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When designer Jillian Sassone, founder of Marrow Fine Jewelry, learned that a jewelry retail space had opened in Newport Beach, Calif., last year, her first thought was, “We’re in a pandemic, I’m not going to open another store.”
Famous last words! The opportunity was simply too good to pass up, so Sassone and her husband and business partner, Tim, moved forward with the store, which opened in mid-January. Like their flagship retail space, located at One Paseo in the tony Southern California beach enclave of Solana Beach, and their mid-century modern home in nearby Cardiff-by-the-Sea, the Newport Beach store was designed by the Los Angeles–based interior design firm Bells + Whistles.
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In the early 1980s, as AIDS was beginning its deadly tear, a Catholic priest told a radio audience in Boston that he sympathized with people who didn’t want to be around anyone who had the disease.
Dr. Robert “Chip” Schooley about popped a vein.
The young Harvard physician and infectious-disease expert got in touch with the station and relayed a blunt message to the priest: “If you ever make a comment like that again, I will reveal that the church is keeping priests who have AIDS out of sight at a monastery in Newton [Mass.].”
“He was stoking fears people had about those with HIV. It was wrong,” said Schooley, who has spent the past 16 years on the UC San Diego faculty.
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In the early 1980s, as AIDS was beginning its deadly tear, a Catholic priest told a radio audience in Boston that he sympathized with people who didn’t want to be around anyone who had the disease.
Robert “Chip” Schooley about popped a vein.
The young Harvard physician and infectious disease expert got in touch with the station and relayed a blunt message to the priest: If you ever make a comment like that again, I will reveal that the church is keeping priests who have AIDS out of sight at a monastery in Newton.
“He was stoking fears people had about those with HIV. It was wrong,” said Schooley, who has spent the past 16 years on the UC San Diego faculty.
Ruth Ann Kremer, Valley City, ND, passed away at the age of 77, on Wednesday, January 20, 2021 at Mercy Hospital, Valley City. Ruth Ann Kremer was born on September 28, 1943 in Valley City, the daughter of Andrew and Dorothy (Ekert) Fritch. Ruth attended and graduated from College High, Valley City in 1961. She attended Valley City State University and Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport, Iowa.
Ruth met her husband, Richard Kremer, at the motel she managed in Davenport, Iowa. They were married in 1981. The couple made their home in Brazil for 2 years. In 1983, they moved to Valley City where Ruth worked as a certified nurse’s assistant for Mercy Hospital and the Sheyenne Care Center. In 2005 she retired and devoted her time to her home, her garden and her puppies.
Nature Collective bridges link Solana Beach, Cardiff trails
A new bridge connects Solana Beach and Cardiff-by-the-Sea over the San Elijo Lagoon.
(Courtesy)
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The coastal communities of Solana Beach and Cardiff-by-the-Sea are now connected by bridges over the San Elijo Lagoon, enhancing the public’s opportunity to escape into nature and explore lagoon life.
The new Nature Collective bridges, which opened in October, connect the Nature Center Loop Trail over San Elijo Lagoon’s Central Basin and onto trails and open space, including Harbaugh Seaside Trails and the Rios Trail in Solana Beach.
The section spanning from the nature center is named Buhr Nature Bridge in honor of the late Gabriel Buhr, a passionate voice to restore the San Elijo Lagoon. That connects to the Martin Nature Bridge