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Palisades Electric: Family and Community

Palisades Electric owners Jamie McLeod and Carolyn Minium with the office Labrador, Coby. Rich Schmitt/Staff Photographer
Palisades Electric owners Jamie McLeod and Carolyn Minium with the office Labrador, Coby. Rich Schmitt/Staff Photographer

Growing up in Pacific Palisades, Jamie McLeod had an early interest in electricity. ‘He used to take things apart, like a television set, and put them back together,’ said his older sister, Carolyn Minium. ‘He made an electric chair and constructed a phone that you could hear and talk on six blocks away.   Laughing, she added, ‘And you knew if you’d grab a doorknob, you’d get an electric shock.’   So it was no surprise to family or friends when McLeod, in 1984, opened Palisades Electric next to Amazing Music, off Swarthmore Avenue.   Realizing he also needed an office manager, he asked Carolyn if she would temporarily help out. The Marquez Elementary kindergarten teacher agreed, and 27 years later she still holds that role.   After outgrowing its Swarthmore space in 2001, Palisades Electric moved temporarily to a space off Marquez Avenue, but McLeod always had an eye on a building built by his father Bill, a realtor, at 17374 Sunset’next to Safeway (now Vons), just north of PCH.   ’We watched the building when there was a cleaners in it, and then it was a tattoo parlor,’ Minium said. ‘When we heard it was up for sale, we snatched it, because it has sentimental value for us.’   They moved their business there in 2007, not only gaining more room for electrical supplies, but space to park the company trucks.   ’The signage is also more visible,’ McLeod said. ‘We get jobs from people driving on Sunset on their way to PCH or the Highlands.’   McLeod and Minium grew up with four siblings (Kent, Tom, John and Peggy) in the Marquez Knolls neighborhood in the ’50s and ’60s. Kent, Tom and Carolyn graduated from Palisades High School, but the other three graduated from Paradise High after their parents, Bill and Jeanne, moved to Northern California.   Immediately after graduating in 1983, Jamie moved back to the Palisades and worked for brother Tom, who owned Southern California Construction, before opening his own business.   ’A lot of our clients are friends and families of the people we grew up with,’ said McLeod, who initially built a house on Livorno, but now lives in Big Rock. ‘I’m going back to work at houses that my friends lived in.’   Minium, who lives in the Palisades with husband Chuck, handles all of the office-related business, including answering the phones, scheduling, payroll, invoicing and paying bills. The couple have two sons, Jason, 32, and Ryan, 30, and a grandchild, Christian. McLeod’s daughter, Taylor, is a senior at Archer School for Girls.   McLeod is responsible for the fieldwork, such as estimates, overseeing the six electricians who work for him, and dealing with the city and permitting. ‘He’s hands-on,’ Minium said. ‘He runs the guys.’   Not all grown siblings work so well together, but Carolyn attributes part of her compatibility with Jamie to their age difference. ‘When we were growing up, I always took care of the younger ones,’ she said. On the office walls are headshots of celebrities such as Tom Hanks, Courtney Cox and Ted Danson, who are also customers.   One of the company’s early clients was Frank Sinatra. ‘He had a house on Broad Beach in Malibu and every night at 1 a.m. all of the second-story lights would go on and the shades would go up,’ McLeod recalled, noting that Sinatra was at the point of selling his house because no one could figure out the oddity.   ’I worked my way through the house,’ McLeod said, ‘until I finally isolated the problem in the master bathroom. His electric razor, which was plugged in the wall, was sending false signals to the electrical system.’ The fix was simple: ‘I plugged in a little $20 filter, which prevented the razor from sending the signals.’   After that, Sinatra hired McLeod to handle all of the electrical work at his homes in Malibu, Westwood and Beverly Hills.   Of course, Palisades Electric also takes good care of locals. ‘We offer a senior-citizen discount,’ Minium said, ‘and no job is too small, even something as simple as a plug not working. ‘Sometimes if it is a small job, we don’t charge the full house call.’   McLeod and Minium receive calls from people they know who have moved away from the area, asking them to help parents who are still living here. ‘We treat our clients like family,’ Carolyn said, noting that many of their new customers come from referrals.   With the addition of large-screen televisions, computers, printers and other electrical upgrades, many of McLeod’s jobs deal with replacing electrical panels, which contain the breakers to electrical circuits.   ’An old house may have four circuits, because when it was built, residents only had a few house lights that needed electricity,’ he said. ‘Now new homes may have as many as 50 different circuits, with a dedicated circuit for everything.’   McLeod also noted that a lot of the older electrical panels are being recalled. ‘Anything electrical that could be a fire hazard in your house should be taken care of immediately,’ he said.   In addition to subcontracting electrical wiring in new homes, Palisades Electric works with realtors and home inspections. McLeod also handles repairs of those same homes after inspections.   The company also specializes in troubleshooting, and installs landscape lighting and back-up generators. While thousands of Palisadians were without electricity during the March 26 power outage, some homes had full power because of back-up generators, powered by natural gas, propane or diesel.   ’More and more people are requesting emergency generators,’ McLeod said. ‘We have clients who are on oxygen, so its imperative they always have power.’ The brother/sister team understands that one of the reasons their business has grown is because people trust them and know they are honest. ‘My brother has told people, ‘You don’t need a whole new panel, you just need a circuit,” Minium said. Call: (310) 454-6994 or visit www.palisadeselectric.com

Spring on Display in Annual Tour

Pacific Palisades Garden Club Garden Tour

Evening turns magical as the lights below ignite a spectacular view.  Photo: Orly Olivier Photography
Evening turns magical as the lights below ignite a spectacular view. Photo: Orly Olivier Photography

Sunday, April 17, noon to 4 p.m., rain or shine. Plant Market, noon to 4 p.m. at 13545 D’Este.   Tickets ($25 in advance; $30 on tour day) are available at the Sunday Farmers’ Market and the plant market on the day of the tour, Gift Garden Antiques (15266 Antioch, next to Noah’s Bagels), Yamaguchi Nursery (1905 Sawtelle Blvd.) and Merrihew’s Nursery (1526 Ocean Park Blvd.), or by mail to the Pacific Palisades Garden Club, 550 Lucero Ave., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272.   The six distinctive gardens on the tour are spread out and include homes in the Riviera, the Alphabet streets and Marquez Knolls, plus a Brentwood and Santa Monica. Proceeds from the tour benefit community education and beautification and student gardens at public schools.   Please, no dogs in the gardens. For more iInformation, call (310) 459-4084 or (310) 472-3374..

Chautauqua Boulevard I

  Some of the most successful gardens evolve from collaboration between the client and designer. In the case of this garden, the homeowner working with FormLA achieved a reorientation of her house following feng shui principles. This ancient Chinese art of placement encourages the beneficial flow of chi (energy force), which affects health, wealth and relationships.   The approach to the house, located on this very busy street, is lined with an interesting variety of native plants, including lion’s tail sage, deer grass, juncos (ornamental grass) and the Australian grevillea (evergreen flowering plants in the protea family). The parkway features red fescue, a long grass that waves in the breeze like a field of wheat.   As soon as you pass through the gate, the landscape, the home and the surrounding trees create a private, calm world. The home itself is oriented east to west, so the homeowner moved the front door from the east wall to the south wall for maximum good luck. In addition, the water feature located in the front symbolizes prosperity and creates yin energy.   Golden bamboo shields the perimeter of property along Chautauqua and provides privacy for the expansive yard that includes a children’s play area within. A path leads around the house towards the back, and 180-degrees view of Rustic Canyon and Santa Monica Bay. Designers used ipe, a sustainable hardwood from South America known for its beauty and endurance, for the gates and outdoor furniture.   The backyard makes for a perfect entertainment venue, complete with tables, chairs, picnic table, Viking barbecue and a fire pit.   Trees anchoring the design include western red bud, pittosporum, persimmon and saucer magnolia. Paddle plants and Myers asparagus provide texture and color in the bedding areas. ‘ LIBBY MOTIKA

Evanston Avenue

  An old Brentwood garden is a rare sight these days and a treasure of specimen trees and bushes. The house stretches east-west along Evanston, so the garden travels along the perimeter of the street until you reach the formal entry. Truly a fairyland opens up both left and right. To the left, an impressive grove of camellias, abutilon, begonias and azaleas co-exist happily under large cedars. Lily-shaped lights line the path of pavers, artfully placed on top of a gravel matrix. Every so often, a seating opportunity pops up, inviting the visitor to seat, read or just daydream. Some are wrought iron, another is stacked Bouquet Canyon stone. The homeowner is fond of whimsical garden features’a fairy tea party here, a butterfly there.   The backyard is to the right of the main garden entrance. An ornamental fountain, designed by John Barnes and stocked with koi, signals the way towards the secret garden beyond. A potting shed looks every bit like a Beatrix Potter watercolor. ‘ LIBBY MOTIKA

Chautauqua Boulevard II

  The lush grove of assorted palms bordering the circular drive on Chautauqua’tall stately queens, tidily symmetrical sagos, spiky fans and fat, leafy bananas’shades a vibrantly dense undergrowth of green, sparked by the white of plants like variegated aspidistra and the vivid, glossy scarlet leaves of coprosma. There are few blooms, but they are not missed here amidst the voluptuous texture. Visitors cross a small, spare bridge to reach the front entry, passing by two tiny sentries, turtles happy to have claimed a sunny rock amidst the chubby, well-fed koi in the big pond below.   Those who wander around the low-slung contemporary home to the back will find a carefully curated collection of colorful blooms, including clivia, grevillea and kangaroo paws, organized in relatively spare tableaus around the freeform pool. Landscape designer Jo Ann Bright of AAA Plantscapes says she acted as a sort of curator for the garden, which was too crowded with random selections when she took on the project about three years ago. She organized, condensed and shifted plant material from front to back, crafting themes among the mayhem. A copse of tall palms in one corner offers an echo of the front entry and a lovely spot for a hammock.   The back of the house is definitely designed for indoor/outdoor living, with plenty of comfortable groupings to lounge or dine under the shady overhang that runs its length and admire the wide-open view across Santa Monica Canyon. ‘ELIZABETH MARCELLINO

Palisades Avenue

  A riot of texture and color greets visitors to this Spanish-Mediterranean home in Santa Monica. The rustic Mexican tiles of the walkway match the hue of the tiled roof and are interspersed with others patterned in orange and white and pleasingly worn with age. Wisteria and roses climb arbors at the sidewalk and over the driveway, and an abundant and eclectic mix of blooms, including statice, gazanias and lamb’s ear, form a wild English garden bordered by boxwood.   Swinging open the massive dark wood doors to the courtyard, visitors confront a profusion of trees and blooms of every type’including cypress, olive and stone fruit trees and begonias, hydrangeas, grasses and succulents. Many are potted in large, waist-high pots and arranged by garden design firm Ruby Begonia. A knotty trumpet vine mingled with wisteria winds along the roof of a Monterrey-style balcony on the second floor. Amid the tranquil and tropically dense oasis of greenery and flowers sits a fountain, with a large clay pot serving as spout.   Around the corner, past a koi pond, is a pool lined with both short and tall palms and fed by a row of clam shell-shaped fountains. A raised terrace off the kitchen fronts the pool and hosts more potted stone fruit and citrus, which sweeten the air.   The back yard opens onto a series of lovely arched doorways leading to a guesthouse and coral and jacaranda trees that circle a small open lawn. One shady corner of cool dirt flanked by ferns and a lush ginger plant offers a secluded spot to sit and contemplate nature.  ’ ELIZABETH MARCELLINO

Capri Drive

  The property on Capri offers an astonishing array of gardens, with trees and plantings as carefully chosen on the far street-side border of the property as the three lovely magnolias and abundant hellebore in a boxwood frame that distinguish the formal entry. The residence’s pale buff yellow paint was chosen to match the marvelous bark of an ancient-looking tree mid-property, which may be a coral or some species of fig.   The homeowner, a hands-on gardener, is diligently attentive to everything horticultural’from the health of soil microorganisms to the custom design of wrought-iron cages for her tomato and bean plants. She has mixed classic formality and modern whimsy, perhaps most evident in a partiere, or knot garden’a typically tight border of boxwood is filled with a dense planting of colorful succulents, including zwartkop and echeveria.   The adjacent garden is devoted to vegetables’English peas are crisp and ripe and will soon be replaced by summer tomatoes. Artichokes, Swiss chard, beets and lettuce fill the series of raised beds bordered in stone and separated by wide walkways. It’s a biodynamic garden where insects and bees thrive, organized with help from John Lyons of The Woven Garden, whose specialty is edible gardens.   Yards and yards away, on the far side of the house, past a gigantically impudent snail, cast in bronze and sitting on the durable and spongy St. Augustine grass, is a terraced orchard that would make a Whole Foods manager cry with envy. Pear, apple, apricot, almond, fig, plum, persimmon, pomegranate, Meyer lemon and other citrus trees abound.   There are more surprises around the corner’the property seems full of them. As you leave again past the front fence you may be amazed, as the owner was, by a couple of mangos found growing amidst the stephanotis.  ‘ ELIZABETH MARCELLINO

Enchanted Way

  This garden, once ‘an eclectic weed collection,’ has been refashioned to suit the dream of the owner, who realized her vision with the expert assistance of Sacred Grounds designer Bruce Izmirian. The modest home in Marquez Knolls is softened in front with an assortment of grevillea species set off by a melaleuca, whose gray/white paper bark and graceful form provide a stunning focal point. The visitor is directed towards the front door through a breezeway, flanked on one side by three basalt column fountains. Their quiet bubble gently transitions the public space to the private. The real drama of this garden unfolds as the visitor rounds the southern perimeter and out to a breathtaking view of the Marquez neighborhood and the ocean beyond. Set above, with no obstructions, the backyard plantings are intended to provide a surprise in all seasons, one plant group giving way to another. The ground cover dymondia displays a luminous shiny gray sparkle, while also being practical. Lupine, from seed, rises on the south side above the fence. Bouganvillea is on its way, climbing up the walls. Joey, a great choice for gardeners who want loads of color in hot, dry spots, displays feathery clusters of pink blooms all summer long. Other plants in the pink/raspberry palette include the small cistus or Rockrose and gazania offering another dazzling display of color. On the north side of the house, a banked slope features Cape honeysuckle (tecomaria), showy with its glistening dark green leaflets, which offset brilliant orange red tubular blossoms. Ceanothus and white mandevilla anchor the slope, and at this season, white and yellow freesias are in full form. The kitchen window looks out on this garden, to the delight of the homeowner. ‘ LIBBY MOTIKA

Recession Spurs a Successful Business for ’09 College Grad

Pacific Palisades native Colin West with his friendly and attentive doggy pack.
Pacific Palisades native Colin West with his friendly and attentive doggy pack.

It’s June 2009 and the United States is mired in the worst recession since the Great Depression. Companies are going bankrupt, millions of jobs have disappeared and morale is low; it’s hardly the right time to be coming into the job market.   That’s exactly what Palisadian Colin West, a 2009 Santa Clara University graduate, was thinking after finishing school. ‘Like many college graduates, he didn’t know exactly what he wanted to do, but he knew he wanted to be successful. He had no idea what he was in for.   ’These last two years [2009, 2010] have been by far the most challenging of my life,’ Colin says. ”When you graduate from college, there is no road map to success and happiness, and you realize quickly that it’s not going to be as easy as you expected.   ’To get a job in this economy, you have to know exactly what you want and do anything it takes to get it. It made me realize I didn’t know what I wanted, and it forced me to take a step back and examine what I really do want in my life. In a sense, it pushed me into a mid-life crisis very early, which I see as a good thing.’   Colin, son of Linda and Bill West, grew up the Palisades and graduated from Marquez, Paul Revere and Loyola High. His interests are varied and include surfing, snowboarding and Brazilian jiu-jitsu. He loves the outdoors and enjoys being physical, but fortuitously, he has always had a great affinity for dogs. His friends jokingly call him the ‘Dog Whisperer.’   Until earlier this year, Colin didn’t know how these pursuits would be valuable for him in his professional life. Then he saw an opportunity.   In January he launched a dog hiking company, Colin’s Pack. ‘Starting a dog hiking company was something I had thought about before graduating, and something that I had pushed aside so that I could pursue my ‘real career,” Colin says. He is now focusing on something that he believes could be a very successful venture, and a good start for the 23-year-old. ‘   Colin’s Pack is unique because of the way he has introduced the doggie backpack to his pack hikes. ‘To me the problem is simple: many dogs were bred to do work for humans, and they simply are not being fulfilled with the sedentary lives that they live today,’ Colin says. ‘By outfitting the high-energy dogs with weighted backpacks for the hikes, I saw a real solution to the problem.’   He says that he can comfortably lead up to 10 dogs on his treks along quiet trails in Malibu, ‘where there are not many people.”   Colin sees this idea of the structured pack hike as part of a healthy lifestyle for his clients and their dogs. ‘I think we’d all be surprised at how much our dog’s energy level can affect us. When we come home to a dog that has had his needs met’or not met’it can really change the vibe in the house.’   Colin also has plans for the future of his company. He currently has four regular clients, but as the pack grows, he plans to hire ‘Pack Leaders’ to serve different areas on the Westside. He sees Colin’s Pack as the beginning of an exciting chapter in his life; one that will allow him to bring peace and satisfaction to his doggie clients.   For more information, visit Colinspack.com.

Rapoport Tackles Love in New Photo Exhibit

Rapoport snapped this photograph of Fidel Castro during the Cuban leader’s “unofficial” visit to the United States in April 1959, three and a half months after the revolution

I.C. (Chuck) Rapoport is presenting a suite of his photos on the theme of ‘Love’ through May 29 at deyermond art + books, 2801 Main St. in Santa Monica.   In this carefully pruned exhibit, which includes 15 iconic images being shown for the first time but shot in the 10-year period preceding the Summer of Love (1959-1969), Rapoport fulfills his calling: as a champion, a friend and a lover of humanity.   From photographs of revolutionaries that scream, ‘I LOVE MY COUNTRY’ to photos of anonymous couples which whisper, ‘I love you,’ Rapoport takes on all comers in his quest for capturing love. Viewing all the images together, one is willing to believe that Rapoport must be intimate friends with every one of his subjects’they inhabit his photographic frames so comfortably, so honestly and so lovingly, even though they are all anonymously captured.   A longtime resident of Pacific Palisades, Rapoport worked for Paris Match magazine as well as The Saturday Evening Post, Life, Sports Illustrated, National Geographic and the New York Times.   For information, visit deyermondbooks.com or call Michael at (310) 450-4400.

Upcoming Events

Marquez Descendants to Recall Family History

  Culture in the Canyon will host ‘6,656 Acres of Family History,’ an evening of rich family stories and ancestral photographs of the area once known as Rancho Boca de la Santa Monica. The presentation is free and will begin at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 19 at Woodland Hall in Temescal Gateway Park. Parking is free.   Exploring their family history, Cousins Terri de la Pe’a and Sharon Reyes found that the genealogy of their descendants, the Marquez/Reyes families, reached back to 1839 and the Mexican land grant of Rancho Boca. The grant stretched from present day Santa Monica to Topanga Canyon, including what is now Will Rogers State Historic Park, Pacific Palisades and parts of Topanga Canyon State Park. It was home to over 30 families, but three women, a mother and two daughters, are at the center of the region’s story.   Contact: (310) 858-7272. ‘

Sign-ups for Memoir Writing Class Set

  Students interested in telling their story are invited to participate in a memoir writing class, ‘Postcards From Your Past,’ meeting on Sundays May 1-29, from 3 to 5 p.m. at Village Books, 1049 Swarthmore.   Barbara Edelman, MFA from Sarah Lawrence College, will help young writers bring the past into the present. The tuition fee for the six-week session is $115. The only required paperback (not included in the tuition fee) is Natalie Goldberg’s ‘Old Friend From Far Away’The Practice of Writing Memoir.’   The book and all other memoirs in the store will be available to workshop attendees for a 10 percent’discount. The class is limited to 10 adults; the first person to enroll will receive a free copy of the required text.   Contact (310) 454-4063 for more information.

Presbyterian Church to Hold Rummage Sale

The Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church will hold its annual estate jewelry, collectibles, books and rummage sale beginning at 8:30 a.m. this Saturday, April 16 at 15821 Sunset, corner of El Medio. To make last minute donations today or Friday, call Lyla Corrales at (310) 454-7620 or (310) 748-6307 (cell). All proceeds will help support Rev. Eric Schaefer’s youth ministry. This summer, the teenagers will build homes at the Campo Indian Reservation in San Diego and in Molokai, Hawaii.

Santa Monica Mountains Science Festival Offers Nature Walks and Experts

The second annual Santa Monica Mountains Science Festival, sponsored by the National Park Service, will take place on Friday, April 15 from 7 to 10 p.m. and Saturday, April 16, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Paramount Ranch, 2813 Cornell Rd. in Agoura. Activities for all ages will include talks, hands-on demonstrations, nature walks, family activities, live animal displays and a chance to meet and talk with scientists. To reach Paramount Ranch from Pacific Coast Highway, go north on Kanan Dume Road 12 miles and turn right on Cornell Road. Continue two miles and the entrance is on the right.

Beach Camp Fun at Sandy Days

Making sandcastles is all part of the fun at Sandy Days Kids Camp at Will Rogers State Beach.
Making sandcastles is all part of the fun at Sandy Days Kids Camp at Will Rogers State Beach.

Sandy Days Kids Camp offers beach and water activities for children ages 5 through 12 at Will Rogers State Beach, just south of the parking lot entrance at Temescal Canyon Road and PCH. The camp starts its third season on June 20 and runs through September 2. Camp owner and director Sina Monjazeb asks parents to sign up for a minimum of five days, but they do not need to be consecutive, which allows maximum flexibility for summer travel plans. ‘Among my favorite memories of growing up in Pacific Palisades are the many hours I spent playing at the beach,’ says Monjazeb, who attended Marquez Elementary, Paul Revere and Palisades High, where he played varsity volleyball.   Monjazeb dreamed of one day establishing a summer beach camp after working in a variety of sports camps and developing his own ideas of what works best for kids.   ’The core of a camp must be fun and must promote growth in skills and confidence,’ Monjazeb says. ‘I have created the ideal spot for my two children (Anna, 6, and Noah, 7), and am delighted to provide it to others.’   Campers are dropped off at 9 a.m. and participate in a variety of sports and educational, water and craft activities. There are also nature walks to learn about conservation and the ocean. Campers are encouraged to work on the arts and crafts, in addition to enjoying face painting, building sand castles, creating fashion shows and skits, and story telling. The camper to counselor ratio is 6:1 and the counselors supervise and encourage the campers to try new things, as well as improving existing skills. Sunscreen is re-applied throughout the day and large cabanas provide shade. Monjazeb graduated from Cal State Long Beach in 1999 with a major in physical education and kinesiology. Since 2002, he has been athletic director of the New Community Jewish High School (in West Hills), where he founded and developed an interscholastic athletic program and the physical education department.   Before that, he taught P.E. in Los Angeles public schools, gaining experience that has helped him assemble a variety of age-appropriate sports for campers that include hula-hooping, potato sack races, tug-of-war, volleyball, flag football, lacrosse, T-ball/softball, Capture the Flag, dodge ball, dance, yoga and stretching. Ocean activities include swimming, skim-boarding and boogie-boarding.   Monjazeb and his wife Jessica Stern, who grew up in Brentwood and also treasures her childhood beach memories, have created a camp that can best be described as a fun day at the beach.   There is a 10 percent early discount if campers are signed up before the end of April. Visit: www.sandydayskidscamp.com or call (310) 569-1274.

Coast Sports Camps Provide Great Variety

A Coast Sports camper sleds down a hill during snow day.
A Coast Sports camper sleds down a hill during snow day.

Celebrating its 11th anniversary, Coast Sports offers camp sessions from June 27 through August 18 at Brentwood Science Magnet School, corner of Bundy and San Vicente. The age range is 3 ‘ to 12.   ’Our program remains dedicated to the proposition that a summer should be of the kids, by the kids and for the kids,’ said founder Steve Morris, who loves to include everything from marbles to bubble-wrap Sumo wrestling along with numerous traditional sports and activities.   Morris, who has also served as the AYSO Region 69 coach administrator for 10 years, has coached all three of his kids in league and All-Star seasons. In 2000, the Yale graduate even gave up a profitable career in television writing to coach 3- to 8-year-olds fulltime.   ’I backed into coaching when my 4-year-old Evan (now a freshman at Union College, where he plays lacrosse) wanted to play soccer,’ Morris said. ‘I enrolled in a class with a coach who was a horror show’insulting the parents and making the kids cry’so I took my limited high school experience and went out to Barrington with a dozen kids.’   Over the next two years, Morris’ one-class hobby developed into 20 soccer classes a week and then into summer camps, all under the umbrella of his company, Coast Sports.   This summer, all of the traditional sports are back: soccer, basketball, baseball, hockey, volleyball, track & field, lacrosse, handball, dodge ball and rugby. Campers will also play cricket, rounders, spud, scully, tag, Red Rover and Kabadi, as well as participate in activities such as arts and crafts, science, lanyards, woodworking, relay races, scooter races and boxcar derby races.   In addition, the kids enjoy off-beat camp activities such as ‘Don’t Do This at Home Day,’ human car wash, and human bowling.   ’I can confidently state that no other camp has ever staged the Battle of Waterloo with water guns and snow saucers,’ said Morris, noting that although his camp doesn’t have a pool, he has created a fully-functioning water park.   ’Every day we set-up our pools, waterslides, slip ‘n’ slides and ziplines. We trot out the water cannons, sprinklers, super soakers and water balloons and create novel ways of beating the heat.’   Led by long-time counselors and coaches Tracy Redman, Christian Chambers, Cory Cooper and Pete Bartlett, campers also participate in Sherlock Holmes Scavenger Hunts, Quiddich and Survivor Brentwood (based on the ‘Survivor’ television show).   Campers arrive between 9:15 and 9:30 and participate in free play before morning activities begin. Lunch can be purchased through the school-lunch company, Freshlunches. After reapplication of sunscreen, it is time for afternoon activities. At the end of the day, campers make their own ice cream sundaes, before being picked up between 3 and 3:30 p.m. Last year, 10- or 15-day drop-in plans were introduced and will once again be an option. This allows parents flexibility in selecting any of the 45 days of camp to accommodate heavy travel plans. Morris’ wife, Marcy, is a partner at the entertainment law firm Jackoway, Tyerman, Wertheimer, Austen, Mandelbaum and Morris, representing actors, writers and producers. In addition to Evan, the couple have a daughter, Dori (15), and a son, Griffin (12), both of whom play club soccer. ‘Treating each and every child as an individual, with singular strengths and abilities, instills in that child the confidence to tackle the challenges of growing up in today’s world,’ Morris said, explaining his philosophy. ‘Be it soccer or handball or watermelon seed spitting, whatever your child’s passion or proclivity, we’ve got the community to make it happen.’ Visit: www.coastsports.com or call (310) 451-4220.

David Dunlap, Jr., 88; Former Resident, Aeronautical Engineer

David Dunlap, Jr., a 19-year resident of Pacific Palisades, passed away on April 2, with his loving wife Jeanne by his side. He was 88.   Born in Buffalo, New York in 1922, David moved to California in 1936 when his father, David E. Dunlap, Sr., joined the Douglas Aircraft Co. David Jr. ultimately followed in his father’s footsteps, working as an aeronautical engineer at McDonnell Douglas for 35 years, but his true love was art.   After graduating from Santa Monica High School, Dave met his wife Jeanne while both were attending the Art Center School in Los Angeles (now in Pasadena). Jeanne was playing badminton in the center’s auditorium, and when Dave saw her, it was love at first sight. They had a love story that lasted 64 years.   Both Dave and Jeanne served in the military during World War II, and Dave finished his schooling in aeronautical engineering at the University of Ohio. They then returned to Santa Monica and Dave went to work for Douglas Aircraft.    When their son, David III, was 2, they moved into one of the oldest homes in the Marquez area. Both of their children attended local schools and graduated from Palisades High School. Dave and Jeanne later agreed that their 19 years living in the Palisades were the happiest in their life.   Upon retirement, they moved to Laguna Niguel, where Dave continued his art, painting portraits in oil. He also took on the project of writing a narrative of his father’s distinguished aviation career. The son so admired his father’a nominee to the National Aviation Hall of Fame and one of the ‘early birds’ working on many aviation innovations. Portions of ‘Pioneer of Aviation’David Earle Dunlap,’ can be found on the Internet.   Dave and Jeanne’s daughter, Doree Dunlap, who had a very accomplished art career, passed away in 2007. Their son, David III, was encouraged by his dad in his love of music and has made it his occupation.   David Jr. leaves behind his loving wife, Jeanne; his son David, wife Susan and their sons Arin and Andy; and Doree’s son, Tyler.   Memorial services will be private.

Charles J. Sloan, 71; Commercial Producer

Charles ‘Chuck’ Jefferson Sloan, a resident of Pacific Palisades, died of a heart attack while swimming in the British Virgin Islands on April 4. He was 71.   Charles was born in Los Angeles on July 22, 1939, the son of Odie Sloan and Violet (Yoquelet) Sloan. He attended Hollywood High School and served in the U.S. Army in Germany for two years. Upon completing his service, he returned to Los Angeles, where his life as a true entrepreneur began. Sloan partnered with Steve McQueen and built thermoplastic gas tanks for motorcycles. He managed parking lots, nightclubs, musicians and had a three-picture movie deal as an actor for Allied Artists.   His pioneering career in production sprang from a job he took as a prop master, filling in for his best friend, Anthony Mazzola. Within the year, he had moved from props to producing and was sent to New York City, where he opened the office of Wakeford/Orloff, a commercial production company. With the commercial business expanding exponentially, Sloan went on to own and operate prominent companies, including the Film Consortium, where he was one of the producers on the film ‘ROAR.’   In 1982, he founded Plum Productions with director and cameraman Eric Saarinen and the two worked together for nearly thirty years in the boutique commercial company, representing directors such as Jan de Bont. With Sloan and Saarinen working together, Plum Productions won every major commercial award, including the Grand Prix at the Cannes Lions Festival for achievement in commercial direction.   Sloan’s latest ventures included partnering to form the successful talent agency Reign in 2006. He also worked tirelessly to promote electric bicycles, electric cars and yoga.   Chuck was divorced from Holly Goldberg Sloan and they had two sons, Max and Calvin, who survive him. He is also survived by his sister Alyce Payne and her family.   A private celebration of Chuck’s life was held on Saturday, April 9. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations in his honor to Heal The Bay.

Inez Johnson, 99; Bubar Manager

Inez Johnson passed away on Thursday, March 31. Born in Alexandria, Louisana on January 7, 1912, she was 99 years old.   Inez began her career as a nanny in 1959 in the Pacific Palisades home of Gertrude and Nat Bubar, caring for their children Moreen and Bill. She ultimately became the general manager of Bubar’s Jewelers in Santa Monica and worked until the day before her passing.   Inez embraced many responsibilities and careers, including raising her four brothers and one sister. She worked as a dietician in an all-girls school, a Bible and Sunday school teacher, a night worker at TWA, an assistant manager at the Gaylord Hotel, and a start-up tailor shop following World War II. As a classroom volunteer for the Los Angeles Unified School District, she was honored as a Dedicated Older Volunteer for Education with commendations.   A very generous person, Inez contributed to numerous charities over her lifetime. She helped others to achieve success through the many relationships that she fostered and the exemplary model of good deeds that she set over the 99 years of her great life.   Inez Johnson is survived by her nieces, Olivett Johnson-Aguilar of Phoenix, Arizona and Janina Austin of Washington, D.C.; her sister-in-law Nina Johnson of Chicago; and William J. Bubar, a friend since 1959.