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Ali Riley Takes Pride in Her WPS Rookie Season

Rookie Ali Riley and the FC Gold Pride clinched their first-ever Women's Professional Soccer playoff berth with a 0-0 tie against Chicago last Saturday.  Photo courtesy of the WPS
Rookie Ali Riley and the FC Gold Pride clinched their first-ever Women’s Professional Soccer playoff berth with a 0-0 tie against Chicago last Saturday. Photo courtesy of the WPS

Ali Riley is enjoying quite a debut season in Women’s Professional Soccer and now her rookie campaign will extend into the playoffs.   The Pacific Palisades resident and former Pali Blues and Stanford University star was picked 10th in the first-round of the 2010 WPS Draft by FC Gold Pride, the league’s Bay Area franchise. Riley has started 17 of the team’s 18 games and, as a rookie, ranks third in minutes played. More importantly, thanks to her steady play at left fullback the Gold Pride have clinched their first-ever postseason berth and are one point away from securing home field advantage.    Bay Area (12-3-3) is 11 points ahead of the Philadelphia Independence in the league standings and Gold Pride will guarantee themselves a home playoff game with a win or a tie on Saturday night against the sixth-place Washington Freedom (5-8-5) at Pioneer Stadium on the campus of Cal State University East Bay.   Riley had suffered a left hip pointer injury in the 75th minute of a 0-0 tie at Atlanta on August 1, but she was back on the pitch for last Saturday’s home game against the fourth-place Chicago Red Stars (5-8-6). Needing only one point to clinch a playoff spot, FC Gold Pride got just what they needed’a scoreless draw’while extending their unbeaten streak to seven games.   ’Ali is one of the best outside backs in this league and if she wasn’t able to go Saturday, she would’ve definitely been missed,’ FC Gold Pride coach Albertin Montoya said. ‘Ali trained on Friday and it came down to a game-time decision.’   There are six games left in Bay Area’s regular season, beginning this Saturday against the Freedom. The four teams with the best records make the playoffs in the eight-team league.   Riley played an integral role in her hometown Blues’ march to their second consecutive W-League title last August and she captained Stanford University to the finals of the NCAA College Cup for the first time in December. The 22-year-old Palisadian played for New Zealand in the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing and in the 2007 FIFA Women’s World Cup in China. In high school, she led Harvard-Westlake to the 2006 Southern Section Division I title and was named Mission League Offensive Most Valuable Player twice. She was also a standout club player for the Westside Breakers and SoCal United.

Bendetti Likes Doubles Zone

Sophie Bendetti won the West Coast Championships 12-and-under doubles title in Sacramento last week.
Sophie Bendetti won the West Coast Championships 12-and-under doubles title in Sacramento last week.

Pacific Palisades resident Sophie Bendetti won eight of her 10 matches, including all five of her doubles matches, at the 12s Pacific Zonal Team Championships July 29-August 2 in Tucson, Arizona.   From there, the sixth-grader went straight from Arizona to the Rio Del Oro Racquet Club in Sacramento for the Girls’ 12s West Coast Championships, where she reached the finals with partner Marianna Alevra of Santa Barbara.   The pair was not seeded in the 14-team field, yet advanced all the way to the finals, where they lost to top-seeded Dana Possokhova and Katya Tabachnik of San Francisco, 8-4.   In the first round, Bendetti and Alevra blanked Paula Catanyag of Sacramento and Neha Gupta of Elk Grove, 8-0. Then, in the quarterfinals, the duo upset second-seeded Denise Arendain of Roseville and Eirene Granville of Fair Oaks, 8-3.   In the semifinals, Bendetti and Alevra beat Rupa Ganesh of San Jose and Lauren Wolfe of Greenbrae, 8-2. The win avenged Bendetti’s 7-5, 7-6 loss to Ganesh in the first round of singles.   In April, Bendetti upset top-seeded Riley Gerdau of Newport Beach, 7-6, 6-4 to win the Girls’ 12s title at the Woodbridge Tennis Club Spring Open in Irvine.

Always Remember the Holocaust

Pacific Palisades resident and Holocaust survivor Anna Sorotzkin recently self-published her autobiography. She will speak on Thursday, August 19, at Village Books.
Pacific Palisades resident and Holocaust survivor Anna Sorotzkin recently self-published her autobiography. She will speak on Thursday, August 19, at Village Books.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

For nearly a decade, Pacific Palisades resident Anna Sorotzkin had thought about writing a book about her experiences during the Holocaust, but it was a trip to the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., in 2005 that convinced her.   ’I realized how important it is,’ Sorotzkin told the Palisadian-Post. ‘I wanted my offspring and their offspring to know what had happened. This can happen to any people, not just the Jewish people.’   She also wanted to memorialize her grandfather and 13 aunts, uncles and cousins whom she lost in the Holocaust.   Originally, she wrote the book only for her family, but after completing it, she realized that her story could teach others about the Holocaust. She will now speak about her self-published book, ‘Panni’s Quest for Freedom,’ on Thursday, August 19 at 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.   Sorotzkin spent about a year writing her autobiography (edited by Palisadian Reeva Mandelbaum Cohen). She not only had to recapitulate the details of her early life, but also had to re-educate herself on Hungarian history.   ’When I left, I was angry,’ said Sorotzkin, who escaped from Hungary to the United States after the 1956 revolution. ‘I almost mentally erased everything about Hungary.’   Born in Budapest in 1932, Sorotzkin recalls living comfortably in an apartment overlooking the Danube with her parents, Paul and Ilona Weisz Fulop, and older brother, Egon, until 1941. At that point, the government required Jews to turn in luxury items such as radios and bicycles, and a year later, prohibited them from attending public schools.   ’It hit very hard when I had to give up my dog, my little fox terrier, Suzy,’ Sorotzkin wrote in her book.   After the Nazis invaded Hungary in March 1944, Jews were forced to wear yellow stars, abide by a curfew and live in ‘yellow-star houses.’ Sorotzkin’s apartment complex was declared as such, so the family could remain.   In October 1944, her father and brother were taken to Mauthausen, a concentration camp in Austria, to work in the stone quarries. Sorotzkin’s mother was also taken by soldiers, but was able to escape and return to the apartment, where Sorotzkin was being taken care of by relatives.   When the yellow-star houses were ordered closed, Sorotzkin and her mother moved into a Swiss-protected house and later to a ghetto in early December 1944.   In the ghetto, Jews ages 16 to 45 were collected for work, and those older and younger were sent to Auschwitz. Since Sorotzkin was 12, she and her mother lied about her age.   ’We were fortunate to get away with it,’ Sorotzkin said. ‘I strongly feel that it was our way of resisting them. Some people ask why the Jews went quietly to their death, but the Jewish people resisted in any way we could. There were many small acts, whether it be hiding behind a door or sneaking from one group to the other to stay together.’   One morning, she and her mother were ordered to march toward a waiting train to be transported to a concentration camp, when Raoul Gustav Wallenberg, the first secretary to the Swedish Legation in Budapest, pulled them out of line and took them to a Swedish apartment, where they were reunited with her mother’s parents and uncle. Sorotzkin now wonders if Wallenberg selected them randomly or if her uncle arranged it.   Wallenberg rescued about 100,000 Jews in Budapest by issuing them Swedish identification papers.   ’Another main purpose of publishing my book was to publicize the story of Wallenberg,’ Sorotzkin said. ‘He was my savior.’ Shortly thereafter, the Russian Army arrived to fight the Germans, and she and her mother decided it would be safe to return to their apartment.   ’They saved our lives,’ Sorotzkin said of the Russian soldiers. ‘But they also acted cruelly to the population.’   One night, a Russian soldier grabbed her mother, intending to rape her. Throughout the war, Sorotzkin had carried a leather case containing a gold Mont Blanc fountain pen, a watch and a few gold charms under her clothing. Hoping to save her mother, she gave her treasures to the soldier.   ’When he looked inside, he gave out a happy yell and ran out,’ Sorotzkin wrote. ‘Fortunately, he totally forgot about my mother.’   Sorotzkin explained that she had risked being shot by the Nazis for carrying that case, but she never once considered discarding it.   ’It was like some voice up there was telling me to keep it for that moment,’ Sorotzkin told the Post.   By March 1945, the Russian Army had defeated the Germans. Four months later, Sorotzkin’s father and brother returned; both were about 6′ tall, but each weighed less than 80 pounds.   Her father recovered and resumed work as a lawyer, while Sorotzkin went back to school. They never discussed the tragic events.   ’We were just numb afterwards,’ Sorotzkin said. ‘It’s not like today, with psychiatrists and psychologists helping you process your thoughts. After the war, the adults were busy rebuilding and the children were left to deal with their own thoughts and feelings.’   The relative normalcy did not last long as a Communist government soon took root.   ’It was really hard to have to live through the Holocaust and then be confronted with Communism,’ Sorotzkin said, so she and the family escaped across the border to Austria and immigrated to the United States in winter 1956.   Sorotzkin studied at Penn State University and moved to Santa Paula in 1958 to work for the Burpee Seed Company. She met her husband Joshua, who worked for Shell Oil as a chemical engineer, and they married in 1959. That same year, Sorotzkin became a teacher, working at Oak View Elementary in Ventura.   They raised three children, Ruth Mandelbaum and Aliza Sorotzkin, both of whom live today in Pacific Palisades, and Dalia Attia of Studio City. In 1986, Sorotzkin commuted from Ventura to Pacific Palisades to teach at Village School.   In 1989, Sorotzkin returned to Budapest with her mother, whom she described as nostalgic. Sorotzkin, however, said she didn’t experience the same sentiment because she hardly has any memories of the good times before the war. She has since returned twice with two of her five grandchildren to show them their ancestral home.   Sorotzkin, who has lived with her husband in the Palisades Highlands for 14 years, says she mostly feels fortunate for the life she has built for herself in the United States.    ‘I have always emphasized to my students to be grateful for all the freedoms we have here,’ said Sorotzkin, who retired from teaching in 1991.r

Beba Leventhal Shares Survival Story

Beba Leventhal, a 45-year Pacific Palisades resident and Holocaust survivor.
Beba Leventhal, a 45-year Pacific Palisades resident and Holocaust survivor.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

In its effort to preserve the stories of Holocaust survivors for the next generation, Chabad of Pacific Palisades recently invited several of them to speak as part of a class called ‘Beyond Never Again.’   ’We have a moral obligation to hear the stories,’ Rabbi Shlomo Zacks said, noting that the survivors provide a personal and spiritual perspective of the mass genocide that occurred.   Beba Leventhal, a Pacific Palisades resident who has lived on Enchanted Way for 45 years, was among those to share her story.   In June 1941, the Nazis captured Beba’s hometown of Vilna in Poland (now Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania). Beba recalls that many Jewish people fled across the border to Russia. Her family of six, however, decided to stay because her father, Simeon Epstein, had a secure position as a bank manager.   ’We did not think it was going to be so bad; we did not expect the extent of the tragedy,’ said Beba, who was 18 at the time.   At first, the Nazis required Beba and the other Jews to wear an armband with the Jewish star and abide by a curfew. Jews could not be seen outside between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. Beba explained that the Nazis took the curfew seriously and would kill Jews out past curfew and leave their dead bodies in the street with a note that listed the time of death as a warning to others.   After a few months, the Nazis forced Beba and her family to move into a ghetto, comprising seven narrow streets enclosed by a fence.   ’They took the poorest part of the city and assigned it to us,’ Beba said. ‘The most we could carry with us was a suitcase. When we arrived at the apartments, it looked as if they had been recently abandoned. There were unfinished meals on the tables.’   Beba’s family lived in a one-bedroom, one-bath apartment with 20 other people. ‘We had to sleep on the floor, and there was one toilet,’ she said, pausing. ‘You can imagine.’   She lived in the ghetto for two years, working many jobs: distributing ration cards, working in gardens around the city, and cleaning and stocking shelves at a supply house.   ’We never had a lot to eat,’ Beba said, noting that when she worked in the gardens, she would hide food under her clothing. ‘It was extremely dangerous. If they caught you, they beat you.’   Beba recalls that every day, the Nazis would take away the elderly and the children, and they would never be heard from again. She lost her entire family: her father, mother, Malka; younger sister, Esia; and two younger brothers, Motia and Chaim. During those two years in the ghetto, Beba escaped for about a month to live with family friends on their farm. The family hid her on the second floor of their house, but with the harvest workers coming daily, Beba became concerned for the family.   ’I decided that it was too dangerous for them, so I returned to the ghetto,’ she said.   When the ghetto was disbanded, Beba was forced onto a crowded freight train and taken to a concentration camp. ‘We didn’t know what was going to happen to us,’ Beba said. ‘We thought it was the end.’   Beba spent the next two years of her life in three concentration camps: Kaiserwald, Stutthof and Torun, a subcamp of Stutthof.   ’Most of the time I dug ditches,’ Beba said. ‘We used to joke that we were digging graves for ourselves.’   She also had to carry rocks in wheelbarrows from point A to point B. ‘It was busy work to keep us very tired,’ she said, noting that she received a bowl of soup and a piece of bread for dinner and bread and coffee for breakfast. ‘We were skinny like a pencil.’   In spring 1945, the British liberated Beba, and she was hospitalized in a German military hospital for several months. She then traveled by ship with other survivors to Swedish hospitals in Helsingborg and Stockholm. She was diagnosed with typhus and suffered from the consequences of malnutrition.   She reconnected with her father’s older brother, who lived in Brooklyn, and he was instrumental in bringing her to the United States. When she arrived in Brooklyn, she took classes to learn English and worked for YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.   Beba met her husband, Lee, through her uncle, and they married on August 5, 1948 in San Antonio, Texas. They then moved to Los Angeles, so that Lee could earn his master’s degree in chemical engineering at USC. Lee, who was born in Poland and immigrated with his family to Mexico City as a child, worked for North American Aviation and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.   The Leventhals moved to Pacific Palisades in 1965 and raised their two children, Mary Ellen, a psychiatrist who lives in Santa Monica, and Michael, now an attorney who lives in West Los Angeles. They have two grandchildren, Noah, 16, and Ariel, 14.   Beba earned her degree in social work from Antioch University, and she worked for the Jewish Family Service for 17 years as a translator and social worker.   Since the war, Beba has returned to Vilnius, but she discovered that her hometown was a completely different place. The thriving Jewish culture that once existed had disappeared.   ’Every day, I think of that particular time period,’ Beba said. ‘When you are incarcerated for four years, all the memories are bad.’

Barbra Streisand and Noel Merz Unite For Women’s Heart Research Funding

Palisadian Dr. Noel Merz thanks Barbra Steisand for her $5 million donation to create the Barbra Streisand Heart Research and Education Program endowment at Cedars-Sinai.
Palisadian Dr. Noel Merz thanks Barbra Steisand for her $5 million donation to create the Barbra Streisand Heart Research and Education Program endowment at Cedars-Sinai.

Appearing at a fundraising event to benefit the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute’s Women’s Heart Center on August 4, singer and actress Barbra Steisand helped highlight the fact that heart disease is the leading cause of death for women in the United States. Dr. C. Noel Bairey Merz, a Pacific Palisades resident and director of the Women’s Heart Health center, told an audience gathered at the new Bloomingdale’s in Santa Monica Place that 500,000 women die each year from heart disease, and that surprisingly, 20 percent of them are typically in their 40s or younger. ‘Even though heart disease is less prevalent in young women than their older counterparts, it is still the leading cause of death in young women,’ said Merz, who received the McCue Woman Cardiologist of the Year award in 2009. ‘Yet less than 10 percent of women think that heart disease will impact them.’ In the United States in 2006, all cardiovascular diseases combined claimed the lives of 432,709 females while all forms of cancer combined to kill 269,819 females (including 40,821 from breast cancer).   Only in the last 10 years has it become common knowledge that there is a difference between men’s and women’s bodies and diseases, like those of the heart. Women experience different symptoms then men and need different diagnostic tests.   ’During the Bush years [2001-2008], there were cuts for women’s health research,’ said Merz, who had to actively search for benefactors to help fund this research and an education campaign. She met Streisand, who is committed to women’s health causes, and Streisand agreed to provide support by setting up a $5 million Barbara Streisand Heart Research and Education Program endowment at Cedars-Sinai.   As Streisand reiterated last Wednesday night at Bloomingdale’s, ‘We’re behind in research for women. Heart disease presents itself differently in men than women. It’s not just a man’s disease anymore, and once I learned these facts, I met with a brilliant woman, Dr. Merz, so we could make a difference.’   Merz would like to find an additional $20 million endowment in order to insure her Women’s Heart Center ‘will not have periods of feast or famine,’ and research won’t have to depend on the financial whims of the federal government.   Basically, in terms of heart disease, both sexes suffer large-artery blockage, which means the artery lining becomes hardened and swollen with plaque (calcium and fatty deposits and abnormal inflammatory cells), minimizing or stopping blood flow. An angiography is used to diagnosis this condition.   Unlike men, the plaque lining in women is smooth and even, which means the condition isn’t diagnosed through an angiogram and, quite often, is misdiagnosed.   ’Symptoms in women can include persistent chest pain or pressure,’ Merz said. ‘Patients describe it as a constricting band or ‘elephant on my chest.’ They have fatigue and shortness of breath. Often the women have already had an angiogram and were told that nothing is wrong.’   Additionally, more women are likely to suffer microvessel disease in which the small arteries fail to respond when demands for blood to the heart are higher. This can lead to a starving to the heart tissue of oxygen and the results are the same as plugged up arteries, resulting in a heart attack.   Why do more women have small-artery disease? Women have smaller arteries than men and although size might be part of it, more probably it is sex related. Data is lacking because tests that have been developed over the years have been geared towards the male and large-artery blockage.   Merz is also excited about the latest stem-cell research and the impact this may have on women’s heart disease. Stem cells are considered a person’s master cells because they have the ability to develop into any type of cell and they can self-renew.   Eduardo Marb’n, director of the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, is conducting an ongoing clinical trial in which patients who suffered recent heart attacks undergo a minimally invasive biopsy to retrieve a peppercorn-sized piece of heart muscle.’Scientists then use it to grow stem cells in a lab.’A month later, millions of the patient’s own stem cells are re-inserted into the patient’s heart via a catheter in an effort to repair muscle damage to the heart.’   ’This is an exciting area; it has so much potential,’ Merz said.   ’Research is time consuming and one has to think outside the box,’ she continued. ‘Maybe one in 10 ideas will work, which means you have to be merciless in your persistence.’ That also means that research is expensive, which is another reason she’s thankful for Streisand’s endowment.   Currently, Merz is treating a woman in her 30s who has three children and has had numerous heart attacks. ‘They (attacks) are in the process of ‘knocking’ her heart out,’ Merz said. ‘She will likely need a heart transplant.’   With the latest stem-cell research, there’s hope that eventually a heart transplant may be an option that is no longer used. Instead, the stem cells will be taken from the patient, ‘souped up and corrected in a Petri dish,’ and put back in the person, Merz said. ‘There are reasons to be optimistic.’   The $1,000-a-plate dinner benefiting the Women’s Heart Center at Cedars-Sinai was underwritten by Bloomingdale’s and hosted by chairman and CEO Michael Gould at the company’s new store at Santa Monica Place. Bloomingdale’s will donate 100 percent of the proceeds from ticket sales to the Center.

Gallery g169 Offers Exhibit of Sugarman’s Art and Photography

Cuban refugees, photo by Martin Sugarman
Cuban refugees, photo by Martin Sugarman

Martin Sugarman’s photographs and paintings, contrasting his quiet views of Santa Monica Bay and his careful documentation of social conflicts around the world, will go on display this weekend through September at g169, the new gallery at 169 W. Channel Rd. in Santa Monica Canyon.   A reception for the artist will be held on Saturday, August 14 from 5 to 8 p.m. The public is invited.   For the past two decades, Sugarman has been painting his beloved Pacific Ocean from the vantage point of a man who has lived most of his life close to the beach, including Santa Monica Canyon and on a sailboat in Marina del Rey.   Sugarman is a professional photographer with a Ph.D. in sociology.’ His publications include ‘God Be With You: War in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina’; ‘Kashmir: Paradise Lost’; ‘Storm over Cuba’; ‘War Above the Clouds: Siachen Glacier’; and ‘Speak Palestine, Speak Again.’

Sophocles’ ‘Elektra’ Set for Getty Villa’s Amphitheater in September

‘Elektra,’ the fifth-annual outdoor theatrical production at the Getty Villa, opens September 9 in the Villa’s outdoor amphitheater.   One of Sophocles’ most elegantly structured and emotionally wrenching works, ‘Elektra’ will feature Annie Purcell in the title role, Olympia Dukakis in the role of the Chorus, Pamela Reed as Clytemnestra and Manoel Felciano as Orestes.   Directed by Carey Perloff, artistic director of the American Conservatory Theater (ACT) in San Francisco, the Getty Villa production debuts a new translation by British playwright Timberlake Wertenbaker.   The story of ‘Elektra’ carries forward the tragic history of the House of Atreus. Years after the bloody murder of King Agamemnon, his widow, Clytemnestra, and her lover, Aegisthus, rule the city with an iron hand, while their daughter Elektra prays to the gods that her exiled brother, Orestes, might return to avenge their father’s death.   Believed to have been written near the end of Sophocles’ life, ‘Elektra’ embodies the playwright’s most profound portrait of the endurance of the human spirit, brilliantly ablaze with the warring, inner flames of hope and despair.   ’Elektra is a play about willful memory and the damage that happens to someone who refuses to forget,’ says Perloff, who grew up in Pacific Palisades and received a B.A. in classics and comparative literature from Stanford University. She is celebrating her 18th season as artistic director of Tony Award-winning ACT in San Francisco, where she is known for directing innovative productions of classics, championing new writing for the theater and creating international collaborations with such artists as Robert Wilson and Tom Stoppard.   This year’s Getty performance offers a particularly rich experience for theatergoers, as it simultaneously complements The Art of Ancient Greek Theater (August 26 through January 3), the first exhibition in the United States in over 50 years to focus on the artistic representation of theatrical performance in ancient Greece. The exhibition will be open at the Villa before each evening’s performance of ‘Elektra.’   Performances will be held Thursdays through Saturdays, at 8 p.m., through October 2. For tickets ($42; $38 for students and seniors), call (310) 440-7300 or go online to www.getty.edu.   A two-day symposium on the historical context of theatrical performance and its relation to the creation of some of the most vivid art from the ancient world is set for September 24-25 in the Getty Villa Auditorium. On Saturday afternoon, director Carey Perloff and Professor Helene Foley of Columbia University join curator Mary Louise Hart of the J. Paul Getty Museum for a conversation about the process of adapting and directing ‘Elektra’ for the contemporary stage.   Advance registration required.

Potrero Canyon Fire Threatens Park, Homes

Firefighters knocked down two simultaneous blazes in upper Potrero Canyon last Wednesday afternoon, including this hillside area below the Palisades Recreation Center. Photo: Steve Bellamy
Firefighters knocked down two simultaneous blazes in upper Potrero Canyon last Wednesday afternoon, including this hillside area below the Palisades Recreation Center. Photo: Steve Bellamy

Two separate but simultaneous fires burned in upper Potrero Canyon last Wednesday afternoon (July 28), threatening several homes and even the playing fields at the Palisades Recreation Center.   The blazes broke out shortly after 1 p.m. on a breezy afternoon, but were extinguished before they could cause any structural damage. Tiny fires were spotted in several other locations. According to Battalion Chief 17 John Miller, the’official cause of the fires was juveniles playing with fireworks.”It appears from the evidence and burn patterns at the scene that there were two different areas where the fire started,’ said Miller, who was dispatched from Woodland Hills when the Battalion 9 chief in Westwood was not available. ‘We originally got a call that the fire was at the corner of Lombard and De Pauw streets,’ said local Fire Station 69 Captain Mike Ketaily, whose crew went to the backyard and the canyon below the house to douse the blaze.   Ketaily said he could also see a grass fire spreading across two hillsides below the Recreation Center mesa, but with Stations 69 and 23 focused on preventing the canyon blaze from reaching the home, they did not have the resources to deploy a second company.   When the fire below the Recreation Center reached the hillside near the lower tennis courts off Alma Real/ Frontera, and with heavy smoke billowing into the sky, youth attending a tennis camp were sent away from the area.   Alma Real resident Jason Lehel reported the fire when it first broke out in the hillside across the canyon. When he saw the second fire coming across the Recreation Center hillside towards his house, he went into his backyard and watched as a water-dropping helicopter quickly extinguished the blaze. ‘It went so quickly it was ridiculous,’ Lehel said, noting that the L.A. Fire Department had done brush clearance in the canyon four weeks earlier. That fact was mentioned over and over by firefighters as a reason why the blazes were readily contained. Ketaily praised civilian Manuel Sanchez, who was working on a construction job in the Palisades. ‘He and his buddies were phenomenal. They kept the fire on the field near Hampden Place from spreading, until a helicopter could get here.’ ‘I happened to be driving by and saw the smoke,’ Sanchez said. ‘I saw two security guards jump over the fence into private yards off Alma Real, and I thought maybe I could help.’ He followed the guards down into the canyon and over towards Hampden Place, where he saw a homeowner hooking up a garden hose. He took a shovel from him and started throwing dirt on the flames. ‘The fire came around the corner real quick,’ Sanchez said. Ketaily was worried that the 15 mph winds would whip embers onto the large eucalyptus trees on Hampden Place, directly in front of a residence with a wooden deck. ‘I thought it was going to take off, with the dead leaves and the eucalyptus,’ he said, but ‘thanks to Sanchez it didn’t.’ Meanwhile, it took Battalion Chief Miller 30 minutes to reach the Palisades. Additional fire companies arrived from West Los Angeles, Playa Vista, Mid-Wilshire and the Mulholland corridor. Three water-dropping helicopters also fought the blazes after utilizing the Highlands reservoir. ‘The Palisades is really isolated and it takes a long time to get companies up here,’ Miller said, ‘but we were fortunate. Had the fire not been reported as quickly as it was and had the brush clearance not been completed, the fire had the possibility of spreading into denser vegetation or to homes in the area with wood-shake roofs.’ By 2:05, the fires were out, and firefighters continued to work on the hot spots, hosing them with Class A foam, which allows the water to penetrate more deeply. On the fire line, four camp crews from L.A. County Fire help turn over the entire burned areas with a shovel. ‘It’s tough what firefighters do,’ Sanchez said. ‘I’ve always had respect for them, but this elevates them to a whole new level.’

Construction Worker Dies after Cave-In at Sea Ridge Townhouse

City workers fought to free a worker trapped under 11 feet of dirt with a L.A. City Department of Sanitation
City workers fought to free a worker trapped under 11 feet of dirt with a L.A. City Department of Sanitation

A desperate rescue operation below a townhouse in the Palisades Highlands ended last Thursday afternoon when construction worker Gualfer Lopez-Reyes was found dead in a trench, buried under 11 feet of dirt.   The L.A. County Coroner, who was on the scene in the 600 block of Palisades Drive in the Sea Ridge gated community, gave asphyxia as the cause of death.   Lopez-Reyes, a 25-year-old worker with McGrath Contracting, was part of a team hired to install a French drain along the foundation of the two-story townhouse, which enters on the second floor. Nancy Hope, president of the Sea Ridge Homeowners Association, said the owner had experienced moisture along the lower-level walls.   The contracting crew had dug out an L-shaped, 8-ft.-by-8-ft. by 11-ft.-deep trench along the building. Lopez-Reyes was the first worker to enter the trench at 10:55 a.m., only to have the dirt from the corner of the L collapse on him. Firemen from Stations 23 and 69 arrived first on the scene. Once they realized the depth at which Lopez-Reyes was trapped under the dirt, a search-and rescue team was called. Meanwhile, firefighters began digging through dirt described as adobe-like clay. They cut plywood and beams to use as support to prevent further cave-ins as they worked in the trench. According to Stephen Ruda, a Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman who was on scene, once the search-and-rescue team arrived, a ventilation air sock was placed after drilling through a cement block wall into the trench space in the hopes that Lopez-Reyes was in an air pocket and could be rescued. A Vactor 2100 sanitation truck, equipped with an apparatus that works as a large-scale vacuum, was positioned above the hole, and dirt was sucked out in an effort to locate Lopez-Reyes. About five feet down, the top of his white hardhat was reached.   ’He was entombed in heavy compacted dirt and there were no signs of life,’ Ruda reported. The rescue attempt ended at 2:50 p.m. Krisann Chasarik of the California State Division of Occupational Safety and Health told the Palisadian-Post that the accident is under investigation and may take three to four months to complete. ‘The construction company had an annual excavation permit,’ Chasarik said. ‘We’re focusing on determining if it [the trench] was shored up properly. Anytime there is an excavation, there are safety regulations that have to be followed.’

Frozen-Yogurt ‘War’ Coming to the Palisades This Fall

Just days after Toppings Yogurt announced that it will open a store on Via de la Paz this fall, a competitor says that it will follow suit on Swarthmore Avenue, below Sunset.   The Yogurt Shoppe is coming to 873 Swarthmore in space currently comprising about half of Black Ink, the stationery and gift store owned by Patti Black. ‘I’m thrilled,’ said Black on Tuesday. ‘I’ve been looking for a tenant since December.’ Black moved to her Swarthmore location in December 2003, and expanded into the space next door when the hair salon Atocha closed in 2005. Wrestling with a tough retail economy, she decided to downsize back to her original storefront. She had two other applications for the space, but chose the frozen yogurt store because she feels it will ‘draw a lot of activity to the street.’   The wall between the stores that was taken down when Black expanded will go back up today, necessitating Black’s closing for three days during the construction. She will reopen on Monday. Black’s new tenants, Kevin Sabin and Clive Lewis, said their store may not open until October because of the length of time it takes to receive city permits. The men want to open sooner, but they have been told that the earliest they can get a city health permit is anywhere from four to six weeks, and they can’t apply for a building permit until the health-permit approval comes. After a dearth of new stores opening in the Palisades, two frozen-yogurt stores should be open by the end of the year, just a block apart. Toppings will be located at 872 Via de la Paz, in the former Chefmakers space. ‘I grew up in Brooklyn and there was always a neighborhood hangout,’ said Sabin, an executive vice president with KW Commercial who lives in Pacific Palisades with his wife Jennifer and their three children, who attend Canyon School. ‘I’d like to create that same kind of place here.’ Lewis, who grew up in Leeds, England, and came to the United States via Cape Town, South Africa, has a frozen-yogurt shop in Newport Beach. He lives in Woodland Hills with his 10-year-old son and says he looks forward to the drive over Topanga Canyon to the Palisades every day. The two men met a year ago while on a kayaking trip off Catalina Island. ‘I was opening the store in Newport at the time,’ Lewis said. ‘We discussed it [frozen-yogurt stores] while kayaking for two days.’ Sabin sold Lewis on the idea of opening a store in the Palisades. The two men looked at possible locations, but while waiting to inspect a vacant store in the Village, Lewis walked into Black Ink and struck up a conversation with Black. After inspecting the first site, he and Sabin elected to opt for a location nearer the Village Green. ‘Our concept is about quality,’ Sabin said. ‘We also want to give back to the community and be part of the neighborhood, support local schools, churches and temples. Our goal is to be a fixture of the community and to be here for a long time.’ The owners plan to have 40 to 50 toppings and five yogurt machines, with two flavors at each machine. Standard flavors like vanilla and chocolate will always be available, but Sabin and Lewis plan to rotate flavors from a choice of 70, so that customers will always have something new to try. Lewis said they plan to employ local residents. To apply, call (818) 383-1010. The men will also offer store promotions on Facebook.