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Patricia Kirkwood, 81; Pioneering Engineer, Technical Staffer at Rand

Patricia Kirkwood, one of the first women to earn a master’s degree in engineering at UCLA, and who served as one of the first female technical staff members at The Rand Corporation, passed away on October 15 in Belmont, California, from brain cancer. She was 81.   Born on June 25, 1928 in Los Angeles, Patricia was the daughter of Catherine and John Keith from Glen’s Ferry, Idaho. After attending Washington High School, she graduated from UCLA with a B.A. degree in mathematics in 1950 and with an M.S. degree in engineering in 1961.   In 1950, Patricia began working at Rand as a ‘computer,’ and was promoted to a full member of the technical staff, where she associated with the likes of Herman Kahn, John Mallet and many other leading defense scientists during the Cold War. During this time, Pat made early technical contributions to radar systems design and the understanding of charged particle motion in space. At Rand, she also met her husband of 50 years, Robert Lord Kirkwood. They married in 1958 and moved to Santa Monica Canyon, then to Pacific Palisades in 1964.   At the age of 31, Patricia stepped away from her career to raise three children. She was a staunch advocate of quality education, fighting to raise the standards by which children’s abilities were assessed, serving as a mathematics tutor to her own children and others, and teaching physics at Crossroads School. She traveled with her family to Mexico, Canada, across the U.S., and to Europe. She spent summers backpacking and winters skiing with her family in the Sierra Nevadas, where she maintained a condominium in the town of Mammoth Lakes. She was also an avid sailor and spent many happy hours sailing the California coast on the family boat.   In 1976, after a 16-year absence from a fast-evolving field, Patricia returned to her career in engineering and software development. She worked as a member of the technical staff at R&D Associates in Marina del Rey for 10 years. In 1988, she began working for Logicon in Pasadena, where she served as project manager for a combat simulation tool used by the U.S. Army as well as one of the first laptop computer-based battle management systems for use by infantry. Patricia completed her career as a program manager at Northrup Grumman in Pasadena. After retiring in 2003, she maintained a second residence in Foster City to be close to her son and grandchildren.   Patricia is survived by her husband, Robert; her son, John; son Robert (wife Kimberly) and their children Rachel and Rebekah; daughter Catherine Kirkwood (partner Kayleen Dunson); brother Edward Keith (wife Sharon), and nieces Dana Keith and Erin Goetz (husband Steve).   Patricia will be remembered for her strength in forging new paths for women, her contributions to our nation, her boundless confidence in those she loved, and her rare combination of intelligence, curiosity and hope.   Memorial services will be held on Friday, November 27, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Pacific Palisades Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford.

We’ve Been Warned by ‘2012’ Producer Michael Wimer

Producer Michael Wimer accepting an Environmental Media Assocation Award in Hollywood on October 25.
Producer Michael Wimer accepting an Environmental Media Assocation Award in Hollywood on October 25.

Tomorrow, a worldwide cataclysm will hit, and one of the people responsible will be Michael Wimer.   The Pacific Palisades resident, a partner of director Roland Emmerich at Centropolis Entertainment, is one of the producers of Sony Pictures’ ‘2012,’ which opens in movie theaters worldwide. The mega-budget, special effects-heavy disaster flick (costing an estimated $200 million to make and market) is tracking to be this weekend’s top multiplex draw. That will not surprise fans of Emmerich, who also directed such apocalyptic blockbusters as the 1996 alien-invaders epic ‘Independence Day’ (which grossed $817,500,000 worldwide), Sony’s re-imagining of ‘Godzilla’ in 1998 and the global-warming nightmare, ‘The Day After Tomorrow’ in 2004 ($542,772 internationally). In other words, Emmerich has a reputation for super-sized, city-leveling entertainment.   In ‘2012,’ John Cusack struggles to stay afloat amidst a global apocalypse predicted by a Mayan prophecy, as the U.S. government agency Institute for Human Continuity dispatches ships to ensure the human race’s survival. The film also features Thandie Newton, Amanda Peet, Oliver Platt, Woody Harrelson, Danny Glover and George Segal.   So why does Emmerich relish destroying Los Angeles and other metropolises in his films? Wimer downplays the destructive side of the German director’s brand of science fiction.   ’The special effects are great [in Emmerich’s films],’ Wimer tells the Palisadian-Post, ‘but at the center are human stories. Cusack is trying to keep his family together. It so happens the cataclysm is so gigantic.’ Wimer’s Hollywood journey has been an interesting ride defined by two phases: first as a powerful literary agent and now as a producer.   ’I have commercial tastes,’ says Wimer, who grew up in the Midwest and attended Harvard University. ‘I came into the business 20 years ago because I love short stories. I represented writers and directors.’   After a brief, unsatisfying stint on Wall Street, Wimer took his English degree and his Stanford Business School diploma and moved to Los Angeles in the mid-1980s to start at the bottom: at the mailroom of Creative Artists Agency. From 1986 to 2005, he was a literary agent at CAA, where he represented some of Hollywood’s top directors and screenwriters, including directorial kings of comedy Harold Ramis, Ivan Reitman, Mel Brooks and Frank Oz, as well as action filmmakers Tony Scott and Joel Schumacher, and late writer-directors Michael Crichton (whom Wimer represented on the author’s ‘ER’ deal with NBC) and John Hughes.   ’It was shocking,’ Wimer says, ‘in that [Crichton and Hughes’ deaths] represented the passage of time. These guys played such big roles in my life.’   Wimer explains that Hughes, who fled Hollywood to write screenplays in his native Chicago, ‘found directing very anti-climactic. He didn’t like the way Hollywood worked, [the studio politics].’   At CAA, Wimer’s friends included super-agent Jay Moloney, who hanged himself two days after his 35th birthday in 1999. Moloney was ‘a wonderful guy,’ Wimer says, but ‘the most alluring drug [in this industry] is power, and Hollywood is not a good place for addicts. ‘Hollywood is not a lot different from the way Washington works. The insecurities and the pettiness with the gigantic amount of money and tempered with the real rarity of great creative skill have made it a place where the weak get crushed.’   Wimer notes that not everyone in Hollywood succumbs to ego, power and greed. ‘Mel Brooks,’ he says, ‘is a great example of how kindness gives back a thousand-fold.’   For the past decade, Wimer and his family have resided in Pacific Palisades, which reminds him in temperament of his native Neenah, Wisconsin, a paper mill town in which he grew up the son of a Kimberly-Clark executive in a family of seven.   ’It’s the comfort of Mayberry,’ he says of the Palisades where he has raised daughter Sarah, 12, and son Luke, 7, with wife Sharon, a TV producer who made the Lifetime movie ‘Acceptable’ with Cusack’s sister, Joan. ‘The Palisades is a great place to go trick-or-treating. We have the best Fourth of July parade. I have to be honest, I love the newspaper. It’s really like a community here. It’s authentic. We know our firefighters at Station 69, the local merchants are great. It’s a great place for our kids.’   For years, Wimer’s work as an agent proved successful and gratifying, even as he encountered difficulty in the days following Sarah’s birth, when Sharon was diagnosed with cancer. She triumphed over the disease, but the four-year battle proved grueling and grounding for the Wimers. ‘My most rewarding job is being a father,’ he says.   Five years ago, Wimer finally tired of the ‘anxieties’ that come with an agent’s territory, such as appeasing the whims of important players. He decided to refocus his passion in 2005.   ’Roland was the first person that I told about my decision [to leave agenting],’ he says. ‘Roland said, ‘Well, let’s join up and let’s do this.”   The pair worked together on Emmerich’s remake of the prehistoric ‘10,000 B.C.,’ the first film of 2008 to surpass the $200-million mark. They are now collaborating on adapting Isaac Asimov’s ‘Foundation’ trilogy, a highly anticipated project that has been gestating with various talents for years in Hollywood. Emmerich also wants to helm a human-scale film, the period piece ‘Anonymous,’ which explores whether or not Shakespeare authored all of his great works.   Recently, Wimer launched a TV production company with ‘Rescue Me’ co-creator Peter Tolan. ‘Peter’s one of the best writers,’ Wimer says. ‘That’s where all of the best writing is right now: on TV.’ A funny contradiction is that Wimer and Emmerich (who has made a cottage industry of creating movies depicting the end of the world) are, in real life, obsessed with saving it. ‘Roland has solar panels in his home and a Prius,’ says Wimer, who also does his part. He arrived for his interview with the Post in his Toyota SUV electric vehicle, which costs him just $6 a month to power.   ’I’ve been making sure that all of our productions are green,’ Wimer says, ticking off the measures he took to keep the set of ‘2012’ environmentally correct: renewable wood, recycling sets, biofueled power generators, ‘whatever we can do to reduce our carbon footprint.’   ’As a long time environmentalist and entertainment-industry leader, Michael has brought his creativity and passion to the Environmental Media Association’s executive board of directors for the past seven years,’ says EMA president Debbie Levin. ‘In January, he was instrumental in putting together ‘The Green Inaugural Ball,’ the largest gathering of environmental groups at the inauguration of Barack Obama. Michael brought EMA and 60 other environmental groups to honor Al Gore and to celebrate our new president’s commitment to a green economy.’   The Wimer-organized gala, held at the Smithsonian, included performances by Palisades High graduate will.i.am and matchbox20.   On October 25, the EMA honored Wimer and Emmerich at its own gala, on Paramount’s studio lot, which attracted Harrison Ford, Alanis Morissette, Richard Branson and other celebrities.   ’This was quite an honor,’ Wimer says. ‘I really have to thank my kids because, until Sarah and Luke came along, I never really thought about the power and importance of setting a good example. Now, whether its driving our electric car or recycling our kitchen waste or running a production utilizing green guidelines, it’s all about showing the kids that taking care of the world is the right thing to do.’   Except for this weekend, of course, when the world will be destroyed with catastrophic glee.

Just Call Fandango CEO Chuck Davis ‘Mr. Turn-Around’

Fandango CEO Chuck Davis with one of his championship AYSO balls in his Huntington Palisades home office. Photo: Cheryl Himmelstein
Fandango CEO Chuck Davis with one of his championship AYSO balls in his Huntington Palisades home office. Photo: Cheryl Himmelstein

In his modest office at Fandango’s West Los Angeles complex, with an untouched lunch on his desk, an animated Chuck Davis eagerly shares anecdote after anecdote with the Palisadian-Post. He paces around as he tells the story of how his 18-year-old son, Jared, a freshman at Brown University, took a business class at Davis’ alma mater with his former professor, Barrett Hazeltine. ‘He got cold-called in his second class,’ Davis says. ‘Hazeltine said to Jared, ‘You know all about cash cows?’ Jared says, ‘I do?’ Hazeltine said, ‘Hasn’t your dad told you all about it?” ‘It was a wonderful bonding moment,’ continues Davis of that ‘full circle’ moment. Davis, of course, does know about cash cows. The Fandango CEO has become a master at turning middling companies around and selling them for hundreds of millions of dollars. The nimble executive vice president of Comcast Interactive Media, which acquired Fandango in April 2007, has always had the knack for adaptation. When he started out in the 1980s, he could not foresee where his career would lead, as there was no Internet. Yet today, the Huntington Palisades resident leads movie-ticket outlet Fandango.com, one of the Internet’s top entertainment sites (according to Alexa, it ranks #233 in site traffic), which sells tickets to more than 16,000 screens nationwide. Before Halloween, Fandango sold 25 percent of the opening night tickets for ‘Michael Jackson’s This Is It’ and the company is currently bracing itself for ‘Twilight: New Moon,’ which has already accounted for 75 percent of advance ticket sales prior to its November 20 release. In addition to Fandango, Davis oversees such Comcast-held entities as Movies.com, which was bought from Disney, and the fashion e-mail newsletter Daily Candy, which will launch its e-commerce site Swirl, a clothing and accessories marketplace, on November 19. Davis comes across as personable and down-to-earth, and, for a man of his position in the business world, humble. He’s not above deferring to a colleague or employee’s expertise. Surrounding himself with the right people at his companies is one secret to his success over the years, and that passion for winning and teamwork transcends to the business arena from his passion for sports. Many Pacific Palisades parents know Davis for his longtime involvement in the American Youth Soccer Organization, coaching Jared and daughter Jenna’s teams. He has coached 600 youth soccer games, winning numerous Area championships. ‘You get to know every team and every family,’ Davis says. ‘You really are plugged into the community.’ Davis grew up in Westport, Connecticut. His father, Joel, was in publishing, releasing such fare as Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. While in high school, Davis would go into his father’s office and mimeograph his sports fanzine, the Pro-Grid Weekly, a broadsheet he’d send out to family and friends. He also sent them out to the commissioners of the four major pro sports. All of them wrote back with thank-you letters, but one of them, NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle, struck up a regular correspondence with Davis. In 1974, when Davis was 13, Rozelle said, ‘Why don’t you miss a day of school and join me for the NFL draft?’ It was a day Davis has never forgotten. Davis went on to intern in Rozelle’s office during his college summers. ‘He loved his sample subscription of Pro-Grid Weekly,’ Davis says, beaming as if relives that defining teenage experience all over again. ‘The opportunity that this man gave me made me the businessman I am today,’ Davis says. After Brown, Davis followed his father into publishing, although not exactly. He tried to matriculate into Time, Inc., home of Sports Illustrated, on the strength of his sports reporting at Staples High School and for the Bruin Grid Weekly, but executives there saw something else in Davis. ‘They told me, ‘You’ll be on the business side,’ says Davis, who joined advertising sales, where he started in 1982 with insert cards in Life magazine. He excelled at Time, Inc., devising strategies and gimmicks to boost magazine circulations. ‘I was one of the first direct marketers in the country,’ says Davis, who helped boost group circulation by 50 percent. Eventually, the writing was on the wall as long-running periodicals Life, Look and Saturday Evening Post faced cancellation. Shortly after New Year’s in 1992, Davis went to TV Guide, which still enjoyed a circulation of 14 million in an era that would soon give way to the Internet age. Seven million subscribers grew to 9 million under Davis’ watch, and he was promoted to senior vice president. Things changed dramatically on August 2, 1995, when Netscape went public. ‘It was massive,’ says Davis, who was playing golf on his birthday. ‘It was the IPO that blew off the doors. AOL was how you got to the Internet, but Netscape was opening the way [to the future of the Internet].’ Within 90 days, Davis received five offers to join new media companies ‘even though I didn’t have a computer.’ One of those companies courting him was Disney. Davis recalls having an interesting conversation with then-Disney chief Michael Ovitz, who told him, ‘We don’t know if it’s [the Internet] a fad, but if it is, you’ll still have a job at Disney.’ Then-Disney Internet Group chairman Jake Winebaum brought Davis into the Disney fold in 1996 and Davis relocated his family”including Jared and daughter Jenna (now 16 and a student at Brentwood School)”to California, where he became president of Disney’s new ecommerce division, overseeing eight Internet product groups. ‘I launched Disneystore.com, Disneyvacations.com,’ recalls Davis. ‘People were very surprised when we actually moved and stayed in California,’ says Jan Davis, his wife of 22 years whom he met at Brown. ‘But we’ve kept our East Coast roots. We’re bicoastal in mentality.’ Scott Schiller, senior vice president of Advertising Sales for Comcast, has known Davis since ‘we met on Super Bowl Sunday in 1997 via phone and spent the entire second half of the Packers-Patriots game figuring out how our worlds collided. We’ve been great friends ever since, and we’ve worked at Disney and Comcast/Fandango together.’ ‘Chuck has an uncanny ability to understand numbers and their implications for a business,’ Schiller says. ‘He knows how to develop and grow a brand. At Disney, he was behind the early years of selling advertising/media, theme-park tickets and Disney merchandise online.’ At the dawn of the Internet, Davis put his money where his mouth was and purchased a vehicle and beloved cocker spaniel Moka, 11, online (Jenna, Jared and Moka even appeared in a 1999 Post ‘Young Palisadians’ article on an initiative to keep Pampas Ricas dog-poop free.) Davis left as president of Disney’s e-commerce division in December 1999 and kicked off the new millennium working at BizRate (which became Shopzilla), where he became president and CEO. ‘BizRate had a great management team and a great customer base,’ says Davis, who started an e-commerce consumer reporter; a click-and-rate venture that turned BizRate into the leading shopping comparison site. ‘When we were almost on empty is when it finally took off,’ continues Davis, who attributes part of that success to simplifying the rating method to a happy-face rating system. ‘It’s important to understand consumers and not overthink things sometimes.’ For the longest time, when the Internet relied on dial-up, most of the online consumers were men, who bought music, electronics, computers, etc. Meanwhile, Davis was readying the Shopzilla site for its close-up. ‘We were betting the women would come,’ Davis says. ‘When high-speed Internet hit the suburbs, they came in droves’ to buy women’s apparel, home goods and other targeted projects. There were 10,000 unique visitors a month at the site when Davis got to BizRate and 2 million per day when he left. In 2005, BizRate sold to E.W. Scripps Company (which owns various daily newspapers and broadcast stations and United Media) for $569 million. ‘They say that I’m good at organizing chaos,’ Davis says with a smile. In January 2006, Davis took charge of Fandango (first as chairman, then as CEO by July of that year). Formed in 2000 by seven of the largest movie theater exhibition companies with the goal of creating a competitor for Moviefone, Fandango had become a limited endeavor with lackluster financials which focused solely on moving movie tickets. Whereas another incoming corporate leader might have purged the company of its staff, Davis retained his employees and introduced methods to re-invigorate them. Even during this difficult economic climate, Davis insists on company perks to keep employees satisfied and engaged, instituting flexibility in working schedules, company-wide lunches twice a week (with excess food delivered to Upward Bound House, a Santa Monica homeless assistance agency), and sports and volunteerism to cement staff bonding and relationships. Davis swells with pride over the fact that Fandango was recognized by the Employers Group as one of ‘California’s Best Places to Work.’ Additionally, Fandango was named as one of the top 50 companies to work for in L.A. earlier this year. He pushed his team to expand the Web site’s scope while doubling the staff, in effect pushing the company to be more ambitious. ‘I wanted to get all of the extraneous words out of the way, to de-clutter the content,’ he says. ‘I thought we could sell more and we did.’ Davis helped Fandango expand its content to include more than 400,000 entertainment listings, more than 500,000 performers and filmmakers, interactive participation such as the Fandango Fan Meter, where moviegoers rank all movies from the best (‘Must Go!’) to the worst (‘Oh, No!’), and departments and features such as movie-related road trips. Fandango has launched its Facebook and TiVo applications, and an iPhone app which has seen 3 million downloads. Fandango’s Web site has grown by more than 30 percent in unique visitors in each of the last two years. Davis ultimately re-branded Fandango into a market leader that made the company so attractive, it led to its acquisition by Comcast. (Fandango executives will not divulge how much the company sold for, but tech blogger Michael Arrington, citing unnamed sources, wrote that ‘Comcast paid $200 million, or perhaps a bit more. We’re also hearing Fandango revenue is in the $50-million-a-year range, split roughly evenly between ticket sales and advertising.’) Davis stayed with Fandango and also became an executive vice president within Comcast’s Interactive Media division, where he is responsible for identifying acquisitions and strategic partnerships for the company. Davis is now in a position to volunteer and give back, which he will do in 2010 as one of the judges of the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Awards’ Los Angeles winners (and where he won the 2004 award for BizRate). He is also an active board member of the Young Presidents’ Organization, both in the Los Angeles Chapter and the YPO International Board. Davis also serves on the boards of Shop.org, The Teaching Company (with Bill Barnum), and LeadPoint. ‘It was very Rozellian,’ Davis says. ‘He gave to me and I gave my time to do this.’ Since moving to California, Davis has felt very comfortable in Pacific Palisades. ‘We were blessed by finding this community,’ says Davis, who appreciates the folksiness re-enforced by the town’s traditions. ‘You see it in the July 4 parade, the first pitch at the PPBA and pancake breakfast, the farmers’ market. The key is for the town to not lose that charm.’ Davis’ passion has always been team sports, whether it’s watching NFL football or coaching AYSO soccer. ‘AYSO soccer is the binding force in the community,’ says Davis, who remembers calling 454-KICK as soon as he was about to relocate to the Palisades to enroll his children. ‘They said, ‘Sign up ended two weeks ago, you’re out of luck unless you can coach.” Davis had no experience coaching, but he wasn’t about to let that stop him. He even roped his wife into serving with Denise DeSantis as co-commissioner of the U10 and U12 girls for three years. ‘AYSO stands for ‘All Your Saturdays are Over,” Jan jokes. Davis says his coaching did not interfere with his work at Disney. ‘It was en vogue for a family-minded company like Disney to let executives leave early to coach kids,’ a philosophy that former Disney executives Joe Roth and Charles Hirschhorn shared. In his first year as an AYSO coach in 1996, Davis and prominent Santa Monica orthopedic surgeon Bert Mandelbaum led the Purple Royals to an Under-Six (U6) season. In 2001, Davis and co-coach Barnum led the U10 Rattlers to a 53-8-3 mark. In 2003, the duo took the Rattlers to another Area P U12 championship with a 61-2-4 record. With co-coach Nancy Babcock, Davis led Pali Storm to a 2006 championship victory with a 45-11-10 record. ‘My kids have made it to the Area P championship eight times,’ Davis says. Winebaum, the founder and former CEO of Business.com, has known Davis since they were out of college, working at Time and Disney together. ‘Chuck hasn’t changed much since we were both 22,’ Winebaum says. ‘He and I sat on each other boards. Mine at Business.com, his at Shopzilla.’ Davis and Winebaum, a Brentwood resident, co-coached the Red Fireball in 2004, which won the area championship. ‘His most famous line on the soccer field is when the game is not going so well and we’re behind or tied or whatever, ‘Who’s going to be a hero?,” Winebaum says of Davis. ‘The key to winning is to get those girls to become contributors,’ Winebaum says. ‘Everyone’s got to pull together. He’s good at getting the most out of his team. It’s the same in business.’ Davis hung up his coaching cap three years ago but still volunteers as a referee, having officiated more than 300 youth games. ‘It’s remarkable that as busy as he is that he still finds the time to referee two or three games on the weekend,’ Winebaum says. ‘He’s the mayor of the weekend. He knows more kids through his reffing than probably anyone else in the Palisades.’ When Davis shares his philosophy on sports, he’s also talking about his perspective on the corporate world: ‘One weak link can crater the whole team. Teams win championships, not individuals.’

New Sally Lamb Exhibit Opens at Schomburg

“Palm on Driveway-Highland Taffy,” oil on canvas by Sally Lamb

  Sally Lamb will exhibit new paintings in a one-woman show at the Schomburg Gallery at Bergamot Station, 2525 Michigan. The exhibition opens on Saturday, November 14 with a reception from 4 to 8 p.m.; it runs through December 16.   ’I titled this show ‘Light and Shadow’ because it is the overriding theme running throughout every image portrayed,’ says Lamb, a Pacific Palisades resident.   ’The landscapes are of places I have studied over many decades. Returning to a place time and time again brings a distilled understanding through familiarity. It has kept the process of painting a fresh and exciting adventure.   ’The botanicals in the show are the result of becoming completely enchanted, some years back, with the Brugmansia flower’in particular, the white double blossoms, that curl with long tendrils twisted and dancing in all directions.’ Lamb has enjoyed a varied career, both painting and teaching. She has exhibited in many shows, and has designed the covers for a number of publications, including the new Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce Directory.

St. Matthew’s Christmas Faire Is Nov. 20

The Parish of St. Matthew and St. Matthew’s Parish School will join forces for the annual Christmas Faire on Friday, November 20 at Sprague Center on campus, 1031 Bienveneda Ave. All proceeds will be distributed among the Parish outreach partners’23 charitable organizations in total.   St. Matthew’s outreach partners include those who provide vital assistance close to home, like the Westside Food Bank, which is trying to cope with the increase of hunger in low-income families in Los Angeles; and global partners GAIA (Global Aids Interfaith Alliance) which fights AIDS and malaria among the poor in Malawi, Africa.   The Faire offers something for everyone to enjoy; the gift boutique features a combination of handmade goods and specialty items; the food boutique sells baked items wrapped and ready to go; the St. Matthew’s Thrift Shop showcases its best finds; the wine and silent auctions promise a wide selection; and the parties auction will offer a variety of fun gatherings for adults and children alike.   Last year the Ojibwe table was added, which is near and dear to the heart of St. Matthew’s rector, Howard Anderson. He grew up in Minnesota, right next door to the Ojibwe Indian reservation. For the Faire, he brings some of the tribe’s most delicious products, including maple syrup, wild rice and muskrat coffee, all of which are made on the reservation. Purchasing these organic products supports not only St. Matthew’s outreach partners, but also the Ojibwe economy. This year’s raffle will include a Kindle, an iPod Nano, and many other items. The proceeds from this raffle will support Angel Interfaith Network, a St. Matthew’s outreach partner that provides baby supplies and clothing to homeless and low-income families with newborns at Los Angeles County Hospital and USC Medical Center. The Christmas Faire begins at 6 p.m. and admission is free. Because of the wine bar, the Faire may be enjoyed by adults over the age of 21 only.

Mississippi Delta Stories Told in Photographs at Gallery 169

Photograph by Rex Miller of James “Son” Thomas, a blues musician, folk artist, gravedigger and one-time sharecropper, who died in 1993 in Greenville, Mississippi.

Walking into the exhibit of photographs by Rex Miller at g169 in Santa Monica Canyon feels a bit like traveling back in time.   The black-and-white images of bluesmen’and women’of the Mississippi Delta look as if they had been taken in the 1930s or ’40s, when some of the blues songs were first recorded.   ’He’s so young,’ one gallery-goer whispers behind Miller’s back, clearly surprised to discover that the filmmaker/photographer is only 47.   It’s in part because his work looks like that of an old soul, comfortable ‘just setting a spell’ in a juke joint in Clarksdale or Greenville, listening to the music. But also in part because the photos, taken in the early 1990s, reflect a world less changed than most of this country in the last half century.   The show opens a window into the Delta blues culture through music, words and images; recordings made by Miller play in the background and stories told by the musicians and others who lived the blues are posted alongside the photographs.   The images hang in rough-hewn frames, and the words alongside are often rougher yet, describing lives filled with hard roads and much pain ‘- but all released, if only for the length of a song, in the blues.   ’Blues is a remedy for whatever it is that ails you. It’s like a pressure value’when you release it, it releases some of the pressure. If you hurt, if there is something you don’t like, sing the blues,’ reads one quote in the show. It’s scribbled on the wall next to a large print showing dozens of prisoners gathered in a yard at the Mississippi State Penitentiary in Parchman. Four men in the center of the crowd are dancing, giving their bodies up fully to some unheard music.   A camera, in the right hands, can always catch someone off guard and reveal something the subject may not intend. But the sentiments expressed in the printed stories here seem raw and honest enough that it’s hard to imagine how Miller was able to elicit them, until he explains that he has been gathering them over nearly eight years.   Frank Langen, the owner of g169, said that at first he wasn’t interested in including the narratives in the exhibit, faithful to the idea that ‘a picture is worth a thousand words.’   But the words here illuminate the pictures, giving them additional power ‘- something Langen now appreciates. The images show the hard edges of the lives lived in the Delta, but the interviews are almost shocking in what they reveal.   ’I was sharecropping too long ‘ If you sharecropping with Mr. so-and-so, and you make 20 bales of cotton, you got to give him 10. He gets that free. No debts come of his 10. The debts be on you. All the poison, the tractor, the gas and all that come out of your 10, and when it winds up, you ain’t got nothin’.   That’s the way sharecropping works. So, I said I’m gonna let that alone. I imagine you would, too,’ reads part of an interview with blues musician James ‘Son’ Thomas.   The words remind us that people still alive today grew up picking cotton, got a dollar a day ‘if you was a good worker,’ and lived with the fear of physical violence if they didn’t do as they were told.   The stories surely ‘take the candy off the music,’ as Arthneice ‘Gas Man’ Jones, one of Miller’s subjects, says.   Miller recorded the words and images while traveling through backwoods into tiny rural crossings and sleeping in shacks, making the acquaintance of bluesmen like Roosevelt ‘Booba’ Barnes and Mitch Pendelton and talking with gravediggers and preachers. A shoot with B.B. King took Miller down the path to a serendipitous meeting with Worth Long, a folklorist and historian who organized black voters and documented the civil rights battles of the 1950s and ’60s.   Long opened doors for Miller across the Delta. And Miller himself was persistent in getting access to places like Parchman, working through a series of wardens and frustrating restrictions.   But the artist also learned the value of just hanging around. There’s something to be said for being in the right place at the right time ‘ but some of that luck is just relaxing into the moment enough to let something happen.   ’You couldn’t show up, take a photo and leave,’ Miller says, in the midst of a story about Barnes’ Playboy Club. The venue is caught in one of Miller’s images with a wild-eyed Barnes out front of an old brick furniture store, with many of its windows boarded-up and its signage spray-painted. Not much to look at, it was still a powerful music scene.   Miller is clearly captivated by the blues, drawn by the ‘amazing intensity of experience’ to be found in the music.   The photographer/filmmaker is currently shooting a documentary on Althea Gibson, a world-class tennis player in the 1950s and the first black, man or woman, to win Wimbledon. He’s off to Forest Hills (once home to the U.S. Open), Palm Beach and other locations far removed from Mississippi.   Miller cites his art as ‘my excuse to go to strange, exotic places.’   But the blues can’t ever be that far behind.   A minister interviewed by Miller quotes an ‘old fella’ as saying ‘things that’s come from the heart reaches the heart.’ And Miller’s heart is full of the Delta blues. ‘All the Blues Gone’ remains on view through January at 169 West Channel Rd. The gallery is open by appointment. Contact Frank Langen at 310-459-4481.

Bienenfeld’s Focus Is with Hellerwork

Dan Bienenfeld uses Hellerwork to help a client.
Dan Bienenfeld uses Hellerwork to help a client.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

You have body aches and you carry stress, but massage, acupuncture and a visit to the chiropractor haven’t helped. Dan Bienenfeld, who specializes in Hellerwork Structural Integration, offers a different way of treating the discomfort, as well as teaching you about your body posture and how that might be a result of your mental state. Bienenfeld, author of ‘Align For Life,’ has opened an office at 881 Alma Real and specializes in structural integration. Put simply, those aches that one experiences might be tied to emotional issues and until those are examined, no amount of manual manipulation is going to make the pain go away, or let us live life as fully as we might like to. He uses the Heller method, which was developed by Joseph Heller, a scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, who studied humanistic psychology, including Rolfing. ‘The method is more long lasting because we teach people how to use the body,’ Bienenfeld said. ‘We align and balance. The result is different than what you’d get with a chiropractor or massage. ‘ He explained that as we age, the way we move determines what our bodies become, and thus it is important to be self-aware. ‘We need to learn how to use our body to move it effortlessly.’ As an example, Bienenfeld noted that if someone has been in a car accident, that person may tense up every time they drive, unaware of what they’re doing. ‘That person is still living out an old event. These tensions can be cleared out of the body.’ Bienenfeld said that although Hellerwork is in the here and now, ‘our bodies are completely stuffed with past events that were not completed and not processed. It gets stuck in our body, filed away.’ Working with a client, Bienenfeld moves different parts of the body, while also applying pressure. He asks the client to focus on breathing while he tries to loosen the rigidity that is stored in the body. Surprisingly, while focusing on the person’s breath, different memories surface, which Bienenfeld listens to and asks for the client’s introspection about the memory. Bienenfeld’s father, Mickey was a cantor and helped start Kehillat Israel on Sunset Boulevard in the early 1950s. Growing up on the Westside, Bienenfeld attended University High and graduated from UC Santa Cruz in 1980 with an major that included anatomy and psychology. He then attended the Hellerwork Institute in Santa Monica, and for many years ran the Alternative Medical Center in West Los Angeles, which included acupuncture, homeopathic doctors, biofeedback, Rolfing and Hellerwork. In 1997, Bienenfeld joined his brother Joel, who was a Pacific Palisades chiropractor. The two worked together until Joel accepted a position at Cedars-Sinai Hospital. This past April, Bienenfeld moved to the Alma Real building, where his son, Jesse, who just finished his Rolfing training, will soon join him. Bienenfeld and his girlfriend, Anne Stifter, live in Topanga.   Visit: www.danbienenfeld.com or call (310) 459-2140.

The Fight for Fence/Hedge Variances

Haverford Avenue resident Gary Boyle stands in front of his six-foot high front-yard fence, which prompted a notice from the City of Los Angeles in March that he had to cut the fence down to 42 inches, per a 1946 city ordinance. After a lengthy process that involved a civil hearing and paying a $1,000 non-refundable fee, Boyle received a variance.
Haverford Avenue resident Gary Boyle stands in front of his six-foot high front-yard fence, which prompted a notice from the City of Los Angeles in March that he had to cut the fence down to 42 inches, per a 1946 city ordinance. After a lengthy process that involved a civil hearing and paying a $1,000 non-refundable fee, Boyle received a variance.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Sixty-one Palisades residents, including Jack Allen and Gary Boyle, received notices in March that their front-yard fence, wall or hedge was in violation of a 1946 city ordinance specifying that front-yard fences, walls and hedges can be no taller than 42 inches. ‘We had 61 complaints in writing,’ said Frank Bush, the assistant chief of the code enforcement bureau, who said the addresses were from a single source. ‘We do not look for them [violations], we respond to complaints only.’ Most of the addresses were from the upper Alphabet streets and streets south of Sunset Boulevard from Chautauqua over to Temescal Canyon Road. After a city inspection, 18 complaints were dismissed, but the remaining 43 owners were given 30 days to bring their over-sized hedge or structures into compliance or else face a fine of $100. If they do not ultimately comply, ‘the case is forwarded to the City Attorney and ultimately a criminal case could be filed,’ Bush said. The residents could also ask for an extension or apply for a variance that would allow them to keep the offending hedge or structure. Allen, a longtime community activist, contends that his hedge and a retaining wall are in compliance because the wall was originally built in 1926, and ‘The height limit is based on the natural ground level,’ he wrote by e-mail to the Palisadian-Post. ‘The building inspector used the sidewalk level but that is not the natural ground level because Bestor Boulevard was carved out of the hillside, so that the natural ground level is the height of the top of the wall.’   Allen, an attorney and an area representative on the Pacific Palisades Community Council, was given 30 days to comply, or else pay a non-compliance fee (NCF) of $100. Thus far, he said, he has spent more than $800 in non-compliance and appeals fees and is still waiting for his hearing. ‘I heard that instead of a single fine of $100, the Department of Building and Safety was proposing that it be $100 a day for every day that there is non-compliance,’ Allen wrote. Code Enforcement Bureau Assistant Chief Frank Bush told the Post on Friday that the NCF’s increased from $100 to $500 on October 23. ‘Orders issued prior to October 23 will be assessed $100,’ Bush said. ‘The NCF is a one-time assessment fee (per order) and is not compounded daily. There are, however, penalties that will be assessed if residents don’t pay the NCF.’ Boyle, who lives on Haverford Avenue and has a long six-foot high front-yard fence, was shocked when he received the March notice that he was in violation of city ordinance LAMC Section 12.22C.20.(f)(2). According to city planner Tom Rothmann, who is supervisor of code studies, the law was originally passed in order to establish a suburban standard throughout the city.   ’It makes for a safe and walkable neighborhood that appears friendly and pedestrian-oriented,’ said Rothmann, who noted that ‘high fences detract from the eyes-on-the-street character of our neighborhoods.’ ‘This is crazy,’ argued Boyle, a third generation Westsider. ‘The duplex was built in 1949 and there were three owners prior to me’so why now?’ Boyle’s neighbor, who also received a notice to comply, had a handyman cut about three feet off his wood fence. ‘The worker didn’t even measure it, he just took a saw to it,’ said Boyle, who thought his own fence (constructed in 1975), was old enough to be grandfathered in.   Since he lives in a duplex, and doesn’t have a backyard’in essence his front yard is his backyard’Boyle wanted to keep his privacy. He also has a German Shepard that can easily jump a lower fence, and didn’t want to have to chain his dog.   And thus began Boyle’s quest to keep his fence and avoid paying any fine.   He began by visiting a city zoning office in Westchester to have the fence approved, but was told the original code went into effect 53 years ago, which meant his fence was not exempted.   Directed to another city office on Vermont, Boyle paid $35 to get an extension to file for a variance. ‘I wanted to do it the right way,’ he said, recounting his odyssey through the L.A. Department of Building and Safety in the San Fernando Valley.   On his first trip to Van Nuys, Boyle learned that he needed a blueprint of the property and a mailing list of his neighbors. He was also required to print special gummed labels, which he was able to purchase for $35 from another city department.   Back in the Palisades, Boyle visited 17 neighbors and got their signatures. Later he learned that the majority were renters, and he needed the building owners’ names and addresses, which he found on the tax rolls. Armed with everything that had been requested, he returned to the Van Nuys office, only to be told he was still missing papers.   ’It seems like every time I went, they asked for something different,’ said Boyle, who during that trip learned about a private expeditor who, for $1,500, would make sure the paperwork was properly handled. Boyle, who is in the film industry but currently out of work, couldn’t afford it. He made two additional trips to the Valley and two trips to Kinkos for special printing.   On his fourth trip, Boyle was told ‘you have everything right’ and paid his $1,000 non-refundable deposit for a variance (as of August the new fee is $3,488). He was told he would be contacted in three to five months for a hearing.   Three weeks later he received a letter that stated, ‘Your application is insufficient.’ He returned to Van Nuys and the man behind the counter told him that the blueprint that Boyle had carefully and painstakingly drawn, including every detail of the house and yard on a scale of one foot to 1/16 of an inch, was a little off in the back of the lot by the garage.   Completely frustrated, Boyle shouted an expletive at the man behind the desk, who threatened to call security. An elderly lady standing at a window next to Boyle tugged on his arm. He felt ashamed at his language and was sure the woman was going to reprimand him, but instead she said, ‘Excuse me, are you from Pacific Palisades? I am and they want me to cut down my 40-year-old oleander bushes.’   Boyle was told to go across the hall, pay $5 for a plot plan, make a copy and bring it back to the administrator, which he did. He was once again told he would be notified of the hearing. He wasn’t notified, only learning about his hearing from his neighbors who did receive notification.   On October 8, Boyle pled his case before Lourdes Green, associate zoning administrator at the City’s building on Corinth Avenue in West L.A.   After looking through Boyle’s file and hearing his story, Green verbally approved a variance because of the multi-storied apartments across the street, a wide shared driveway on one side of his property and no driveway on the other.   If none of Boyle’s neighbors raise further objections, he will keep the six-foot fence and receive a covenant allowing whoever buys his property the same right.   Boyle is happy that he won, but is still upset by his seven-month ordeal. ‘I remember years ago when they [the City] didn’t honor tattletales,’ he said, referring to the anonymous person who set off the whole chain of events.

CLASSIFIED ADS FOR THE WEEK OF NOVEMBER 5, 2009

DUE TO THE POST OFFICE’S OBSERVATION OF VETERAN’S DAY, THE CLASSIFIED DEADLINE THIS WEEK IS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5 AT 11 A.M.

CONDOS/TOWNHOMES FOR SALE 1e

$249,000. IMMACULATE SENIOR UNIT, very cheerful and quiet. 1 bd, 1 ba. Minimum age 62, 2 car parking, elevator, patio, close to everything. Broker, (310) 795-3795 (c), (310) 456-8770 (h)

FURNISHED HOMES 2

PICTURE PERFECT LEASE, Huntington Palisades. Beautifully decorated 3 bd, 3 ba, LR w/ FP, FR w/ FP, FDR, den, lovely garden, pool. Furn or unfurn at $11,000/mo. Contact Dolly Niemann, (310) 230-3706

UNFURNISHED HOMES 2a

3 ROOM GUESTHOUSE, Full kitchen, balcony, hardwood floors, quiet garden setting. Washer & dryer in garage. Cat o.k. 1 year lease. $2,200/mo. Utilities included. (310) 454-8150

2 BDRM, 2 BA, 2 car garage, private deck & garden, lndry, new kitchen, dishwasher, microwave, hardwd floors. Nice quiet area. Pets o.k. Reduced rent to $3,500/mo. O.B.O. (310) 454-4599, (310) 266-4151

ONE LEVEL REMODELED bright home 3 bd, 2 ba, PL, TC, gym, private backyard, $4,500/mo. Judy, (310) 454-0696

HUNTINGTON PALISADES. 3 bdr, 2 ba. Large beautiful yard, corner lot, viking stove, includes W/D, pristine condition. $8,000/mo. (310) 454-8632. Owner has real estate license.

UPPER SANTA MONICA CANYON. 3 BR, 2 BA Home. Peek of ocean. Hardwood floors. Fruit trees. Sunny yard. Flexible terms. Pets ok. Canyon school. $4,895/mo. loggiedog@aol.com. (310) 871-4415

2 BD, 1.5 BA, FIREPLACE, hardwood floors, appliances, gardener. Walk to schools, village, bluffs. No dogs. $3,400/mo. Leave message. (310) 454-0054

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 2c

CUTE & COZY SINGLE mediterranean triplex near village & bluffs. Full kitchen, bath, laundry, garden, and carport. 1 year lease. Non-smoking building. No pets. $1,500/mo. (310) 804-3142

BRIGHT, LARGE, 3 BD+2 BA ,1,500 sq. ft., top floor, 1 garage+1 tandem, new carpets. Great closet space. 1 yr. lease. N/S. $2,500/mo. (310) 498-0149

2 BD, 1 BA UNIT AVAILABLE. $1,850/mo. upper unit available now. Vintage 6 unit building. Includes water. Approx. 800 sq. ft., Hardwood, tile floors. Lite & brite. Shared laundry. Pet o.k. with approval. 1 year lease. (424) 228-4570

OCTOBER SPECIAL, one month free. One bdrm. $1,285/mo., or large studio $1,125/mo. refrigerator, gas stove, laundry, covered parking, storage. No pets, non-smoker. (310) 477-6767

SPACIOUS, LIGHT UPPER UNIT in unique mediterranean triplex. 1,850 sq. ft. 2 bdrm, 1 ba + office, fireplace, fans, shutters, balconies & garden. Perfect for a couple. $2,900/mo. No pets, non-smoker, 1 year lease. (310) 804-3142

SANTA MONICA ‘COTTAGE’ $2,950/mo.!!! A RARE FIND in lovely 4 unit complex on Yale and Montana. Perfect for those who love their gardens and desire privacy. This unique and charming one bedroom has the feel of an East Coast Hamptons Cottage. Beautifully maintained with a feeling of ZEN. HAS EVERYTHING: ‘ High wood beam ceilings. ‘ Peg and grooved hardwood floors. ‘ Brick wood burning fireplace. ‘ French windows and shutters throughout. ‘ New stainless steel appliances with washer-dryer in unit. ‘ Surrounded by spacious private garden patio. ‘ Fenced and gated entry with intercom. ‘ Great security & completely separate from other units. ‘ Enclosed garage and unlimited street parking. (No permit required) ‘ No pets, one year lease. Call: (310) 826-7960

CONDOS/TOWNHOMES FOR RENT 2d

SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW from this 2 BDRM, 2 BA, 1,850 sq. ft. condo. Watch the surfers at sunset and look out over the entire S.M. Bay from this large third floor Penthouse. Entire unit newly remodeled with wood floors, granite counters, and much more! Large private balcony, pool & gym. Located at 17337 Tramonto Drive, near beach and trailheads. $4,250/mo. Must see to believe. (310) 459-7030

SPACIOUS 3 BDRM, 3 BA TOWNHOME in Pacific Palisades. Tennis court & swimming pool. $3,500/mo. Call Judy, (310) 454-0696

LARGE VIEW TOWNHOME * Beautiful ‘villa’ with mtn/cyn views! Great floorplan features high ceilings, skylite, A/C, shutters, wood floors, and private 2-car garage. 2 bd + 2 ‘ ba. Plus FR, FDR. Large master suite with FP, balcony, W.I.C., and views. $3,200/mo. Sharon/John/Victoria. Coldwell Banker Company, (310) 573-7737

ROOMS FOR RENT 3

CHARMING, SERENE GUEST HOUSE. Special guest house near village. Private entrance, kitchenette, serene and quiet. No pets. Professionals only. $2,500/mo. (310) 454-7978

OFFICE/STORE RENTALS 3c

THE SKI CHANNEL in the 881 Alma Real building has 2 offices and 2 cubes for sub-lease featuring shared use of many amenities. (310) 230-2050

PALISADES OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE, $900/MO.: In the heart of the Village. Single room office with large window & private restroom. Building amenities include high speed internet access, elevator & covered parking garage. Office has a/c, beautiful hardwood floors & is professionally cleaned on a regular basis. Call Kate at (310) 663-8127, please leave your contact info.

ONE OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT in Pacific Palisades Village. $1,250/mo. Call (310) 230-8335

PROFESSIONAL BUILDING in Pacific Palisades village for lease. Lovely and spacious suite available. 850 square feet. Reasonable rent price. Excellent tenant improvement. Please call Ness, (310) 230-6712 ext. 105, for more details.

LARGE FABULOUS OFFICE in private, quiet, intimate setting. Tons of storage and light. Available October 1, 2009 at $849/month. Parking available. (310) 991-9434, ask for Jessica.

PALISADES OFFICE, RETAIL SUITES & EXECUTIVE SUITES NOW AVAILABLE in the heart of the village: Single room offices & office suites ranging in size up to 3,235 sf & 700 sf retail suite. Executive suites now available w/ conf rm, kitchen, copy machine, etc. Building has amazing views of Santa Monica mountains, private balconies & restrooms. Amenities incl high speed T1 internet access, elevator & secured, underground parking. CALL BRETT AT (310) 591-8789 or email brett@hp-cap.com

FURNISHED OFFICE TO SHARE on Sunset, near village. Mountain view, quiet, light & bright. $750/mo., terms negotiable. (310) 459-3493

VACATION RENTALS 3e

MAMMOTH SKI CHATEAU RENTAL. Blocks from Canyon Lodge, brand new 2400 sq. ft. premium luxury townhome with limestone and hardwood floors throughout. Sleeps up to 14 people. Call: (310) 454-7313

BOOKKEEPING/ACCOUNTING 7b

PART-TIME BOOKKEEPER TO GO! * F/C bookkeeper specializing in small businesses & private individuals. QB, Quicken & Peachtree proficient. PC or MAC. Refs upon request. Call (310) 486-1055

ACCOUNTANT/CONTROLLER. Quickbooks/Quicken setup. Outsource the hassle’all bookkeeping needs including tax prep for home or office. Get organized now! (310) 562-0635

COMPUTER SERVICES 7c

MARIE’S MAC & PC OUTCALL ‘ I CAN HELP YOU IN YOUR HOME OR OFFICE WITH: ‘ Consultation on best hard/software for your needs ‘ Setting up & configuring your system & applications ‘ Teaching you how to use your Mac or PC ‘ Upgrades: Mac OS & Windows ‘ Internet: DSL, Wireless, E-mail, Remote Access ‘ Key Applications: MS Office, Filemaker, Quicken ‘ Contact Managers, Networking, File Sharing, Data backup ‘ Palm, Visor, Digital Camera, Scanner, CD Burning ‘ FRIENDLY & PROFESSIONAL ‘ BEST RATES ‘ (310) 262-5652

YOUR OWN TECH GURU * EXPERT SET-UP, OPTIMIZATION, REPAIR. Problem-Free Computing Since 1992. Work Smarter, Faster, More Reliably. If I Can’t Help, NO CHARGE! ALAN PERLA, (310) 455-2000

THE DETECHTIVES’ ‘ PROFESSIONAL ON-SITE MAC SPECIALISTS. PATIENT, FRIENDLY AND AFFORDABLE. WE COVER ALL THINGS MAC ‘ Consulting ‘ Installation ‘ Training and Repair for Beginners to Advanced Users ‘ Data recovery ‘ Networks ‘ Wireless Internet & more ‘ (310) 838-2254 ‘ William Moorefield ‘ www.thedetechtives.com

EXPERT COMPUTER HELP ‘ On-Site Service’No travel charge ‘ Help design, buy and install your system ‘ One-on-One Training, Hard & Software ‘ Troubleshooting, Mac & Windows, Organizing ‘ Installations & Upgrades ‘ Wireless Networking ‘ Digital Phones, Photo, Music ‘ Internet ‘ Serving the Palisades, Santa Monica & Brentwood ‘ DEVIN FRANK (310) 499-7000

USER FRIENDLY’MAC CONSULTANT ‘ User friendly. Certified Apple help desk technician and proud member of the Apple consultant network. An easy approach to understanding all of your computer needs. Offering computer support in wide variety of repairs, set-ups, installs, troubleshooting, upgrades, networking, and tutoring in the application of choice. Computer consulting at fair rates. Ryan Ross: (310) 721-2827 ‘ email: ryanaross@mac.com ‘ For a full list of services visit: http://userfriendlyrr.com/

DECORATING 7d

HOLIDAY DECORATING SERVICES. Starting with the 2009 Christmas season, we are offering our very special and personalized holiday design services. Let us do all the work and create a Winter Wonderland for the interior and exterior of your home. We proudly feature the use of low energy lighting and unique decor. We are the only creative design team that knows what it takes to make a home look beautiful for busy people who love to celebrate in style! (424) 227-9210. www.dbholidaydecor.com

GARAGE, ESTATE SALE SERVICES 7f

PLANNING A GARAGE SALE? an estate sale? a moving sale? a yard sale? Call it what you like. But call us to do it for you. We do the work. Start to finish. ‘ BARBARA DAWSON ‘ Estate/Garage Sale Specialist ‘ (310) 454-0359 ‘ bmdawson@verizon.net ‘ www.bmdawson.com ‘ Furniture ‘ Antiques ‘ Collectibles ‘ Junque ‘ Reliable professionals ‘ Local References

MESSENGER/COURIER SERVICES 7n

MESSENGER & COURIER SERVICES (S. Cal.). Direct, same day or overnite, PU & Del. 24/7 guaranteed, on-time service. All major credit cards accepted. Santa Monica Express Inc. ‘ Since 1984 ‘ Tel: (310) 458-6000 www.smexpress.com

NANNIES/BABYSITTERS 8a

BABYSITTER/HOUSEKEEPER/COMPANION: 15 years in Palisades, good local references, has own vehicle. Available Wed-Sat. Honest & hardworking.. Call Martha, (323) 596-8758

FULL TIME NANNY AVAILABLE. Excellent references, clean driving record, own a car (S.U.V. Lexus), bilingual, experience with newborns. Nancy, (310) 740-1047 or (310) 741-2758

FT NANNY SEEKS LOVING FAMILY. Honest, responsible, and reliable. Speaks little English but studying. (425) 256-2310

HOUSEKEEPERS 9a

PROFESSIONAL MAID SERVICES. In Malibu! We make your home our business. Star sparkling cleaning services. In the community over 15 years. The best in house-keeping for the best price. Good references. Licensed. Call Bertha, (323) 754-6873 & cell (213) 393-1419. professionalmaidinmalibu@google.com

HOUSECLEANER AVAILABLE Monday & Thursday. 10 years experience, local references, legal, own transportation, neat person, reliable. Call Marisa, (323) 215-6526, (323) 232-7668, or (323) 328-5205

EXCELLENT HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE, Mon. thru Sat., own transportation, 15 yrs experience, good references, hardworking, & great with children. Call Yaneth at (818) 581-5473 (c) or (818) 834-1341 (h)

WOULD YOU ENJOY a delicious home cooked meal? How about fresh laundry and a sparkling home? Trini is your solution! (310) 573-5040

HOUSEKEEPER, live out. Speaks English, local references, 3 years experience. Call Estella, (310) 839-7643 (h) or (310) 994-4652 (c)

FULL TIME HOUSEKEEPER. Experienced, good references, flexible, legal, drives, single. Call Doris, (323) 445-7636 (c) or (323) 225-0349 (h)

HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER: Experienced, own transportation, excellent references. Available Tuesdays and Fridays in the Santa Monica area. Call Elena, (323) 793-2862

HOUSEKEEPER & BABYSITTER available Monday-Friday. Has own transportation, experience, and excellent references. Call Maria at (310) 869-9121

EXCELLENT HOUSEKEEPER. Available Mon-Sat. Good refs. Own transportation. CDL. Over 19 yrs exper in Malibu & Palisades. Speaks English. Call Yolanda, (h) (323) 731-6114, (c) (323) 580-2859

HOUSEKEEPER, 10 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Good references, drives, available Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Call Ruth, (323) 731-1510

HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTING, Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Live out. Speaks English, good references, 3 years experience, DL & good w/ newborns. Call (310) 721-5622 or (323) 455-0708, Jeanette M.

PALISADES HOUSEKEEPER, 15 yrs. experience. Excellent references, honest, dependable. Legal resident. Child & pet care. Available every Tues., Fri., Sat. & Sun. Carmen, (323) 460-6473, (213) 618-9671

HOUSEKEEPERS AVAILABLE. References. We work as a team to clean your house. Many years experience. Please call Amanda or Ruben, (213) 481-2545 (h) or (213) 422-6746 (c), call anytime.

ELDER CARE/COMPANIONS 10a

GOOD COMPANY Senior Care. A premiere private duty home care agency. Provides in-home care and companionship to help people remain independent and happy at home. If you are a caring individual who would like to join our team, please call (323) 932-8700. joni@goodcopros.com

CAREGIVER WANTED in the Palisades for an elderly female. Mon, Wed, & Fri. from 5-8 p.m. The perfect way to earn a little extra cash. Judith, (310) 459-2227

GARDENING/LANDSCAPING 11

PALISADES GARDENING ‘ Full Gardening Service ‘ Sprinkler Install ‘ Tree Trim ‘ Sodding ‘ Sprays, non-toxic ‘ FREE AZALEA PLANT ‘ Cell,(310) 701-1613, (310) 568-0989

MOVING & HAULING 11b

HAULING. Local students will haul your stuff. References. (310) 922-8475

STEREO, TV, VCR SERVICES 13g

1 REMOTE CONTROL THAT WORKS! Is your entertainment system not entertaining you? We can tune up your system, bring it up to date, hide wires, mount TVs, install speakers, etc. We can even reprogram or replace your remote control so it is easy to use. Call us, we can help! Stanford Connect, (310) 829-0872. Lic. #515929

WINDOW WASHING 13h

THE WINDOWS OF OZ. Detailed interior/exterior glass & screen cleaning. High ladder work. 10% new customer discount. Next day service available. Free estimates. Lic. & bonded. Insured. (310) 926-7626

PERSONAL SERVICES 14f

DRIVER WANTED. Dependable, careful driver wanted to take professor from Palisades home to UCLA and back 3x/week. Call Betsy at (213) 891-2880

Chauffeur/Bodyguard/Personal Ass’t. Certified CPR. Luxury 2008 sedan available 24/7. $200 per day. Licensed & insured. Robert, (310) 902-1945. rpiscottano@yahoo.com

PET SERVICES/PET SITTING 14g

PRIVATE DOG WALKER/housesitter, Palisades & Santa Monica. S.M. Canyon resident. Please call or email Sherry, (310) 383-7852, www.palisadesdogwalker.com

PUPPY HEAVEN ‘ TRAINING/WALKING ‘ Play groups and hikes. 30 years Palisades resident. References. Call (310) 454-0058 for a happy dog!

FITNESS INSTRUCTION 15a

HAVE FUN! GET FIT! NORDIC WALKING CLASSES. Certified Advanced Nordic walking instructor, Palisades resident teaches private/group classes in the Palisades. Weekends. (310) 266-4651

SCHOOLS, INSTRUCTION 15d

MIDDLE SCHOOL MATH TUTOR. Individual w/ undergrad degree avail. to tutor middle school math. Lives in Palisades. (310) 874-9707

TUTORS 15e

INDIVIDUALIZED INSTRUCTION. Children & adults. 20+ years teaching/tutoring exper. MATH, GRAMMAR, ESSAY WRITING & STUDY SKILLS. Formerly Sp. Ed. teacher. Call Gail, (310) 313-2530

MS. SCIENCE TUTOR. Ph.D., Experienced, Palisades resident. Tutor All Ages In Your Home. Marie, (310) 888-7145

PROFESSIONAL TUTOR. Stanford graduate (BA and MA, Class of 2000). Available for all subjects and test prep (SAT & ISEE). In-home tutoring at great rates. Call Jonathan, (310) 560-9134

MATH & CREATIVE WRITING SKILLS: COLLEGE ESSAYS, SAT/SAT II/ACT/ISEE/HSPT MATH PREP. All math subjects thru calculus. Jr. high thru college level writing skills. Fun, caring, creative, individualized tutoring. Local office in Palisades Village. Call Jamie, (888) 459-6430

EXPERIENCED SPANISH TUTOR ‘ All grade levels ‘ Grammar ‘ Conversational ‘ SAT/AP ‘ Children, adults ‘ Great references. Noelle, (310) 273-3593, (310) 980-6071

SCIENCE & MATH TUTOR. All levels (elementary to college). Ph.D., MIT graduate, 30 years experience. Ed Kanegsberg, (310) 459-3614

TUTORING FOR GRADES 1-8 by a California credentialed teacher and the author of 14 educational books. Affordable prices. Call Linda, (310) 820-7580

GROZA LEARNING CENTER. Tutoring K-12, all subjects. SAT, ISEE, HSPT, ACT, ERB, STAR. Caring, meticulous service. GrozaLearningCenter.com ‘ (310) 454-3731

MIDDLE SCHOOL MATH & SCIENCE teacher. Pomona College graduate. Has lived in Palisades for 8+ years. Has coached football and soccer. Willing to travel to your home. (310) 384-4507

STANFORD-EDUCATED MATH TUTOR-BSME ’96, tutoring Pali High kids in math and physics since ’02. Familiar with Pali curriculum and teachers. I can help! Chris, (323) 309-6687

HOMEWORK HELPER/TUTOR FOR 1-5. Are you tired of fighting with your child about homework? STOP’You no longer need to struggle with this. I am a CA Credentialed retired teacher from LAUSD with 20+ years teaching experience. Looking for students after school to help with their homework/tutor. Specialty: Reading, Math, Lang. Arts, Social Studies, Study Skills, & TIME MANAGEMENT. I am affordable & will travel to your home. References upon request. See positive results! Call: Pam (310) 393-1771

GIVE YOUR CHILD THE BEST TUTOR. National Board Certified. Credentialed retired teacher with 40+ years of experience. Most subjects. Call Jan, (310) 454-6774, ecrnord@aol.com

ENGLISH TUTOR. College, HS, MS. Writing, reading comprehension, study skills, test preparation. Experienced private school teacher, MA UCLA. Reasonable rate. Arthur, (310) 459-9100

SOUTH AMERICAN SPANISH INSTRUCTOR. Palisadian, excellent background, experienced, patient. Individual, groups, adults & children. Learn, improve skills, feel confident in Spanish. (310) 741-8422

SCIENCE & MATH SECRETS . . . expert teacher offering after school help for elementary, middle school, and high school. Loc: CoAmericaBuilding in BRENTWOOD 90049. M.A. Columbia University, Teachers College. Credentialed in NY AND CA. FREE PRACTICE TESTS! SAT/SAT II/BIO/CHEM/PHYSICS/MATH. Individual or group sessions (4 students max) available! Call now’space is going fast! (310) 295-8915. www.310Tutoring.com

10 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional tutor specializing in reading & writing. Excellent refs and great results. Palisades resident. Northwestern & London centre grad. Samantha, (626) 864-7444

MUSIC LESSONS & INSTRUCTION 15h

PIANO LESSONS. Kids: gain an academic edge! Adults: increase your brain plasticity! Have fun and learn to play with passion. Conservatory Grad/Music Therapist, 20+ years exp., ages 4-up, all levels. Karen, (310) 230-7804

CONCRETE, MASONRY, POOLS 16c

MASONRY, CONCRETE & POOL CONTRACTOR ‘ 39 YEARS IN PACIFIC PALISADES ‘ New Construction & Remodels. Hardscapes, custom stone, stamped concrete, brick, driveways, retaining walls, BBQs, outdoor kitchens, fireplaces, foundations, drainage, pool & spas, water features. Excellent local refs. Lic #309844. Bonded, ins, work comp. MIKE HORUSICKY CONSTRUCTION, INC. (310) 454-4385 ‘ WWW.HORUSICKY.COM

CONSTRUCTION 16d

ALAN PINE, GENERAL CONTRACTOR ‘ New homes ‘ Remodeling ‘ Additions ‘ Kitchen & bath ‘ Planning/architectural services ‘ Insured ‘ Local refs. Lic. #469435. (310) 457-5655 or (818) 203-8881

CASALE CONSTRUCTION CO. LLC ‘ General Contractor Lic. #512443 ‘ Residential ‘ Commercial ‘ New Construction ‘ Additions ‘ Remodeling ‘ (866) 362-2573 www.reemodeling.com

ELECTRICAL 16h

PALISADES ELECTRIC. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR. All phases of electrical, new construction to service work. (310) 454-6994. Lic. #468437. Insured. Professional Service

ELECTRICIAN HANDYMAN. Local service only. Non-lic. Please call (310) 454-6849 or (818) 317-8286

LICHWA ELECTRIC. Remodeling, rewiring, troubleshooting. Lighting: low voltage, energy safe, indoor, outdoor, landscape. Low voltage: telephone, Internet, CCTV, home theatre, audio/video. Non-lic. Refs. LichwaElectric@gmail.com, (310) 270-8596

BEST ELECTRICAL * Over 25 yrs experience, All phases of electrical. 24 hrs, 7 day service. (310) 621-3905. Lic. #695411

FENCES, DECKS 16j

THE FENCE MAN ‘ 18 years quality work ‘ Wood fences ‘ Decks ‘ Gates ‘ Chainlink & patio ‘ Wrought iron ‘ Lic. #663238, bonded. (818) 706-1996

INDEPENDENT SERVICE CARLOS FENCE: Wood & Picket Fences ‘ Chain Link ‘ Iron & Gates ‘ Deck & Patio Covers. Ask for Carlos, (310) 677-2737 or fax (310) 677-8650. Non-lic.

FLOOR CARE 16m

GREG GARBER’S HARDWOOD FLOORS SINCE 1979. Install, refinish. Fully insured. Local references (310) 230-4597 Lic. #455608

CENTURY HARDWOOD FLOOR. Refinishing, Installation, Repairs. Lic. #813778. www.centurycustomhardwoodfloorinc.com ‘ centuryfloor@sbcglobal.net ‘ (800) 608-6007 ‘ (310) 276-6407

JEFF HRONEK, 40 YRS. RESIDENT ‘ HARDWOOD FLOORS INC. ‘ Sanding & Refinishing ‘ Installations ‘ Pre-finished ‘ Unfinished ‘ Lic. #608606. Bonded, Insured, Workers Comp. www.hronekhardwoodfloors.com (310) 475-1414

HANDYMAN 16o

HANDYMAN ‘ HOOSHMAN ‘ Most known name in the Palisades. Since 1975. Member Chamber of Commerce. Non-Lic. Call for your free est. Local refs available. Hooshman, (310) 459-8009, 24 Hr.

LABOR OF LOVE carpentry, plumbing, tile, plaster, doors, windows, fencing & those special challenges. Work guaranteed. License #B767950. Ken at (310) 487-6464

LOCAL RESIDENT, LOCAL CLIENTELE. Make a list, call me. I specialize in repairing, replacing all those little nuisances. Not licensed; fully insured; always on time. 1 Call, 1 Guy: Marty, (310) 459-2692

DJ PRO SERVICES ‘ Carpentry, Handyman, Repairs. ALL PROJECTS CONSIDERED. See my work at: www.djproservices.com ‘ Non-lic. (c) (310) 907-6169, (h) (310) 454-4121

YANKEE CRAFTSMAN, CARPENTER & HANDYMAN. 20 yrs exp. All phases res. renov. Consultation for the do-it-yourselfer & as much help as req’d. Ref’s. Non-lic. (323) 691-2265, Mark

HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING 16p

SANTA MONICA HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING. INSTALLATION: New and old service and repairs. Lic. #324942 (310) 393-5686

PAINTING, PAPERHANGING 16r

PAUL HORST ‘ Interior & Exterior ‘ PAINTING ‘ 55 YEARS OF SERVICE ‘ Our reputation is your safeguard. License No. 186825 ‘ (310) 454-4630 ‘ Bonded & Insured

TILO MARTIN PAINTING. For A Professional Job Call (310) 230-0202. Refs. Lic. #715099

SQUIRE PAINTING CO. Interior and Exterior. License #405049. 30 years. Local Service. (310) 454-8266. www.squirepainting.com

ZARKO PRTINA PAINTING. Interior/Exterior. Serving Palisades/Malibu over 35 years. Lic. #637882. Call (310) 454-6604

A PACIFIC PAINTING. Residential, commercial, industrial. Interior/exterior. Drywall, plaster, stucco repair, pressure washing. Free estimates. Bonded & insured. Lic. #908913. ‘Since 1979.’ (310) 954-7170

REMODELING 16v

KANAN CONSTRUCTION ‘ References. BONDED ‘ INSURED ‘ St. Lic. #554451 ‘ DANIEL J. KANAN, CONTRACTOR, (310) 451-3540 / (800) 585-4-DAN

COMPLETE CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION ‘ Kitchen+bath ‘ Additions ‘ Tile, carpentry, plumbing ‘ Quality work at reasonable rates guaranteed. Large & small projects welcomed. Lic. #751137. Call Michael Hoff Construction, (310) 774-9159

HELP WANTED 17

THE SKI CHANNEL & THE SURF CHANNEL located in the Palisades village have immediate openings for interns in programming, production & marketing. (310) 230-2050

MYSTERY SHOPPERS earn up to $150 per day. Undercover shoppers needed to judge retail and dine-in establishments. No experience required. Call (877) 648-1571

PALISADES PUBLISHING CO. needs a good salesperson for high commission advertising sales. You can work from home. Pleasant clients, no unwanted cold calling. Send resume to: editor@ies-ed.com

FURNITURE 18c

THOMASVILLE HARDWOOD 5 PIECE country French bedroom set, 4 poster king bed, side cabinets, 9 drawer dresser, adjustable winged beveled mirror. Excellent condition. $2,000 OBO. Price includes designer accessories. (310) 454-1031

NAME YOUR PRICE!!! Horizon Elite treadmill in mint condition with a 30 yr. warranty. Rapid response drive system & folds up to take up less room. Burgundy velvet Pottery Barn club chair and a large beige lounge chair also up for grabs. Name your price . . . (310) 310-3949

GARAGE, ESTATE SALES 18d

GARAGE SALE, Nov. 7 & 8, 7 a.m.-1 p.m. Everything! Holiday items, china, crystal, books, cds, home decor, furniture, artwork, appliances. Everything must go! 140 S. Gretna Green Wy. Brentwood, 90049

PALIS. MARQUEZ! Annual pre-Xmas sale! Lots of fun gift stuff! 16620 Merivale Ln. (N. of Sunset/Bienvenida) FRI.-SAT., Nov. 6-7; 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Photos/details: www.bmdawson.com

YOU CAN’T MISS THIS * We’ve got it all! Clothes, furniture, antiques, collectibles, craft supplies, housewares, many new with tags. Famous artists paintings, tons of holiday decorations. Saturday only, Nov. 7th, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. 710 Hartzell, corner of Sunset & Hartzell.

Thursday, November 5 – Thursday, November 12

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5

  Former Pacific Palisades resident Jan Loomis signs and discusses ‘Images of America: Pacific Palisades,’ 6:30 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. Loomis will join a panel that includes authors of historical books about Santa Monica, Venice and the early Universal City. The public is invited.   Dr. Michael Murray, author of ‘What the Drug Companies Won’t Tell You and Your Doctor Doesn’t Know,’ will speak at 7 p.m. at Pharmaca Integrative Pharmacy, corner of Sunset and La Cruz. Murray, a naturopathic doctor, has published almost 30 books on health-related topics and has a best-selling supplement line.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6

  Pacific Palisades resident Alan Eisenstock, co-author of David Allan Grier’s autobiography ‘Barack Like Me: The Chocolate Covered Truth,’ will discuss Grier’s humorous and compelling story, from growing up in Detroit, where he marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to attending the inauguration of President Barack Obama, 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. (See story, page 15.)   Theatre Palisades presents ‘Things We Do For Love,’ a comedy by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, 8 p.m. at Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd. Performances are Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m., through December 13. For tickets, call (310) 454-1970.   Los Angeles Metropolitan Opera presents ‘La Traviata,’ 8 p.m. at the Community United Methodist Church, 801 Via de la Paz. The suggested donation at the door is $25. Other performances are November 8 (at 3 p.m.), 13 and 15. Information: (310) 570-6448 or visit www.losangelesmet.com.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7

  California State Parks will serve cake to celebrate the legendary actor and humorist Will Rogers’ 130th birthday, 12 noon at Will Rogers State Historic Park in Pacific Palisades. The public is invited.   The Pacific Palisades Art Association hosts a reception in honor of its’judged member show featuring photography and mixed media, 2 to 4 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library on Alma Real. The public is invited.’The show runs through November.   Poet Judith Pacht signs copies of ‘User’s Guide,’ 3 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. Pacht’s poems have been published in Ploughshares, Runes, Cider Press Review and numerous literary journals. ‘

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8

  California State Parks celebrates the 130th birthday of Will Rogers, 12 noon at Will Rogers State Historic Park. The public is invited.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9

  Moonday, a monthly Westside poetry reading, 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. (See story, page 16.)

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10

  Artwork and storytelling with Rebecca Martin, for children ages 3 and up, 4 p.m., Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. This is a special Read-To-Me L.A. program. (See story, page 3.)

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11

  Monthly meeting of the Palisades AARP chapter, 2 p.m. at the Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford. The public is invited. Local historian Randy Young will be the guest speaker.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12

  Iao Katagirl, director of community relations for The RAND Corporation, talks about ‘Brain Damage in Six Easy Lessons: Building an Office Project in Santa Monica,’ 7:15 a.m. at the Palisades Rotary Club meeting at Gladstone’s restaurant on PCH. 310-442-1607.   Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, 7 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. The public is invited.   Ben Fuchs, a registered pharmacist and cosmetic chemist, speaks about ‘The Science of Beautiful Skin,’ 7 p.m. at Pharmaca, corner of Sunset and La Cruz. Fuchs has been formulating custom skin-care products for over 20 years.