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Work in Progress: Young Photographer Takes Aim

“Just Hit Pause,” a scene on Pacific Palisades bluffs before a brush fire spread.

“My Armor,” self-portrait by Robert Larson

Pacific Palisades resident Robert Larson explores the lonely man in his first solo exhibition, now on display through April at Mayberry restaurant on Swarthmore.   In this body of work, ‘Away From Me,’ a common theme prevails: one lonely man against ‘a somewhat epic backdrop,’ Larson explains. One of the images was photographed on the Palisades bluffs. The other images were taken in Africa, Europe and Asia. Larson, 23, grew up in the Palisades and attended Calvary Christian School. His life, his ambitions, his dreams are best explored in his own words. ”LIBBY MOTIKA, Senior Editor   ’I was born in Dallas, Texas, to a selfless woman named Melissa. A few days later, I was in Los Angeles, beginning the rest of this life with my new adopted mom, dad, and big sister. I spent much of my childhood in the care of my maternal grandparents and attended Calvary Christian for 11 years. My grandfather taught me how to shoot a gun when I was 5, and I grew up dreaming that I’d one day be a great sniper like Carlos Hathcock.   When I was 19, I gave up that dream, and during a very empty and aimless period of my life I took a basic photography course at Santa Monica College. I felt an internal click (excuse the pun) deep within me. I started to constantly ditch class to go take pictures, and so it began.   A year later, I went to Australia on my first trip abroad (Mexico doesn’t count for Southern Californians) and fell in love with collecting experiences. Since then I have traveled as much as I can and will continue to do so. More often than not, my only companion on these trips has been a camera.   I still live in the Palisades and am currently attending the Julia Dean Photo Workshops as a full-time student in an attempt to erase my bad habits. I am a photographer and a writer. Mainly, though, I am a work in progress.   Larson’s work is also included in a group show, ‘Dirty Pretty, Thirteen Los Angeles Photographers’ on display through May 22 at The Julia Dean Gallery, 801 Ocean Front Walk, Studio 8, in Venice. The photographers were challenged to explore the idea of beauty and filth in a city obsessed with those concepts. Contact: (310) 392-0909; www.juliadean.com.

Brake for ‘Honk!’ at PaliHi

Theater Review

A scene from PaliHi’s spring musical production of “Honk!,” featuring Mountain Glover as Ugly.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

‘Honk!’ if you’ve heard this one before: an ugly little bird with a persecution complex strays from home and embarks on a misadventure to return to his mother. Across his odyssey, he learns that being different isn’t so bad. That’s the premise of ‘Honk!,’ the musical-comedy playing at Palisades Charter High. Based on Hans Christian Andersen’s ‘The Ugly Duckling,’ with music and lyrics by George Stiles and Anthony Drewe, the spring musical opened last Friday at Mercer Hall, 15777 Bowdoin St. This production, directed by Lisa Kraus, stars Mountain Glover as Ugly, Elizabeth Rich as Ida, and Daniel Rasch as Cat. ‘Honk!’ is a family-friendly, Technicolor affair, with some Busby Berkeley numbers and a Pixar feature’s over-the-top comic energy. The song-and-dance routines are when ‘Honk!’ fires on all cylinders. Acting-wise, ‘Honk!”s strongest players come from the cat contingent. Mia Canter inhabits her role as Queenie, milking her role for comedic value, down to the sassy lilt in her voice channeling Mae West. Also chewing much scenery: Rasch, a transfer student from Crossroads making a strong Pali debut as the piece’s wily villain. Felines aside, Ryan Steinberg (Drake) has the strongest feel for the stage, projecting to the back and singing showtunes the Great White Way way. In the singing department, Rich shines brightest as worried mama Ida. ‘Every tear a mother cries is a dream that’s washed away,’ Rich sings confidently in a sweeping pop ballad akin to those populating soundtracks of ’90s Disney animated features. As all-around performers, freshman Alana Best lives up to her surname. Her comedic Bullfrog steals the show. On opening night, she overcame microphone problems to deliver one of ‘Honk!”s best-received performances, from the hookiest tune, ‘Warts and All’ (‘Even some potatoes has got nice eyes,’ she belts) to a string of vaudevillian frog puns. Diana Kim makes the most of her straight role as Penny, an empathetic swan who becomes Clarice the Doe to Ugly’s Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Her acting and singing is pitch-perfect. Some of the acting and singing comes off wobbly. Star Glover is likeable, but could use some polish in both departments. His singing burns brightest in his duet with Kim in ‘Transformation.’ As ‘Honk!’ is democratic, lead character Ugly does not dominate the story, becoming the catalyst to introduce a cavalcade of eccentric characters in ‘Wizard of Oz’ fashion. ‘Honk!”s live orchestra can be a double-edged sword. The incidental music alternately gooses the energy and steps on actors’ lines. Some ‘invisible people’ must be singled out for their outstanding contributions. Lexi Rubaum, Mary Hobbs, Maddie Packer, Alessandra Varsano, Sean Pinto, Steven Meiers and Molly Binder produced the eye-catching, stylized farm setting, painting the cornfields three times over to yield the right effect, stretching sheets of blue fabric to create a lake. Lights techies Danny Greenberg and James Hale beautifully illuminate the performances and work the sky’s morphing hues. Have no fear, ‘Honk!’ does not feature high-schoolers in animal costumes. The clever wardrobe (Katie Lantz, Lorin Doctor, Pasha Ayazi) is symbolic, such as the barnstormer goggles/leather jackets worn by ‘geese’ during the winning number ‘We’re Off,’ which features a kazoo chorus during the bridge. Another visual and choreographic highlight: ‘The Blizzard’ ballet number. Fun and feather-light, ‘Honk!’ offers a massive self-esteem boost for all you freaks and misfits out there. ‘Honk!’ plays on Friday, March 27 and Saturday, March 28, 7 p.m., with a matinee March 28, 2 p.m. Tickets: students, $10; adults, $15. For information, email palisadespublicity@gmail.com

Palisades Readers to Discuss ‘The Soloist’ April 1 at Village Books

Pacific Palisades has joined the ‘community reads’ arena with Steve Lopez’s ‘The Soloist’ as the first selection. The first of several events is a book discussion on Wednesday, April 1 at 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.   ’The Soloist,’ a work of nonfiction which originally ran as a series of columns in the Los Angeles Times, chronicles Lopez’s ultimate friendship with Nathaniel Ayers, a homeless man with an extraordinary musical gift. His first encounter with Ayers was on Skid Row, where the African American, accompanied by his violin with two strings, lost his ability to function following a mental breakdown.   Thirty years earlier, Ayers had been a promising classical bass student at Juilliard. When Lopez finds him on the streets of downtown, he sees glimmers of Ayers’ brilliance and wants to help him, trying to secure lodging for him, reconnecting him with his family, and arranging for him to play and meet a former Juilliard classmate at Disney Hall. As with so many attempts to ‘do good,’ Lopez learns that the road is bumpy and, with every tiny success, there are disappointments.   The discussion at Village Books, facilitated by Dr. Kathleen Jackson, will not only focus on Lopez’s story of redemption and wisdom, but also include a discussion of homelessness.   A second book discussion will take place on Monday, April 6, 10:30 a.m. at the Palisades Branch Library, 861 Alma Real. R.S.V.P.: info@palisadescares.org or 310-459-1614   On April 7 at 9 p.m., jazz musicians Phillip Golub (on keyboard) and Adam Goldman (on bass) will perform at Paolo’s Ristorante at 1515 Palisades Dr. Both performers participate in the Colburn School Jazz Workshop. Golub attended Marquez Charter School and won the prestigious Spotlight Award from the Music Center. For dinner reservations, call 310-454-8889.   Toiletries and clean socks will be collected for the homeless at all events. For more information and reservations for the reading events, call 310-459-1614 or visit info@palisadescares.org

Theatre Palisades’ ‘Cuckoo’s Nest’ Takes Flight April 3 at Pierson Playhouse

  Theatre Palisades presents the 2001 Off Broadway Tony Award winner ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ from April 3 through May 10 at Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd.   Adapted by Dale Wasserman from Ken Kesey’s novel, ‘Cuckoo’s Nest’ involves inmates of a psychiatric hospital who are victimized by cold, castrating Nurse Ratched (Cindy Dellinger). Into their world blows larger-than-life rebel Randle Patrick McMurphy (Rico Simonini), a free spirit who challenges the establishment and everything Nurse Ratched represents. These two forces of nature battle one another with hilarious, shocking and tragic results.   This powerful, effective modern classic continues to challenge, shock and move audiences. The novel was famously adapted by Milos Forman as a 1975 movie, which starred Jack Nicholson and Louise Fletcher as McMurphy and Ratched, respectively. It became the first film since ‘It Happened One Night’ in 1934 to win Academy Awards for all five major categories, including Best Picture.   Directed by Sherry Coon and produced by Coon and Dellinger, the Theater Palisades production of ‘Cuckoo’s Nest’ features Palisadian George Lissandrello and returning actors Matthew Artson, David Kunzle, Bud Sabatino and Kevin Olsen. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m.   For tickets ($14-$18), call 310-454-1970 or visit www.theatrepalisades.org. Free parking available.

City Seeks Stormwater Diversion in Los Liones

The city has applied for a grant to divert stormwater runoff into this dry streambed in Los Liones Gateway Park, just north of Sunset between Castellammare and Paseo Miramar.
The city has applied for a grant to divert stormwater runoff into this dry streambed in Los Liones Gateway Park, just north of Sunset between Castellammare and Paseo Miramar.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

The L.A. Department of Public Works has applied for a grant from the State Water Resources Control Board to divert stormwater runoff from a storm drain at the top of Los Liones Drive into a dry streambed that runs through Los Liones Gateway Park. The project is one of many planned citywide to prevent polluted water from reaching local beaches, said Michelle Vargas, spokeswoman for the Department of Public Works. Currently, the runoff from the 800-acre watershed of Los Liones Canyon flows into the storm drain located just below the Los Liones trailhead. The eight-foot-high drain runs underneath Los Liones Drive and Sunset, emptying into the ocean just south of Gladstone’s Restaurant. The plan is to divert stormwater into the half-mile streambed that runs from the Los Liones trailhead (which connects to Topanga State Park) to a catch basin at Sunset Boulevard near Fire Station 23. When California State Parks engineered the creek about 10 years ago, the state had plans to divert some of the water from the city’s stormwater drain to the creek to create a riparian zone. ‘We haven’t had the funding, but it has been our goal,’ State Parks Information Officer Sheryl Watson said. The project conveniently fit into the city’s efforts to prevent stormwater from reaching beaches, Vargas said. The runoff mainly comes from parkland ‘that is not terribly polluted, but does get some pollutants,’ she said. In February and early March, the stretch of Will Rogers State Beach at Sunset near Gladstone’s received an F rating in wet weather, according to Heal the Bay. Last year, the annual grade for the beach was a B in wet weather. By bringing the stormwater into the Los Liones creek, Vargas explained that it will be exposed to sunlight and a natural cleaning process will occur. In addition, less water will reach the beach because it will filter into the porous creek bed. The plans have not been finalized for how the water will be diverted, Vargas said. The objective is to shunt all, or at least the majority, of the water to the creek. ‘A hydrology feasibility study still needs to be done, and a lot can change,’ Watson said. ‘The idea of diverting water into the creek is still preliminary and there are a lot of decisions to be made. The first thing that needs to happen is that funding needs to be made available. Then, we can begin to talk about more specific possibilities.’ Public Works is asking for $800,000 to $1 million from the State Water Resources Control Board for the project. The grant funding would come from Proposition 84, which was passed in 2006 and authorized the issuance of $90 million in bonds for water-quality projects. However, legislators have temporarily frozen the bonds because of the state’s projected budget shortfall of $42 billion. If Public Works is unable to secure the grant, ‘We will explore options to push this project through,’ Vargas said. Pacific Palisades resident Randy Young, who helped spearhead the effort to create Los Liones Gateway Park, is excited because the addition of water will draw more wildlife and provide nutrients to the approximate 3,000 native species planted by State Parks and local volunteers. Ten years ago, State Parks received a $350,000 grant from the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) to create the park, which includes an amphitheater, picnic areas, parking lots, hiking trails and a restroom. Young believes that once water is in the creek, the park will be a more pleasant place to visit. There will be a series of water cascades at the bottom of the streambed near Station 23. The Pacific Palisades Community Council and the Santa Monica Canyon Civic Association have sent letters encouraging the State Water Resources Control Board to fully fund the project. ‘We support this project because it will divert questionable stormwater and help the city meet its bacterial pollution mandates,’ said George Wolfberg, president of the Santa Monica Canyon Civic Association. In addition to shunting water to the creek, State Parks hopes to further improve Los Liones Park. The department plans to spend $250,000 (a mix of Caltrans grant money and State Parks’ Major Capital Outlay funding) to replace the chain-link fence at the trailhead entrance near the Getty Villa Service Road with a wrought-iron one, add another restroom and make the trails handicapped-accessible. ‘That work has already begun, but it had to be put on hold because of the bond freeze,’ Watson said, adding that State Parks’ funding is through bonds. ‘Once the funds become available, the work should be completed in 11 months.’ For more information about the plan to divert stormwater to the creek, call the city’s Stormwater Pollution Prevention Team at (213) 978-0333 or visit the Web site at lastormwater.org.

Hosting Pali Blues Players: A Win-Win Deal

Two Pali Blues soccer players - Rosie Tantillo (far left) and Sasha Andrews (far right) - lived so successfully with the Kornfeinds last year that they were included in the family's Christmas card. Clockwise in the center are Meredith, 16, Molly, 14, Maggie, 6, and Lindsay 11.
Two Pali Blues soccer players – Rosie Tantillo (far left) and Sasha Andrews (far right) – lived so successfully with the Kornfeinds last year that they were included in the family’s Christmas card. Clockwise in the center are Meredith, 16, Molly, 14, Maggie, 6, and Lindsay 11.

Last year, when the plea went out for Pacific Palisades residents to open their homes for Pali Blues women soccer players, most of whom are in college and receive zero-dollar amateur contracts, Gina Kornfeind e-mailed Kenzo Bergeron, the team’s director of operations: ‘If you ever need a place for a player, let me know.’ The Blues, who played their first season last year as a member of the new 41-team, nationwide W-League, will once again practice on the Palisades High field and play their home games there, starting May 9. Kornfeind, the mother of four girls (Meredith, 16, Molly, 14, Lindsay, 11, and Maggie, 6), forgot to tell her husband Fred, a psychologist at the Veterans Administration, about the e-mail, but within a week she heard from Bergeron that he indeed had a player, Jill Oakes, who needed a room from early May through early August. The Kornfeind girls were excited. They had seen Oakes play at UCLA and they knew she was dating Lakers guard Jordan Farmer. What father could say no to the prospect of the possibility of housing a sports celebrity, as well as meeting a second one? He agreed. Alas, Oakes called Kornfeind back and told her that she was moving in with her boyfriend, but that she had two friends who needed a place to stay: Rosie Tantillo, a USC graduate and Sasha Andrews, a University of Nebraska graduate. The family had only one guest room, but Kornfeind, who works part-time as a social worker and a bereavement counselor, agreed to meet both women.   ’I already knew Tantillo, who had worked out with my daughter’s club team,’ said Kornfeind, who has volunteered for several years as an AYSO commissioner. After visiting with the two players in the family’s kitchen in the Marquez area, Kornfeind offered them both a place to stay’if they wanted it. One girl could have the guest room, the other a space in the family’s unfinished basement. During their ‘interview,’ Kornfeind discussed expectations, which she said were minimal, because she felt that taking players in was a kind of ministry that helped the community by supporting a professional sport and exceptional women whom youth could emulate. ‘I expected that since they were grown women, they would be using our home as more of a boarding house,’ Kornfeind told the Palisadian-Post. Although Andrews had been living unsuccessfully with a family in Brentwood and Tantillo was sleeping on a sofa at the home of Blues head coach Charlie Naimo, Kornfeind was surprised’but pleased’when they both said ‘yes’ to her offer and moved immediately into the family’s sparse living quarters. ‘It turned out to be the most unbelievable, rich, exciting experience,’ Kornfeind said. ‘It was like having two new daughters. Every day after school, my younger daughters would come home and ask if Rosie and Sasha were there.’ Kornfeind said that even though she had no expectations, the soccer players proved to be helpful. They drove her girls places such as the orthodontist and soccer practices, helped with dinner, served as confidantes for the older daughters, and were inspirations for how hard one has to work at a sport to reach the next level.   ’My kids learned that if you want to be that good, you have to do more than practice two times a week,’ Kornfeind said. Tantillo and Andrews tried out for the inaugural women pro soccer teams, which debut this week, but weren’t chosen. ‘It was good for my daughters to see them deal with disappointment,’ Kornfeind said. ‘They [the players] had a sad day or two and then went for a run down to the pier and back.’ Meanwhile last year, Tantillo and Andrews attended various Kornfeind soccer games games and brought other Pali Blues players to cheer them on. Tantillo told Meredith, who plays for PaliHi, ‘Charlie loves that style of play, and you could play for the Blues someday.’ Kornfeind said it was a real confidence booster for her daughter, who went on to make first team All-Western League.   Unlike most W-League players, who stayed with families and moved out when the season ended in August, the two players are still living here, but will soon move out: Tantillo to Buffalo and Andrews to Indiana to join new soccer teams for the upcoming season.   ’We’re really sad they’re leaving’it’s going to be hard,’ Kornfeind said. ‘They’ve become such a part of our family. As much as we gave them, we got back more.’   Her husband, whose experience had to be akin to living in a sorority house, must agree, because he told his wife: ‘If they leave, I think we should take in another player.’   Host families are needed immediately for about a dozen players. Please contact Jason Lemire at (310) 264-4649. Visit: www.bluessoccerclub.com

Pali Pool Construction Begins; Budget Is Now $4.2 Million

Construction was scheduled to begin this week on the much-anticipated Maggie Gilbert Aquatic Center at Palisades Charter High School, and students and community members should be able to dive in by early 2010.   The aquatic center, with a 12-lane competitive pool and adjacent two-lane pool, is the vision of 90-year-old English teacher Rose Gilbert, who has donated $2 million toward construction costs. The center, located at the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Bowdoin Street, will be named after her late daughter and swimmer, Maggie Gilbert.   The Division of the State Architect reviewed the plans and gave the school the go-ahead about three weeks ago, enabling the board of directors to hire Sarlan Builders in Beverly Hills to construct the pool for $3.85 million. The total cost of the project (which includes expenditures such as permits, inspection and design plans) is projected to be $4.2 million.   ’The scope of the project expanded somewhat in the final set of plans and the cost of some of the materials increased since last summer, which is why the total project budget has increased,’ according to Executive Director Amy Dresser-Held.   For one, there were some land-stability issues. Because the entire campus was built on fill, a concrete slab with steel rebar will have to be installed under the pool to provide stability.   ’The contractor is working to mobilize his crew and address issues like installing gates in the temporary fence,’ prior to breaking asphalt on the outdoor basketball courts, Dresser-Held said Tuesday.   The school has raised $2.9 million thus far, including $150,000 from the Palisades High Booster Club as the second-largest donation thus far. Other important contributions have been received from American Legion Post 283 ($50,000); Kwok’s Shell Station at the corner of Sunset and Via de la Paz ($10,000); Cal National Bank ($5,000); Pacific Palisades Junior Women’s Club ($5,000); and Riviera Masonic Lodge 780 ($5,000), according to Chief Business Officer Greg Wood.   Once the aquatic center is complete, Dresser-Held is positive that the school will be able to afford operating it. The projected annual operating cost is roughly $375,000, and Dresser-Held anticipates that the school will bring in about $500,000 annually by leasing the pool to aquatic user groups during non-school hours. The surplus will be set aside for maintenance and repairs.    ‘In building our business plan for operation, we were conservative in only assuming that 75 percent of non-school time the pool would be permitted out,’ Dresser-Held said.   Aquatic user groups can secure time from 5 to 7 a.m. and after 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, as well as on the weekends during the school year, Dresser-Held said. The pool will be available all day during the summer. Westside Aquatics has contributed financially to the construction of the pool and has already secured pool time. Dresser-Held added that school leaders are ‘committed to offering public swimming, currently envisioned to be on Sundays, but we are still considering different models for providing this.’   The school’s fundraising efforts for the pool are ongoing, with a tribute dinner for Gilbert planned for June 5 at 6:30 p.m. at the Sheraton Delfina in Santa Monica. Dinner costs $150, with all proceeds benefiting the aquatic center. Contact: palihigh.enschool.org.

Martha Pollock, 98; Vital and Caring

Martha Springer Pollock, a gracious, thoughtful woman who embraced life with intelligence and compassion, died on March 22 at home in Pacific Palisades. ‘It all went by so fast,’ Martha said early this month as she anticipated her 99th birthday. Martha Way was born to Mary Prewitt Springer and Melvin Springer in Bayfield, Colorado, on March 31, 1910. The family, including her two younger beloved brothers, Melvin ‘Jim’ and Llewellyn, traveled to San Diego in 1919 by car, negotiating part of the trip over sand dunes on a wooden plank road after a team of horses pulled them across the Colorado River.   They moved to Delta, Colorado in 1920 and Martha excelled in her academic work in the outstanding public schools. She graduated from the University of Colorado at Boulder, where she studied sociology and was a member of Pi Beta Phi. Martha met her first husband, Jack Edwards, at the university. They married in 1930 and moved to Seattle, where she was a child welfare worker for the county court. After Jack passed away in 1940, Martha briefly joined her father’s bank in Delta, and when World War II started she enlisted in the new Women’s Army Corps. She had many challenging stateside postings, including Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, using her interviewing, psychology and sociology skills from 1942 to 1945. She worked compassionately with soldiers returning from the European battlefields, many suffering from what is now recognized as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.   In 1945, upon her honorable discharge at the rank of staff sergeant, Martha traveled to Hazelton, Iowa to assist the family of newly widowed Perry C. Pollock and his two children, Perry Holman ‘Pete’ and Reba Pamela ‘Pam’. Martha and Perry were married in 1946 in Austin, Minnesota. Soon after the birth of their son, Thomas Joseph, in 1949, they moved to La Mesa, California. Martha joined the First United Methodist Church, and later the Grossmont Community Concert Association, the La Mesa Women’s Club, the Singing Hills Golf Club, and various children’s relief efforts in the county. She and Perry contributed to the life of their church for 50 years, and were instrumental in securing the church’s present organ. Martha’s volunteer activities included reviewing children’s court documents in the county’s dependency system for Voices for Children, an organization of CASA (court appointed special advocates).   An adventurous traveler, Martha visited nearly every state and many locations around the world, from Norway and Spain to China and New Zealand. She had numerous interests, including opera, bridge and flower propagation, and avidly read about a wide range of topics. She lived comfortably the past year in Pacific Palisades at the home of her daughter Pam, and most recently enjoyed the frequent visits of her five-month-old great-grandson, Sean Perry Mininsky.   Martha was predeceased by her husband Perry in 2004, and is survived by her children, Perry H. of Aspen, Colorado (wife Jacqueline Mastrangelo), Pamela Bruns of Pacific Palisades, California (husband William), and Thomas of San Diego (wife Christine Gritzmacher); and grandchildren Alan Bruns of Seattle (engaged to Kara Heist) and Allison Bruns Mininsky of Los Angeles (husband Michael and son Sean).   Open services will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 4 at the First United Methodist Church in La Mesa. A committal for the family will be held afterwards at Greenwood Memorial Park.   In lieu of flowers the family suggests donations to Voices for Children in San Diego (www.voices4children.com).

Spikers Rebound from Loss

Jordan Cohen spikes the ball against San Luis Obispo Saturday at the Dos Pueblos Invitational. Palisades reached the semifinals of the Bronze Division. Photo: Chuck Cohen
Jordan Cohen spikes the ball against San Luis Obispo Saturday at the Dos Pueblos Invitational. Palisades reached the semifinals of the Bronze Division. Photo: Chuck Cohen

Perhaps having two days to stew over its shocking three-game sweep at the hands of Fairfax was just what the Palisades High boys’ volleyball team needed heading into Saturday’s Dos Pueblos Invitational in Santa Barbara. The Dolphins played some of their best volleyball of the season at the day-long tournament, reaching the semifinals of the Bronze Division before fatigue finally took its toll in a 25-13, 27-25 loss to Granada Hills. “I wasn’t looking for us to win, I was looking for us to improve and we did that,” Palisades Coach Chris Forrest said. “We played some very good teams and we were competitive in every match. Granada [Hills] had two hours to rest before our match while we had just played three tough games so if we play them again I think we’ll do better.” Palisades and Granada Hills each finished third in its pool and advanced to the single-elimination playoff round. The other two City Section teams–El Camino Real and Chatsworth–failed to advance out of pool play. The Dolphins’ first match was against tournament host Dos Pueblos, which won both games. Palisades split 1-1 with Notre Dame, swept Rio Mesa 2-0 and split 1-1 with San Luis Obispo. In the quarterfinals, Palisades faced a tall, athletic Righetti squad and prevailed 28-26, 13-25, 21-19–setting the stage for a rematch of last year’s City semifinals. This time, the Dolphins were missing All-City hitter Kene Izuchukwu (who is out with a shoulder injury) and the Highlanders took advantage. Izuchukwu also did not play against Fairfax and his offense was sorely missed. Matt Hanley and Jordan Cohen tried to rally the Dolphins in the third game, but the host Lions finally clinched the upset victory on their fifth match point and took over sole possession of first place in the Western League. Palisades got back on track by sweeping Westchester 25-13, 25-16, 25-16 on Monday. This weekend, the Dolphins travel to San Diego for the La Jolla Classic–their third and last tournament of the season. “That’s where our team grew the most last year,” Forrest said. “I’m hoping the same thing happens this year.”

Pali Swims Strong in Beverly Hills

Hayley Hacker swims the freestyle leg of her varsity 200 individual medley at the Beverly Hills Invitational.
Hayley Hacker swims the freestyle leg of her varsity 200 individual medley at the Beverly Hills Invitational.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

For perhaps the only time this season the Palisades High girls’ varsity swim team was not the favorite heading into last week’s John Marrow Invitational. Instead it was one of 13 teams trying to dethrone reigning champion La Canada at the three-day meet in Beverly Hills. The reigning City champions didn’t win–that honor went to Palos Verdes–but they did their section proud by finishing fifth against the best competition they will face all year. “I’m extremely proud of everyone,” Coach Maggie Nance said. “All of our teams did very well. The big surprise was the frosh/soph girls finishing first. That was huge.” Palisades led the frosh/soph girls meet by three points heading into the final event and clinched the title with a resounding victory in the 400 freestyle relay. Freshmen Mara Silka and Tatiana Fields joined sophomores Zoe Fullerton and Hannah Kogan to complete the race in 4:00.67 and beat Mira Costa. Kogan won the 100 freestyle in 57.81 and the 50 butterfly in 28.88 while Fullerton won the 100 individual medley. Palisades’ 200 medley relay team, consisting of Rachel Jaffe, Sabrina Giglio, Fullerton and Kogan got the Dolphins off to a strong start, finishing second to league rival Venice. “All of the girls–both frosh/soph and varsity–swam better tonight than they did in qualifying,” Nance said. “Ideally, that’s what you want to see.” Junior Shelby Pascoe was fourth in the varsity girls’ 500 freestyle and Hayley Lemoine was sixth in both the 50 and 100 freestyle events. Ana Silka was fifth in the 200 freestyle and Hayley Hacker was sixth in the 200 individual medley. Though not as deep as the girls’ squad, Palisades’ boys varsity still finished eighth and the frosh/soph took sixth. Practicing indoors at Santa Monica College might have served the Dolphins well in Friday’s finals. Freshman J.J. Amis swam fourth in the frosh/soph 50 freestyle and the varsity 200 freestyle relay team of Jimmy de Mayo, Nicholas Kaufman, Lev Vaysman and Justin Nam was fourth. “All of them had excellent swims,” Nance said of the foursome, two of whom’Kaufman and Vaysman–swam their legs in identical times of 24.65 seconds. “The boys are going to be awesome a year from now.” John Cullen swam 1:02.58 in the boys’ varsity 100 backstroke. Peninsula of Rolling Hills won the varsity boys’ crown with 273 points. Other schools participating were El Segundo, Torrance, Culver City, Maranatha, Rio Mesa and Santa Monica. “This meet is a good barometer to see where we’re at,” Nance said. “Judging by our results I like where we are. Cleveland is going to be the main competition for the girls just like last year’s City finals.” The Dolphins took on San Pedro in a Western League meet at Banning High on Tuesday and travel to Venice for a showdown against their archrivals Friday at 7 p.m.