Participants in the Palisadian Playwrights Festival: (Back row:) co-producers Pat Perkins, Shirley Churgin and Andrew Frew. (Middle row:) playwrights Richard Martin Hirsch and Gene Franklin Smith. (Front row:) Sandra Shanin, Diane Grant and Noelle Donfeld. Photo: Joy Daunis.
Theatre Palisades presents the first annual Palisades Playwrights Festival’ four evenings of plays by award-winning local playwrights. Readings will take place Tuesday evenings, March 9, 16, 23 and April 13 at 7:30 p.m. at Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd. The schedule for the Festival is as follows: March 9 ‘ ‘The Last of the Daytons’ by Diane Grant The universal human longing for family informs this play about how one incident can define and change a person’s life forever. At first glance, family members Melina and Bob, Jodie and Devon might not be seen as ‘normal.’ Not that many people talk to invisible friends, escape from hospitals in pajamas, or collect epitaphs. But this is how they cope. March 16 ‘ ‘Apogee + 26’ by Richard Martin Hirsch In the summer of 1969, three friends from L.A.’s Westside began a tour of the U.S. in a VW van. Now, 26 years later, one of them has been stricken with a terminal illness, and his former best friend is thrown into a quandary about why their friendship dissolved. April 13 ‘ ‘Haunted Masters: The Ghosts of War’ by Gene Franklin Smith Three short plays adapted from stories by D.H. Lawrence, Ambrose Bierce and Algernon Blackwood. April 20 ‘ ‘The Spark ‘ Hannah Senesh,’ a musical with book and lyrics by Noelle Donfeld, music by Sandra Shanin. The action takes place in Hannah’s cell in a Hungarian prison, 1943. Stark reality and memories surround Hannah, a strong-willed young Hungarian Jew captured by Nazis after parachuting behind enemy lines in an attempt to save her Jewish countrymen. Donations are welcome. Parking is free. Contact: 310-454-1970.
Hostess Karen Dawn and actor James Cromwell (“Babe”) will be at the fundraiser
‘Sunset Sangria for the Dolphins’ will take place at the Pacific Palisades home of animal advocate Karen Dawn on Saturday, March 6, from 4 to 7 p.m. Cetaceans activist Ric O’Barry, the subject of the Oscar-nominated documentary ‘The Cove,’ will speak at 5 p.m. Actor/activist James Cromwell (‘Babe,’ ‘Spider-Man 3’) will introduce O’Barry. ‘Cove’ filmmaker Louie Psyhoyos is also scheduled to attend. Madeleine Bistro will cater the gourmet vegan cuisine. ‘The Cove’ details O’Barry’s mission to expose the dolphin slaughter that has been taking place annually and covertly at a remote location in Taiji, Japan. In the 2009 film, O’Barry, who started his career as a dolphin trainer on the TV program ‘Flipper,’ says he now regrets his participation on the hit series because it ultimately created the market for the sale of dolphins to aquatic parks that spawned the Taiji situation, in which 23,000 dolphins are killed each year. The meat from the dolphins (which contains high levels of mercury) is then sold to consumers in Japan, misrepresented as other forms of fish. ’I spent 10 years building that industry up and I spent 35 years trying to tear it down,’ O’Barry says in the film. (An interview with O’Barry will appear in next week’s Palisadian-Post. ‘The idea for the event,’ Dawn tells the Post, ‘came about when I congratulated my friend Ric on the Oscar nomination and he said that he was delighted but hoped that some of the attention the film was getting could be directed back to the dolphins and ending the annual slaughter in Taiji. ‘So we are doing this event to raise awareness of and money for Earth Island Institute, the organization that funds Ric’s work.’ Proceeds will help subsidize O’Barry’s voyage back to Taiji, where he plans to stage a celebrity-laden demonstration in an effort to help shut down the dolphin-slaughter site. Ben Stiller, Sting and Yoko Ono are among the celebrities O’Barry is attempting to mobilize. Dawn promises an interesting evening on her scenic patio, overlooking the Pacific Ocean, but there are a few guests that she can not guarantee will make it. ‘We have asked the dolphins to do a swim-by and they are considering it but won’t commit,’ Dawn says, smiling. Recommended donation: $250 per person. Limited capacity: 40 guests. Advance RSVP recommended. E-mail Karen at news@dawnwatch.com
Clematis crispa bears lavender-blue, bell-shaped flowers with curly edges in summer. Its blooms are not profuse, but their elegant shape makes this plant a good choice for trellises, growing through shrubs, or planting in damp areas.
Edith Malek was not always royalty. The ‘Clematis Queen’ ascended to the throne after her years of great appreciation for the ‘aristocrat of climbers’ finally led to founding the American Clematis Society over a decade ago. Her highness will talk about her favorite subject to members and friends of the Palisades Garden Club on Monday, March 1 at 7:30 p.m. at the Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford. ’In 1994, I was working at a small nursery in Irvine and one of the local sales reps brought his truck around in which he had several clematis samples,’ Malek recalls. ‘ I thought I was going to pass out and go to heaven. I thought, they can’t grow here in Irvine, but I didn’t let that dampen my spirit. I bought seven three-gallon pots, $28 apiece. That was a lot of money back then.’ Malek’s dream soon turned serious when on a trip to England that same year; she bought two books on the subject. ‘I was reading them and my hair follicles hurt.’ Nobody was talking about clematis back then, Malek recalls. But she kept doing her own thing, and even started presenting programs on the species. ‘I was in my princess stage,’ she says. ’I realized that I had to help them along, get horticulturalists familiar with the multiple possibilities of this plant.’ A colleague, Gloria Leibach, who was the president of the South Bay Rose Society at that time, encouraged Malek to start a society. ‘She said, ‘I’d join the society if you’d start one.’ I had no idea what I was doing; we started with nine people. Now we have over 350 members.’ For the most part, Malek says that gardeners fall in love with the big hybrid soft flowers, but she is drawn to the smaller ones like the crispa, which are tiny, the size of a marshmallow. Clematis grow most everywhere in the United States, but with complete comfort in zones 4-11, those with mild temperatures and a little cold chill. The varieties are limited in the warmer zones. The plants come in a range of rich hues and varied bloom times, which enable gardeners to have masses of bloom from late winter to late fall. While the flowers give a good show in the ground, they also make an excellent cut flower with a two-week shelf life, Malek says. She has some 200 plants in her yard, one-third in the ground and the remainder in containers. ’I trial them so I can tell our members which ones I really like,’ Malek says. ‘There are more than the jackmanii (the first large-flowered hybrid), and if I don’t try them we’re never going to get beyond the seven favorites.’ Malek has a degree in horticulture, and for six years she ran a floral business until the 1990s, when the economy took a downturn. She then got a job with the Irvine Company; she was the first female gardener on the 80-member team. She proudly recalls that her ‘location’ was Fashion Island, where she took care of the pond, the poplar trees and changing out the concrete planters each season. These days, she is knee-deep in overseeing and directing the society, but Malek looks back on her floral design days nostalgically. ‘I came out of retirement last year when my daughter got married,’ she says. ‘She told me that I could use clematis in her bouquet, but not to go overboard. This was hard for me because I had been collecting clematis, carefully processing and saving them for a couple of weeks to use in the arrangements. So I started putting in roses and delphinium, and then added just a few clematis. which bloomed into a big clematis extravaganza. I’m all about show,’ she admits. Her daughter loved it.
Goalie Casey Jordan and the Palisades High boys’ soccer team won two playoff games last week to advance to the quarterfinals of the City Section playoffs. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Last week was all about winning for the soccer programs at Palisades High. While the boys are sailing in uncharted waters, the girls are right where they are accustomed to being. Each established itself as a serious threat to win the City Section championship after posting impressive victories. The boys had reason to be excited after last Friday’s dramatic 1-0 second-round win over Fremont. According to assistant coach John Lissauer it has been about 20 years since the Dolphins have advanced beyond the second round of the playoffs. “This is a team that just doesn’t quit. They play for the full 80 minutes,” said head coach Dave Suarez, who saw his team lose badly to Bell in the first round last year. “We’re the highest seed left in our half of the draw so I’m anxious to see how far we can take it.” The seventh-seeded Dolphins (9-1-5) hosted No. 18 Locke (9-8-2) in the quarterfinals Wednesday (result undetermined at press time). If victorious they would host the winner between No. 14 Narbonne and No. 22 Bravo Medical in the semifinals next Monday at 3 p.m. at Stadium by the Sea. The City championship game will be played Saturday, March 6, at Contreras High in Los Angeles. Every game presents an opportunity for somebody to make a big play and Friday’s hero turned out to be Pali’s diminutive sophomore midfielder Kevin Strangeway, who cut across the goalmouth and headed in a cross from Max Ledesma for the game’s only goal in the 73rd minute. “I saw throughout the game that our No. 1 set [corner] play wasn’t working because Fremont was clogging the middle,” Suarez said. “So I called for something shorter, hoping to draw their defenders out, then play the ball right back in, and it worked.” Instead of curving his corner kick towards the net on the first strike, Ledesma touched the ball back up the sideline, waited for the return pass and one-timed it into the penalty area where Strangeway was waiting to re-direct it just inside the left goalpost. Moments later, Palisades goalie Casey Jordan was issued a yellow card for delay of game after taking too long to put the ball in play on a goal kick. The infraction meant that Jordan had to leave the game, leading to some tense moments as the clock wound down. The referee allowed Palisades one last chance to re-insert Jordan with 90 seconds left in injury time, but Suarez opted to stay with backup Charlie Bailey. Once again, the coach’s intuition proved to be spot on as Bailey came off his line to punch away a loose ball just before the final whistle. “Casey made a couple of huge saves for us earlier, but at that point I had a lot of confidence in Charlie so I stuck with him,” Suarez said. “It’s a great luxury to have the depth we do at that position. If I could take any two goalies in the City, I’d pick those guys 1-2.” The 10th-seeded Pathfinders (11-3-4) were controlling play early in the second half but could not put a shot past Jordan. Palisades dominated the final 15 minutes and its late pressure, coupled with Fremont’s tiring defense, led to the decisive goal. “At the end of games is where conditioning really becomes a factor,” said Palisades assistant coach Rigoberto Rivas, who played for the Dolphins under previous head coach David Williams. “Yes, they were controlling play most of the second half, but they were expending a lot of energy in the process.” In the first round last Wednesday the Dolphins dominated 26th-seeded Lincoln from the opening whistle, Jordan having to make only four saves in a 2-0 victory at Stadium by the Sea. A Lincoln defender accidentally deflected the ball into his own net off a corner kick by Ledesma late in the first half. Then, the Dolphins added an insurance goal on a well-placed turnaround shot from 12 yards out by Jesse Vasquez midway through the second half. Meanwhile, the girls squad keeps rolling along under head coach Kim Smith. Palisades appears to be on a collision course with top-seeded El Camino Real, but in order for that to happen the fifth-seeded Dolphins (16-5-2) must get past No. 4 San Pedro (16-5-1) in a quarterfinal game this Thursday in the South Bay. The Western League champion Dolphins blanked Kennedy 2-0 in their playoff opener last Thursday at Stadium by the Sea. Top scorer Kathryn Gaskin notched her 26th goal of the season on a breakway in the closing seconds of the first half to put her team ahead. Palisades quickened the pace when play resumed and was rewarded when sophomore forward Katie Van Daalen Wetters tapped home a loose ball after the Cougars’ goalie mishandled a cross from freshman Jacklyn Bamberger in the 50th minute. “Kathryn getting that goal going into halftime was huge,” said Van Daalen Wetters, who scored 14 goals as a freshman last year and has 11 so far this season. “We wanted to follow it up and do what we do best. I’m really looking forward to the next game.” The semifinals are next Tuesday, March 2, and the finals are March 6 at Contreras High.
Garrett Nevels scored 38 points but it wasn’t enough to prevent Palisades from losing to Birmingham 90-86 in the first round of the City playoffs. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Expectations are always high for Coach James Paleno and the Palisades High boys’ varsity basketball team. The Dolphins were hoping to reach the semifinals of the City Section Division I playoffs and qualify for the state tournament, but those aspirations will be put on hold for another year after their shocking 90-86 overtime loss to Birmingham in the first round last Friday night. “This idea of ‘I’ll give you two points to get three’ is for the birds,” said Paleno, also the boys’ golf coach, who now has to shift his focus to that sport a little earlier than he expected. “Defense has been the problem all season and it was again. We didn’t move our feet, we didn’t take charges and we didn’t work for good position on rebounds.” Sahdi Odu scored the winning basket on a tip-in and fellow senior Sedreth Gillespie sank two clinching free throws with five seconds left in overtime for Birmingham, which came into the playoffs having lost four straight West Valley League games. Almost lost in his team’s defeat was the offensive show put on by wing Garrett Nevels, who made four three-pointers and finished with 38 points for the Dolphins, including all seven of Palisades’ points in overtime. Kenneth Towner had 14 points, Adam Griffin scored 10 and Rico Matheney added nine. “Garrett should make first-team All-City,” Paleno said. “He’s that good.” Despite their problems on the defensive end, the Dolphins did whatever they wanted on offense, especially in the first half. No. 6-seeded Palisades (19-9) started fast, built a 13-point lead midway through the second quarter and took a 43-35 advantage into halftime. Providing a spark off the bench for the 11th-seeded Patriots (15-11) was Corey Randall, who played for Palisades’ sophomore squad last season. Randall hit a pair of three-pointers in the third quarter, the second giving Birmingham a 52-48 lead. The teams traded baskets from then until the four-minute mark of the fourth quarter. “Sure, we were scoring but it’s hard to build a lead if you keep giving up points at the other end of the court,” Paleno said. Guard Rene Reyes made a running floater to tie the score 79-79 with two seconds left in regulation. Angel Gutierrez had 23 points and Gillespie added 20 for Birmingham, which moved on to play at third-seeded Crenshaw in the quarterfinals Wednesday. “The disappointing thing is that we never once this season played with defensive intensity for the full 32 minutes,” Paleno said. “Kudos to them [Birmingham]. They came out here and beat us on our own floor.” Girls’ Basketball If anyone had told him beforehand his team would only be down by two points to Narbonne heading into the fourth quarter of last Thursday night’s City Section Division I playoff opener, Palisades Coach Torino Johnson gladly would have taken that scenario. “I was happy with where we were at and I thought we were in a great position to win’it just didn’t happen,” Johnson said. “We made too many costly mistakes early on and, in the end, they are what cost us the game.” The fourth-seeded Gauchos (20-9) outscored Palisades 8-0 in the final eight minutes for a tightly-contested 47-37 victory that ended the season for the Dolphins (6-21), who were dealt the unlucky No. 13 seed after having to forfeit nine games for using an ineligible player. “We came at them strong and I think they were a little surprised by that,” forward Nicole Flyer said. “It’s very disappointing to lose but overall we learned a lot this season.” Although center Donae Moguel was force in the key for Palisades she was unable to convert at the foul line, missing 10 of 13 free throws, including all five of her attempts in the first quarter. Point guard Ashlie Bruner added 13 points and Skai Thompson had five for the Dolphins. sports@palipost.com
St. Matthew’s 7th-grader Matthew Koh breaks away for the first of his two goals in the first half of Monday’s championship game. Photo by Andy Bernstein
It was a showdown between two unbeaten teams and something had to give Monday afternoon in the Pacific Basin League boys’ soccer championship game. Windward scored five unanswered goals in the second half to defeat St. Matthew’s 6-2 at Mar Vista Park Having outscored its two previous playoff opponents by a combined total of 18-3, the St. Matthew’s 6th-8th grade squad took the field with momentum and confidence against Windward in a rematch of a regular season game that ended in a 1-1 tie. Fittingly, it was 7th-grader Matthew Koh who got the Falcons on the board first in the fourth minute. He scored again 10 minutes later to increase the lead to 2-0. That was nothing new for Koh, who had scored six first-half goals in St. Matthew’s 11-1 quarterfinal win over Wildwood and added four first-half goals in the Falcons’ 7-2 semifinal victory over Brentwood last week. Windward pulled to within 2-1 by halftime and then took control in the second half with an offensive intensity the Falcons just couldn’t match. St. Matthew’s goalie Cameron Schiffer made 18 saves, including a blocked penalty kick. Koh had chances in the second half along with Jeffrey Elhers, Brandon Kupfer, Jack Newman, Tyler Newman, Quinn McGinley and Kieran Sheridan but none found the net. Rounding out the team were Ryan Bostick, Alec Graham, Andrew Radbel, Peter St. John, Hank Algert, Lachlan Montgomery, Henry Prentice, Hunter Price, Eric Roosendahl.and Brendan Sanderson. It was a remarkable season nonetheless for St. Matthew’s under co-coaches Rob Risley and Gerardo Martinez.
Palisadian Leo Rosetti has signed with the Moses Lake Pirates of the West Coast League.
Leo Rosetti, who grew up playing in the Palisades Pony Baseball Association and led Loyola High to the Southern Section Division III championship at Dodger Stadium in 2007, has signed to play in Washington for the Moses Lake Pirates of the West Coast League this summer. A pitcher at Pomona-Pitzer College, Rosetti helped PPBA Commissioner Bob Benton with spring tryouts and remains involved in the community that gave him his start. Last summer, the crafty right-hander played for the Cheyenne Grizzlies in Wyoming. Now in its fifth year, the Moses Lakes organization belongs to a league stretching from Kelowna, Canada, to Bend, Oregon. A Division III school in Claremont, Pomona-Pitzer is a member of the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC). The Sagehens were ranked No. 1 in the nation last year.
Palisades High’s annual alumni baseball games will be this Saturday, February 27, at George Robert Field. In keeping with tradition, there will be two games. The junior varsity will face the older alumni at 1 p.m., followed by the Dolphins’ varsity against the younger alumni at 5 p.m. Palisades is the defending Western League champion and will field another strong team this spring under Head Coach Mike Voelkel. All former PaliHi baseball players are invited. For details, call Maurice Levin at (818) 759-0600 or e-mail maurice@cyads.com. Wong Fun Raiser Saturday at PTC Palisadians are invited to a charity “Fun Raiser” on Saturday at the Palisades Tennis Center to raise money for Glenn Wong, owner of 1st String Pro Shop in Santa Monica, who is battling lung cancer. The event will feature a doubles tournament, a raffle, and silent and live auctions in which $25,000 in services and merchandise will be up for bid. Among the auction items will be two box seats to the upcoming Indian Wells tournament; a two-night stay at La Quinta Resort & Spa; a limited-edition tennis racquet autographed by Rod Laver; a racquet signed by Maria Sharapova; month-long training packages at Spectrum Club; a signed copy of Andre Agassi’s autobiography; hand-crafted jewelry; a luxury condo timeshare; and USC tennis memorabilia. A $75 dollar donation is requested to play in the “Live Ball” tournament from 2-5:30 p.m. Bidding for the auction will be from 2-4 p.m., with pick-up at 4:30 p.m. To donate to the auction or make a tax-deductible gift, call Schwartz at 310-451-1220 or e-mail bill@schwartzcompany.com. JG Online Registration for Opens Registration for returning Junior Lifeguards will begin on-line at 9 a.m. on March 1. The Junior Guard Program is open to all boys and girls in L.A. County and is designed to instruct youth ages 9-17 in beach and ocean skills. The program runs June 28 through July 30. Classes are Monday through Friday and registrants can choose between two class sessions (8:30-11:30 a.m.) and (1:30-4:30 p.m.). The fee is $420 and includes a shirt and a swimsuit. Financial aid is available. Visit www.watchthewater.org/jg/. PPBA Pancake Breakfast March 13 The Palisades Pony Baseball Association’s annual pancake breakfast is Saturday, March 13 from 7-11 a.m. at the Palisades Recreational Center. Tickets are $5 and include pancakes, sausage, fresh fruit, coffee and juice. Tickets can be purchased at the event or from your favorite neighborhood baseball player. The breakfast is the only PPBA fundraiser and all money raised goes to the Field of Dreams Fund to help pay for field maintenance. Opening day ceremonies start at 9 a.m. sharp. PPBA Commissioner Bob Benton has yet to reveal who will throw this year’s ceremonial first pitch
Budget Move Would Impact Some 1,180 Students at Racially Diverse School
In order to save about $2 million next school year, the Los Angeles Unified School District has proposed eliminating 25 buses for about 1,180 Palisades Charter High School students, who travel from more than 100 zip codes to the campus. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Faced with a $640-million budget deficit, the Los Angeles Unified School District has proposed eliminating bus transportation this fall for about 1,180 Palisades Charter High School students who travel from more than 100 Los Angeles zip codes.   ’When I found out, I was shocked,’ said PaliHi freshman Maria Morfin. ‘I thought my future is gone.’   Morfin, whose bus trip from Sun Valley takes her an hour and a half, told the Palisadian-Post that her parents would be unable to drive her. Meanwhile, the public high school in her gang-infested neighborhood does not provide the same high quality of education or a safe environment to study, she said.   ’Here, possibilities come true,’ said the 14-year-old, who hopes to become a physician’s assistant.   Last Thursday, 200 parents and students, who travel from communities such as East Los Angeles, South Los Angeles and Inglewood, attended a meeting in Mercer Hall at PaliHi to find out more about the proposal and talk about solutions.   ’This is your school; we want you here,’ PaliHi Executive Director Amy Dresser-Held told the group, adding that the traveling students comprise 42 percent of the student population. ‘Diversity is a key part of our success at this school.’   She explained that PaliHi recently submitted its charter application to the district for renewal, which gives the district an opportunity to renegotiate terms. As a result, the district has proposed cutting transportation (25 buses a day) for a savings of about $2 million.   '[We] cannot continue to transport students to an independent charter school at district expense when we are facing larger class sizes, layoffs and substantial cuts to district programs,’ Estelle Luckett, director of LAUSD’s Student Integration Services, told the Post.   PaliHi, which opened in 1961, separated from LAUSD in 2003 as an independent charter school, by which it receives funding directly from the state and operates under its own governing board. LAUSD, however, continues to oversee the charter to make sure the school is being governed properly.   Since the late 1970s, LAUSD has also paid to transport students to the school through the Permits with Transportation (PWT) program, which provides transportation for Hispanic, black, Asian and other non-Anglo-Saxon students to predominantly white schools and vice versa. LAUSD also transports students to PaliHi’s magnet program, which is one of 173 programs within the district that provide students of different ethnicities the opportunity to focus on a specific subject. Pali’s magnet is geared toward math, science and computer technology.   The district is required to offer these integration programs under a 1963 lawsuit, Crawford v. Board of Education of Los Angeles, which was upheld by the Supreme Court in 1982. PaliHi has educated about 10,000 students in the PWT and magnet programs since their inception in 1977, according to Dresser-Held.   Students are also bused to PaliHi through Public School Choice, a No Child Left Behind mandate that requires the district to provide transportation from low-performing schools to higher-performing schools and through the Capacity Adjustment Placement program, which is intended to alleviate overcrowded schools.   Luckett argues that PaliHi should pay for the busing if the school wants to continue to educate these students. Racial diversity has been a key provision of the school’s charter since 1993, when the school initially gained charter status.   ’Palisades Charter High School receives the full state allocation (based on average daily attendance) for each of those students and the district does not,’ Luckett said.   Schools are paid a certain amount per student annually based on their attendance rate. This year, the state is giving PaliHi $5,831 per student, or about $6.9 million for the 1,180 traveling students. If those students attended other LAUSD schools that are not fiscally independent charters, the district would receive that money from the state instead. Dresser-Held responded that the school cannot afford to bus the students. The $2- million cost is nearly 10 percent of PaliHi’s $22-million operating budget. Eighty percent of the budget is dedicated to teachers’ salaries and benefits, while the remaining 20 percent covers the costs of utilities, food service, textbooks, custodial services and more.   She argues that LAUSD has the money to pay for the transportation from a Targeted Instructional Improvement Grant, which the district receives from the state to support court-ordered integration programs. PaliHi is not eligible for this grant.   ’We are trying to negotiate with the district on the best way to proceed,’ Dresser-Held said, adding that she and PaliHi’s Operations Manager Maisha-Cole Perri met with LAUSD’s Director of Transportation Enrique Boull’t to discuss options.   They analyzed the number of riders per bus traveling to and from PaliHi and Paul Revere Middle School, which also educates students from all over Los Angeles. They discovered that the 45 buses are not filled to capacity, and by aligning PaliHi’s and Paul Revere’s drop-off and pick-up times, the district would save $1.2 million. PaliHi has also proposed reducing the number of 5:45 p.m. pick-up buses from five to three for a savings of $500,000. The buses pick up students in the afternoon at 2:15 p.m., 3 p.m., and 5:45 p.m. The evening buses are for athletes and students participating in after-school sports and clubs. Luckett told the Post that the district is verifying the accuracy of PaliHi’s proposal. ‘No final decision has been made,’ she said. ‘We continue to hope that Palisades will reimburse the district for transportation, so there is no disruption. If that doesn’t happen, we will work closely with parents to find other options for these students.’ However, Dresser-Held believes that PaliHi’s program is the best option. ‘We’re serving the traveling students better than their home schools,’ she said. PaliHi’s African American and Latino students are performing better than their respective racial groups at their neighborhood schools such as Crenshaw, Dorsey, Manual Arts, Los Angeles High and Jefferson. Last school year at PaliHi, African Americans received an Academic Performance Index (API) score of 704 and Latinos a score of 762. At their neighborhood schools, the African Americans and Hispanics are generally scoring in the 500s and 400s. API is based on test results from the Standardized Testing and Reporting program (STAR) and the California High School Exit Examination (CAHSEE). Dresser-Held continued that the cuts will disrupt education because Paul Revere and PaliHi teachers collaborate, and the district would continue to bus students to Paul Revere. ‘We would still give preference to Paul Revere students, but they would have to figure out how to get here on their own,’ she said. PaliHi officials are considering other alternatives if LAUSD does not accept the proposal, Dresser-Held said. These include working with Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority and Santa Monica Big Blue Bus to provide reduced-cost bus tickets. Parents could also pitch in to fund bus transportation or arrange carpools. PaliHi mother Cherry Goff, who lives near the intersection of Crenshaw and Hyde Park, said she would be willing to work overtime at her job at Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk to help pay for busing. She doesn’t want her son, Christian Allende, to ride the MTA bus because she believes he would be more susceptible to gang activity, and she can’t drive him. ‘I have always had a good experience with these schools,’ Goff said, adding that Allende, a freshman at PaliHi, attended Brentwood Elementary Magnet School and Paul Revere. ‘Plus, I don’t have to worry while I am at work. I don’t get calls that ‘We’re going to have to close down the school [because of a shooting].” She fears he would have to attend his neighborhood school, Crenshaw. Luckett said if LAUSD stops providing transportation to PaliHi, these traveling students would still have alternatives. ‘The district could accommodate the magnet students by relocating [PaliHi’s] math/science magnet program to another campus,’ Luckett said. ‘The Permits with Transportation students could be accommodated at other successful LAUSD high schools.’ In addition, the district would identify another school that is considered high achieving under No Child Left Behind. Dresser-Held is rallying parents and students to help save the buses. At last Thursday’s meeting, she asked them to sign a petition that will be sent to LAUSD. ‘United is the only way to confront this,’ Dresser-Held told the group. ‘There is power in community.’ PaliHi will post up-to-the-date information regarding this issue on its Web site, www.palihigh.org.
Ignacio Romero is one of several Big Blue Bus drivers who work the No. 9 line between Santa Monica and Pacific Palisades every weekday morning. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
If you depend on the Big Blue Bus line No. 9 to travel between Santa Monica and Pacific Palisades weekday mornings, you know Ignacio Romero”even if you don’t know him by name. The mustached bus driver cuts a distinctive presence with his sunglasses, his uniform, the number 7 on the silver pendant pinned to his black vest”all topped with a dark beret that may suggest a hint of military commando. However, front and center are the warm greetings and the avuncular smile Romero offers his riders as they board and depart his bus. ‘Working for the Big Blue Bus is a privilege,’ Romero told the Palisadian-Post last week. Likewise, Santa Monica’s bus company thinks highly of him. On February 2, the City of Santa Monica honored Romero” alongside other municipal service people, such as dedicated employees of the police and fire departments”at a service awards ceremony. The City singled out Romero from among some 300 employees of Big Blue Bus, presenting the veteran driver (or motor coach operator, as he is officially classified by his employer) with a certificate, a ring and a gold watch, to honor his 30 years of service. ‘Everyone is excellent,’ Romero said. ‘I have a good relationship with all of the drivers and with the public.’ Just like the days of the week, no two trips are alike. ‘Every trip is a new adventure, even if it’s a small one,’ said the 60-year-old Palmdale resident, who has been married to wife Ruthie (whom he met at a Venice High School party) for nearly 40 years. The couple has three daughters: Elizabeth, a teacher in Antelope Valley; Serena, who lives in Valencia and gave birth to their first grandchild, Jadon, two years ago; and Gina, a registered nurse in Massachusetts. When he’s not working, Romero sometimes operates a bus of his own”a Winnebago”that he likes to drive up to Lake Elizabeth or Lake Hughes to go fishing. The City of Santa Monica’s bus system, however, is his daily domain. ‘The people on board, we call them ‘precious cargo,” said Romero, whose driving record, after three decades, remains impeccable: not one accident. Ignatio Romero, Jr. (his friends call him ‘Nacho’) was born in Tepatitlan, Mexico, to Ignatio, a construction worker, and Juanita, a homemaker. In a family of five brothers and three sisters, Romero was the baby boy. In the same year the Beatles invaded America, Romero’s family moved to America in 1964. Romero was 14 when they settled in Santa Monica, where he attended John Adams Junior High and Santa Monica High. ‘It was very hard going to school and not knowing the language,’ he said, adding with a laugh, ‘I’m still picking it up!’ After graduating, Romero worked for a few years as a truck driver for the now-defunct Bush Moving and Storage before segueing into the bus-driving profession. Romero originally worked the No. 2 line (Venice/UCLA) and drove various other routes before settling into No. 9 about six years ago. Beginning at Olympic Boulevard and Avenida Mazatlan every weekday at 5:40 a.m., he makes seven round trips daily from downtown Santa Monica to western Marquez Avenue (at Sunset Boulevard) in the Palisades. Each trip takes about an hour to complete. ‘What I like about the 9, it’s the same people,’ Romero said. Citizens such as the 84-year-old doctor who boarded the bus last week in downtown Santa Monica wearing a vintage purplish suit and fedora. Or the 45-year-old woman who talks about her relationship problems. Or the senior citizen at the Mesa Road stop who rides up the hill to go shopping in the Palisades. Or the eccentric property owner who gets on in Santa Monica and blows Romero kisses after exiting the bus at San Vicente and Seventh Street. Years ago, Romero recalled, he used to drive members of the Marquez family into Santa Monica Canyon. One relative even invited him to San Lorenzo Street to visit the Marquez family’s private cemetery (Romero never took her up on it). Romero realizes how crucial his service is. A healthy portion of the domestic workforce coming to the Palisades every day depends on his bus. Often, people who work in the village are recognizable on the 9, such as the employees in their black Caf’ Vida t-shirts and caps. ‘A lot of people in Pacific Palisades come here to work,’ Romero said. ‘It’s a very important line.’ The fact that the friendly, gregarious Romero also speaks Spanish fluently makes his rapport with many daily riders that much smoother and homier. As the Mexican and Central American housekeepers and babysitters get off the bus along Chautauqua and on Sunset, they shower Romero with a bevy of small talk and ‘Gr’cias!’ as they would a friend. Riding the 9 up Chautauqua Boulevard in the morning”with the loud, cheerful bursts of Spanish in the air”can often resemble a moving party. The lively atmosphere suits the friendly driver just fine. ‘They talk about their life, their experiences, the people they work for, their problems,’ Romero said of the Spanish-language workers. ‘They also talk about the world and the economy.’ By now, Romero’s trained ear can often discern four or five conversations at a time without ever looking back. So what’s with the beret, Nacho? Did you once serve a tour in Vietnam? ‘This is part of the uniform,’ Romero said. ‘So is the vest! I love it!’ As it turns out, while some other bus drivers forego the beret, Romero wears his with pride. Of course, the driver has seen the area change across three decades. ‘There’s more traffic, more people than when I started,’ he said. ‘[Santa Monica] was like Pacific Palisades before. Now, it’s a big city. ‘Always show compassion to people,’ he continued. ‘And give the kids respect and they give you respect in return. The kids are not animals. They’re very smart. They know more than I do with the computers and everything. They grow up faster today.’ One woman, a panhandler who picked up the bus on Fourth Street, interrupts a conversation to give Romero an unsolicited endorsement to a reporter. ‘He’s a good guy,’ she said, before departing to occupy a spot on PCH and Chautauqua, where she begs for change. Indeed, the homeless who sometimes congregate along that corner, such as a man regularly seen sweeping outside the restaurants, throw waves at Romero, even though most of them never ride his bus. They’re evidently happy to see his friendly, familiar face. Rich or poor, whatever their background, ‘I treat everyone just the same,’ Romero said. ‘I’m just doing my work.’ After his decades-long connection to the area, Romero is still enchanted by the beautiful scenery along his route and the ocean view at PCH. ‘It’s so nice,’ Romero said. ‘In the summer, you can feel the breeze coming in. I see the beach all the time. It’s very relaxing. That’s why I’m always smiling!’ On a recent afternoon after his shift, Romero was recognized by some of his regulars as he sat to discuss his career over coffee with the Post. A customer named Theresa, on her way into the coffeehouse, came over to the affable driver and asked him, ‘You want me to buy you a cookie?’ She wasn’t making chit-chat; she was serious. Romero politely declined, but he did offer her some warm words and a smile. As he will the next time Theresa boards line No. 9.
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