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Race Day in the Palisades

32nd Annual Will Rogers 5/10K Run Kicks Off Town’s July 4th Festivities

Therese Fricke crosses the finish line in Saturday's Palisades-Will Rogers Run. She won the 5K for the second time in 18:47.
Therese Fricke crosses the finish line in Saturday’s Palisades-Will Rogers Run. She won the 5K for the second time in 18:47.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

By the time Jennifer Rogers-Etcheverry took the stage to fire the gun that officially started the Palisades-Will Rogers Run last Saturday morning, the sun had begun to creep out of the clouds–a bright beginning to the community’s most patriotic day of the year. “It’s all of you who keep my great grandfather’s legacy alive,” she said, referring to the famous actor/comedian after whom the landmark holiday event is named. “Thank you all so much.” Moments later the field of the 32nd annual July 4 race–some 2,612 strong–began its journey into the Huntington Palisades and, for the 1,050 runners in the 10K, up Sunset to the dreaded switchbacks of Will Rogers State Park. Just past the 15-minute mark the first winner rounded the bend on Toyopa at the entrance to the Palisades Recreation Center. That was 20-year-old Ravi Amarawansa, who won on his fourth attempt in 15 minutes, 13 seconds. “I was hoping Peter Gilmore would run because I would’ve liked to test myself against the best,” he said. “This is my best time for a road race. It’s a nice flat course. Good for running a PR.” Gilmore, a former Palisades High/UC Berkeley distance runner and now one of the nation’s top marathoners, has won his hometown race eight times and set the course record of 14:10 in 2003. Amarawansa ran track and cross country at Venice High, graduating in 2007, but he got his start in the sport at Paul Revere Middle School, where he trained under Paul and Stacy Foxson. “They introduced me to the long jump, the mile, the 400, everything,” said Amarawansa, a psychology major at the University of San Francisco. “It all started with them.” The last time Amarawansa ran the 5K here was his freshman year at Venice when he clocked 19:38. He would have run it at least once since except he got stung in the ankle by a bee the day before, the ankle swelled up and he decided not to run. “I think I’ll try the 10K next year,” he said. A sleepless night might have affected her time but it couldn’t keep Therese Fricke from winning the women’s 5K for the second time in 18:47. In her first prep race since getting back into training with Coach Eric Barron’s Track Club L.A. before Christmas, Fricke was first in her division and third overall at last month’s Brentwood 5K, won by 2008 Palisades-Will Rogers 5K champion Vivien Wadeck. Fricke, 35, lives in Santa Monica. She won the Palisades-Will Rogers 5K for the first time in 2005 and her goal is to crack the 18-minute mark. “Even though I won today I would’ve preferred a faster time,” said Fricke, who has her own business (“On the Move” Pilates & Fitness) and is a singer/songwriter and guitarist. “I think it takes a good three or four races so I plan to continue getting my time back down, closer to where I left off with racing a couple years ago when I won the Heart of the City in 18:01.” Fricke’s personal-best 5K time is 17:52, which she ran in college at Pacific Lutheran University in Washington. Another of Fricke’s personal goals is producing her music CD. She recently sang at the Summer Soulstice in Santa Monica and her band “Tereza & the Banditz” is performing at the House of Blues in Hollywood at 10 p.m. Sunday night. “It’s so great that my hobbies–my passions–became my career,” Fricke said. “It’s awesome that I can motivate, heal and inspire others through fitness and music! It’s the greatest job!” The women’s 5K record is 16:29 by Annetta Luevano in 1995. Mikal Sandoval, a ranger at Will Rogers State Historic Park set the mood for the race with her stirring rendition of the national anthem. Then, announcer Bob Benton asked for a round of applause for Brian Shea, who was recognized for his tireless work as race coordinator every year since the race began in 1978. As usual the Fluffy Bunnies, a men’s track club based in Santa Monica, showed up in force–and properly attired in white bunny rabbit ears. Having completed the Seattle Half-Marathon in one hour and 10 minutes just a week before, the 10K must have been a walk in the park for men’s winner Lewis Eliot, a 29-year-old from Phoenix. At first, Eliot turned up Alma Real instead of proceeding through the 10K chute, but race officials yelled “You’re going the wrong way!” and quickly re-routed him to the finish in 33:29 with plenty of time to spare. Four-time winner Nate Bowen of Redwood City finished second in 34:10. “I’m staying in Santa Monica right now doing a lot of smaller races,” Eliot said. “This was my first time doing it and it was so cool.” Eliot is a triathlete and his goal is to qualify for the Olympic Triathlon in London in 2012. He has completed about 30 half-triathlons and seven full triathlons. His best Ironman time to date is 8 hours and 53 minutes. “I plan on sticking around for the Nautica [Triathlon] in Malibu and the L.A. Triathlon,” he added. “I’m going back to short course for a while.” The dreaded switchbacks were no big deal for Eliot, who got used to hilly courses while racing for the U.S. national cycling team before attending college at Montana State. Russell Edmonds of New Zealand holds the 10K course record of 29:46, set back in 1983–the same year that Katie Dunsmuir set the women’s record of 35:09. Shawna Burger wore a neon gold outfit and matching shoes on her way to winning the women’s 10K last year. This time, she arrived with a new color (pink) and a new strategy: follow the Fluffy Bunnies. “I thought to myself ‘Just try to keep up with them,'” said Burger, who charged to the front of the pack right away and was never challenged, covering the 6.2 miles in 38:02. “It helped a lot having run it last year and being more familiar with the course.” The 24-year-old Burger recently moved to Santa Monica and is majoring in fine arts at Cal State Los Angeles, where she ran cross country and track before using up her athletic eligibility. Burger finished almost two minutes ahead of VS Athletics Track Club teammate Laura Conley. Burger’s only regret is that she couldn’t run the 5K too: “Maybe I’ll try that next year. I love this race and I want to keep coming back.” Amarawansa and Burger celebrated their victories by riding in the parade that afternoon. Camille Chapus won the 13-15 age division and was second overall in the women’s 5K, finishing in 19:31 and 12-year-old Palisadian Mackenzie Howe won her age group in 21:56. Carol Gordon won the 45-49 division in 21:14 and Diane Goldberg won the 75-79 age group in 45:40. Palisadian Andrew Bland won the men’s 13-15 age division of the 5K in 17:34, Ron Graham won the 50-54 age group in 18:11, Anthony Reading won the 55-59 category in 21:12 while locals Ted Mackie, Tom McKiernan and Ken Adams swept the top three places in the 80-99 division. In the 10K, Gregory Dunne, Sawyer Pascoe and Tommy Collins swept the top three spots in the 13-15 division and Adam Gooch was first in the 65-69 age range in 47:20. Michaela Keefe, Elisabeth Lomis and Caitlin Keefe finished 1-2-3 in the 12-and-under division, Hannah Cranston won the 16-18 division in 47:24 and Eleanor Keare won the 40-44 category in 44:17. Jennifer Levi, Brianna Becker and Tanya Bentley swept the 35-39 age division while Jamie Halper, Susan Harbert and Maria Marrone were 1-2-3 in the 50-54 age group. Pacific Palisades-own kickboxing champion Baxter Humby, in training for his July 25 fight in Las Vegas, took it easy in the men’s 5K, completing the 3.1 miles in 23 minutes flat. For complete results visit the official race website at www.palisades10k.com or try the Race Central website at www.runraceresults.com.

Thursday, July 2 – Thursday, July 9

THURSDAY, JULY 2

Longtime Pacific Palisades resident Dotty Larson discusses and signs ‘Flight 20-31: A Journey into Eternity Book,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. Her book, based on the Gospel of John, incorporates the spiritual insights and practical wisdom Larson has gained over the past 40 years as a teaching leader for both Community Bible Study and Bible Study Fellowship.

FRIDAY, JULY 3

Actress Mariel Hemingway signs and discusses ‘Mariel’s Kitchen: Simple Ingredients for a Delicious and Satisfying Life,’ 5:30 p.m. at Simon Meadow in Temescal Gateway Park, as part of Palisades-Malibu YMCA’s ‘Fun Family Friday Nights.’ (See story, page 13.) The Theatre Palisades production of ‘Smokey Joe’s Cafe continues its run at the Pierson Playhouse tonight at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m., through July 19 (Saturday night performances resume July 11). Tickets: Friday and Sunday, adults, $20, seniors and students, $18; Saturday, adults, $22, seniors and students $20. Contact: (310) 454-1970 or visit www.theatrepalisades.org

SATURDAY, JULY 4

31st Annual Will Rogers 5/10K Run, starting at 8:15 a.m. at the entrance to the Palisades Recreation Center, 851 Alma Real. 14th Annual Kids Fun Run, presented by the Palisades-Will Rogers Ridge Runners and the Palisades Optimist Club, 9:15 a.m. at the intersection of Alma Real and Toyopa. 42nd Annual Pacific Palisades Americanism Parade, 2 p.m., starting at Bowdoin and Via de la Paz. Pre-fireworks musical concert, 6:30 p.m. at the Palisades High stadium, followed by the traditional fireworks show at about 9 p.m.

MONDAY, JULY 6

Pajama Storytime, for children of all ages (parents and teddy bears welcomed, too), 7 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library, 861 Alma Real.

TUESDAY, JULY 7

Bubble Magic, a special Read-to-Me L.A. program for children of all ages, featuring rainbow bubbles, square bubbles, bubbles in bubbles and even a kid in a bubble, 4 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library. The Temescal Canyon Association’s summer evening hiking group will take an easy hike up Topanga’s Dead Horse Trail. Meet in the Temescal Gateway parking lot at 6 p.m. for carpooling. No dogs! Expect to be back by 9 p.m. Information: temcanyon.org.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 8

Monthly meeting of the Pacific Palisades AARP chapter, 2 p.m. at the Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford. The public is invited.

THURSDAY, JULY 9

Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, 7 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library meeting room, 861 Alma Real. The public is invited. Palisades High alum Norman Ollestad signs and discusses ‘Crazy for the Storm: A Memoir of Survival,’ an adventure exploring the bond between father and son, 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.

‘Corso’ Wins Taormina Audience Jury Award

‘Corso: The Last Beat,’ a documentary about the last surviving Beat Generation poet Gregory Corso by Palisadian filmmaker Gustave Reininger, has won the Taormina Film Festival’s Audience Jury Award. The film had been accepted as part of the official ‘Beyond the Mediterranean’ competition section of the 55th Annual Taormina Film Festival in Sicily, which took place from June 13 through 20. ‘Beyond the Mediterranean’ showcased 24 films. ‘Corso was the only American selection,’ said Reininger, phoning from a Rome airport. ‘They did not see it as a documentary. It was seen as a drama.’ Reininger had been invited to travel with the film all over Sicily by American film critic Deborah Young, the festival’s director. Reininger was very pleased with ‘Corso”s reception: ‘The audience had a lot of young people, students from all over Sicily and Southern Italy.’ ‘I was actually in the shower when I got the news,’ Reininger said. No sooner did he jump out, than there were reporters outside his door. Reininger said that the prize was awarded to ‘Corso’ in the Teatro Antico, the 2,500-year-old Greco-Roman ampitheater. Reininger was happy to premiere ‘Corso’ at the Sicilian festival.   ’Out of loyalty to Gregory, I thought I’d debut the film in Italy,’ said the filmmaker of the late Italian-American subject of his film. ‘I just had a really great time going out and getting people to see the film,’ Reininger said. ‘I didn’t get much sleep. But it was just really marvelous.’ Oddly enough, Reininger almost felt at home in the Italian burg.   ’Taormina looks just like Pacific Palisades,’ Reininger said. ‘It’s like standing at the end of Via de la Paz.’ The Palisadian-Post was the first media outlet to profile Reininger’s documentary (”Last Beat’ Standing,’ January 29). Thanks to the online version of the article, Reininger was invited to attend Taormina.

Mariel’s Moveable Feast

Actress Mariel Hemingway will sign copies of her cookbook,
Actress Mariel Hemingway will sign copies of her cookbook, “Mariel’s Kitchen,” at Simon Meadow Friday night.

Three years ago, actress Mariel Hemingway appeared on an episode of ‘Everyday Italian,’ the Food Network cooking show hosted by Palisadian Giada DeLaurentiis.   ’My youngest daughter, Langley, was obsessed with Giada,’ says Hemingway, who appeared on the show with Langley. Today, Hemingway herself is becoming known for her culinary skills, thanks to her latest book, ‘Mariel’s Kitchen: Simple Ingredients for a Delicious and Satisfying Life’ (HarperCollins). Hemingway will sign copies of her book and greet fans tomorrow night, July 3, at Palisades-Malibu YMCA’s inaugural ‘Fun Family Friday Nights,’ 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., at Simon Meadow in Temescal Gateway Park.   ’Mariel’s Kitchen’ is the logical extension of Hemingway’s own obsession with fitness, wellness and stillness, the actress tells the Palisadian-Post. ‘It’s my first cook book,’ Hemingway, 47, says. ‘It was originally about greening your kitchen because I believe the way that you eat and set up your kitchen is the first step in becoming helping your environment.’ In ‘Mariel’s Kitchen,’ readers will discover course-by-course recipes including such delicacies as a cauliflower, celery, and green pea salad; cranberry ‘blisscuit’ mini muffins; roasted chicken with rosemary and root vegetables; and seared wild salmon with minted mango salsa. Hungry readers will also find a spinach and mushroom lasagna, buffalo meat loaf (‘one of the best meats you can get is buffalo; it’s just a healthy meat’) and such desserts as lemon zest cheesecake, pumpkin walnut balls (‘That was my new creation’) and pear sorbet with balsamic port syrup. ‘I created those for my kids,’ she says of her quite-emerald spinach pancakes. ‘I just love everything green.’ ‘Mariel’s Kitchen’ is organized by seasons, utilizing ingredients specific to winter, spring, summer and autumn. ‘It’s a gluten-free cookbook. Some are family recipes that I tweaked to make healthier. We over-process wheat grain so much in this country that I believe we have an allergic reaction to gluten. ‘Food in its simplicity is the best kind of food,’ Hemingway says. ‘Shopping at the farmers market, supporting local merchants.’ Hemingway believes her penchant for cooking is genetic. She credits her dad, John Hadley Hemingway. ‘My father grew up in Paris, and he never believed that anyone in America could really cook,’ Hemingway says. ‘When he married my mother, a native Idahoan, he was convinced she couldn’t cook so he sent her to Le Cordon Bleu. Julia Child was at their wedding.’ Hemingway has always been connected to food service. Divorced earlier this year, she had been married since 1984 to Stephen Crisman, a restaurateur who co-founded the Hard Rock Caf’. They have two daughters, Dree, 22, and the aforementioned Langley, 20. In the 1980s, Hemingway and Crisman ran seven Sam’s Caf’ restaurants nationwide (‘Sam’ was Crisman’s nickname for Hemingway). Hemingway, of course, is not the only author in her family. Today marks the anniversary of the death of her grandfather, Ernest Hemingway, who was widely considered the 20th century’s most important American writer. He died in 1961, about four months before granddaughter Mariel was born. Hemingway starred in films representing two phases of filmmaker Woody Allen’s career: his 1979 classic ‘Manhattan,’ and 1997’s well-reviewed ‘Deconstructing Harry.’ ‘It was kind of a surreal experience,’ Hemingway recalls of shooting ‘Manhattan,’ in which she played Allen’s love interest. ‘I had never kissed anyone until I kissed Woody Allen in the film. I had to practice at home. I would look in the mirror and kiss my arm for an hour. ‘I was a kid,’ she continues. ‘I came from Idaho. I didn’t understand sexuality. It was like being on another planet. It was an amazing experience to be in ‘Manhattan’ even though I had already made ‘Lipstick.” Hemingway also played in 2001’s ‘Perfume’ (not a sequel to ‘Lipstick’). ”Perfume’ was all improvised,’ Hemingway says. ‘There was no script at all. It was scary but really fun.’ Speaking of sequels, 1987’s ‘Superman IV: The Quest for Peace’ may not be a career highlight for anyone involved, but Hemingway got to work with some of Hollywood’s most talented actors. ‘It was great to work with Gene Hackman, and Christopher Reeve was a gentle sweet soul,’ Hemingway says. ‘It was a great time in my life, and I was newly married.’ Earlier this year, Hemingway appeared with the late David Carradine in ‘The Golden Boys,’ ‘a period piece, a sweet, sweet film. But currently I’m producing stuff and I only work in films when something comes along that really moves me.’ Hemingway wants to get a motion picture made based on grandpa Ernest’s ‘A Moveable Feast,’ his memoir of his insouciant, intoxicated 20-something years in Paris with F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. Unlike her hard-drinking, hard-living grandfather, this third-generation Hemingway prefers cleaner living and healthy food with fresh ingredients. She is currently developing ‘The Mariel Hemingway Show,’ which will address her passions”health, wellness, and food’in a talk show format. ‘Everyone I pitched it to has really liked it,’ Hemingway says. ‘Nobody’s done a holistic show; it’s not just food, it’s everything.’ Translation: Giada, watch your back! www.marielhemingway.com Contact: Palisades-Malibu YMCA, (310) 454-5591.

Santa Monica’s Broad Stage Lights Up for Second Season

Broad Stage Artistic Director Dale Franzen will present a variety of theater, dance, and music for the Santa Monica theater's second season.
Broad Stage Artistic Director Dale Franzen will present a variety of theater, dance, and music for the Santa Monica theater’s second season.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Artistic Director Dale Franzen has fashioned the Broad Stage’s second season for omnibus tastes, offering 81 performances at the Santa Monica theater between September and May. Mikhail Baryshnikov brings two U.S. premieres of dances for the opening gala and season opener on September 4 and 5. Other highlights include Broadway’s Savion Glover; Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, from London; chamber music, jazz, world music, baroque, dance, opera/voice; and family and educational programs. Faced with the continuing uncertain state of the arts, a dismal economy and a lean budget, Franzen, a Pacific Palisades resident, has managed to create programming that satisfies the sophisticated audiences she attracts. ‘No doubt, last year was challenging,’ she tells the Palisadian-Post. ‘The week after we opened, the world fell apart and everybody stayed home.’ But despite the abbreviated season (40 performances) she says that she is pleased. ‘We had 12,000 come through the door; we’ve done well.’ While the challenges for Franzen remain the same, somehow things seem to fall on the right side of the balance sheet. Her pay-as-you-go philosophy (tightening staff, making cuts and keeping services in-house) has kept the Broad within its $1.2-million budget and allowed her to focus on seeking donations, large and small. ‘Some foundations froze, but others opened up,’ says Franzen, who is also grateful for her contacts, many of whom she developed over her 20-years as a professional opera singer (lyric soprano). Certainly one of the most important angels are the Broads, who helped launch the theater with a $10-million endowment for programming and arts education. ‘Eli and Edye came into my life at the best time. It was a great piece of timing; they have been extraordinary with my board, the budget and long-term strategy. Eli is brilliant and caring. I can call him up and he helps me. He is famous for his laser ability to zero in on things.’ Other advisors include L.A. Opera’s Pl’cido Domingo, actor/producer Tom Hulce, who assisted with booking Baryshnikov for the second season, and KCRW General Manager Ruth Seymour. ‘Ruth has been a mentor to me,’ Franzen says. ‘I admire her; she had a vision and has remained flexible and timely.’ Franzen also finds her counsel as a woman instructive. ‘I trust her, she’s a woman who’s not afraid.’ Franzen has also shaped a board she thinks has the background, connections and strategic thinking skills to build a community, to move the theater from its founding-year challenges to become a longtime theatrical entity. With this in mind, the board has begun to talk about a five-year strategic plan. ‘Nonprofits can’t afford to think about themselves as nonprofits any more,’ Franzen explains. ‘The original definition of nonprofit is ‘for the public good.’ All of us need to start thinking that way. My goal even in a 500-seat theater is to try to break even, but not to lose money. In order to do this I need to be thinking more strategically about a variety of income streams. With a new board chair, Austin Veutner, and a strong passionate board, we are looking at a long term strategy to protect this nonprofit.’ Believe it or not, Franzen says, her biggest challenge is spreading the word that the Broad Stage is out there. ‘I want everybody to know about this theater, and they don’t. ‘We need to spread the net through programming, the press, articles and just people talking. You can tweet, you can e-mail, but sometimes it takes actually getting someone to come to the theater by picking up the phone.’ There will be multiple reasons for visiting the Broad in the 2009-10 season, Franzen promises. She understands that the Westside wants dance, but she decided to cut out an expanded dance series in order to bring theater. It’s simple economics: unless she gets a major underwriter, such as KCRW’s support for Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, individual performers don’t require the rehearsal and tech expenses that dance and theater do. Doubtless, the opening celebration with Baryshnikov elevates the programming bar, and the story behind this coup underscores the behind-the-scenes work of an artistic director. ‘I was lucky,’ Franzen says, simply. Five years ago, she spoke with Baryshnikov’s publicist, explaining to him that what Misha was doing with his foundation (The Baryshnikov Arts Center) was similar to what she wanted to do with the Broad Stage and the smaller (126-seat) Edye Second Space. One thing led to another. Franzen began talking to Misha’s executive director, Stamford Makishi, about doing a program at the Broad. While encouraged, Franzen was not able to close the deal until March of this year, when she was ready to go to press with the season brochure and she got the call that it was a go. ‘Relationships are very important,’ she says. ‘It took me five trips to New York to get Baryshnikov.’ The legendary dancer will offer two new dances by Alexei Ratmansky’the recently appointed artist in residence at the American Ballet Theatre’and Benjamin Millepied, first soloist with the New York City Ballet. Prima ballerina Ana Laguna will share the duet. Theater programs include not only Shakespeare’s ‘Love’s Labour’s Lost,’ (November) but New-York based puppeteer Basil Twist, who will perform his version of ‘Petrouchka,’ accompanied by Stravinsky’s score for two pianos in February 2010. Franzen is also presenting ‘Jane Austen Unscripted with High Tea’ at the Edye Second Space in December, which she saw at a smaller Hollywood theater last year. ‘It’s great to have the Edye to try things out; it’s our think tank.’ In reviewing the inaugural year, Franzen says that it is still too soon to know what does or doesn’t work. That’s why she is still working as hard as ever, seeing theater, listening to music and all the while ‘getting stronger and getting clearer about what our needs are.’ For information and subscription series tickets, visit www.thebroadstage.com or call 818-461-9244.

O Palisadian, Where Art Thou?

Country Musician David Holt Left the Palisades of His Youth to Chase Appalachian Sounds

Grammy Award-winning musician David Holt
Grammy Award-winning musician David Holt

In 1968, a young Texas-born musician named David Holt took his banjo and traveled to the heart of the Appalachian Mountains. He visited remote mountain communities such as Kingdom Come, Kentucky, and Sodom Laurel, North Carolina, searching for the best traditional musicians. His quest paid off handsomely. Over his three-decade career, Holt has earned four Grammy Awards for albums rich with American roots music and storytelling, and he has performed and recorded with – and mentored under – many of his heroes in the industry, including Doc Watson, Grandpa Jones, Bill Monroe, Earl Scruggs, Roy Acuff and Chet Atkins. But the seeds of his musical journey were planted in Pacific Palisades. One might call Holt, 62, a country or bluegrass artist. On his Web site, he describes himself as a musician ‘preserving traditional American music and stories.’ He plays 10 acoustic instruments and has released numerous recordings of traditional mountain music and southern folktales. Holt has become well known in North Carolina as host of the long-running public television program ‘Folkways,’ and for his radio show, ‘Riverwalk: Classic Jazz From The Landing’ for Public Radio International. He has also guest-starred on such shows as ‘Hee Haw’ and ‘The Grand Ole Opry.’ In 2000, he appeared in the Coen Brothers’ ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou,’ starring George Clooney. The film itself did not click commercially, but the bluegrass-flavored soundtrack album became something of a phenomenon, winning a Grammy in 2001. ‘I got a lot of energy from that,’ Holt says, although the aftermath of the album’s success had limited impact on his career. ‘It didn’t do much difference. I guess it raised awareness for that music. It’s not like Angelina Jolie on ‘Entertainment Tonight’ every night, but there are millions of people who know who’s who in the music. It’s almost an underground thing.’ Holt’s various albums have garnered Grammy Award attention. ‘Grandfather’s Greatest Hits’ received a 1992 Grammy nomination for ‘Best Traditional Folk Recording,’ and featured Atkins, Watson and Duane Eddy jamming together. ‘Why the Dog Chases The Cat: Great Animal Stories,’ with fellow storyteller Bill Mooney, was nominated in 1995 for a Grammy. In 1996, ‘Stellaluna,’ a collection of bat stories, garnered two Grammys for Holt, as artist and producer. Holt’s ‘Spiders in the Hairdo: Modern Urban Legends’ was nominated in 1999 for a Grammy in the Adult Spoken Word category. He and Watson shared the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Folk Recording in 2002 for ‘Legacy,’ a three-CD collection chronicling Watson’s life.   A native of Garland, Texas, Holt moved with his family to Pacific Palisades during his junior high years. ‘Dad moved there from Texas because he’s an inventor [of parts for planes],’ Holt says. The Holts lived on Las Pulgas and El Medio. David attended Paul Revere Middle School. The Palisades of Holt’s childhood was a different world. ‘In 1957, Pacific Palisades was a middle class place,’ he continues. ‘There were no houses in the mountains. We could just roam. It wasn’t Westwood, and it certainly wasn’t Beverly Hills. It was a good place to start, and my dad loved the beach. ‘There was no PaliHi. Eddie Fisher owned the whole land that PaliHi was later built on. Where that highway is today, there was a deep canyon. There were caves with stalagmites and stalactites. It was quite a remarkable, natural place. Nobody but kids went down there.’ Holt and friends ‘tried to live off the land there over night eating leaves and pine nuts.’ Holt also whiled away hours in the village at such long-vanished destinations as the Hot Dog Show and the Bay Theatre, behind which ‘there was a trampoline for kids to play on.’ At age 14, Holt says, ‘My parents wouldn’t let me get drums.’ They brokered a deal with their son that if he would take lessons for a year at the Hobby Music Shop on Via de la Paz, they would get him a kit. Under the tutelage of Johnny Malone, Holt spent months practicing on a rubber pad. He got his drum kit. By the time Holt hit high school, Palisades High was built. Holt graduated in the winter of ’65, after serving as senior class president. ‘At 15, I was the drummer in a local band called the Persuaders with Chris Gordon and Byron Case,’ Holt says. ‘We played all over Los Angeles and I got my first taste of performing. At 16, we got together with members of the Sun Rays, another local Palisades band, and recorded ‘Ski Storm.’ This was a surf-style instrumental featuring me doing a big drum solo.’ ‘Ski Storm’ raced up the charts in 1964. It ranked number 13 on the Billboard charts the very week the Beatles’ ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’ took America by storm. After graduating from UC Santa Barbara magna cum laude in biology and art, Holt began his trek to Appalachia. Along the way, he made a stop at the Bryant, Texas, home of one of his idols. ‘I sought out Carl Sprague, the first of the recorded singing cowboys,’ Holt says. ‘He taught me to play the harmonica and regaled me with old-time cowboy stories. This experience introduced me to the excitement of learning from the source: the old-timers themselves.’ In the Appalachians, Holt found old-time mountaineers with a wealth of folk music, stories and wisdom, including banjoist Wade Mainer, balladeer Dellie Norton, singing coal miner Nimrod Workman, and 122 year-old washboard player Susie Brunson. Holt not only learned to master the banjo, but such instruments as the mouth bow, the bottleneck slide guitar, and the paper bag. ‘I stumbled onto almost like a lost world,’ Holt says. ‘A culture that was not going to be here much longer. These people I was learning from were born in the 1800s. They grew up before self-doubt was invented.’ In 1973, Holt convinced his wife, Virginia Callaway of Santa Barbara, to relocate to western North Carolina. Married for 38 years, the Holts currently reside in Ashville, a town of 150,000 with a vibrant musical scene. ‘She didn’t know anything about Southern culture,’ Holt says. ‘It took her about two years to get adjusted.’ Holt explains his attachment to the region: its music.   ’To me, mountain music is very soulful,’ Holt says. ‘The music is filled with a great variety of sounds and feelings. It contains elements of blues, bluegrass, early country, jazz and folk ballads. In essence, it encompasses the history of American music.’ Sort of a musical anthropologist, Holt enjoys finding a balance in his music that honors the past without disrespecting it. ‘I don’t play these songs as a museum piece,’ Holt says. ‘I take things and make them more acceptable for modern audiences. I don’t break them, I bend them. ‘One of my main heroes is Watson. He’s added who he is to the music and that’s what I try to do.’ Today, Holt tours with his band, The Lightning Bolts. He and Watson collaborate often, even sharing a Web site (www.docwatsonanddavidholt.com). Holt’s son, Zeb, 32, lives in New York, where he works in NBC’s online division. Holt will not be visiting Los Angeles anytime soon, but American roots music fans can catch Holt and his Bolts on tour at UC Santa Cruz on October 2, and for free with Watson at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco on October 4. ‘For over 40 years,’ Holt says, ‘I’ve been inspired by the great musicians I have known who play mountain music. The music I play is filled with their musical spirit. I feel part of an unbroken chain.’ Visit www.davidholt.com.

Oscar-Winning Saxon Calls Palisades Home

Producer Edward Saxon, who calls himself a family guy, is pictured with daughters Violet (left) and Willow, and wife Kirsten Coyne, holding their pet cat Quinn.
Producer Edward Saxon, who calls himself a family guy, is pictured with daughters Violet (left) and Willow, and wife Kirsten Coyne, holding their pet cat Quinn.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Pacific Palisades residents have probably seen film producer Edward Saxon around town, driving car pool, going to his daughters’ school events’usually with a ready smile. You may even remember his face from ‘Silence of the Lambs’ as a head in a jar. He won a 1992 Best Picture Oscar for producing that movie, and his latest film, the adult comedy ‘Away We Go,’ is now showing in theaters after receiving mostly positive reviews. ‘I saw a script and thought it was the best one I had seen forever,’ Saxon said. ‘Sam Mendes [who won a 1999 Oscar for directing ‘American Beauty’] called and said he was interested.’ During filming, the crew shot in Connecticut (‘where we got a fabulous tax credit’), Arizona, Florida and Colorado. Once the film was completed, the decision was made to roll it out slowly, so that word-of-mouth would help propel it – and the buzz has been good. Saxon loves comedies, but selects his projects based on movies he’d like to see. His favorite film is ‘The Godfather Part II.’ ‘It is an extraordinary immigrant story,’ he said. ‘It has the hopefulness of coming to America as a family man and shows what happens if you don’t have a moral compass.’ He describes ‘Godfather II’ as high craft married to a great script and incredible performances. Saxon’s next film underway is an untitled wedding comedy starring Palisades High School graduate Forest Whitaker. Described as a culture-clash, the story centers on two overbearing fathers, Whitaker and Carlos Mencia, who must put aside their differences to plan the wedding of their children, played by Lance Gross (‘Meet the Browns’) and America Ferrera (‘Ugly Betty’). The movie is likely to open next spring, and Saxon, who was on the Los Angeles set on Tuesday, said, ‘So far, it’s fantastic. It’s really going great.’ When reading a screenplay, the first thing Saxon notices is the writing. He advises new screenwriters to work on their craft, noting that if the script is not carefully written, it keeps him from finishing it. ‘The intent and clarity are diminished if there are not grammatically correct words that are well-chosen,’ said Saxon, who has been reading scripts for 25 years. He notes that screenplays haven’t changed much, that only the genres go in and out of style. Today, movies are more likely to be made if there is a built-in awareness or marketing, such as with ‘Transformers’ or the Harry Potter series. ‘It’s a good time for comedy, given the economic climate,’ said Saxon, who was raised in St. Louis and attended McGill University in Montreal. He graduated with a degree in English in 1980. Saxon applied to the Peter Stark Producing Program at USC, but was turned down. He admits that it was probably his grades that caused the rejection, telling the Palisadian-Post that he was preoccupied with theater and foosball, as opposed to reading the required material for his English literature classes. He was eventually accepted at USC, graduating with an M.F.A. in 1984. During college, Saxon did everything from Shakespeare to hosting an original radio show. When asked if he has any acting aspirations, he said, ‘I never turn down a part if I’m asked, but I never get offered one either.’ Saxon jokes that show business has always been in his blood because his grandmother was a Rockette. His mom even wrote a script titled ‘My Mom was a Rockette.’ In 1984, he met director Jonathan Demme while both were working on a PBS half-hour comedy written by Beth Henley. They worked together through 2002 and produced (in addition to ‘Silence of the Lambs’) ‘Beloved,’ ‘Philadelphia,’ ‘Married to the Mob,’ Something Wild,’ and ‘The Truth About Charlie.’ The partnership ultimately ‘ran its course.’ ‘I wanted to do more producing and he wanted to go a different direction.’ Saxon produced Spike Jonze’s 2002 film, ‘Adaptation’ (written by Charlie Kaufman), and Richard Linklater’s ‘Fast Food Nation’ in 2006. ‘I like the variety which goes with producing,’ Saxon said. ‘You do a little bit of everything:’ looking at scripts, casting, finding a director, finances and visiting different locations. Saxon and his wife Kirsten Coyne, an artist who does large-scale installations and sculptures, moved to Pacific Palisades in 2005 to be closer to his extended family. His mom and four brothers live in Los Angeles, as does his sister, Leslie Saxon, a Palisadian who is chief of cardiology at USC Medical Center.   Saxon and Coyne have two daughters, Violet and Willow.

Mildred ‘Midge’ Goldberg, 83

Mildred ‘Midge’ Goldberg of Pacific Palisades passed away peacefully on June 24 at the age of 83.   Born of Swedish descent on October 17, 1925 to Algot and Emma Sanders, Midge was raised on a farm in Arcadia. Four years after graduating from MAD (Monrovia, Arcadia, Duarte) High School, she met her true love, Murray Goldberg, and married on January 11, 1948. Murray was a school teacher and principal.   The couple, who moved to Pacific Palisades in 1965, enjoyed a happy union for 61 years that produced two sons, both of whom followed in their father’s footsteps as teachers.   As Midge raised her family, she worked for Hughes Aircraft in Culver City as an administrative secretary for over 20 years. She also volunteered for numerous organizations such as the 1984 Olympics, the Daybreak Women’s Homeless Shelter of Santa Monica, and Paul Revere Junior High.   Midge and Murray founded, in perpetuity, scholarship funds to reward high-achieving, Jewish high school graduates and equally qualified Lutheran high school graduates.   In addition to her husband, Midge is survived by her sons Murray I. (Sandy) of Los Alamitos and Michael of Redondo Beach, as well as grandchildren Catherine (Katie) and Donald Joseph (Joey).   Private services were held on June 28 at Westwood Village Memorial Park.   In lieu of flowers, please donate to St. John’s Hospital of Santa Monica.

CLASSIFIED ADS FOR THE WEEK OF JULY 2, 2009

HOMES FOR SALE 1

GREAT DEALS. Homes Steps from Sand. Right in the Palisades! $125-450,000. Fab ocean views. For use as homes/offices/weekend retreats/condo alt. Terrific Opportunity! PCH Between Sunset and Temescal. 8 sold last year. Remodels and fixers available. Heated pool and rec center. Agent: Michelle Bolotin, (310) 230-2438, www.michellebolotin.com

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 $14,000/mo. Contact Dolly Niemann, (310) 230-3706

CONVENIENT PALISADES FURNISHED CONDO for rent by the day or by the week. Sleeps up to 6. 2 bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms, swimming pool, heart of town. Completely remodeled. $1,500 per week. Call now. (310) 490-5596, Rebekah

HOUSE FOR RENT. August only. 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath in alphabet streets, walking distance to the village, great grassy yard. $2,500/wk. Call (310) 454-7665, email: musicnat@msn.com

UNFURNISHED HOMES 2a

OCEAN VIEW near Pali schools. 4 BDRM, 3 BA, LR & master BDRM w/ frpls. W/D, 2 car garage. Jacuzzi bath. Gardener incl. 1 yr lease min. $6,400/mo. (310) 908-8390

16904 DONNA YNEZ LANE. Located on a cul-de-sac street this light & bright 4 BD, 2.5 BA house features a living rm & dining area w/ an open fireplace. Updated kitchen. Large master w/ bath. Pvt fenced in yard. $4,950/mo. Jody Fine, (310) 230-3770

2 BDRM, 2 BA, 2 CAR GARAGE, private deck & garden, laundry, new kitchen, dishwasher, microwave, hardwood floors. Nice quiet area. Pets o.k. $4,500/mo. or make offer. (310) 454-4599

BEAUTIFUL ENGLISH COTTAGE style home for rent. 3 bdrm, 2 ba, in Marquez area. Old style charm completely refurbished. Contact Roy at (415) 722-9270 or waandmel@aol.com

BEAUTIFUL HOME WITH 3 BD, 3 BA plus conv den, cathedral ceilings and mtn vus in Highlands. Assoc. pool and TC. $5,400/mo. Dolly Niemann, (310) 230-3706

MARQUEZ: 3 BR + 2 BA, office, great room w/ open beamed ceiling, country kitchen & designer baths, patios & zen garden for entertaining. $4,950/mo. (310) 502-3665

FURNISHED APARTMENTS 2b

LOVELY 3 BDRM, 3 BA apartment at Edgewater Towers, across from beach, ocean view. $4,500/mo. Call or e-mail for pictures, (310) 887-1333, s@90210law.com

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 2c

RARE, CHARMING FIND in lovely neighborhood. Large, upper unit, 2 bd + bonus room, 1 ba. Plantation shutters, fireplace, ceiling fan, balcony, garden, garage, light & airy. 1 yr lease. Cooperates w/ brokers. N/P, N/S. $3,500/mo. (310) 804-3142

BEAUTIFUL 2 BD + 2 BA * $2,695/mo. Small pet ok with deposit. Quiet building, new carpet, marble floors, crown molding, gas fireplace & appliances. Walk to village and beach. With 1 month free rent. Call (310) 454-2024

PACIFIC PALISADES: UNIQUE, UPSCALE, huge garden patio great for entertaining, with private spa, 2 bdrm, 2 full baths. No pets. $3,495/mo. with a lease. Available now. Call (310) 456-0047

BEAUTIFUL 1 BDRM, 1 BA, with kitchenette, large patio, pool, spa, gym, bonus room, mountain view, near trail heads & beach. $1,350/mo. (310) 459-9111

APARTMENT/OFFICE FOR RENT. 2 bdrm, (one could be used as an office), 2 full baths, close to Sunset, A/C, all utilities paid. $2,000/mo. (310) 459-4441 or (310) 393-1165

CONDOS, TOWNHOMES FOR RENT 2d

PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEWS 2+2. DESIGNER INTERIOR. Just steps to beach. 5 minutes to Santa Monica. All new cabinets, appliances, granite, marble, hardwood floors. High ceilings. W/D in condo. Ocean view patio. Garage. $2,980/mo. Was $5,500! (310) 702-1154, www.MalibuCoastline.com

BEAUTIFUL 3 BDRM, 2.5 BA, HIGHLANDS townhouse. Upgraded, light, hardwood, tile, spacious, patio, balcony, W/D, private 2 car garage, pools, tennis & gym. $3,675/mo. (310) 459-3264

GEM IN THE PALISADES, 2 bdrm, 2.5 ba, townhouse, hdwd, tile, new carpet, W/D, dishwasher. Parking. $3,350/mo. (310) 392-1757

$3,500/MO. 3 BDRM, 2.5 BATH, over 1700 sq.ft. Newer appliances, tile floors, view of mountains, living, dining, W/D in unit, open patio, community tennis, gym, pool. John Portman, agent, (818) 645-3681

CHARMING TWO BEDROOM, two bath condo in the heart of the village. Wonderful building. Available furnished or unfurnished. $3,400/mo. (310) 869-1612

ROOMS FOR RENT 3

PAC PAL RENTAL. Lovely furnished room w/ bathroom & mini kitchen, open to garden, sep entry, quiet single, N/S, mature person or student, preferred female. $800. Refs req. Avail 7/1. (310) 459-5261

SPACIOUS MASTER SUITE w/ den available for rent as of August 1. Use of kitchen, garden and pool. Off street parking available. Walking distance to beach. $2,250/mo. Professional female preferred. Please reply to swyndon@aol.com

VERY NICE MASTER BEDROOM & BATH. Private entrance. Includes patio, cable, WiFi, W/D, furnished/unfurnished. $950/mo. Lease open. Available now. (310) 454-4318

RENTALS TO SHARE 3a

ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHARE spacious, clean 2-story, 2 br, 2 bath condo in Brentwood near Bundy and Wilshire. $1,000/mo on lease. Bedroom & bath located on private top floor. AC, washer/dryer in unit; 2-space gated parking. 2 cats on premises. Call Wendy, (310) 980-0016, (818) 645-8632

WANTED TO RENT 3b

LOCAL EMPLOYED male seeks guesthouse. Quiet, local references. Non-smoker, no pets. Call Palisadian-Post, (310) 454-1321

WANTED: GARAGE TO RENT. Would like long-term rental for one or two small vintage cars. Seldom driven. Please respond to Mr. Nye, (310) 839-1984 x114

OFFICE/STORE RENTALS 3c

PALISADES OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLE in the heart of the Village: Single room offices & office suites ranging in size up to 3,235 sf, all with large windows with great natural light. Amazing views of the Santa Monica mountains, private balconies and restrooms. Building amenities include high speed T1 internet access, elevator and secured, underground parking. CALL BRETT AT (310) 591-8789 or email brett@hp-cap.com

FRONT FACING OFFICE/RETAIL. Charming courtyard, approx 500 sq ft, includes parking. Gross lease. $2,000/mo. 859 Via de la Paz. (310) 395-7272

OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT. Individual offices for rent in Pacific Palisades Village. $750 to $1,250/mo. Call Aimee @ (310) 230-8335

PALISADES OFFICE, two rooms, 2nd floor, 15115-1/2 Sunset Blvd. Across from Ralphs. $950/mo. (310) 459-3493

SANTA MONICA, 901 Wilshire Blvd. 3 suites available. eCard access, lots of light, close to beach, promenade, restaurants. Utilities/custodial included, parking available. 640 sf, 1100 sf, and 1700 sf. Competitively priced. Joe, (310) 459-8872 0r (310) 428-7380

OFFICE TO SHARE, $950/MO. Two treatment rooms in Holistic Chiropractic Center in village on Sunset. Light filled, cheerful, healing environment. Includes use of large reception, front office, kitchen. Utilities included. Convenient parking. (310) 612-9111

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

VACATION RENTALS 3e

THREE FULLY SELF-CONTAINED trailers for rent across from Will Rogers State Beach and about 2 miles from Santa Monica Pier. $1,400/mo. and $1,200/mo. One bedroom mobile, $1,995/mo. (310) 454-2515

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 5

SERIOUS ENTREPRENEURS? Looking for serious profits. No franchise fees, no royalties. Fastest growing opp in industry. Call now: (888) 523-4973

INCOME PROPERTY 5b

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY INVESTORS. Triple Net Properties available locally and nationally (Walgreens, Ralphs, Jack-in-the-Box, etc): Ability to achieve superior returns and excellent cash flow, with little management. Please contact T.C. Macker, CCIM, a Palisades resident and Senior Vice President at Coldwell Banker Commercial WESTMAC. (310) 966-4352 or tcmacker@westmac.com

LOST & FOUND 6a

LOST: CAT, male, striped light & dark gray with white cheeks, 1 yr old, dog friendly. Collar fell off. Highlands area. Missing since June 4th. Call (310) 487-1277 anytime.

LOST: GOLD & DIAMOND BRACELET. June 11th, in the village. Reward! Call (310) 454-8162

BOOKKEEPING/ACCOUNTING 7b

QUICKBOOKS ‘ LOCAL PALISADIAN. Call Shirley, (310) 570-6085

BOOKKEEPING. Payroll a specialty. Household & small business. Local. Trina, (310) 459-4807

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/

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 ‘ Garage Sale Specialist ‘ (310) 454-0359 ‘ bmdawson@verizon.net ‘ www.bmdawson.com ‘ Furniture ‘ Antiques ‘ Collectibles ‘ Junque ‘ Reliable professionals ‘ Local References

SOLAR/WIND ENERGY 7l

SOLAR ENERGY with ALTERNATIVE ENGINEERING SOLAR. Go green, save 40% to 50%! Huge rebates and tax incentives! Call for free estimate or questions. Local Palisades contractor. Lic. #912279. (877) 898-1948 ‘ e-mail: sales@alternativeengineering.net

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

DAYCARE CENTERS 8

PALISADES LEARN & PLAY. Creative & nurturing, Pre-K program. Art, educational themes & socialization. Healthy meals provided. Now registering for summer & fall. 18 yrs in Palisades. (310) 459-0920

NANNIES/BABYSITTERS 8a

NANNY: EXPERIENCED with newborns, early twins. Good references, drivers license, legal. 20 years experience. Please call Anna, (310) 586-1049

AMAZING NANNY. With our kids in school, we sadly must say goodbye after 5 1/2 years. Susana is fantastic: young, energetic and dependable. Excellent English. For more details, call Tracy at (310) 573-2172 or Susana, (310) 591-7302

HOUSEKEEPER & BABYSITTER/ELDER CARE. Day or night. Available Mon to Sat. Very good refs. Own transportation. Many years experience. Call Dora, (818) 994-2053

NEED HELP WEEKENDS. Twins, 3 years old. Boy and girl in Palisades. Hours flexible. Experienced nanny. (714) 318-1791

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

HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE! Our housekeeper available on Tuesdays. Reliable, speaks English, excellent cleaning, resourceful. Contact Raquel directly after 5 p.m., (213) 736-5362

HOUSEKEEPING’EXPERIENCED 18 YEARS! Good refs. Own transportation. Reliable and trustworthy. Call Esperanza, (310) 806-7791

HOUSECLEANING. AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY for two days a week. Very good references. Own transportation and drivers license. Ask for Marina, (562) 408-2068

HOUSECLEANING AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY for Tuesday & Saturday. Very good references. Own transportation and drivers license. 15 years experience. (213) 447-4104

HOUSECLEANING: Available Mon, Wed, & Sat. Local refs. Own transportation. Experienced, good worker, excellent English. Please call Evelia, (213) 745-6276

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

FUNDAMENTALLY THE FINEST. Licensed nurses and caregivers. Calm old-school values! Lowest rates, free smiles!! Also call us for MOBILE NOTARY. (310) 795-5023 ‘ yourextraspecial.com

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

CALVIN’S SPECIALTY GARDENS. Specializing in rose garden maintenance & organic vegetable gardens. Over 30 years experience. Free estimates. Call Casey & Randy, (310) 460-8760

HEALTH & BEAUTY CARE 12a

ANGIE’S PETITE SPA ‘ (310) 821-7045. European deep pore cleansing facial, $39. (Reg. $80) First time clients only. Expires 8/1/09. 700 Washington Blvd., Marina Del Rey, CA 90292. www.afacialgirl.com

SEWER & DRAIN CLEANING 13f

SEWER & DRAIN CLEANING SERVICE. All Stoppages Cleared. Sewer Repair & Replacement. High Velocity Water Jetting. Video Camera Inspections. Lic. #512638. Call (310) 648 2611

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

CATERING 14

EVENT PLANNER & CULINARY GRADUATE. Le Cordon Bleu graduate & event planner to help with your prep, cooking, serving, menus & all event details. 10+ years experience. $50/hr. Please call Danielle, (310) 691-0578. daniellesamendez@gmail.com

HOUSESITTING 14b

PROFESSIONAL COUPLE SEEKING long term housesitting in or near Palisades. Conscientious care of your home while you’re away. Light garden care, dogs, horse, ok. Good people, honest care. (310) 310-3089

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

PERSONAL SHOPPING 14j

‘AT YOUR SERVICE’: Evelyne, (310) 395-4660. Available at all hours. 2 hour minimum. Experienced. Errands, shopping, doctors, etc. . . . Being a companion, reading, organizing, etc. . . . References available.

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

GAIN STRENGTH, FLEXIBILITY, muscle balance and endurance to aid in the reduction of cellulite. My private studio or your home. First session free. This is what your workout is missing! Rob, (310) 403-2760. rob@ehwbody.com

$60 TRAINING SUMMER SPECIAL. A personal trainer that went from a size 16 to a 6!!! Call Sherry, (310) 383-7852

SCHOOLS, INSTRUCTION 15d

SWIM INSTRUCTOR, Lifeguard. Red Cross trained. Available for private swim parties, & swimming lessons of all ages. Call (310) 431-6887, (310) 586-7473. E-mail: bakerrachel65@gmail.com

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

CLEARLY MATH & MORE! Specializing in math & now offering chemistry & physics! Elementary thru college level. Test prep, algebra, trig, geom, calculus. Fun, caring, creative, individualized tutoring. Math anxiety. 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

2-FOR-1 SPANISH TUTORING SUMMER SPECIAL. Learn how to speak & write in Spanish with a local, native speaker. Amazing method. Local refs. Very experienced. Marietta, (310) 458-8180

MATH & SCIENCE TUTOR. Middle school-college level. BS LAUSD credentialed high school teacher. Test Prep. Flexible hours. AVAILABLE to help NOW! Seth Freedman, (310) 909-3049

MATH TUTORING, K-12. Experienced, credentialed math teacher seeks new clients for test preparation, basic skills and self concept. (Special Ed and gifted included). Rick, (310) 704-6284

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

SUMMER CAMPS 15f

CANYON KIDS PRESCHOOL. Now enrolling for July Summer Camp & Fall 2009 Semester. Ages 2-5 years. Just 6 miles from Temescal Cyn! (310) 456-2897 Email:canyonkids@yahoo.com

MUSIC LESSONS & INSTRUCTION 15h

VOICE LESSONS/VOCAL COACHING with professional vocalist. Palisades resident, $30/half hour. References upon request. (310) 795-3999

CARPENTRY 16a

FINE WOODWORKING: Carpentry of any kind. Bathrooms, kitchens, doors, cabinets, decks & gates. State lic. #822541. No project too small. References available. Reasonable prices. Contact: Ed Winterhalter at (310) 213-3101

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

HGTV Design Team (former). HGTV Design Team. We are a full service construction/design team ready to remodel a room for you! Formally on the hit HGTV show, Rate My Space. We revive any room or outdoor space for you. With our inspired, affordable, licensed construction and design staff, we can bring your ideas to life. From simple affordable alterations to extensive overhauls and additions, we are the right company for you!! Lic. #858904. Call (310) 877-5577 & (818) 445-0951. http://debonairrenovations.com/Home/Home.html

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

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.

DECK REPAIR, SEALING & STAINING. Local resident, local clientele. 1 day service. (See ad under handyman.) Marty, (310) 459-2692

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. Lic. #560299. 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

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES! Dave The Handyman. You won’t be disappointed! Lic. #629651. (310) 739-6253

SCOTT’S HANDYMAN SERVICE. Demolition & hauling, framing & concrete. Painting, plumbing, electrical, tile, etc. 25 years experience. (310) 493-2751

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

ALL SEASONS PAINTING. Summer specials ‘ Kitchen cabinets, garage doors, deck & fences. Interior/exterior painting specialist. ‘Green’ environmentally friendly paint upon request. Excellent referrals. Free estimate. Lic. #106150. Randy, (310) 678-7913

WALLS TO GO. Single wall flat interior includes: washing, patching, sanding, primIng, two coats of paint, $150. 4 walls, $400. 20 years experience. Local resident. School teacher. Non-lic. Call Tim, (310) 433-9610

REMODELING 16v

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

LABOR OF LOVE HOME REPAIR & REMODEL. Kitchens, bathrooms, cabinetry, tile, doors, windows, decks, etc. Work guar. Ken Bass, General Contractor. Lic. #B767950. (310) 487-6464

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) 710-3199

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

SMALL MANUFACTURING COMPANY seeks Accounting Manager with years of experience. Requires full knowledge of AP & AR, payroll, account analysis, collections, general ledger & financial statements. Knowledge of integrated accounting software programs & Excel are a must. Interested candidate should forward his/her resume to: chatcher01@gmail.com

MYSTERY SHOPPER. Enjoy this unique and interesting position and the associated training. Are you responsible, motivated and computer literate? Are you interested in providing feedback to a Fortune 50 company specific to store conditions and service levels? Hourly rate for driving time, observation time, report time applies. Mileage reimbursed based on distance associated with assignments. For additional information and to submit an on line application visit https://qualityshopper.org. No Associated Fees.

FURNITURE 18c

FOR SALE: SOFA & LOVE SEAT. Like new. You must see! $350 or best offer. (310) 459-4594

Palisades High Is Actively Hiring after 16 Departures

Palisades Charter High School is actively looking to find replacements for the principal, administrators, teachers and clerical staff who have left or retired this June.   This week, the school hired Richard Thomas, assistant principal for the last four years at Bear Creek High School in Stockton, as the director of instruction. Thomas, who will begin in August, will replace Grace LaTegola, who is leaving to pursue her doctoral studies after one year on the job.   '[Thomas] specializes in differentiated instruction, having taught multiple grade levels and subjects in 10 years in alternative educational settings,’ Executive Director Amy Dresser-Held said on Monday.   PaliHi is still in the process of hiring a principal after losing Martin Griffin, who lasted only a year. This spring, an interview committee narrowed the field to one prime candidate, La Costa Canyon High School Principal Craig Lewis, whom the community had the opportunity to meet on June 11.   Lewis, however, decided to take a position elsewhere, so PaliHi’s board has been meeting to explore other options.   ’To date, we have discussed leaving the position vacant, appointing an acting principal or seeking an interim principal and launching another large-scale search to fill the position for 2010-2011,’ Dresser-Held said.   In June, the high school also lost six teachers, two other administrators and six clerical staff who decided to retire or return to the Los Angeles Unified School District after taking a six-year leave of absence to work at the school, when it became a fiscally independent charter school.   Sixty-seven certified and 18 classified staff members had the choice of staying at PaliHi, returning to LAUSD or retiring. A major factor influencing their decision was health and retirement benefits, Dresser-Held said.   Since becoming fiscally independent, PaliHi has continued to purchase health and retirement benefits from the district. However, LAUSD announced this spring that the district will not allow the school to continue to purchase its health-benefits package after December and its retirement benefits after this June.   Employees who chose to retire or return to an LAUSD school will receive their health and lifetime retirement benefits from the district. PaliHi board set aside $1.5 million in a trust fund to offer its own lifetime retirement benefits to encourage employees to stay.   Teachers Odell Mack (technology education) and Esteban Cacicedo (Spanish and psychology) have retired, while Michael Cohen (life skills and independent study), Leo Castro, Joi Tanita and Austin Carter (all physical education) plan to return to an open position in LAUSD.   Classified staff Carol Walters, Elaine Levitt, Susan Samama and Hortencia Hernandez (all clerical) and Sandy Durate and Cathy Catapano (both special-education aides) have retired.   Athletic Director Rich McKeon has decided to return to an LAUSD school, while Assistant Principal Ann Davenport has retired.   The board agreed to restructure McKeon’s position, so that the new administrator will oversee a part-time athletic director, the physical education department, the discipline deans, the security supervisor, school police officers and the student leadership advisor, Dresser-Held said.   PaliHi’s Dean of Discipline Russ Howard will assume the new role this fall. He graduated from PaliHi and worked as a physical education and science teacher at the school before taking on his current position. He is the former head baseball coach, serving for 18 years and taking his team to the playoffs 15 times.