
Contreras-Sweet will be in San Diego on Friday, Sept. 5th, at the AARP
convention Ideas@50+, where she
will be speaking about how people 50
years and over can take advantage
of all the resources available to them
through the SBA to start their own
small business.
“Those who are retiring can only
play so much golf,” she said. “People
over 50 have a lot of energy, they
want to start businesses, they want
to remain active. Sixty is the 40,
right?”
During her visit to San Diego, the
Administrator will also meet with San
Diego representatives from different
organizations that are part of the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda.
“I’m committed to create social
mobility through small businesses,”
she said. “I’m committed to serving
Latinos, African-Americans, AsianAmericans, Native Americans, seniors, women, we need everyone on
the table.”
Contreras-Sweet said that her visit
to America’s Finest City is part of a
West Coast trip where she is promoting the different programs, loans, and
resources, the SBA has for small business owners.
“I’m always looking forward to visiting San Diego,” she said. “San Diego is a very important destination for
the SBA. It is a smart, bold, and accessible city. It has always been a for
La Prensa Muñoz, Inc. Publications
AUGUST 29, 2014
People age 50 and over represent diverse group
By Pablo J. Sáinz
When Marie Rose Escobedo retired from her job in human resources
a few years ago, she knew she
wasn’t going to be the typical retiree
that stays home doing nothing all day.
“I’ve been involved in my city’s
affairs for a long time, so I always
wanted to be a volunteer in one way
or another, helping others,” said
Escobedo, who is 77.
Escobedo, who lives in Chula
Vista, said that she found a world of
opportunities as a volunteer and a
leader thanks to AARP, an organization focused on people age 50 and
over. She has been a leader of a program called CarFit, which helps
people over 50 make sure their vehicles are in the right conditions for
them to drive it.
Escobedo coordinates a group that
meets and conducts vehicle checkups in Chula Vista.
“I have two years as a leader in
this group and it has had a great success,” she said. “It is a very important project that helps older drivers
with their cars.”
Those opportunities that Escobedo
has at age 77 that help her stay active and enthusiastic about helping
others is one of the goals of AARP
membership. AARP is one of the
largest organizations in the U.S. for
people age 50 and over.
Escobedo will bring all the positive energy of people age 50 and over
to San Diego when she serves as volunteer at the AARP fall convention,
Ideas@50+, which is taking place at
the San Diego Convention Center
from Thursday, September 4th, to Saturday, September 6th.
Attendees will be able to learn and
know more from experts in a variety
of topics of interest to people age 50
and over, from finances and enter(See Diverse, page 2)
Ideas@50+ is an event for individuals over 50 that want to develop their knowledge in finance, networking, entertainment etc.
Las personas mayores de 50 años representan a un grupo diverso
Por Pablo J. Sáinz
Cuando Marie Rose Escobedo se
jubiló de su empleo en recursos
humanos hace ya algunos años, ella
sabía que no iba a ser la típica jubilada
que se queda en casa sin hacer nada.
“Todo el tiempo he estado muy
involucrada en los asuntos de mi
ciudad, así que siempre quise ser
voluntaria de alguna manera para
ayudar a otros”, dijo Escobedo, quien
tiene 77 años de edad.
Escobedo, quien vive en Chula
Vista, dijo que encontró un mundo de
oportunidades como voluntaria y como
líder gracias a AARP, una organización enfocada en personas mayores
de 50 años. Ella ha sido líder de un
programa llamado CarFit que ayuda
a personas mayores de 50 años a
asegurarse que su vehículo está en
condiciones adecuadas para manejarse de acuerdo a las necesidades
de esas personas.
Escobedo coordina el grupo que
se reúne y realiza revisiones de
vehículos en Chula Vista.
“Ya tengo dos años como líder de
este grupo y ha tenido un éxito
grande”, dijo. “Es un proyecto muy
importante para ayudar a conductores de la tercera edad con sus
autos”.
Esas oportunidades que Escobedo
tiene a la edad de 77 años que ayudan
a mantenerla activa y entusiasmada
por ayudar a otros es una de las metas
de la membresía de AARP, una de
las organizaciones para personas
mayores de 50 años más grandes en
Estados Unidos.
Escobeado traerá toda ese energía
positiva de las personas mayores de
50 años a San Diego cuando sirva
como voluntaria en la conferencia de
otoño de AARP, Ideas@50+, que
será en el San Diego Convention
Center del jueves 4 al sábado 6 de
septiembre.
Los asistentes al evento podrán
aprender y conocer más de expertos
en una gama de temas de interés para
personas mayores de 50 años, desde
finanzas y entretenimiento, hasta
(Veá Diverso, pag. 2)
Fred Ross. The man who found Cesar Chavez
By Gabriel Thompson
LA VOZ DE AUSTIN
On June 9, 1952, Fred Ross
knocked on the door of a modest
house on San Jose’s eastside. The
house belonged to Cesar Chavez,
then an anonymous 25-year-old
struggling to support his family
through part-time work at a lumberyard. Ross launched into his pitch,
talking about how Mexican Americans could become a political force,
but Chavez was initially skeptical.
Who was this guy, walking the
dusty barrio and sharing fantastic
tales of what could happen if folks
got organized? As Chavez admitted,
“The first time I met Fred Ross, he
was about the last person I wanted
to see.”
But as Ross highlighted past accomplishments, Chavez’ skepticism
began to fade. “He started talking —
and changed my life,” Chavez later
remarked. “Fred did such a good job
of explaining how poor people could
build power that I could even taste it.
I thought, gee, it’s like digging a hole.
There’s nothing complicated about
it.”
The episode was vintage Ross. As
an organizer, he spent his life knocking on doors and breaking down barriers, encouraging and training people
to stand up and fight back. A few
years after taking Chavez under his
organizing wing, Ross came across
(see SBA, page 7) Dolores Huerta, then a single mother
who planned on a career in teaching.
After meeting Ross, Huerta launched
into a lifetime of activism, and later
helped Chavez do what everyone said
was impossible: organize farm workers.
Ross soon became Chavez’s organizing mentor, and for the next decade they crisscrossed the state of
California, forming chapters of the
Community Service Organization
(CSO), the most powerful Mexican
American organization of its day (at
the height of the McCarthy era, no
less).
Although Ross was one of the most
influential grassroots organizers of the
twentieth century — mentoring individuals like Chavez and Dolores
Huerta, running the Dustbowl migrant
camp fictionalized by John Steinbeck
in The Grapes of Wrath, securing the
release of Japanese- American internees during World War II, organizing black and Latino parents to help
end school segregation in California,
going on to spearhead a campaign that
elected the first Latino to Los
Angeles’s city council since the
1800s, and strategizing with Saul
Alinsky — he remained largely in the
background, unknown to the general
public.
As Ross was fond of stating, “An
organizer is a leader who does not
lead but gets behind the people and
pushes.” He spent his life pushing
people to lead — in migrant camps,
in living rooms, on picket lines — and
Fred Ross Sr. and Cesar Chavez on Grove Street in 1979 leading
United Domestic Workers Organizing Training
was so effective that he pushed him- to fight against the fascist regime of
self right out of most history books. Franco as part of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. His courage, and death
Ross’s Background
on the battlefield, would serve as a
Ross was born in San Francisco lifelong spur to Ross, who graduated
on August 23, 1910. His parents, both from USC in 1936 and, unable to find
politically conservative, moved to Los a teaching job during the Depression,
Angeles soon after, where Ross became a relief worker.
grew up in the sheltered middle-class
After three years of relief work,
neighborhood of Echo Park. His first Ross became manager of the federcontact with the world of left-wing ally-run Arvin Migratory Camp, lopolitics came at the University of cated near Bakersfield. Arvin was
Southern California, where he en- home to hundreds of desperate
rolled in 1932 and became close dustbowl refugees, and was the camp
friends with a student named Eugene fictionalized by John Steinbeck in The
Wolman.
Grapes of Wrath. The former camp
Wolman was a dedicated unionist
(see The Man, page 4)
and Communist who traveled to Spain
Tecate de fiesta: 70
años de éxito en Baja
California
Veá pagina 10
PAGE 2
AUGUST 29, 2014
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
Reclaiming Life from Streets of Death
By Kent Paterson
FRONTERA NORTESUR
On a recent afternoon, dozens of pretty white handkerchiefs fluttered in the breeze
from the fence of the Benito
Juarez Monument in Ciudad
Juarez, Mexico. Embroidered
in beautiful blue, green and red
letters, the words spelled out
very ugly messages:
for display at the monument
document the fates of Mexicans, some named and some
anonymous, who fell victim to
violence during the last few
years. They were cops, gangbangers, hamburger sellers,
students fathers, sons, daughters and mothers. Many of the
cases are from 2010- an especially violent year among
many- and most happened in
Ciudad Juarez or elsewhere in
the state of Chihuahua.
A few other samples:
October 13, 2013 Juarez,
Chihuahua
A man known as Lucky was
executed in Lomas de
Jimenez, Chihuahua
Poleo…
October 16, 2010
2 people decapitated…
Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua
October 4, 2010
Urique, Chihuahua
Eileen Armendariz
October 4, 2010
6 years old
6 men murdered with
Murdered during a robbery firearms..2 are minors
She was a student of
Canutillo School, where
January 30, 2010
she was going with her
Victims of Villas de
sister..
Salvarcar (Ciudad Juarez)
Jaime Rosales Cisneros,
And on and on the handker- 42-contractor-saw hit men
chiefs went. The display was blocking off the street and
the work of Bordeamos Por la ran toward the party where
Paz, or We Stitch for Peace, his son was but was shot in
an international movement of the back.
people who meticulously sew “He died shot in the back
socially relevant messages for but managed to save his
public viewing. In Mexico, the son.”
movement’s goal is “to preserve the memory” of victims
Rojero considers the handof “homicides, femicides and kerchiefs a small contribution
forced disappearance,” said in the reconstruction of a shatlocal activist Hazel Davalos. tered social fabric, and a tool
Every second Sunday, activists for teaching future generations
exhibit the handkerchiefs at the not to repeat the mistakes of
Benito Juarez Monument, she previous ones. “Every little
added.
grain of sand makes a differDavalos’ colleague, Madga ence,” she told Frontera NorteRojero, elaborated on Bordea- Sur. “I can’t allow my heart to
mos Por la Paz’s goal. “It is to stop.”
construct a memory,” she said.
Bordeamos Por la Paz’s
“Every dead or disappeared handkerchiefs are not the only
person has a right to be on a visual social messages that ochandkerchief. It’s a silent pro- cupy public space in Ciudad
test. It’s an act of love.”
Juarez. In July, women from
The handkerchiefs selected across Mexico and South
Diverse Group
(con’t from page 1)
tainment, to technology and life
style.
“This conference has something for everyone,” said
Patricia Perez, member of the
AARP board. “These will be
a series of fun events where
participants will be able to interact with each other and with
presenters.”
The event is organized in
four great areas, according to
Anai Ibarra, associate state
director of Multicultural Communications for AARP California.
The four areas are Health
& Wellness, Money & Work,
Technology & Innovation, and
Travel & Lifestyle.
“This is a more innovative,
more defined event,” Ibarra
said. “With these areas we
cover topics that are of interest to people age 50 and over.
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These are topics of public interest.”
Perez warned that people
age 50 and over are not a homogenous group; instead they
are people with diverse interests, diverse life styles, diverse
needs, and diverse stages in
their lives.
“The diversity that exists
among us is huge,” she said.
“The diversity of ideas continues at this age. Some of us still
work, some of us have retired.”
Even more, Perez said that
one third of all AARP members still has a job.
Some 10,000 to 12,000 are
expected to attend. There will
be a lot to do during those three
days in San Diego.
With workshops and panels
on one side, and dances and
concerts on another, such as
Los Lobos on September 6th,
Ideas@50+ is an event where
everything is of benefit for
people age 50 and over. (Registration is $25 for AARP
members, and $35 for nonmembers. The $35 fee includes
an annual membership.)
“Life keeps going after 50,”
Perez said. “It’s important to
keep on learning and improving our quality of life.”
For the complete program
and to register for Ideas@50+,
visit www.aarp.org.
Those interested in joining
AARP after Ideas@50+, the
next CarFit in Chula Vista, an
event organized by Marie Rose
Escobedo, will be on Thursday,
Oct. 9th, at the Norman Park
Center’s parking lot, 270 F St.,
Chula Vista. Registration is
required: (619) 641-7020.
Grupo Diverso
(con’t de pag. 1)
tecnología y estilo de vida.
“La conferencia tiene algo
para todos”, dijo Patricia
Pérez, miembro del comité
ejecutivo de AARP. “Serán
eventos divertidos donde los
asistentes podrán interactuar
entre ellos y con los presentadores”.
America converged on the
border city for Feminem 2014,
an event dedicated to opposing war and gender violence/
oppression through urban art
and other creative forms of
expression.
As part of the encounter,
women painted a block-long
mural on Vicente Guerrero
Avenue directly across from
the Benito Juarez Monument.
A striking image of an indigenous woman holding a flower
rises from the center of the
artwork on a busy street.
“From Brazil with Love,”
reads one message signed in
Portuguese.
Other writings painted on
the new mural protest the murder and disappearance of
women: The “Not One More”
phrase that has become the
slogan of the international antifemicide movement is joined
“We Want Them Alive” and the
poetic “I miss your breath that
turns into a desert.”
In Ciudad Juarez, the artwork and accompanying words
are not abstract representations. The mural stands one
block down the street from the
Allende High School, a private
school where several female
victims of disappearance and
murder once attended.
While Feminem 2014 was
in progress, the artist/activists
transported their pain and paint
to other sections of the city as
well.
Very close to the downtown
Cathedral on September 16
Avenue, which is nearing recompletion as a pedestrian
walkway, the same messages
as the ones on the Vicente
Guerrero Avenue mural also
appear on concrete barriers,
one of which is right around the
corner from the Hotel Plaza
where Dutch tourist Hester
van Nierop was murdered in
1998.
Downtown is the zone where
dozens of young women have
vanished over the years, many
later turning up murdered at
mass burial sites; new and old
missing posters that plaster the
streets testify to an ongoing issue that’s left a searing wound
in Juarense society.
One of the most recent posters, or pesquias as they are
called in Spanish, is for 23year-old Iliana Carrillo, a U.S.
citizen residing in Ciudad
Juarez who was reported missing after she left her home in
the Bellavista neighborhood for
work early on the afternoon of
July 31 of this year.
Alicia Andares, who was a
participant in Feminem 2014,
penned an essay on the event
for the Spanish-language website elbarrioantiguo.com. Andares placed the Ciudad Juarez
gathering in a global context:
“The social fabric has been
eroded, destroyed and broken
by a technology of war that is
more powerful and sophisticated all the time. And the erosion, destruction, rupture and
war that is provoked in modern society now is not able to
El evento estará organizado be narrated, and it is difficult
en cuatro grandes áreas, de to admit, to feel, to understand.
acuerdo a Anaí Ibarra, directora asociada de comunicación
multicultural de AARP en California.
Estas son Salud y bienestar,
Finanzas y trabajo, Tecnología
e innovación y Viajes y estilo
de vida.
“Se trata de un evento más
innovador, más definido”,
indicó Ibarra. “Con estas áreas
se abordan más temas que
interesan a las personas mayores de 50 años. Son temas
de interés público”.
Pérez advirtió que las personas mayores de 50 años no
son un grupo homogéneo, sino
que son personas con diversos
intereses, diversos estilos de
vida, diversas necesidades,
diversas etapas en sus vidas.
“La diversidad que existe
entre nosotros es enorme”,
dijo. “La diversidad de ideas
continua en esta edad. Algunos
todavía trabajan, otros ya están
jubilados”.
Es más, Pérez indicó que un
tercio de los miembros de
AARP todavía tienen un empleo.
Al evento se espera que
asistan de 10 mil a 12 mil personas. Y habrá mucho por
hacer durante esos tres días en
San Diego.
Con talleres y mesas redondas por un lado y bailes y
conciertos por el otro, como el
de Los Lobos el 6 de septiembre, Ideas@50+ es un
evento donde todo tiene un
beneficio para las personas
mayores de 50 años. (El costo
de entrada es de $25 para
miembros de AARP y $35 para
no-miembros. Los $35 incluyen membresía por un año.)
“La vida continua después
de los 50 años”, dijo Pérez. “Es
importante seguir aprendiendo
y mejorando nuestra calidad de
vida”.
Para ver el programa completo de Ideas@50+ y para
registrarse, visite www.aarp.
org. Hay información completa
en español.
Bordeamos Por la Paz
In the entire country-and the
whole world-we are becoming
closer witnesses to the degree
of stupidity, cruelty and impunity that the rapacious powers
are capable of coming to…”
For Andares, art is a collective and non-commercial response to an unjust death and
the silencing of peoples.
Feminem 2014 she wrote, allowed the flowering of urban
art in a city whose “heart
wanted to be caressed.”
For examples of Bordeamos
por la Paz’s handkerchiefs:
https://es-es.facebook.com/
BordEamosPaz
Background on Feminem
2014: https://es-es.facebook.
com/FestivalFeminem
Frontera NorteSur: on-line,
U.S.-Mexico border news
Center for Latin American
and Border Studies New
Mexico State University Las
Cruces, New Mexico
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
AUGUST 29, 2014
PAGE 3
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PAGE 4
AUGUST 29, 2014
The man who found Cesar Chavez
(con’t from page 1)
manager had been tossed out
after residents accused him of
numerous acts of violence, and
Ross’ first duty was to restore
their confidence.
“What started out as a way
to win them [over],” Ross said,
“almost immediately became a
driving interest to be around
them, learn about them, pick up
their stories. If you are really
interested, listening comes
naturally.”
Arvin served both as a key
training ground and political
education for the future organizer. Ross learned how to gain
people’s confidence, organized
an elected council responsible
for making many of the dayto-day decisions within the
community, and supported a
strike of cotton workers. It was
at Arvin that Ross also came
to know Woody Guthrie, who
visited frequently and sung for
the striking workers.
When the U.S. entered
World War II, Ross shifted
positions to the War Relocation Authority, and spent most
of the war years in Cleveland,
seeking jobs and housing for
Japanese-Americans, which
allowed them to be released
from internment camps.
After the war he returned
to Southern California to help
establish multi-racial “unity
leagues” as an organizer with
the American Council on Race
Relations. Organizing AfricanAmerican and Latino parents
in the citrus belt, Ross led voter
registration efforts—which
tossed out a racist politician in
Riverside, and helped integrate
schools.
His work fed into the first
successful federal school desegregation case in the country, Mendez vs. Westminster
— which occurred seven
years before Brown vs. Board.
It was during this period that
Ross discovered what would
be his life’s major work: organizing Mexican Americans in
California.
Hearing of Ross’ exploits,
Saul Alinsky hired him in 1947,
marking the beginning of a long
partnership. With funds secured by Alinsky, Ross spent
the next decade serving as a
key catalyst to the birth of
Latino political power in California. He formed the Community Service Organization
(CSO) with Edward Roybal,
directing a groundbreaking
voter registration drive in East
Los Angeles that resulted in the
election of Roybal to city council in 1949 — the first Latino
council member since the
1800s. Using this success as a
springboard, Ross spent the
1950s visiting barrios across
the state, helping to form 22
chapters of the CSO.
The CSO helped crack down
on public brutality; registered
half a million Latinos to vote;
passed statewide legislation to
grant pensions to 50,000 noncitizen farmworkers; and elected a number of leaders to local
political office. The people who
came out of the CSO — like
Chavez, Huerta, and many others — would go on to play pivotal roles in the United Farm
Workers and Chicano civil
rights movements of the 1960s.
After leaving the CSO in the
early 1960s, Ross helped organize residents of Guadalupe,
Arizona— home to both Mexican-Americans and Yaqui Indians—resulting in the group
securing paved roads, stop
signs, and other basic necessities from politicians who had
long ignored their concerns.
He then moved east for two
years, where he taught organizing basics to students at
Syracuse University. By now
he had developed his own
method, which relied heavily on
a “house meeting” strategy
that uses intimate living room
gatherings as a means to build
a broad organization.
The campaign in Syracuse,
funded through federal “War
on Poverty” money, sought to
organize African-American
residents living in decrepit public housing. The Syracuse
project soon generated national controversy — here was
the government, after all, paying organizers to stir up protestors who then challenged
government policies — and
funding was soon pulled.
Ross returned to California
in 1966. By this time, Chavez
and the farmworkers were
locked in what likely amounted
to a do-or-die struggle with the
Teamsters over who would represent workers at DiGiorgio, a
giant grower in the San Joaquin
Valley. Ross was tasked with
leading the election drive, in
what amounted to a coming
home affair: the cotton pickers
who went out on strike at Arvin
in 1939 — and were crushed
with violence — had been
DiGiorgio employees. Ross
worked around the clock with
a team of organizers to defeat
the much wealthier Teamsters,
who had the tacit support of the
company.
Ross would go on to spend
the late 1960s and 70s assisting Chavez and the UFW with
Southwestern College Awarded
$2.475 Million Federal Grant
Funding will boost
stitution, Southwestern College
completion rates for Latino serves more than 10,000 Latino
students
students each fall.
A five-year effort to increase completion rates for
Latinos and language learners
at Southwestern College has
been given a financial boost.
The U.S. Department of
Education has awarded the college $2,475,000 over five years
for its Puertas al Futuro
(Doorways to the Future) grant
application. Funding will be used
to create a first-year experience where cohorts of freshmen will work with a College
Success Team and peer mentors to strengthen their study
skills and build a learning community. The funding will also be
used to shorten the time students spend in basic skills. Programming begins Oct. 1, 2014.
“Puertas al Futuro helps us
implement best practices that
focus on counseling support,
peer mentoring, learning communities and new instructional
strategies,” said Dr. Melinda
Nish, superintendent/president
of Southwestern College. “Our
goal is to streamline the pathways for students to complete
their educational goals.”
As a Hispanic-Serving In-
various elections and boycotts,
training thousands of UFW
volunteers in his organizing
strategy. The list of Ross trainees is long and impressive, including Eliseo Medina — until
recently a top leader of SEIU
and now a key advocate for
immigration reform — and
Marshall Ganz, who helped
design Barack Obama’s 2008
field campaign.
Ross, married twice and
with three children, continued
to organize into the 1980s, conducting trainings for a wide
array of groups that tackled
everything from U.S. intervention in Central America to
nuclear disarmament. His final
organizing project was with
Neighbor to Neighbor, a group
headed by his son, Fred Ross,
Jr., which successfully pressured the Congress in 1987 to
cut U.S. military aid to the
Contras in Nicaragua.
Ross was the author of Conquering Goliath: Cesar Chavez
at the Beginning, along with a
pamphlet called Axioms for
Organizers. One of his favorite axioms described the role
of the organizer: “A good organizer is a social arsonist who
goes around setting people on
fire.”
In 1985, Ross told an interviewer, “All my life I’ve been
looking to go to work with
people who are in trouble of
some kind. My goal was to help
the people do away with fear
— fear to speak up and demand their rights.”
On September 27, 1992, the
82- year-old Ross, who had set
so many people on fire over
the course of his long life,
passed away in San Rafael. At
his memorial, Jerry Cohen, the
creative and combative lawyer
for the UFW, remembered
Ross with these words: “Fred
fought more fights and trained
more organizers and planted
more seeds of righteous indignation than anyone we’re ever
likely to see again.”
Thompson is an author and
journalist who’s work appears regularly in The Nation
and has written for the New
York Times, MotherJones,
ColorLines, amongst others.
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
LA COLUMNA VERTEBRAL
El Soporte Informativo Para Millones
de Hispanos
Por Luisa Fernanda Montero
¡A lavarse las manos!
Hasta hace muy pocos
años, cuando el hombre carecía de las maravillosas herramientas que le ha dado la
modernidad, la muerte era un
asunto de jóvenes; muy pocos
llegaban a la edad madura y
muchos no alcanzaban la
adolescencia.
Antes de que llegaran al
mundo anestésicos, penicilinas
y otros antibióticos la vida del
hombre era corta y dolorosa,
muy dolorosa. Hoy los umbrales
del dolor son desconocidos para
la mayoría gracias a misteriosas
sustancias liquidas o compactas
con poderes mágicos que
sorprenderían a cualquier alquimista de la edad media; pero
no podemos abusar.
Los agentes patógenos que
transmiten enfermedades mortales o al menos muy molestas
siguen existiendo y el mundo
se enfrenta a la posibilidad de
que los antibióticos pierdan su
poder.
Pero no vayamos tan lejos,
quedémonos en los ataques
cotidianos que pueden venir
camuflados en los alimentos, el
agua no procesada o el simple
y puro descuido.
Los baños públicos por
ejemplo, y los de casa, si no se
toman las precauciones del
caso, son foco de infecciones,
pero no solo ellos, computadores y teléfonos suelen estar
llenos de microscópicos enemigos de nuestra salud.
Por eso es fundamental
tomar precauciones. Además
de mantener nuestro entorno
lo más limpio posible, debemos
lavarnos las manos frecuentemente. Lavarse las manos,
después de ir al baño, antes y
después de manipular alimentos o tener acceso a ciertas
superficies, recoger basura o
heces de animales, lidiar con
una persona enferma o cambiar pañales puede evitarnos
muchos dolores de cabeza.
Al lavarnos las manos estamos evitando la transmisión de
gérmenes de persona a persona y evitando por tanto que
lleguen a toda una comunidad,
como lo recuerdan los Centros
de Control de Enfermedades CDC- cuando indican que
debemos hacerlo, además, con
mucho cuidado.
No se trata de mojar las
manos y sobarlas con el jabón
rápidamente, se trata de restregarlas y tener especial
cuidado en las zonas que están
entre los dedos y debajo de las
uñas. La idea es lavarlas
completamente por encima y
por debajo y hasta la muñeca.
Si no hay agua y jabón,
puede usarse una solución
desinfectante que contenga al
menos un 60 por ciento de alcohol, claro, teniendo en cuenta
que este tipo de soluciones
eliminan ciertos gérmenes,
pero no todos.
El simple acto de mantener
las manos limpias puede mantenernos lejos de ciertas enfer-
Luisa Fernanda Montero
medades respiratorias y estomacales y protegernos de los
ataques de desagradables
salmonelas, E. colis, norovirus
y adenovirus entre otros gérmenes que además pueden
generarnos infecciones cutáneas e irritaciones en los ojos.
¿Cuántas veces nos llevamos
las manos a la cara sin pensar?
Solo como punto de referencia, podemos pensar en que, de
acuerdo con los CDC, más de
2,2 millones de niños menores
de cinco años mueren cada año
en el mundo por enfermedades
infectocontagiosas como la
diarrea o la neumonía; lavarse
las manos puede proteger al
menos uno de cada tres niños
con diarrea y uno de cada seis
niños con infecciones respiratorias como la neumonía.
Diariamente debemos compartir con millones de seres,
baños, barreras, escaleras,
metros, buses y demás. ¿Cómo
saber quien puso antes la mano
justo ahí? Más vale prevenir
que lamentar.
Hábitos higiénicos tan sencillos como el correcto lavado
de las manos pueden salvarnos
la vida, o al menos, nos evitarán
serios dolores de cabeza. Así
que ¡a lavarse las manos!
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
AUGUST 29, 2014
Mateo Camarillo: “He encontrado el
Sueño Americano”
Por Pablo J. Sáinz
Mateo Camarillo se mudó a
San Diego de su natal Tijuana
siendo un niño. Desde entonces, se ha convertido en uno
de los activistas chicanos y
empresarios más activos en
San Diego.
Su vida es un perfecto balance de activismo social y
espíritu empresarial, algo que
dijo ha podido lograr gracias a
su habilidad de trabajar bien
con otros.
“El éxito en los negocios, en
el trabajo social, en la labor social y en la acción cívica
depende de trabajar bien con
otros”, dijo Camarillo. “Nadie
puede tener éxito por si mismo.
El trabajo en equipo es clave
para el éxito”.
Como activista, Camarillo ha
servido como director ejecutivo
de la Chicano Federation y
también trabajó arduamente
para crear un nuevo distrito
diverso en la Ciudad de San
Diego, que eventualmente se
convirtió en el Distrito 9.
Como empresario, abrió un
McDonald’s en Linda Vista en
1976, fue propietario de seis
estaciones de radio en español,
y más recientemente es dueño
de All Amigos Ignition Interlock.
Ha podido lograr todo esto
siendo un inmigrante que está
muy orgulloso de sus orígenes
humildes.
“Me considero un inmigrante de México donde nací”,
dijo. “Nuestra familia emigró a
los E.U. en busca de una mejor
vida. Al crecer en Tijuana y vivir
día a día, aprendimos que el éxito
y la supervivencia se lograba si
incluíamos a nuestros vecinos.
Estábamos en la misma situación, pero juntos compartíamos
nuestros limitados recursos”.
Camarillo recientemente
publicó An Immigrant’s Journey in Search of the American Dream, un libro donde
comparte sus experiencias de
vida, que abarcan los últimos
50 años de la historia de la
Mateo Camarillo
comunidad chicana de San Diego.
En el libro, Camarillo detalle
su vida temprana en Tijuana y
San Diego, sus años universitarios en San Diego State
University, su tiempo en la
Chicano Federation y su participación cívica y carrera
empresarial.
“Varias personas en mi vida,
como mi esposa Reina, me
alentaron a escribir un libro
cuando me estaban ayudando
a organizar mis archivos”, dijo
Camarillo, quien recientemente
donó los Mateo Camarillo Papers al Chicana and Chicano
Archive Project de San Diego
State University. “Al haber
sido un educador, sé lo importante que es tener documentados los logros sobresalientes para motivar a los
estudiantes, nuestra siguiente
generación de líderes comunitarios. El éxito con el que ellos
se puedan identificar los motiva a alcanzar las estrellas.
Todos necesitamos héroes y
modelos a seguir positivos”.
En verdad, el libro de Camarillo es un testamento de lo que
un inmigrante puede otorgar a
la sociedad estadounidense.
“Estados Unidos sigue siendo
una nación de inmigrantes”,
escribe en su libro. “Los inmigrantes han jugado un papel
enorme en el desarrollo democrático, multicultural y vitalidad económica de nuestro
país”.
Su meta con el libro es
inspirar a otros, especialmente
a los jóvenes latinos.
“Mi mensaje a los jóvenes
es que los héroes y líderes
comunitarios existen en comunidades latinas para que
ellos se puedan conectar con
modelos a seguir positivos”,
dijo Camarillo. “Espero que
muchas personas lean mis
memorias y se motiven a tomar
acción en sus vidas y comunidades al unirse con otros
en la misma situación”.
Después de una vida entera
entregado a los derechos
humanos en San Diego, Camarillo dijo que está orgulloso de
sus logros. Pero su logro más
grande, dijo, es poder extender
una mano de ayuda a la comunidad.
“He encontrado el Sueño
Americano”, dijo. “No es ser
propietario de restaurantes y
de estaciones de radio, ni vivir
en vecindarios exclusivos o
enseñar en dos universidades.
Viene de ese sentimiento tibio
cuando ayudas a otros”.
Mateo Camarillo: “I have found
the American Dream”
By Pablo J. Sáinz
Mateo Camarillo moved to
San Diego from his native
Tijuana as a little boy. Since
then, he has become one of San
Diego’s most active Chicano
activists and entrepreneurs.
His life is a perfect balance
of social activism and business
entrepreneurship, something
he said he has been able to accomplish thanks to his ability
to work well with others.
“Success in business, social
work, social engagement, and
civic action is dependent on
working with others,” Camarillo said. “No one succeeds by
themselves. Team work is the
key to success.”
As an activist, Camarillo has
served as executive director of
the Chicano Federation and
also worked hard to create a
new diverse district in the City
of San Diego, which eventually became District 9.
As a business-owner, he
opened his first McDonald’s
franchise in Linda Vista in
1976, he owned six Spanishlanguage radio stations, and
most recently he owns All
Amigos Ignition Interlock.
He has been able to accomplish all of this as an immigrant
who is very proud of his
humble origins.
“I consider myself an immigrant from Mexico where I
was born,” he said. “Our family immigrated to the U.S. in
search for a better life. Growing up in Tijuana and living day
to day, we learned that success
and survival was enhanced by
reaching out to our neighbors.
We were similarly situated
but together we shared our limited resources.”
Camarillo recently published
An Immigrant’s Journey in
Search of The American
Dream, a book where he shares
his life experiences, which cover
the last 50 years of San Diego’s
Chicano community’s history.
In the book, Camarillo details his early life in Tijuana and
San Diego, his college years at
San Diego State University, his
time at the Chicano Federation,
and his civic participation and
business career.
“Several significant individuals in my life, such as my wife
Reina, encouraged me to write
a book when they were helping me organize my files,” said
Camarillo, who recently donated the Mateo Camarillo
Papers to San Diego State
University’s Chicana and
Chicano Archive Project.
“Having been an educator, I
know how important it is to
have documented examples of
significant achievements to
motivate students, our next
generation of community leaders. Success that they can relate to motivates them to reach
for the stars. We all need heroes and positive role models.”
Truly, Camarillo’s book is a
testament of what a single im-
migrant can contribute to U.S.
society.
“America is still a nation
of immigrants,” he writes in
his book. “Immigrants have
played a huge role in the development of our democratic,
multicultural, and economic
vitality of our country.”
His goal with the book is to
inspire others, especially Latino
youth.
“My message to our youth
is that heroes and community
leaders exist in Latino communities so that they can connect
with positive role models,”
Camarillo said. “I hope a lot of
people read my memoirs and
are motivated to take action to
improve their lives and communities by joining with others
similarly situated.”
After a lifelong commitment
to human rights in San Diego,
Camarillo said he is proud of
his accomplishments. But his
greatest accomplishment, he
said, is being able to extend a
helping hand to the community.
“I have found the American
Dream,” he said. “It is not in
owning restaurants, radio stations, living in exclusive neighborhoods or teaching at two
universities. It comes from the
warm feeling all over when
you help others.”
PHONE: 619-993-5778
FAX: 619-286-2231
PAGE 5
Ofreció Concierto de Guitarra
Flamenca Giordano Gamiño
Por Paco Zavala
El extraordinario joven
guitarrista mexicano Giordano
Gamiño ofreció un concierto
de guitarra flamenca en las
instalaciones del Multiforo del
Instituto de Cultura de Baja
California, el pasado jueves 14
de agosto, la mitad de lo
recaudado se destinó para
beneficio de la Casa Hogar
“Morada del Niño Jesús”,
ubicada en el Ejido Matamoros
de la ciudad de Tijuana, B.C.
Giordano Gamiño, determina el gusto por pulsar la
guitarra a los 16 años de edad,
tomando los bártulos del instrumento de manera empírica a
través de tablatura y flamenco
gracias a las enseñanzas de su
padre.
Posteriormente abandona su
condición de autodidacta y
empieza su aprendizaje formal
con el Maestro de flamenco
Oscar Aragón, en San Diego,
Ca., con quien aprende las
bases del solfeo, técnica clásica y flamenco.
Por cuestiones familiares
abandona las clases con el
Maestro Aragón y se inscribe
en la Escuela Superior de
El guitarrista mexicano Giordano Gamiño, ofreció un
extraordinario concierto de música flamenca
Música de Baja California y, con los que toma clases de
se adiestra en el manejo de la solfeo, historia y teoría de la
guitarra clásica con el Maestro música, coro y guitarra clásica,
Marco Antonio Jurado y su así lo aseveró Giordano.
Con el Maestro Jurado,
esposa Olga de Jurado, ambos
maestros egresados del Con- quien cuenta con una Maestría
servatorio de Música de la
Ciudad de México, maestros (vea El guitarrista, página 8)
Elección General Gubernativa del 4 de noviembre de 2014
Fechas Importantes
20 de Sept.
Comienza el envío de la Boleta a Electores Militares y en el
Extranjero
25 de Sept.
Comienza el envío de la Guía Estatal de Información para el
Elector
25 de Sept.
Comienza, de parte del Registro Electoral del condado de San
Diego, el envío de la Boleta Electoral de Muestra y Folleto de
Información Para el Elector.
6 de Oct.
Comienza el envío de la Boleta Oficial a electores de boleta
de voto por correo.
6 de Oct. –
3 de Nov.
Votación Temprana en persona, en el Registro Electoral, entre
semana de 8 am – 5 pm
20 de Oct.
Último día para inscribirse para votar
21 de Oct. –
4 de Nov.
Nuevos ciudadanos naturalizados pueden inscribirse y votar
en persona después del 20 de octubre (solamente en el
Registro Electoral)
28 de Oct.
Último día para solicitar una boleta electoral de voto por correo
(hasta las 5 pm)
1 y 2 de Nov.
Votación de sábado y domingo (sólo en el Registro Electoral),
de 8 am – 5 pm
4 de noviembre Día de la Elección, de 7 am - 8 pm
1. ¿POR QUÉ HAY UNA ELECCIÓN EL 4 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2014 – QUÉ HAY EN
LA BOLETA?
El 4 de noviembre es la fecha de la elección programada regularmente para la
Elección General Gubernativa. (Cargos Estatales, Congreso, Senado Estatal y
Asamblea); Juez de la Corte Superior, Cargo #25, y funcionarios de la ciudad
para las 18 ciudades incorporadas por todo el condado; juntas gubernativas para
los distritos escolares, distritos de protección contra incendios, distritos de
hospitales, distritos de agua y grupos de planeación.
2. ¿QUIÉN PUEDE VOTAR EN ESTA ELECCIÓN?
Todos los electores inscritos en el Condado de San Diego. El lunes, 20 de
octubre de 2014 es el último día para inscribirse. Se puede inscribir en el sitio
web del Registro Electoral en www.sdvote.com. Haga Clic en “Register to Vote” y
siga las instrucciones; en oficinas de Correo, el Departamento de Vehículos
Motorizados, Bibliotecas, así como en varias Oficinas del Secretario de la Ciudad
y en el Registro Electoral en 5600 Overland Ave., San Diego.
3. ¿QUÉ SUCEDE SI DESEA VOTAR PERO NO PUEDE IR A LOS LUGARES DE
VOTACIÓN EL DÍA DE LA ELECCIÓN – CÓMO PUEDE VOTAR POR CORREO?
(1) completando la tarjeta de solicitud que se encuentra en LA PARTE POSTERIOR
DE SU FOLLETO DE LA BOLETA ELECTORAL DE MUESTRA
(2) llamando al Registro Electoral y solicitando por teléfono al 858-565-5800, o
(3) escribiendo su propia petición. Las solicitudes deben ser enviadas al Registro
Electoral del Condado de San Diego, 5600 Overland Ave, San Diego, CA 92123.
O por fax al número 858-694-2955.
Debe incluir su nombre, domicilio registrado en San Diego, título de la elección,
firma y domicilio donde se debe enviar su boleta electoral. La fecha límite para
solicitar una boleta electoral de voto por correo es el martes, 28 de octubre de
2014 hasta las 5 pm. También puede votar en la Oficina del Registro Electoral
entre semana, de 8 am a 5 pm, comenzando el lunes, 6 de octubre de 2014 hasta
el Día de la Elección. También sábado y domingo, 1 y 2 de noviembre, de 8 am a
5 pm. Para información adicional por favor llame al 858-565-5800.
4. ¿DÓNDE ESTARÁN LOCALIZADOS LOS LUGARES DE VOTACIÓN?
La ubicación de su lugar de votación estará en la cubierta posterior de su
folleto de la boleta electoral de muestra; visitando www.sdvote.com o llamando
al Registro Electoral al 858-565-5800
5. ¿NECESITA EL CONDADO TRABAJADORES ELECTORALES?
De acuerdo a la legislación recientemente implementada habrá oportunidades
para personas que se admitieron legalmente con residencia permanente en los
Estados Unidos, para también servir como trabajadores electorales en una junta
de precinto.
Los trabajadores electorales reciben un estipendio de voluntario de $75 a $175,
y $15 adicionales si son nombrados para llenar una asignación en chino, filipino,
hindi, japonés, khmer, coreano, español o vietnamita en un lugar de votación. Si
está interesado, por favor vea la página de Internet del Registro en www.sdvote.com
y/o llame al 858-565-5800.
PAGE 6
AUGUST 29, 2014
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
We ask the question: Why are Jim Cartmill
and Bertha Lopez running for office?
T
his week we celebrate the contributions of the working man/woman
of America on Labor Day. We celebrate his toil, sweat, and sacrifice
to make this a great nation. It is the labor of
the working man and woman who move this
nation forward.
While we celebrate the working man/
woman, we are reminded that Labor Day also
signals the un-official kick-off for most local
elections. In days gone by this would mean
two hard months of campaigning were left to
win voters over. Things are different today.
With mail in ballots becoming more and more
popular- and with those ballots being mailed
the first week of October, this now means
there is basically only one month of campaigning to reach early voters!
While mail in ballots have made it convenient for the voter, it has also made it a tad bit
more difficult for those newspapers, especially
weeklies such as La Prensa San Diego, to do
our due diligence and provide our recommendations/endorsements for candidates and ballot measures. This now has to be done within
the short time frame of one month. More difficult - yes, but we move undaunted.
With that in mind La Prensa wants to take a
look at the upcoming Sweetwater Union High
School District Board races.
For the first time in history, board members
will be elected by geographical district areas.
This makes it more economical and easier to
campaign. Also for the first time there will be
a limit on campaign contributions, meaning that
no individual can contribute more than $750.
Lastly with Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez’s bill, school administrators are banned
from raising money for board member’s campaigns.
Presently there are 21 candidates running
within the five geographical areas. That is a
large number of candidates that we know very
little about. But there are two candidates we
know a lot about. However La Prensa question is; why are those two candidates running
for election?’
The two known candidates are Jim Cartmill
for trustee, area 3, and Bertha Lopez for
trustee, area 2.
Both of these candidates are former
Sweetwater School Board Members that for
the last two years were under indictment,
charged with public corruption. This year they
pleaded guilty for accepting gifts and lost their
seats on the board. Now they are trying to
regain their old position.
In the case of Jim Cartmill it is difficult for us
to understand why he would feel the need to
run again? It is not as if he has any unfinished
business on the board. He has already served
on the Sweetwater School Board for 24 long
years, none of the students going to school
now were even born when Cartmill was first
elected. La Prensa’s position is that a school
board seat should not be for a lifetime, especially in the case of Mr. Cartmill who pleaded
guilty to accepting gifts from contractors.
In the case of convicted board member Bertha Lopez, her reason for running for trustee
is not all that difficult to figure out. Bertha believes along with the support of several members of the community that she with her husband Jose Lopez (who sits on the Otay Water board) is a political juggernaut in the South
Bay community. Bertha needs this elected seat
to continue in her self serving role of being a
political mover and shaker.
In the case of Bertha Lopez any controversy you find her involved with, she will be at
the center of that chaos. This has always been
Bertha way of doing business, create an atmosphere of chaos, so that friends and supporters can benefit. Of course always at the
expense of the education of students. A prime
example of this was her political campaign to
have Principal Robert Bleisch of Castle Park
Middle School, fired.
The chaos on the Sweetwater School Board
and district over the years was due to a lack
of leadership that can be attributed directly to
some board members, but especially to
Cartmill and Lopez. The negative news stories, the chaos at board meetings, illegal dealings with private institutions, and shady real
estate deals that finally ended in legal indictments of the board can all be attributed to
Cartmill and Lopez while they served as board
trustees.
The upcoming November election represents a fresh clean start for the district. This is
a long awaited opportunity for the district to
clean out the negative residues that was left
behind by the last school board. It is La
Prensa’s opinion that if either Cartmill or Lopez
(or both) are elected again that all of the negative residues left from the last chaotic years,
will surely return. Cartmill’s and Lopez’s elections to the board will have the political effect
of blunting any honest efforts by newly elected
board members to diligently work to bring
about much needed integrity to the Sweetwater Union High School District.
La Prensa believes that both Cartmill and
Lopez have lost their rights to serve as elected
official, after pleading guilty to crimes while
serving as board members. It is La Prensa’s
position that neither candidate offer anything
so valuable (to the community) that warrants
voters to consider them for public office.
The decision rests in the hands of the voters.
Labor Day: Skills for a Lifetime
By Thomas E. Perez
As the Secretary of Labor, I have a unique
opportunity to meet with employers around the
country of all sizes and from an array of industries. So many of them tell me the same thing;
they’re ready to grow their businesses and to
hire more people.
But here’s the rub: too often, they can’t find
workers who have the skills they need.
Meanwhile, although businesses have added
9.9 million jobs since February 2010, a lot of
people are still hurting, unable to access the
opportunities that will allow them to share in
our national recovery. About a third of those
who remain unemployed have been unemployed
for six months or more.
So we have ready-to-work people looking for
work. And we have ready-to-fill jobs that employers can’t fill. If we want to continue our
economic recovery, grow our middle class and
ensure a prosperous future, we’ve got to match
them up.
That’s at the heart of President Obama’s opportunity agenda. And that’s why he recently
signed the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) – a bipartisan bill that
passed with little fanfare, but represents the
first major reform of the nation’s workforce
system since 1998. The reforms in the new
law will make the nation’s workforce system,
which serves more than 20 million people a
year, better able to provide people with the skills
they need to access ladders of opportunity.
But that’s not all. Vice President Biden recently released a report calling for stronger
partnerships with employers; better access to
information for job-seekers; and more effective training strategies.
All of these efforts are based on the principle of job-driven training. We’re doing away
with what I call “train and pray,” – training
people to be widget makers and praying that
there’s a company hiring widget makers. We
need to provide people with the skills needed
for jobs that actually exist.
So what exactly does “job-driven training”
look like? Here’s an example. High school students in the East San Gabriel Valley are getting
hands-on career training in science, technology
and healthcare industries. Through the regional
Career Pathways Partnership, school officials
are offering students an integrated academic and
career development curriculum, providing them
with industry-recognized credentials upon graduation and leg up to succeed in college.
And perhaps the most important ingredient
to making this program successful? The school
system has developed strong partnerships with
local employers – like Boeing and the San
Gabriel Valley Economic Partnership - to provide students with education and training that
will lead to jobs in fields employers are looking
to expand.
In April, this program was awarded a $4.5
million Youth CareerConnect grant from the
(see Labor Day, page 7)
Inequality: A Broad Middle Class
Requires Empowering Workers
By Robert Borosage
union strategies. And with the election of Ronald
Reagan as president, all gloves were off.
• Unions now represent less than 7 percent
of the private workforce. As unions declined,
wages no longer rose with productivity. CEOs
and investors captured ever higher portions of
corporate income. The minimum wage lost
value. Corporations gutted pensions and health
care plans. Incomes on the top soared, while
those on the bottom sunk. America grew apart.
The decline of unions is indisputably at the
center of America’s growing inequality and hallowed-out middle class. But what is also clear
is that reviving shared prosperity and rebuilding the middle class isn’t likely to occur without reviving the ability of workers to organize
and bargain collectively.
That’s true at the workplace. Over one-third
of our jobs now are contingent – part-time,
short-term, on-call. Workers cobble together
different jobs to survive, but often don’t know
what their hours will be. But no job is inherently marginal. Workers don’t lack education;
they lack power. Where unions are strong –
such as for maids, bellman, and porters in New
York hotels – workers negotiate for regular
hours, while gaining decent wages, health care
and pensions.
And it’s true for our politics. Most remedies
for inequality include calls for progressive tax
reform, for investment in education and training. The more insightful advocate balancing our
trade and ending perverse incentives that reward CEOs for plundering their own companies. But none of these reforms is likely without a strong mobilization of workers – a strong
union movement – to elect leaders and drive
the debate. It isn’t an accident that corporations and the right have seen weakening unions
as central to their political project.
Reviving unions will take new forms of organizing, new alliances, new thinking. In Los
Angeles, for example, an active union movement – built significantly in immigrant communities — helped elect officials who then used
government procurement and zoning powers
to demand that companies pay decent wages,
adhere to labor standards, and end sabotage of
worker organizing. In the fast-food walkouts
of this summer, new alliances with religious and
community groups, support by elected officials
such as members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, provided both protection for
the workers and began to enlist consumer support for better wages.
Government policy helped to build strong
unions; government policy helped to undermine
them. Winning the necessary reforms against
the entrenched big money politics of our time
won’t be easy. But the first step is for
progressives to be clear: At the center of any
agenda to rebuild the middle class must be a
commitment to empowering workers to organize and bargain collectively, to rebuild a strong
worker voice both in the workplace and in our
politics.
On Labor Day, families gather, politicians pay
tribute to values of hard work, and some workers even get an extra day off. But this Labor
Day arrives with working families struggling to
stay afloat.
Working family incomes haven’t gone up in
the 21st century. Inequality reaches new extremes. Corporate profits are reaping a record
portion of the nation’s income, while worker
wages wallow at record lows. Three-fourths
of Americans fear their children will fare less
well than they have.
This Labor Day, we should do more than celebrate workers – we should understand how
vital reviving worker unions is to rebuilding a
broad middle class.
The raging debate on inequality and its remedies often omits discussion of unions. Inequality is blamed on globalization and technology
that have transformed our workforce. Remedies focus on better education and more training, with liberals supporting fair taxes to help
pay the cost.
But this leaves power and politics out of the
equation. Americans are better educated than
ever, with high school and college graduation
rates at record levels. Technological change
was as rapid when America was building the
middle class as it is now. Globalization isn’t an
act of nature; it is a set of trade, tax and corporate policies that benefit some and injure others. Our extreme inequality and our sinking
middle class are the product of political choices
and political power.
And central to this reality: the rise and the
fall of worker power in the form of unions able
to bargain collectively at the workplace and mobilize worker power in the political arena. Trying to explain rising inequality without talking
about unions is like explaining why the train is
late – the tracks are worn, the weather is bad
– without noting that one of its engines has been
sabotaged.
The facts are clear. The Campaign for
America’s Future released a report – “Inequality: Rebuilding the Middle Class Requires Reviving Strong Unions” – that lays out the essential facts. In brief:
• America’s broad middle class was built
when unions were strong, representing over
one-third of the private workforce. Strong
unions helped workers win better wages and
benefits at the workplace, and championed vital reforms in the political arena — raising the
minimum wage, creating Medicare, raising Social Security benefits, workplace safety and
more – that helped build the broad middle class.
• During those years, workers shared in the
increased productivity and profits that they
helped to create. Incomes on the bottom actually grew faster than top-end incomes. America
grew together.
• Then furious corporate campaigns succeeded
in weakening unions. Laws banned powerful
union-organizing tactics. Multinationals wrote
trade rules that facilitated moving jobs abroad, Robert L. Borosage is the founder and presienabling companies to threaten workers seek- dent of the Institute for America’s Future,
ing better wages. Corporations perfected anti- (http://ourfuture.org/)
drugs + HIV
> learn the link
send
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
> the msg
> hiv drugabuse gov
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
AUGUST 29, 2014
PAGE 7
Commentary/Opinion Page
A need to Demilitarize our Society
By Jimmy Franco Sr.
The present surge in the use of heavy weaponry and violence on the international front by
the leaders of our government is beginning to
penetrate all facets of our society. This increase
in militarism and the use of aggressive tactics
to resolve problems are now becoming the political norm in US foreign policy relations, responses to the surging anger of minority communities here at home, and the practice of spying and surveillance on the US public through
the illegal collection of their personal information and activities by the NSA.
The continuing flow of heavy weaponry from
the federal government to local law enforcement now includes armored vehicles, military
assault rifles, tanks, tear gas and other lethal
hardware. The possession of such an arsenal
of deadly weapons will eventually be used
against communities as this trend continues to
transform local police departments from protect and serve civil servants into aggressive
para-military forces.
The increasing use of heavily-armed police
who launch war-like operations such as discriminatory gang injunctions, drug busts by
SWAT teams who resemble soldiers and police responses to incidents armed with deadly
firepower often result in over reaction and injuries to innocent people. In many cases, the
use of these weapons and aggressive tactics
further inflames the existing anger within ethnic communities which is what has occurred in
Ferguson Missouri and other communities who
are already suffering from a lack of decent social
services and heavy-handed tactics and racial
profiling by the police.
Militarization and armed confrontation
cannot resolve our social problems
The US public is the world’s largest consumer
of illegal drugs and this profitable market continues to expand. Attempting to repress the
suppliers of this growing demand through a billion-dollar ‘War on Drugs’ only creates more
heavily armed gangs, rampant violence and
overflowing prisons which have now become
schools for crime.
The complex issue of immigration reform requires a logical political process and just resolution that is mutually acceptable to all concerned.
The government’s policy of declaring a ‘war on
immigration’ which resorts to tactics of mass
deportations, a heavily-armed blockade of the
border and a rapid increase in the armed forces
and weaponry to man this 2000 mile frontier is
economically and politically unsustainable. The
political decision to utilize a military solution to
resolve this problem rather than using common
sense, economics and principled negotiations ultimately the result is failure.
Domestically, the ongoing ‘war on gangs’ ignores any concrete solutions to the underlying
social problems that motivate these young
people to choose and live this dangerous life
style. The crusade of heavily-armed police being used against gangs, targets this growing
problem by utilizing racial profiling to stop suspects, mass gang injunctions and organizing
combative sweeps and raids into minority communities. These aggressive anti-gang sweeps
utilize deadly surplus weapons left over from
numerous US conflicts abroad and are patterned after war-time operations.
Another group that is increasingly being victimized by these combative police responses
are the mentally ill and homeless. As the number of mentally-ill people within the country in-
Labor Day
creases and the level of medical care provided
to them declines, their behavior on the streets
is increasingly being viewed as a criminal threat
by police who are trained to respond to emotional outbursts and abnormal behavior by immediately shooting to kill.
All of these pressing social problems within
our society which range from drugs, immigration, gangs, the mentally ill and homeless have
a cause and effect relationship. The root causes
of these problems are generally ignored by government officials who instead focus on the effects and then automatically respond to them
in an irrational and belligerent manner that utilizes aggression and force to supposedly solve
these problems
Militarization: a failure to pinpoint the
causes and solutions of problems
The militarization solution in order to resolve
complex problems has created negative consequences for our society. This has resulted in
viewing certain minority communities through
a military perspective and treating them as enemy combatants who need to be periodically
occupied with heavily armed police and order
maintained through the use of force.
Military action simply reinforces the present
and backward mindset of negating the causes
of social problems by primarily focusing on their
harmful effects and then irrationally attempting to use aggressive tactics and force as a
quick solution. Treating certain communities as
the enemy who need to be periodically repressed
and kept in their subordinate position within our
society will only backfire and eventually create more anger and resistance as shown by
the residents of Ferguson.
The increasing use of military-style campaigns
by local police forces will not resolve any of
our deeply-rooted social problems. A fresh and
alternative approach is needed which requires
a careful analysis of the causes of our pressing
social problems and the formulation of logical
and realistic policies that are practical, less
costly and which will work in the real world.
For example, if we use our resources to fund
and improve the educational level of people in
our society, then poverty will be reduced as
well as the lure of youth gangs and the eventual imprisonment of young people.
Meanwhile, reaching a just political agreement on immigration will result in reducing the
amount of weaponry and violence along the
border and decreasing the number of people
deported and locked up in immigration detention centers.
The militarization of our society is proceeding
in an incremental manner and this process is
contradictory to maintaining democratic rights
within our society. A militaristic outlook, mentality and repressive methods are incompatible with
that of a democratic ideology that condones diverse ideas, methods and free expression.
We cannot have both which leaves us with
two clear alternatives: either roll over and passively accept this growing totalitarian trend or
stand firm, speak up and oppose it. Some
middle-class people take the attitude that this
issue doesn’t affect them as they don’t live in
a barrio or ghetto. Yet, this undemocratic trend
of militarization affects all of us in regard to
our quality of life, the use of our taxes, our political right to protest and having to endure continual violence and countless new enemies.
Either take a stand to stop this march toward
militarization or accept an eventual loss of personal liberties and rights to a regime that resembles ‘Big Brother’.
ery day to our nation’s strength and vitality. And
we recommit ourselves to helping more people
enjoy the dignity of work, helping them acquire
the skills and access the opportunities to reach
the American Dream.
NOTE: Use the Department of Labor’s new
FindYourPath (http://www.dol.gov/findyourpath/
) tool to connect with an American Job Center
and find the training opportunities you need to
launch a successful career.
“Redskins” es un insulto
Por Humberto Caspa, Ph.D.
Al igual que greasers, el gobierno federal
legitimó el uso de la palabra wetback al utilizarlo
como una política de Estado en cuestiones
migratorias. En 1954 se instituyó la llamada
Operación Wetback para deportar a miles de
personas indocumentadas, quienes habían
llegado a este país por medio del Programa
Bracero. Fue otra de las grandes vergüenzas
de las altas esferas del gobierno en contra de
la población latina.
Y el término “mud [people]” es utilizado por
grupos racistas neonazis y skinheads para
referirse a la gente latina.
Así, históricamente los euro-norteamericanos
se refirieron a los grupos minoritarios étnicos
con nombres vulgares, no solamente para
insultarlos, sino también para relegarlos
intencionalmente en los eslabones más bajos
de la sociedad.
Lo mismo sucedió con el término de redskins,
el cual es un nombre peyorativo que descalifica
a la población originaria de Norteamérica.
Recientemente el periódico Washington Post
optó en no utilizar esta palabra ofensiva en sus
Editoriales por considerarla un insulto a la
comunidad originaria. Obviamente, el reconocimiento de los editores de este medio de
comunicación es valorable, pero siento que se
queda corto.
Los periódicos y otros medios de comunicación deberían minimizar su utilización, especialmente para identificar al equipo de futbol de
Washington. Por mi parte, desde hoy en
adelante, yo simplemente me referiré a los […]
como el “equipo de Washington”.
Después del abandono de los Raiders a Oakland, la ciudad de Los Ángeles ha buscado
imperiosamente un equipo de futbol que, no solo
enaltezca las cualidades innatas de su gente,
sino que ese equipo se convierta en una
inversión que produzca beneficios económicos
para toda la comunidad angelina.
Qué les parece si una vez adquirido la luz
verde de la NFL, los residentes de los Ángeles
tengan la mala fortuna de encontrar un
empresario con las mismas características de
Donald Sterling, ex dueño del equipo de basketball de los Clippers, o Dan Snyder,
mandamás de los “redskins”.
El primero, Sternling, ofendió a la comunidad
afroamericana con comentarios racistas e
intolerantes. El segundo, Snyder, persiste con
la idea de que el nombre de su equipo es una
palabra inofensiva.
Por supuesto que “redskins” es vulgar y
ofensivo. Es como si existiera un equipo de
futbol americano en la ciudad de Los Ángeles
con el nombre de “los greasers” o “los
wetbacks” o peor aún los “muds”.
La palabra “greaser” se utilizó durante el
Siglo XIX para describir e insultar a los
inmigrantes mexicanos, por los trabajos
“sucios” que realizaban y por su supuesta
apariencia “grasosa”. Este término, lamentablemente, lo legalizó el gobierno californiano por
medio de una vergonzosa ley conocida como
el Greaser Act (1855), misma que dispuso la
prohibición de vagos grasosos en las calles.
Por su parte, Wetbacks fue utilizado desde
la década de 1920 hasta nuestros días. Hace Humberto Caspa, Ph.D., es profesor e
referencia a la forma cómo los inmigrantes investigador de Economics On The Move.
latinoamericanos cruzan ilícitamente la frontera E-mail: [email protected]
por el río Grande.
¡ASK A MEXICAN!
Mexican as you
are American.
Dear Mexican: I see lots of Mexican- Screw you,
muchacho!” While
Americans struggling in grade school
this would be
and high school. Many Mexicantotally obnoxious,
American activists claim it’s because
they don’t speak English at home or the at least it’d be
schools don’t teach them well. But I see more HONEST
than “No, si, no.”
lots of Asian-Americans in the same
Willy the White Writer
schools who do really well. Many of
them also don’t speak English at home.
Dear Gabacho: Of course the kids speak
The last time I went to a hospital, it
seemed like Asians were 30% of all the better English than their parents—the kids
doctors. I didn’t see a single Latino one. are Americans, while the parents are
Mexicans. And those Mexicans are muy
Why is it that one group consistently
honest with you—or do you not hear them
does better than the other? I don’t
mutter “Chinga tu madre, pinche gabacho
understand.
Clueless feo apestoso” under their breath?
By Gustavo Arellano
Dear Gabacho: Because Mexican
students are stupid, while Asian students are
geniuses—that’s what you and your ilk want
to hear, right? This pregunta always busts
me up, because no matter how many studies
activists can offer examining the myths of
model minorities and Mexican apathy
toward academics—variables, educational
background of parents, socioeconomic
conditions of neighborhoods, the quality of
schools blah blah blah—Know Nothings
dismiss the facts. That’s not what they want
to hear, and they don’t even care about
solutions to the education gap. So I’ll just
say it again to please ustedes: Mexican
students are stupid, Asian students are
geniuses. Happy? Of course you are!
However, just because you wish something
to be verdad doesn’t make it so—and if you
don’t believe me, go see what happened to
Mitt Romney’s dream of Mexicans selfdeporting.
My boyfriend is Mexican, and I am a
gabacha. Whenever my boyfriend sees
a Mexican girl with someone of a
different race, he gets disgusted and
mad (especially when he sees them with
black guys.) I’ve pointed out to him that
he seems a bit hypocritical, since he’s
with a white girl as well—but he says
that he makes an exception for me. Do
all Mexicans feel this way, or is my
boyfriend pinche loco?
Lover of Verga
Dear Gabacha: Of course your guy is
pinche loco—but so are all men of color.
Hombres complaining that their raza’s
women are dickmatized by gabachos while
boasting about nailing gabachas is a trope as
old as gabachos fearful that oversexed
bucks and banditos were taking too many of
their women. That said, I’m not going to
dismiss the anti-negrito sentiment that still
dominates the Mexican mind, especially
when said negrito is dating a mexicana.
Raza: We gotta drop anti-black thoughts
from our community the same way we
ditched Carlos Mencia.
(con’t from page 6)
Department of Labor to expand the program
to more students. We’re putting more than a
billion dollars on the street in grant funding to
support programs like this one. Those resources
are being deployed in a number of different
ways – strengthening our community colleges,
promoting apprenticeship and on-the-job trainFar too many Mexicans REFUSE
ing, investing in youth employment and more. Thomas E. Perez was nominated by Presigoing
to the trouble of learning English.
On Labor Day, we honor the contributions dent Obama to serve as the nation's 26th
They
often
speak Spanish annoyingly
that hard-working men and women make ev- Secretary of Labor
loud in public. Sometimes, the KIDS
speak better English than their
Ask the Mexican at themexican@aska
PARENTS! And, if they don’t
understand you, they just smile and say, mexican.net, be his fan on Facebook,
One of the arguments against the minimum “No, si, no.” What is that crap anyway! follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano
or follow him on Instagram
wage ordinance in San Diego has been that it How about learning enough of our
@gustavo_arellano!
would greatly affect small business owners in language to say, “I’m as proudly
(con’t from page 1)
the city.
But Contreras-Sweet disagreed.
“Generally speaking, small businesses have
ward-looking city. It is strategically located,
connected to Pacific Rim and Latin America.” to remain competitive employers, offering emContreras-Sweet said that small businesses ployees healthy salaries, and benefits,” she said. A well informed person is an aware person! Keep informed on all the ‘news
Since its founding on July 30, 1953, the U.S. that is news’ of the Hispanic community in the City of San Diego, the County,
are an important part of the U.S. economy. So
much so, she said, that two out three new jobs Small Business Administration has delivered State and Nation!
millions of loans, loan guarantees, contracts,
are small business employees.
When asked about her thoughts about a San counseling sessions and other forms of assis- Receive La Prensa San Diego at your home or office every week. La Prensa San
Diego ordinance that will increase the minimum tance to small businesses. Maria Contreras- Diego is published every Friday of the week. Ph: (619) 425 7400
wage to the city to $11.50 during a period of Sweet became the 24th Administrator of the
Please visit our web site (laprensa-sandiego.org) for a subscription form or just
three years, the SBA Administrator said that U.S. Small Business Administration.
To learn about the resources offered by the mail in your check for $130 made out to La Prensa San Diego with a note that
she supports minimum wage hikes, and “President Obama’s vision for livable wages for all U.S. Small Business Administration, visit says Subscription, including your mailing address and mail to: La Prensa San
Diego, 651-C.Third Ave., Chula Vista, CA 91910.
www.sba.gov.
American families.”
SBA
Subscribe to La Prensa Sa
Sann Diego
PAGE 8
AUGUST 29, 2014
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
El guitarrista
ICBC la interesante historia del Origen de la Palabra, una obra para reflexionar sobre la importancia de expresar lo que
sentimos y arriesgarnos en la vida.
Esta interesante historia “La interesante historia del origen de la palabra ciclo”” de la dramaturga regiomontana
Celeste
Espinoza Uribe, con la compañía Minotauro Teatro, bajo la dirección de Ana Riojas y la asistencia de Lizeth
(con’t de página 5)
Marcela.
en Guitarra Clásica, adquiere una formación completa y profunda en
Esta puesta en escena aborda el tema de las relaciones entre los seres humanos, sus expectativas y miedos, así como
cuanto a el estudio de guitarra clásica.
las cosas que se quedan en el silencio por miedo a decirlas.
Después de esto toma clases con el maestro Jorge López, con quién
Para concluir la compañía de teatro De Cierto Azul, celebrará su XV aniversario, por tal motivo están anunciando que
a la fecha continúa con su entrenamiento de preparación para el fla- en está fecha tan significativa lo celebrarán con una Temporada Teatral, en nuestra próxima edición daremos detalles de
menco, enfocándose en la técnica de este género y del ritmo.
este evento.
Giordano Gamiño, se ha presentado en algunas salas de la ciudad,
compartiendo el escenario con algunos colegas, con la finalidad de
adquirir experiencia y crítica.
Este concierto fue todo un éxito, Giordano espera que el público lo
siga apoyando.
En nota de complemento el pasado viernes 15 de agosto el Instituto
de Cultura de Baja California presentó su Primera Tarde de Vacilón
con la participación de importantes bandas jóvenes de la región tales
como: “Palos Verdes”, “Pucha Lucha”, “Mala Suerte”, “La Gre-Ska”
y “Tierra Suelta”, este evento se iluminó con la presencia de público de
todas las edades.
El pasado sábado 23 de agosto se realizó en el Arco de la Avenida
Revolución y Calle Primera, n este evento se celebraron 10 años de
existencia de “Invasión Fest.”, un programa de música independiente
Invasión Local, que es transmitido los lunes de 19:00 a 21:00 pm., por
Fusión 102.5 FM.
Continúan los Ciclos de Teatro Familiar en el ICBC; por lo tanto esta
institución invita a todas las familias fronterizas a disfrutar de estas
puestas en escena.
Esta es una actividad que se ha venido fortaleciendo domingo a
domingo. En este espectáculo teatral en el que se cuentan historias
diversas, cada ocho días una distinta.
Uno de los grupos teatrales que han participado es Abordo Teatro,
que dirige Griselda Hernández y la dirección musical está a cargo de
Juan Carlos Villanueva. Algunas de las actrices que han participado
han sido Brenda Hernández y Lizeth Marcela.
Los pasados días 21 y 22 de agosto representaron en el Multiforo del
FOR RENT
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
Windsor Gardens Apartments will
be accepting applications for one
(1) bedroom apartments for seniors 62 years of age and older
and/or disabled individuals who
qualify with low income.
Starting Monday, September 22nd
applications can be submitted at
the address below on weekdays
between the hours of 9am – 12pm
and 1pm – 4pm.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Windsor Gardens
1600 W. 9th Ave., Office
Escondido, CA 92029
(760) 741-5606
www.wgescondido.com
REQUESTING
PROPOSALS
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
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Fictitious Business Name: GOLDEN
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Fallbrook, CA, County of San Diego,
92028.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Sombutphaya, Inc., 7931
Borson St., Downey, CA 90242
This Business is Conducted By: A Corporation. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
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knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant
Name:
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Sinsombutcharoin. Title: President
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
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of San Diego County AUG 04, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-020804
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Support the environmental re- La Prensa San Diego
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A, Chula Vista, CA, County of San Diego,
P/T Dishwasher and kitchen 91910.
help wanted for busy Chinese This Business Is Registered by the
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CHILDCARE at 922 Myra Ave., Chula of San Diego County JUL 30, 2014.
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of San Diego County JUL 28, 2014.
and Professions code that the registrant
Assigned File No.: 2014-020245
knows to be false is guilty of a misdePublished: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/ meanor punishable by a fine not to ex2014
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
La Prensa San Diego
Registrant Name: Salvador Flores Lopez
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
of San Diego County AUG 27, 2014.
NAME STATEMENT
Assigned File No.: 2014-023015
Fictitious Business Name: AGROPAC DEL
NOROESTE S. DE R.C. DE C.V. at 1320 Published: August 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/
E 6th Street, Los Angeles, CA, County of 2014
La Prensa San Diego
Los Angeles, 90021.
This Business Is Registered by the
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
Following: Araceli Delagarza
NAME STATEMENT
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was: Fictitious Business Name: SAINZ TAX SON/A
LUTIONS at 730 Broadway St. 301,
I declare that all information in this state- Chula Vista, CA, County of San Diego,
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who 91911.
declares as true any material matter pur- This Business Is Registered by the
suant to section 17913 of the Business Following: Maria Sainz, 70 Quintard St.
and Professions code that the registrant #15, Chula Vista, CA 91911
knows to be false is guilty of a misde- This Business is Conducted By: An Inmeanor punishable by a fine not to ex- dividual. The First Day of Business Was:
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
N/A
Registrant Name: Araceli Delagarza
I declare that all information in this stateThis Statement Was Filed With Ernest ment is true and correct. (A registrant who
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk declares as true any material matter purof San Diego County AUG 14, 2014.
suant to section 17913 of the Business
Assigned File No.: 2014-021939
and Professions code that the registrant
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014 knows to be false is guilty of a misdeLa Prensa San Diego
meanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Maria Sainz
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
NAME STATEMENT
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
Fictitious Business Name: INTERNA- of San Diego County AUG 04, 2014.
TIONAL
INSTITUTE
OF Assigned File No.: 2014-020845
MICROPIGMENTATION at 91 W Prospect
St., Chula Vista, CA, County of San Di- Published: Aug 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/2014
La Prensa San Diego
ego, 91911.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Ema Corning, 91 W Prospect
St., Chula Vista, CA 91911
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Ema Corning
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 21, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-022585
Published: August 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
¡Anúnciate en
La Prensa San Diego!
619-425-7400
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: ONE UNIQUE
TOW&TRANSPORT at 483 Timber Ct,
Chula Vista, CA, County of San Diego,
91911.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Rafael Guerra, 483 Timber
Ct, Chula Vista, CA 91911.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
08/06/2014
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Rafael Guerra
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 27, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-023152
Published: Aug 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/2014
La Prensa San Diego
Fictitious Business Name: HARD KNOX
APPAREL at 4360 Main Street, Suite
202, Chula Vista, CA, County of San Diego, 91911.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Monica Cordero, 2619 Faivre
Street, Chula Vista, CA 91911.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Monica Cordero
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County JUL 29, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-020383
Published: August 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: SUPERIOR DISTRIBUTION AND SALES at 1955 Grove
Ave., San Diego, CA, County of San Diego, 92154.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Jesus Magallon, 1955 Grove
Ave., San Diego, CA 92154.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
08/27/2014
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Jesus Magallon
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 27, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-023187
Published: Aug 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/2014
La Prensa San Diego
Psomas is seeking certified
SLBE/ELBE firms for the City of
San Diego, As-Needed Engineering Consultant Services: 20152017 (Contract Number:
H146292). Requested disciplines include: Structural Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Traffic Engineering and
Geotechnical Engineering.
If qualified, please contact Karen
Santoro at Psomas, 3111 Camino
Del Rio North, Suite 702, San
Diego, CA 92018. Phone (619)
961-2800, Fax (619) 961-2392,
Email: [email protected]
Published: Aug 22, 29, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
REQUESTING BIDS
REQUESTING
PROPOSALS
NOTICE TO POTENTIAL RESPONDENTS
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the City of San Diego will
receive Statements of Qualifications for commodities and services. RFSQ packages can be downloaded from the City of
San Diego’s Bid & Contract Opportunities web page, found at
http://www.sandiego.gov under the Business section.
If you are unable to utilize the online option, RFSQ packages
can be requested by calling the Purchasing & Contracting Department at (619) 236-6000.
Furnish Qualifications for Lease Purchase Funding Services
for Essential City Equipment Purchases through September 25, 2019, as may be required for a period of one (1) year
with options to renew for four (4) additional one (1) year periods.
RFSQ No. 10053250-15-A. RFSQ Initial Closing Date:
September 19, 2014 @ 4:00 p.m.
RFSQ Final Closing Date: September 25, 2018 @ 4:00 p.m.
Published: August 29, 2014
La Prensa, San Diego
Notice is hereby given that the San Diego Unified School District, acting by and through its governing board, will receive
sealed bids for the furnishing of all labor, materials, transportation, equipment, and services for:
REMOVAL OR DEMOLITION OF PORTABLE BUILDINGS
ON AN AS-NEEDED BASIS (IDIQ)
A mandatory site visit is scheduled for 9:00 a.m. on SEPTEMBER 4, 2014 in front of the main office at Madison High
School, 4833 Doliva Drive, San Diego, CA 92117. PLEASE SEE
BID FOR DETAILS. (No.CZ-15-0289-29)
All bids must be received at or before 1:00 p.m. on SEPTEMBER 18, 2014, at the Strategic Sourcing and Contracts Department, 2351 Cardinal Lane, Bldg. M, San Diego, CA 92123,
at which time bids will be publicly opened and read aloud.
The project is for a not-to-exceed value of $1.8 million annually. This project is a PSA project and requires prequalification.
The District requires that Bidders possess any of the following
classification(s) of California State Contractors License(s), valid
and in good standing, at the time of bid opening and contract
award: B or C-21.
All late bids shall be deemed non-responsive and not opened.
Each bid shall be in accordance with all terms, conditions, plans,
specifications and any other documents that comprise the bid
package. The Bid and Contract Documents are available in three
formats, hard copy, CD, or online from Plan Well. Hard copy
bid documents are available at American Reprographics Company (ARC), 1200 4th Avenue (4th and B Street), San Diego,
CA 92101, phone number 619-232-8440, for a refundable payment of Two Hundred Dollars ($200) per set; CD’s are available
for a non-refundable charge of $50. Payments shall be made
by check payable to SAN DIEGO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT.
If the payment for Bid and Contract Documents is refundable,
refunds will be processed by the District only if the Bid and
Contract Documents, including all addendums, are returned intact and in good order to ARC within ten (10) days of the issuance of the Final Bid Tabulation. Online documents are available for download free of charge on PlanWell through ARC.
Go to www.crplanwell.com, click on Public Planroom,
search SDUSD (Questions? 714-434-8525). All bids shall
be submittedon bid forms furnished by the District in the
bid package beginning August 26, 2014. Bid packages will
not be faxed.
As of January 1, 2012, the San Diego Unified School District no
longer administers the in-house Labor Compliance Program for
all new construction projects. Prevailing wage requirements will
still apply to all public works projects and must be followed per
Article 18 of the General Conditions of this bid.
WAGES: The Director of the Department of Industrial Relations
has determined the general prevailing rate of per diem wages in
the locality in which this public work is to be performed for each
craft, classification, or type of worker needed to execute the
contract. Copies of that determination are available at the
District’s Labor Compliance Office for interested parties upon
request; or may be found on the internet at: http://
www.dir.ca.gov/DLSR/PWD. It shall be mandatory upon the
contractor to whom this contract is awarded and upon any subcontractor under him to pay not less than the said specified
rates to all laborers, workmen, and mechanics employed by them
in the execution of the contract.
PROJECT STABILIZATION AGREEMENT (PSA): This project is
subject to the Project Stabilization Agreement (PSA) adopted by
the Board of Education on July 28, 2009. The complete agreement is available for viewing and downloading at www.sandi.net
- Proposition S & Z.
DISABLED VETERAN BUSINESS ENTERPRISE PARTICIPATION PROGRAM: Pursuant to Resolution In Support of Service
Disabled Veterans Owned Businesses (SDVOB) and Disabled
Veteran Business Enterprises (DVBE) approved on May 10, 2011
by the Board of Education, the Bidder is required to satisfy a
minimum DVBE participation percentage of at least three percent (3%) for this project. In compliance with this Program,
the Bidder shall satisfy all requirements enumerated in the bid
package.
Each bid must be submitted on the Bid Form provided in the bid
package and shall be accompanied by a satisfactory bid security in the form of either a bid bond executed by the bidder and
Surety Company, or a certified or cashier’s check in favor of
the San Diego Unified School District, in an amount equal to ten
percent (10%) of their bid value. Said bid security shall be given
to guarantee that the Bidder will execute the contract as specified, within five (5) working days of notification by the District.
The District reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to
waive any irregularities or informalities in any bids or in the bidding. No bidder may withdraw his bid for a period of 120 days
after the date set for the opening of bids. For information regarding bidding, please call 858-522-5831.
Pre-Qualification of Bidders: Pursuant to Public Contract
Code 20111.6, ALL PRIME CONTRACTORS (A or B license)
AND ALL MECHANICAL, ELECTRICAL, AND PLUMBING (MEP)
SUBCONTRACTORS HOLDING ANY OF THE CLASSIFICATIONS LISTED BELOW MUST BE PRE-QUALIFIED TO BID
ON THIS PROJECT: A, B, C4, C7, C10, C16, C20, C34, C36,
C38, C42, C43, and/or C46. If you are not already pre-qualified please begin the process now. You can apply online
by going to https://prequal.sandi.net or contact Glenda
Burbery at [email protected] to request a pre-qualification questionnaire. Completed questionnaires must be submitted to the District no later than 10 business days before
the bid opening due date. Any questionnaires submitted
later than this deadline will not be processed for this Invitation for Bids. The District encourages all general contractors bidding as a prime contractor, and all MEP subcontractors to request a questionnaire, complete it and submit it as soon as possible.
SAN DIEGO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
Arthur S. Hanby, Jr., CPPO, C.P.M., CPPB, A.P.P
Strategic Sourcing and Contracts Officer
Strategic Sourcing and Contracts Dept
Published: August 29, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
NOTICE TO INVESTMENT BANKING &
UNDERWRITING FIRMS
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL/QUALIFICATION (RFP)
NO. 1415-142
Notice is hereby given by the Southwestern Community College District of San Diego County, California, hereinafter referred to as the District, acting by and through its Governing
Board, will receive up to, but not later than 10:00 a.m. on the 12th
day of September 2014, responses to this Request for Proposal
(RFP) for Investment Banking & Underwriting Services for the
Southwestern Community College District.
Responses shall be received in the Office of Procurement, Central Services & Risk Management, Room 1651 located at 900
Otay Lakes Road, Chula Vista, CA 91910, on the date and at
the time stated above.
All responses to this RFP shall conform and be responsive to
the RFP, including its attachments/addenda.
All interested Firms may request a copy of this RFP by e-mailing [email protected], calling 619-482-6481 or visiting the
District’s Web-Site at www.swccd.edu/procurement. Any requests for information may be directed to Priya Jerome, Director of Procurement, Central Services and Risk Management by
e-mailing [email protected] no later than 2:00 PM on September 5, 2014.
Melinda Nish, Ed.D.
Secretary of the Governing Board
Southwestern Community College District
of San Diego, California
Published: Aug. 29, Sep 5, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
CIUDAD DE OCEANSIDE
AVISO DE NOMINADOS PARA CARGO PÚBLICO
AVISO DE NOMINADOS PARA CARGOS
PÚBLICOS
SE NOTIFICA POR MEDIO DEL PRESENTE que las siguientes
personas han sido nominadas para el cargo que se indica a
continuación a ser ocupado en la Elección Municipal General que
se llevará a cabo en la Ciudad de Oceanside el martes, 4 de
noviembre de 2014.
Para Miembro del Concejo de la Ciudad
Vote Por No Más De Dos
Chuck Lowery
Dana Corso
Robert Tran
Gary Felien
Jerome M. “Jerry” Kern
Fechado: 18 de agosto de 2014
Zack Beck
Secretario de la Ciudad/Funcionario Electoral de la Ciudad
Publicado: Agosto 29, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
POR MEDIO DE LA PRESENTE SE NOTIFICA que las siguientes
personas han sido nominadas para los cargos designados a ser
ocupados en la Elección Municipal General a llevarse a cabo en
la Ciudad de Imperial Beach el martes, 4 de noviembre de 2014.
Para Alcalde: Vote por Uno
Jim Janney
Serge Dedina
Para Miembro del Concejo Municipal: Vote por Dos
Ed Spriggs
Elizabeth Saldaña
Erika Lowery
Lorie Bragg
Valerie K. Acevez
Jim King
Fechado: 28 de agosto de 2014
Jacqueline M. Hald, MMC
Secretaria de la Ciudad
Publicado: Agosto 29, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
AVISO DE NOMINADOS PARA CARGOS
PÚBLICOS
CIUDAD DE SANTEE
POR MEDIO DE LA PRESENTE SE NOTIFICA que las siguientes
personas han sido nominadas para los cargos designados a ser
ocupados en la Elección Municipal General a llevarse a cabo en
la Ciudad de Santee el martes, 4 de noviembre de 2014.
Para Miembro del Concejo Municipal
Vote por no más de tres (3)
Hall, Ronn
Acerra, Maggie
McNelis, Rob
Minto, John
Damoor, Keshav
PATSY BELL, CMC
SECRETARIA DE LA CIUDAD
Fechado: 19 de agosto de 2014
Publicado: Agosto 29, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
CIUDAD DE POWAY
AVISO DE NOMINADOS PARA
CARGOS PÚBLICOS
Elección Municipal General del 4 de
noviembre de 2014
POR MEDIO DE LA PRESENTE SE NOTIFICA que las siguientes
personas han sido nominadas para los cargos designados a ser
ocupados en la Elección Municipal General a llevarse a cabo en
la Ciudad de Poway el martes, 4 de noviembre de 2014.
Para Alcalde
Vote por uno
Don Higginson
Steve Vaus
Para Miembros del
Vote por no más de dos
Concejo Municipal
Christopher Olps
Dave Grosch
John Mullin
Sheila R. Cobian, CMC, Secretaria de la Ciudad
Ciudad de Poway
13325 Civic Center Drive
Poway, CA 92064
858-668-4530
Fechado: 18 de agosto de 2014
Publicado: Agosto 29, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
AVISO DE NOMINADOS PARA CARGO PÚBLICO
SE NOTIFICA POR MEDIO DEL PRESENTE que las siguientes
personas han sido nominadas para los cargos designados a ser
ocupados en la Elección Municipal General que se llevará a cabo
en la Ciudad de Coronado, el martes, 4 de noviembre de 2014.
PARA MIEMBRO DEL CONCEJO DE LA CIUDAD
Vote por no más de dos (2)
BILL SANDKE
ANGELA ALVAREZ
CARRIE ANNE DOWNEY
El Día de la Elección, los lugares de votación estarán abiertos
entre las 7 a.m. y las 8 p.m.
Por: Mary L. Clifford, Secretaria de la Ciudad
Publicado: Agosto 29. 2014
La Prensa San Diego
REQUESTING BIDS REQUESTING BIDS
La Prensa San Diego
is on the web:
laprensa-sandiego.org
facebook.com/LaPrensaSD
REQUESTING BIDS
Orion/Balboa Construction Joint Venture is soliciting bids
for the City of San Diego’s University Avenue Pipeline Replacement Project (Bid No. K-15-5716-DBB-3). We are requesting solicitations from the following SLBE/ELBE/DBE/DVBE/
MBE/WBE/OBE subcontractors and suppliers: Slurry Seal, AC
Paving, Striping, Site Concrete, Trenchless Pipe Installation, Landscaping/Earthwork, Traffic Control, Archaeo/Paleo Monitoring,
Traffic Loops, Piping Materials, Aggregates, Special Inspection
/ Testing, Trucking, Community Liaison. Bid Date/Time: October 2nd, 2014 @ 2:00PM. Plans, specs, and project requirements are available at no cost and may be viewed at our office
at 2185 La Mirada Drive, Vista, CA 92081. Orion/Balboa Construction JV is willing to set aside any portion of work, no matter
how small, to encourage SLBE/ELBE/DVBE/MBE/WBE/OBE
participation. Assistance will be made available to help selected
firms in obtaining equipment, supplies, materials, bonding, lines
of credit, and insurance. Interested bidders, please contact the
Orion Construction estimating department at 760-597-9660.
Published: August 29, 2014
La Prensa San Diego
PAGE 9
AUGUST 29, 2014
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
*** LEGALS *** 619-425-7400 *** CLASSIFIEDS ***
SUMMONS
SUMMONS
CHANGE OF NAME
SUMMONS - (Family Law)
una copia de estas órdenes puede
hacerlas acatar en cualquier lugar de
California.
FEE WAIVER: If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the clerk for a fee waiver
form. The court may order you to pay back
all or part of the fees and costs that the
court you waived for you or the other
party.
EXENCIÓN DE CUOTAS: Si no puede
pagar la cuota de presentación, pida al
secretario un formulario de exención de
cuotas. La corte puede ordenar que usted
pague, ya sea en parte o por completo,
las cuotas y costos de la corte
previamente exentos a petición de usted
o de la otra parte.
1. The name and address of the court is:
El nombre y dirección de la corte son:
Superior Court of California, 325 S
Melrose Drive, Vista, CA 92081.
2. The name, address, and telephone
number of petitioner's attorney, or the petitioner without an attorney, are:
(El nombre, dirección y número de
teléfono del abogado del demandante, o
del demandante si no tiene abogado,
son): Yeimi Carreon, 435 Alturas Rd.
Apt.#108, Fallbrook, CA 92028. Tel.#:
760-586-2848
Date (Fecha): JUL 3, 2014
Clerk, by (Secretario, por) T. ANGULO,
Deputy (Asistente)
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
KHANH HUYNH
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above
must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at
least two court days before the matter is
scheduled to be heard and must appear
at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written
objection is timely filed, the court may
grant the petition without a hearing.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Date: OCT-03-2014. Time: 8:30 a.m. Dept.:
C46. The address of the court is Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, 220 West Broadway, San Diego, CA
92101
A Copy of this Order to Show Cause
shall be published at least once each
week for four successive weeks prior to
the date set for hearing on the petition in
the following newspaper of general circulation printed in this county La Prensa
San Diego, 651 Third Avenue, Suite C,
Chula Vista, CA 91910
Date: AUG 19, 2014
DAVID J. DANIELSEN
Judge of the Superior Court
Published: August 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
CASE NUMBER: DN 179585
NOTICE TO RESPONDENT:
AVISO AL DEMANDADO:
ALFONSO PEDRO CANO GUZMAN
You are being sued.
Lo están demandando.
PETITIONER'S NAME IS:
NOMBRE DEL DEMANDANTE:
SATURNINA AGUILAR RODRIGUEZ
You have 30 calendar days after this
Summons and Petition are served on
you to file a Response (form FL-120 or
FL-123) at the court and have a copy
served on the petitioner. A letter or phone
call will not protect you.
If you do not file your Response on time,
the court may make orders affecting your
marriage or domestic partnership, your
property and custody of your children.
You may be ordered to pay support and
attorney fees and costs. If you cannot
pay the filing fee, ask the clerk for a fee
waiver form.
For legal advice, contact a lawyer immediately. You can get information about
finding lawyers at the California Courts
Online Self-Help Center (www.
court.ca.gov/self help), at the California
Legal Services Web site (www.law
helpcalifornia.org), or by contacting your
local county bar association.
Tiene 30 días de calendario después
de haber recibido la entrega legal de esta
Citación y Petición para presentar una
Respuesta (formulario FL-120 ó FL-123)
ante la corte y efectuar la entrega legal
de una copia al demandante. Una carta
o llamada telefónica no basta para
protegerlo.
Si no presenta su Respuesta a tiempo,
la corte puede dar órdenes que afecten
su matrimonio o pareja de hecho, sus
bienes y la custodia de sus hijos. La
corte también le puede ordenar que
pague manutención, y honorarios y
costos legales. Si no puede pagar la
cuota de presentación, pida al secretario
un formulario de exención de cuotas.
Si desea obtener asesoramiento legal,
póngase en contacto de inmediato con
un abogado. Puede obtener información
para encontrar a un abogado en el Centro
de Ayuda de las Cortes de California
(www.sucorte. ca.gov), en el sitio Web de
los Servicios Legales de California
(www.lawhelpcalifornia.org) o poniéndose
en contacto con el colegio de abogados
de su condado.
NOTICE-RESTRAINING ORDERS ARE
ON PAGE 2: These restraining orders are
effective against both spouses or domestic partners until the petition is dismissed, a judgment is entered, or the
court makes further orders. They are enforceable anywhere in California by any
law enforcement office who has received
or seen a copy of them.
AVISO-LAS
ÓRDENES
DE
RESTRICCIÓN SE ENCUENTRAN EN
LA PÁGINA 2: Las órdenes de
restricción están en vigencia en cuanto
ambos cónyuges o miembros de la pareja
de hecho hasta que se despida la
petición, se emita un fallo o la corte dé
otras órdenes. Cualquier agencia del
orden público que haya recibido o visto
una copia de estas órdenes puede
hacerlas acatar en cualquier lugar de
California.
FEE WAIVER: If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the clerk for a fee waiver
form. The court may order you to pay back
all or part of the fees and costs that the
court you waived for you or the other
party.
EXENCIÓN DE CUOTAS: Si no puede
pagar la cuota de presentación, pida al
secretario un formulario de exención de
cuotas. La corte puede ordenar que usted
pague, ya sea en parte o por completo,
las cuotas y costos de la corte
previamente exentos a petición de usted
o de la otra parte.
1. The name and address of the court is:
El nombre y dirección de la corte son:
Superior Court of California, 325 S
Melrose Drive, Vista, CA 92083.
2. The name, address, and telephone
number of petitioner's attorney, or the petitioner without an attorney, are:
(El nombre, dirección y número de
teléfono del abogado del demandante, o
del demandante si no tiene abogado,
son): Saturnina Aguilar Rodriguez, 257 N
Cedar Street, Escondido, CA 92025.
Tel#: 760-522-0315
Date (Fecha): JUL 3, 2014
Clerk, by (Secretario, por) J.
BERGERON, Deputy (Asistente)
Published: Aug 15, 22, 29. Sept 5/2014
La Prensa San Diego
SUMMONS - (Family Law)
CASE NUMBER: DN 177352
NOTICE TO RESPONDENT:
AVISO AL DEMANDADO:
JORDAN CARREON REYES
You are being sued.
Lo están demandando.
PETITIONER'S NAME IS:
NOMBRE DEL DEMANDANTE:
YEIMI CARREON
You have 30 calendar days after this
Summons and Petition are served on
you to file a Response (form FL-120 or
FL-123) at the court and have a copy
served on the petitioner. A letter or phone
call will not protect you.
If you do not file your Response on time,
the court may make orders affecting your
marriage or domestic partnership, your
property and custody of your children.
You may be ordered to pay support and
attorney fees and costs. If you cannot
pay the filing fee, ask the clerk for a fee
waiver form.
For legal advice, contact a lawyer immediately. You can get information about
finding lawyers at the California Courts
Online Self-Help Center (www.
court.ca.gov/self help), at the California
Legal Services Web site (www.law
helpcalifornia.org), or by contacting your
local county bar association.
Tiene 30 días de calendario después
de haber recibido la entrega legal de esta
Citación y Petición para presentar una
Respuesta (formulario FL-120 ó FL-123)
ante la corte y efectuar la entrega legal
de una copia al demandante. Una carta
o llamada telefónica no basta para
protegerlo.
Si no presenta su Respuesta a tiempo,
la corte puede dar órdenes que afecten
su matrimonio o pareja de hecho, sus
bienes y la custodia de sus hijos. La
corte también le puede ordenar que
pague manutención, y honorarios y
costos legales. Si no puede pagar la
cuota de presentación, pida al secretario
un formulario de exención de cuotas.
Si desea obtener asesoramiento legal,
póngase en contacto de inmediato con
un abogado. Puede obtener información
para encontrar a un abogado en el Centro
de Ayuda de las Cortes de California
(www.sucorte. ca.gov), en el sitio Web de
los Servicios Legales de California
(www.lawhelpcalifornia.org) o poniéndose
en contacto con el colegio de abogados
de su condado.
NOTICE-RESTRAINING ORDERS ARE
ON PAGE 2: These restraining orders are
effective against both spouses or domestic partners until the petition is dismissed, a judgment is entered, or the
court makes further orders. They are enforceable anywhere in California by any
law enforcement office who has received
or seen a copy of them.
AVISO-LAS
ÓRDENES
DE
RESTRICCIÓN SE ENCUENTRAN EN
LA PÁGINA 2: Las órdenes de
restricción están en vigencia en cuanto
ambos cónyuges o miembros de la pareja
de hecho hasta que se despida la
petición, se emita un fallo o la corte dé
otras órdenes. Cualquier agencia del
orden público que haya recibido o visto
CHANGE OF NAME
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER:
37-2014-00026676-CU-PT-CTL
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: ADELINA SOTO AND
FERNANDO PADILLA ON BEHALF OF
A MINOR filed a petition with this court
for a decree changing names as follows:
ANADELI SOTO PADILLA to ANADELI
PADILLA-SOTO
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above
must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at
least two court days before the matter is
scheduled to be heard and must appear
at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written
objection is timely filed, the court may
grant the petition without a hearing.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Date: SEPT-26-2014. Time: 9:30 a.m.
Dept.: 46. The address of the court is Superior Court of California, County of San
Diego, 220 West Broadway, San Diego,
CA 92101
A Copy of this Order to Show Cause
shall be published at least once each
week for four successive weeks prior to
the date set for hearing on the petition in
the following newspaper of general circulation printed in this county La Prensa
San Diego, 651 Third Avenue, Suite C,
Chula Vista, CA 91910
Date: AUG 11, 2014
DAVID J. DANIELSEN
Judge of the Superior Court
Published: Aug 15, 22, 29. Sept. 5/2014
La Prensa San Diego
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER:
37-2014-00027187-CU-PT-CTL
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: ANDREA IZAMARY
ESCOBAR CONTRETRAS ON BEHALF
OF MINOR GRETTA ISABELLA
GUADALUPE filed a petition with this
court for a decree changing names as follows:
GRETTA ISABELLA GUADALUPE
ESCOBAR to GRETTA ISABELLA
ESCOBAR
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above
must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at
least two court days before the matter is
scheduled to be heard and must appear
at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written
objection is timely filed, the court may
grant the petition without a hearing.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Date: SEPT-26-2014. Time: 8:30 a.m.
Dept.: 46. The address of the court is Superior Court of California, County of San
Diego, 220 West Broadway, San Diego,
CA 92101
A Copy of this Order to Show Cause
shall be published at least once each
week for four successive weeks prior to
the date set for hearing on the petition in
the following newspaper of general circulation printed in this county La Prensa
San Diego, 651 Third Avenue, Suite C,
Chula Vista, CA 91910
Date: SEP 22, 2014
DAVID J. DANIELSEN
Judge of the Superior Court
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER:
37-2014-00028285-CU-PT-CTL
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: NAHARA JANESSY GALVANACEVEDO filed a petition with this court
for a decree changing names as follows:
NAHARA JANESSY GALVANACEVEDO to NAHARA JANESSY
SANCHEZ-GALVAN
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above
must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at
least two court days before the matter is
scheduled to be heard and must appear
at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written
objection is timely filed, the court may
grant the petition without a hearing.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Date: OCT-10-2014. Time: 8:30 a.m. Dept.:
46. The address of the court is Superior
Court of California, County of San Diego,
220 West Broadway, San Diego, CA
92101
A Copy of this Order to Show Cause
shall be published at least once each
week for four successive weeks prior to
the date set for hearing on the petition in
the following newspaper of general circulation printed in this county La Prensa
San Diego, 651 Third Avenue, Suite C,
Chula Vista, CA 91910
Date: AUG 22, 2014
DAVID J. DANIELSEN
Judge of the Superior Court
Published: August 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER:
37-2014-00027776-CU-PT-CTL
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: MINH THY KHANH HUYNH
filed a petition with this court for a decree
changing names as follows:
MINH THY KHANH HUYNH to CATHY
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER:
37-2014-00028515-CU-PT-CTL
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: DELIA TAPIZ ON BEHALF
OF MINOR JUAN GANDARA filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows:
JUAN TAPIZ GANDARA to JUAN
GANDARA TAPIZ
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above
must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at
least two court days before the matter is
scheduled to be heard and must appear
at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written
objection is timely filed, the court may
grant the petition without a hearing.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Date: OCT-17-2014. Time: 8:30 a.m. Dept.:
46. The address of the court is Superior
Court of California, County of San Diego,
220 West Broadway, San Diego, CA
92101
A Copy of this Order to Show Cause
shall be published at least once each
week for four successive weeks prior to
the date set for hearing on the petition in
the following newspaper of general circulation printed in this county La Prensa
San Diego, 651 Third Avenue, Suite C,
Chula Vista, CA 91910
Date: AUG 25, 2014
DAVID J. DANIELSEN
Judge of the Superior Court
Published: August 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
ABANDONMENT OF
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT OF
ABANDONMENT OF USE
OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME
Fictitious Business Name: OPTIMUM INDEPENDENT LIVING, 330 Osage St.,
Spring Valley, CA, County of San Diego,
91977.
The Fictitious Business Name referred to
above was filed in San Diego County on:
04-16-2012, and assigned File No. 2013011338
Is Abandoned by The Following Registrant: Adoracion C. Iglesia, 2965 Pointe
Parkway, Spring Valley, CA 91977
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct.
Signature of Registrant: Adoracion C.
Iglesia
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 15, 2014
Assigned File No.: 2014-022077
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept. 5,12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: CECILIA’S FAMILY BARBER SHOP at 985 Broadway
Suite F, Chula Vista, CA, County of San
Diego, 91911.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Efren Anguiano, 3263 Tequila Way, San Ysidro, CA 92173.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A.
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Efren Anguiano
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County JUL 31, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-020577
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: VIRIANA’S
BEAUTY SHOP at 665 H St. Suite F,
Chula Vista, CA, County of San Diego,
91910. Mailing Address: 1674 Palm Ave.
Spc. 72, San Diego, CA 92154.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: 1. Soledad G. Lopez, 1674
Palm Ave. Spc. 72, San Diego, CA
92154. 2. Denise Garcia. 4023 Peterlynn
Ct., San Diego, CA 92154
This Business is Conducted By A General Partnership:. The First Day of Business Was: 07/29/2014
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Soledad G. Lopez
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County JUL 29, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-020366
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: WEST COAST
FENCE CO. at 9538 Summerfield #C,
Spring Valley, CA, County of San Diego,
91977.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Javier Hernandez, 9538
Summerfield #C,, Spring Valley, CA
91977.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
01/01/2007
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Javier Hernandez
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County JUL 17, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-019329
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: ROSITA’S DELI
at 1811 L Ave., National City, CA, County
of San Diego, 91950.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Rosa Espinoza, 1822 L Ave.,
National City, CA 91950
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
08/05/2014.
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Rosa Espinoza
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
NAME STATEMENT
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
Fictitious Business Name: DISPRO SAN of San Diego County AUG 05, 2014.
DIEGO at 1655 Dahlia Ave., San Diego, Assigned File No.: 2014-020933
CA, County of San Diego, 92154.
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
This Business Is Registered by the La Prensa San Diego
Following: Claudia Albilene Garcia,
1655 Dahlia Ave., San Diego, CA 92154.
This Business is Conducted By: An InFICTITIOUS BUSINESS
dividual. The First Day of Business Was:
NAME STATEMENT
N/A.
I declare that all information in this state- Fictitious Business Name: SAN DIEGO
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who CONST. SERVICE at 2840 Ridge View
declares as true any material matter pur- Dr., San Diego, CA, County of San Diego,
suant to section 17913 of the Business 92105.
and Professions code that the registrant This Business Is Registered by the
knows to be false is guilty of a misde- Following: 1. Oscar Salcedo, 2921
meanor punishable by a fine not to ex- Leonard St., National City, CA 91950. 2.
Luis Llamas, 2840 Ridge View Dr., San
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Claudia Abilene Garcia Diego, CA 92105
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest This Business is Conducted By: A GenJ. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk eral Partnership. The First Day of Business Was: 05/10/2006.
of San Diego County JUL 11, 2014.
I declare that all information in this stateAssigned File No.: 2014-018717
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
declares as true any material matter purLa Prensa San Diego
suant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
knows to be false is guilty of a misdeNAME STATEMENT
meanor punishable by a fine not to exFictitious Business Name: PARADISE ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
HOUSE CLEANING at 453 Tram Place, Registrant Name: Oscar Salcedo
Chula Vista, CA, County of San Diego, This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
91910.
This Business Is Registered by the of San Diego County AUG 05, 2014.
Following: Patricia Nuñez, 453 Tram Assigned File No.: 2014-020923
Place, Chula Vista, CA 91910.
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
This Business is Conducted By: An In- La Prensa San Diego
dividual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
I declare that all information in this stateNAME STATEMENT
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pur- Fictitious Business Name: a. SENOR
suant to section 17913 of the Business MANGOS b. LEON PRODUCE at 4607
and Professions code that the registrant 30th St., San Diego, CA, County of San
knows to be false is guilty of a misde- Diego, 92116.
meanor punishable by a fine not to ex- This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Senor Mangos Inc, 4607 30th
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
St., San Diego, CA 92116. If corporation
Registrant Name: Patricia Nuñez
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest or LLC: California
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk This Business is Conducted By: A Corporation. The First Day of Business Was:
of San Diego County JUL 31, 2014.
07/01/2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-020614
I declare that all information in this statePublished: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who
La Prensa San Diego
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
and Professions code that the registrant
NAME STATEMENT
knows to be false is guilty of a misdeFictitious Business Name: a. TALENT MU- meanor punishable by a fine not to exSIC GROUP INC. b. TALENT MUSIC ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
PUBLISHING GROUP. c. TALENT MU- Registrant Name: Armando Leon. Title:
SIC PROMOTIONS GROUP. d. TMG Secretary
PROMOTIONS GROUP e. TMG PUB- This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
LISHING GROUP. f. TMG INC. g. TMG J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
RECORDS GROUP. h. TALENT MUSIC of San Diego County AUG 05, 2014.
RECORD GROUP at 2075 Ocean View Assigned File No.: 2014-020984
Blvd., San Diego, CA, County of San Di- Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
ego, 92113.
La Prensa San Diego
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Talent Music Group Inc.,
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
2075 Ocean View Blvd., San Diego, CA
NAME STATEMENT
92113. If corporation or LLC: California.
This Business is Conducted By: A Cor- Fictitious Business Name: MD’S IMMIGRAporation. The First Day of Business Was: TION SOLUTIONS at 9659 San Diego
Street, Spring Valley, CA, County of San
02/01/1998.
I declare that all information in this state- Diego, 91977.
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who This Business Is Registered by the
declares as true any material matter pur- Following: Mirtha Davila, 9659 San Disuant to section 17913 of the Business ego Street, Spring Valley, CA 91977
and Professions code that the registrant This Business is Conducted By: An Inknows to be false is guilty of a misde- dividual. The First Day of Business Was:
meanor punishable by a fine not to ex- N/A.
I declare that all information in this stateceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Ramon Verduzco ment is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter purMartinez. Title: CEO
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest suant to section 17913 of the Business
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdeof San Diego County JUL 29, 2014.
meanor punishable by a fine not to exAssigned File No.: 2014-020325
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
Registrant Name: Mirtha Davila
La Prensa San Diego
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
of San Diego County JUL 30, 2014.
NAME STATEMENT
Assigned File No.: 2014-020477
Fictitious Business Name: ENDLESS Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
LOVE FAMILY CHILD CARE at 555 La Prensa San Diego
Naples St. 211, Chula Vista, CA, County
of San Diego, 91911.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
This Business Is Registered by the
NAME STATEMENT
Following: Heydi Alvizures, 555 Naples
Fictitious Business Name: R&C PAINTING
St. 211, Chula Vista, CA 91911
This Business is Conducted By: An In- AND WALL COVERING at 1012 E 1st
dividual. The First Day of Business Was: St., National City, CA, County of San Diego, 91950.
N/A.
I declare that all information in this state- This Business Is Registered by the
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who Following: Hector F. Lerigeth-Soto, 1012
declares as true any material matter pur- E 1st St., National City, CA 91950
suant to section 17913 of the Business This Business is Conducted By: An Inand Professions code that the registrant dividual. The First Day of Business Was:
knows to be false is guilty of a misde- N/A.
meanor punishable by a fine not to ex- I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
declares as true any material matter purRegistrant Name: Heydi Alvizures
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest suant to section 17913 of the Business
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdeof San Diego County JUL 31, 2014.
meanor punishable by a fine not to exAssigned File No.: 2014-020635
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
Registrant Name: Hector F. Lerigeth-Soto
La Prensa San Diego
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
of San Diego County JUL 18, 2014.
NAME STATEMENT
Assigned File No.: 2014-019491
Fictitious Business Name: RITA MCQUEEN Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
INTERNATIONAL at 1115 Calle Mesita, La Prensa San Diego
Bonita, CA, County of San Diego, 91902.
This Business Is Registered by the
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
Following: Shannon Ewalt, 1115 Calle
NAME STATEMENT
Mesita, Bonita, CA 91902
This Business is Conducted By: An In- Fictitious Business Name: BOUT THAT
dividual. The First Day of Business Was: LIFT at 367 E. Emerson St., Chula Vista,
CA, County of San Diego, 91911.
07/25/2014.
I declare that all information in this state- This Business Is Registered by the
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who Following: Michael Esquer, 367 E.
declares as true any material matter pur- Emerson St., Chula Vista, CA 91911.
suant to section 17913 of the Business This Business is Conducted By: An Inand Professions code that the registrant dividual. The First Day of Business Was:
knows to be false is guilty of a misde- N/A.
meanor punishable by a fine not to ex- I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
declares as true any material matter purRegistrant Name: Shannon Ewalt
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest suant to section 17913 of the Business
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdeof San Diego County JUL 28, 2014.
meanor punishable by a fine not to exAssigned File No.: 2014-020224
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Published: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
Registrant Name: Michael Esquer
La Prensa San Diego
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
of San Diego County JUL 21, 2014.
NAME STATEMENT
Assigned File No.: 2014-019538
Fictitious Business Name: ARTISTS BAR- Published: August 15, 22, 29. SeptemBERSHOP at 433 E. Main St., El Cajon, ber 5/2014
CA, County of San Diego, 92020.
La Prensa San Diego
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Samr Yousif, 322 S. Anza St.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
#1, El Cajon, CA 92020.
NAME STATEMENT
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was: Fictitious Business Name: GRACYS
CLEANING SERVICE at 1465 Elder Ave.
08/01/2014.
I declare that all information in this state- Apt. #L, San Diego, CA, County of San
ment is true and correct. (A registrant who Diego, 92154.
declares as true any material matter pur- This Business Is Registered by the
suant to section 17913 of the Business Following: Graciela I. Cesar, 1465 Eland Professions code that the registrant der Ave. Apt. #L, San Diego, CA 92154.
knows to be false is guilty of a misde- This Business is Conducted By: An Inmeanor punishable by a fine not to ex- dividual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A.
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
I declare that all information in this stateRegistrant Name: Samr Yousif
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest ment is true and correct. (A registrant who
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
of San Diego County AUG 04, 2014.
and Professions code that the registrant
Assigned File No.: 2014-020839
knows to be false is guilty of a misdePublished: August 8, 15, 22, 29/2014
meanor punishable by a fine not to exLa Prensa San Diego
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Graciela I. Cesar
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 04, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-020894
Published: August 15, 22, 29. September 5/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: NEXGEN MANAGEMENT SERVICES at 4242 Cindy
Street, San Diego, CA, County of San Diego, 92117.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: 1. Laura Hurtado. 4242 Cindy
Street, San Diego, CA 92117. 2. Marco G.
Galaz, 4242 Cindy Street, San Diego, CA
92117
This Business is Conducted By: Joint
Venture. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A.
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Laura Hurtado. Title:
Principal
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County JUL 18, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-019461
Published: August 15, 22, 29. September 5/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: MIKE’S NEWS
STAND at 3003 Highland Ave. Suite D,
National City, CA, County of San Diego,
91950.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Wassim Sahli, 540 Naples
St. Apt. 15, Chula Vista, CA 91911
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
07/11/2014
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Wassim Sahli
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County JUL 16, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-019158
Published: August 15, 22, 29. September 5/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: a. A.O.K b. ALL
OUT KLOTHING at 1122 Elm Ave.,
Chula Vista, CA, County of San Diego,
91911.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Michael Allen Schenk, 1122
Elm Ave., Chula Vista, CA 91911.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A.
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Michael A. Schenk
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 11, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-021510
Published: August 15, 22, 29. September 5/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: SHOES ROCK
AND SHIRT at 3500 Sports Arena Blvd.,
San Diego, CA, County of San Diego,
92110. Mailing address: P.O Box 120306,
San Diego, CA 92112-0306
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: James Parker, 3996 Broadway, San Diego, CA 92102.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: James Parker
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 13, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-021849
Published: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: CONNECT, INTEGRATED EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM
at 11775 Walnut Road, Lakeside, CA,
County of San Diego, 92040.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Connect, Integrated Employment Program, 11775 Walnut Road,
Lakeside, CA 92040. If corporation or
LLC: California
This Business is Conducted By: A Corporation. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: David Larson. Title:
Executive Officer
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 11, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-021576
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: RANCHO
ISABELLA at 223 Via de San Ysidro
Suite #9, San Ysidro, CA, County of San
Diego, 92173.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Joya Group Inc., 223 Via de
San Ysidro Suite #9, San Ysidro, CA
92173. If corporation or LLC: California
This Business is Conducted By: A Corporation. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Jorge F. Ojeda Garcia.
Title: President
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 14, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-021929
Published: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: MORENO’S
TRUCKING at 9765 Marconi Dr. #104, San
Diego, CA, County of San Diego, 92154.
Mailing address: 2475 Paseo de las
Americas #1004, San Diego, CA 92154
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Oswaldo Basurto Torres,
1241 Santa Cora Ave. Unit #133, Chula
Vista, CA 91913
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
09/01/2005
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Oswaldo Basurto
Torres
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 13, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-021828
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
Fictitious Business Name: DEVIOUS
VAPERS at 1987 Rue Chateau, Chula
Vista, CA, County of San Diego, 91913.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Surreal Developments, LLC,
1987 Rue Chateau, Chula Vista, CA
91913. If Corporation or LLC: California
This Business is Conducted By: A Limited Liability Company. The First Day of
Business Was: N/A.
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Leslie Arcinue. Title:
Manager.
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County JUL 15, 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
Assigned File No.: 2014-019066
NAME STATEMENT
Published: Aug 15, 22, 29. Sepr\t 5/2014 Fictitious Business Name: RD
La Prensa San Diego
CESSNA&ASSOCIATES at 1130 D Street
#9, Ramona, CA, County of San Diego,
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
92065.
NAME STATEMENT
This Business Is Registered by the
Fictitious Business Name: SOUTHWEST Following: Fidelity General Inc., 18155
TRANSPORTATION at 3723 Sunset Ln. Traylor Road, Ramona, CA 92065
#2, San Ysidro, CA, County of San Diego, This Business is Conducted By: A Corporation. The First Day of Business Was:
92173.
This Business Is Registered by the N/A
Following: Severino Barrera, 3723 Sun- I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
set Ln. #2, San Ysidro, CA 92173
This Business is Conducted By: An In- declares as true any material matter purdividual. The First Day of Business Was: suant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
07/01/2014
I declare that all information in this state- knows to be false is guilty of a misdement is true and correct. (A registrant who meanor punishable by a fine not to exdeclares as true any material matter pur- ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
suant to section 17913 of the Business Registrant Name: Kenneth W. Terrill.
and Professions code that the registrant Title: President
knows to be false is guilty of a misde- This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
meanor punishable by a fine not to ex- J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 05, 2014.
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Assigned File No.: 2014-021033
Registrant Name: Severino Barrera
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest Published: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk 2014
of San Diego County AUG 07, 2014.
La Prensa San Diego
Assigned File No.: 2014-021287
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
Published: August 15, 22, 29. SeptemNAME STATEMENT
ber 5/2014
La Prensa San Diego
Fictitious Business Name: RADIANT
SKIN&SPA at 4248 Bonita Rd, Bonita,
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
CA, County of San Diego, 91902. MailNAME STATEMENT
ing address: 730 Edgewater Dr. Unit “D’,
Fictitious Business Name: KALLEN Chula Vista, CA 91913
BOOKS AND PRINTS at 4058 Palm This Business Is Registered by the
Ave., San Diego, CA, County of San Di- Following: Socorro Blake, 730
Edgewater Dr. Unit “D”, Chula Vista, CA
ego, 92154.
This Business Is Registered by the 91913
Following: Karla Allen V., 4058 Palm This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
Ave., San Diego, CA 92154
This Business is Conducted By: An In- N/A
dividual. The First Day of Business Was: I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
N/A
I declare that all information in this state- declares as true any material matter purment is true and correct. (A registrant who suant to section 17913 of the Business
declares as true any material matter pur- and Professions code that the registrant
suant to section 17913 of the Business knows to be false is guilty of a misdeand Professions code that the registrant meanor punishable by a fine not to exknows to be false is guilty of a misde- ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
meanor punishable by a fine not to ex- Registrant Name: Socorro Blake
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
ceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
Registrant Name: Karla Allen V.
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest of San Diego County AUG 13, 2014.
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk Assigned File No.: 2014-021775
of San Diego County AUG 01, 2014.
Published: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/
Assigned File No.: 2014-020764
2014
Published: August 15, 22, 29. Septem- La Prensa San Diego
ber 5/2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
La Prensa San Diego
NAME STATEMENT
laprensa-sandiego.org
facebook.com/LaPrensaSD
Fictitious Business Name: 4 DUDES
BREWERY, LLC at 4555 71st St., Unit
12, La Mesa, CA, County of San Diego,
91942. Mailing address: 111 Woodman
St., San Diego, CA 92114
This Business Is Registered by the
Following:4 Dudes Brewery, LLC, 4555
71st St., Unit 12, La Mesa, CA 91942
This Business is Conducted By: A Limited Liability Company. The First Day of
Business Was: 07/01/2014
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Fernando J. Moscoso.
Title: Member
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 15, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-022111
Published: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: CONDE INDEPENDENT LIVING at 2965 Point Parkway, Spring Valley, CA, County of San Diego, 91977.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Adoracion C. Iglesia, 2965
Point Parkway, Spring Valley, CA 91977.
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
08/01/2014
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Adoracion C. Iglesia
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 15, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-022078
Published: Augt 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: UNI
SUSHI&CATHERING at 430 J St., Chula
Vista, CA, County of San Diego, 91910.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: 1. Miguel A. Alatorre De Hijar,
430 J St., Chula Vista, CA 91910. 2.
Sonia Coronado, 430 J St., Chula Vista,
CA 91910
This Business is Conducted By: A Married Couple. The First Day of Business
Was: N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Sonia Coronado
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 18, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-022195
Published: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: ESPINOSA’S
CARPET CLEANING at 2626 Menlo Ave.,
San Diego, CA, County of San Diego,
92105.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Braulio Espinosa, 2626
Menlo Ave., San Diego, CA 92105
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Braulio Espinosa
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 07, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-021311
Published: Augt 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: ALEXIS CAKE
HOUSE at 2696 Elm Ave., San Diego,
CA, County of San Diego, 92154.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Susana Jimenez, 2696 Elm
Ave., San Diego, CA 92154
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Susana Jimenez
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 18, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-022216
Published: August 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/
2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: BE YOUR OWN
DESTINEY at 763 Cassia Place, Chula
Vista, CA, County of San Diego, 91910.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Dania Destiney Lyric
Davidson, 763 Cassia Place, Chula
Vista, CA 91910
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Dania Destiney Lyric
Davidson
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 15, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-022005
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Fictitious Business Name: CLEAN MASTER JANITORIAL at 184 5th Av., Chula
Vista, CA, County of San Diego, 91910.
This Business Is Registered by the
Following: Marissa Rodriquez. 184 5th
Av., Chula Vista, CA 91910
This Business is Conducted By: An Individual. The First Day of Business Was:
N/A
I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who
declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business
and Professions code that the registrant
knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars [$1,000].)
Registrant Name: Marissa Rodriguez
This Statement Was Filed With Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk
of San Diego County AUG 15, 2014.
Assigned File No.: 2014-022319
Published: Aug 22, 29. Sept. 5, 12/2014
La Prensa San Diego
PAGE 10
AUGUST 29, 2012
LA PRENSA SAN DIEGO
Tecate de fiesta: 70 años de éxito en Baja California
Por Citlalli Rodríguez
La cerveza que lleva el
nombre de uno de los 5 municipios de Baja California:
Tecate celebra este año su 70
aniversario de la exitosa fundación en esta localidad con
una serie de eventos que
resaltan la belleza y atractivos
turísticos de lo que comenzó
siendo solamente un par de
rancherías entre las formaciones rocosas del lugar.
Tecate, municipio declarado
en el 2012 como pueblo mágico por la Secretaria de
Turismo, tiene el honor de llevar
el nombre de la cerveza que lo
ha puesto en la mira internacional con la exitosa bebida.
La planta cervecera que lleva
el nombre de Cuauhtémoc
Moctezuma fue inaugurada por
el empresario Don Alberto
Aldrete en el año de 1944, por
ello, este 2014 será un año de
celebración para la cervecería
y lo festeja con una serie de
eventos por todo México, y la
mejor manera de hacerlo es
comenzar con abrir las puertas
de su casa, el lugar donde se
originó la internacional cerveza: la planta de operaciones
en Tecate, Baja California.
Posteriormente diversas actividades que van desde concierto,
box, comida y exposiciones de
arte en galería.
En una extensa visita turística ofrecida por la cervecería
Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma a
medios de comunicación: locales y extranjeros, se apreciaron muestras de lo que la
celebración en el pueblo mágico implica. La cita se dio en
la estación de Tren Simón
Bolívar en la ciudad de Tijuana
para emprender el traslado en
tren rumbo a Tecate, atravesando los bellos paisajes ro-
cosos que acertadamente le
dan su característico nombre;
asignado –según los historiadores locales- por las antiguas
comunidades de la localidad
bautizaron, “piedra o árbol
cortado”.
Al arribar a la ciudad la
primera parada fue un recorrido por la planta de operaciones de la cervecería para
observar a detalle el proceso
etapa por etapa –desde la
fermentación hasta el embasado- con la guía de los
expertos, que posteriormente
ofrecieron en rueda de prensa
lo que esta celebración significa para su empresa y los
pormenores de los diferentes
atractivos que a lo largo de una
semana resaltaron los atractivos del pueblo mágico por sus
70 años de historia con lo mas
representativo de éstos.
Lo expresado en la rueda de
prensa por Franco María Maggi
-director de Marcas de la
cervecería- dijo que para demostrar de qué está hecha
Tecate, durante un año se
llevarán a cabo actividades en
todo el territorio nacional,
aprovechando activos de Tecate, como futbol, box y música.
“Empezaremos con el concierto
de Los Tigres del Norte, experiencias gastronómicas con
siete chefs originarios de Baja
California, actividades al aire
libre, un Beer Garden y, el cierre
de la semana, con una extraordinaria función de Box” dijo.
Además para conmemorar este
aniversario, durante este año
estará disponible una lata de 16
onzas edición especial.
Es claro que esta la cerveza
Tecate se mantiene como líder
en todo México, y actualmente
ha rebasado las fronteras de
las ligas locales y este 2014 se
integra como uno de los prin-
cipales patrocinadores del
prestigiado equipo de futbol
“Club Barcelona”. Jorge
Meillón, vicepresidente de
operaciones de Cuauhtémoc
Moctezuma, comentó “aprender sobre la historia de Cerveza Tecate en Baja California nos motiva a seguir trabajando muy duro para alimentar
una de las historias de éxito más
inspiradoras que existen en el
mundo cervecero”.
La muestra culinaria organizada por los chefs principales
del movimiento de cocina estilo
Baja-Med contara con la
presencia de de los principales
exponentes: Martín San Román, Bianca Castro-Cerio
Trenti, Ryan Steyn, Miguel
Ángel Guerrero, Javier Plasencia, Mariela Manzano y
Alma Daniela Santana.
Esta localidad no solamente
cuenta con una cervecería de
primer nivel mundial, si no
prestigiados restaurantes,
ranchos estilo spa resort con
Siendo una de las cervezas mas reconocidas Tecate celebrará en grande sus 70 años
de identidad.
los más altos estándares de por supuesto, el atractivo prin- panaderías del estado de Baja
calidad que son visitados por cipal: su exquisito pan que California que lo hacen un
celebridades internacionales desde hace décadas es reco- atractivo turístico que nadie se
como El Rancho la puerta, y nocido por tener las mejores puede perder.
The 7th Annual Brauzilian activities and entertainment the El Festival De la Vela
whole family can enjoy. ChilDay Street Fair and Parade dren will enjoy a kids’ zone with Embellezerá El
The 7th Annual Brazilian
Day San Diego Street Fair
and Parade is the largest Brazilian Festival in the United
State, after Brazilian Day,
New York, attracting over
50,000 attendees annually. Brazilian Day will once again bring
the spirit of Brazil to the heart
of San Diego’s iconic beach
town, Pacific Beach, with this
year’s theme Getting into the
Brazilian “Flavor.”
The event is located just one
block from the beach, on five
blocks of the lively Garnet Avenue. The Brazilian festival
provides a day for the entire
community to come together to
embrace the cultural flavors,
sounds, and arts of Brazil. It is
free to the public, and provides
games and activities. vendors
will serve up traditional Brazilian dishes and other fair favorites, as well as display multicultural arts, crafts, souvenirs
and more. Non-stop entertainment will take place on two
stages with energetic music
and spectacular dance ensembles. The highlight of the
festival is the carnival style
parade, full of vibrant floats,
extravagant costumes, and
contagious rhythms.
Brazilian Day San Diego will
take place Sunday, September
7, 2014 from 11:00am until
7:00pm, on Garnet Avenue between Bayard St. and Everts
St. in Pacific Beach. The parade is scheduled from 3:004:00pm.
Embarcadero De San
Diego en Septiembre
El Festival de la Vela del
2014 patrocinado por el Museo
Marítimo de San Diego
transformará el Embarcadero
en un parque náutico. Una
serie de barcos extraordinarios
y más de veinte barcos de vela
nos visitarán del 29 de agosto
al 1 de septiembre de este año.
El festival ofrece música,
exhibición de distintos barcos,
apetitosas comidas y deliciosas
bebidas de una gran variedad
de puestos; también ofrece
actividades para familias, un
zoologico para niños y una
serie de puestos con una gran
variedad de articulos de venta
con más de 150 vendedores.
Batalla de Cañones
Durante el festival varios
barcos participarán en una
exhibición reflejando una
batalla náutica de cañones.
Interesados pueden compartir
de esta experiencia a bordo de
uno de los barcos participantes.
El costo del boleto es de $65
por adultos y $40 por niños
menores de 12 años de edad.
Los boletos se pueden obtener
por adelantado en el sitio web:
www.sdmaritime.org. Esta
actividad es sumamente popular y los boletos son muy
pedidos, se recomienda obtener su boleto con anticipación
y se requiere boleto de admisión general. Esta actividad
no es recomendada para niños
menores de 5 años.
Zona Para Niños
El zoologico está abierto
sábado, domingo y lunes de
11am a 4:00pm.
SAN DIEGO
CONVENTION CENTER
September 4–6, 2014
DISCOVER.
ENGAGE.
ENJOY.
Scott Duncan
Join today’s top
thinkers and innovators,
along with sensational
entertainment, for
this first-of-its-kind
experience.
Randy Jackson
Taylor Hicks
Patti Austin
Emilio Estefan
Ideas@50+
has it all!
REGISTER
TODAY!
Ideas@50+
Platinum Sponsors:
1-800-650-6839 | www.aarp.org/events

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