The California Coastal Commission board voted unanimously at its April 8 meeting in Oxnard to allow the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy to keep the Temescal Pool permanently filled in with dirt and covered with sod. The Commission issued the Conservancy an emergency permit in January to fill in the empty pool, located in Temescal Gateway Park, because the pool posed a threat to overall stability of the site and the surrounding area if rain should occur, according to the emergency permit. Last Wednesday’s decision allows the work that was done to remain as long as the Conservancy wants, said Gary Timm, the Commission’s coastal program manager. From the time the emergency permit was issued on January 9, the Conservancy had 60 days to file for a regular permit to have the work be considered permanent, according to Timm. If the Coastal Commission had not received such an application, the Conservancy would have had to reverse the work within 150 days. The Conservancy can still apply for a permit in the future to reopen the pool, Timm said. The Palisades-Malibu YMCA had operated the pool until February 2008, at which time the facility was closed for repairs estimated to cost $400,000. In December, the Conservancy board decided to develop a long-term plan for the park before possibly offering a new pool lease. When the crews were filling in the pool in January, MRCA chief ranger Ken Nelson told the Palisadian-Post that the work was being done in such a manner that the pool could be reopened. For now, the area will be used for public picnicking, while the pool deck, pool house, maintenance/equipment building, and paved parking lot remain until long-term plans for the site are developed and the necessary permits obtained. The Conservancy hired Dudek, an environmental and engineering consulting firm, to conduct a master plan for the park. Executive Director Joe Edmiston told the Palisadian-Post on April 9 that the planning process has been halted because the state has frozen bond spending in the midst of its budget shortfall. Edmiston could not say when the planning process would resume. Before the April 8 Coastal Commission meeting, Friends of the Temescal Pool president Jane Albrecht submitted a letter to the Commission asking for a postponement to ‘give a reasonable amount of time for the Friends and the regional community to provide comments on the matter, and to ensure that the Commission has a full and accurate understanding.’ Albrecht added that she was notified of the meeting late because the notice had been sent to the wrong address. She said that a few days’ notice was not sufficient for Friends or the community to respond or for the Commissioners to read the submissions and properly consider them. When the Commission gave permission in January to fill in the pool, ‘neither the local government nor interested parties had any notice,’ Albright wrote, adding that the Commission gave oral permission to fill in the pool on January 7 and work began the next day. The actual emergency permit was issued on January 9. ‘Especially in light of how the emergency permit was handled, the Coastal Commission should afford the community a full, fair and meaningful opportunity to brief the commission,’ Albrecht wrote. At the April 8 meeting, Friends also submitted a 26-page report to the Coastal Commission stating its position. In January, Friends filed a lawsuit against the Conservancy and its partner, the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority, asking the court to order the Conservancy to negotiate a pool lease, pay to repair the pool, and make the park fully accessible to the disabled. Friends contends that the land was purchased with Proposition A funding, which is partly intended to create recreational facilities for senior citizens. According to the lawsuit, ‘The pool was the only part of Temescal Gateway Park that was open and accessible for recreation use by many handicapped and senior citizens of the community.’ The pool was handicapped-accessible and the YMCA offered rehabilitation programs. Friends also argues that by filling in the pool, the Conservancy violated its contract agreement with the Presbyterian Synod, from which the land was purchased in 1994. The Conservancy has since filed a demurrer and Friends has until late May to reply, said Laurie Collins, Conservancy’s chief staff counsel. A demurrer is a pleading in effect that even if the facts are as alleged by the opposite party, they do not sustain the contention based on them. If the judge denies the demurrer, the Conservancy has to file an answer to the Friends’ complaint. If the judge honors the demurrer, the case is either dismissed or Friends may have the option of amending its complaint to move the case forward. In the meantime, Friends of the Temescal Pool is continuing to work on a viable business plan for an aquatics program at the pool. ‘[Edmiston] indicated that he would consider such a plan in the future, as the [Conservancy] develops its comprehensive plan for Temescal Gateway Park,’ said Jean Rosenfeld, a Friends member. ‘We believe that the pool can and will be repaired and that an aquatics program will be resumed,’ Rosenfeld added. ‘Friends continues to work in a positive and collaborative relationship with any public agency that will facilitate our purpose.’
Temescal Continuation School Faces Possible Closure

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
As continuation students ran around the Temescal Canyon High School campus looking for hidden Easter eggs on April 3, Principal Allan Tamshen was sober about the school’s future. ‘We are the best drop-out prevention program in the district [LAUSD],’ Tamshen said. ‘But the district has already shut down three continuation schools for next year.’ Whitney Young at Crenshaw High, Del Rey at Westchester High and Indian Springs at University High have been closed, and given the current LAUSD budget crisis, Temescal Canyon may be next. Continuation schools serve students who are at the highest risk of dropping out by helping and encouraging them to complete their high school education. ‘We’re not profitable because our class size is 25 to 1,’ said Tamshen, who noted that it costs the state $60,000 to house a prisoner for a year, compared to about $5,750 allocated to a high school student’s education at LAUSD (which could be higher with additional allocations). Palisades Charter High School, which is fiscally independent, spent $8,270 per pupil this year. High school dropouts are far more likely to spend their lives periodically unemployed, on government assistance, or cycling in and out of the prison system, according to the National Center for Educational Statistics. A 2008 California Department of Education study showed that one in three LAUSD high school students failed to graduate. ‘This school represents giving kids a second chance, keeping dropouts off the street,’ Tamshen said. ‘More programs like this might stop incarcerations.’ Temescal Canyon, located just below PaliHi, has 92 students from 13 high schools. The faculty consists of teachers Lorene Sosa (social studies), Justin Kirby (English) and Bryan Ko (math) teacher. Patricia Dunn is the school’s administrative assistant. At the April 3 assembly (a gathering that recognizes the most improved student every month), plastic eggs were filled with candy, and $5 was hidden in one. The reason for the hunt was simple: ‘These kids come from tough neighborhoods,’ Tamshen said. ‘They can let their guard down here.’ ‘It was pretty funny,’ said junior Xavier Martinez, who found the egg with the money. He lives in downtown L.A. near Koreatown and started at PaliHi before switching to Temescal as a sophomore. ‘This is way better,’ he said. ‘I do more work here.’ Tamshen explained that students need 230 credits to receive a high school diploma and Temescal High finds ways to help those students who have fallen behind or who are failing to meet the standard requirements. At Temescal, about 50 percent of the students who were failing in a traditional high school are able to catch up and eventually earn their diplomas by taking classes with more individualized instruction. In order to reach more of his students, Tamshen has also developed a special program that offers 10 classes and GED (general educational development) test preparation that helps them them attain their high school diploma equivalent. ‘I started that five years ago because a lot of the students were ‘lost,” said Tamshen, who also offers a Tuesday program from 4 to 8 p.m. that works like a study hall, but with individualized help.
Charter School Awards to Rose Gilbert, Weir
Legendary Palisades Charter High School teacher Rose Gilbert received the Legacy Award at the 16th Annual California Charter Schools Conference in Long Beach on March 12. Before an audience of 2,000 teachers, principals and educational leaders, Gilbert, 90, was praised for a 53-year career in which she has inspired and mentored countless students and colleagues. ‘Generations of students experienced her passion for great literature and her dynamic teaching style,’ wrote the judges in selecting Gilbert for the award. ‘As a teacher of advanced placement and honors courses, [she] prepared thousands of students for the rigors of college, carefully guiding them through the process of critical literary analysis and impelling them to write with discipline and commitment.’ Gilbert, whose late husband Sam was a millionaire, was also recognized for her philanthropy, which includes scholarships every June to the PaliHi valedictorian, salutatorian, most improved senior, and highest-achieving female athlete in multiple sports, plus winners of the Mama G award and the AcaDec Spirit of Enthusiasm award. In addition, Gilbert also funds numerous scholarships at UCLA (where she graduated in 1940), and has contributed $2 million to build the Maggie Gilbert Aquatic Center on the PaliHi campus, with construction now underway. In 2006, after she had coached the school’s Academic Decathlon Team for 25 years, Gilbert said: ‘To me, education is power. I want to marry effort and education so students will understand the complexities of life and understand the need to contribute positively to the world.’ On March 12, the California Charter Schools Association also awarded Dr. Sharon Weir the annual Hart Vision Award as Charter School Principal of the Year, out of 750 California charter principals. Weir, principal of New West Charter Middle School in West Los Angeles, accepted her award by sharing her formula: ‘Teamwork divides the task and doubles the success.’ New West was founded in 2003 by Palisades residents Judith Bronowski, David Eagle and Gene Albrecht, with support from about 200 local families. Unable to locate in the Palisades, the school transformed an existing building on Pico Boulevard (a half-block east of Barrington) and has become one of the highest-performing public middle schools in Los Angeles. ‘Sharon is a shining example of what is possible in public schools when the right person is in the position to lead,’ said Jed Wallace, president and CEO of the California Charter Schools Association. ‘She is a model leader, a fierce advocate for charter school equity and an inspiration for educators nationwide.’ Weir was recruited to New West by Bronowski, current chair of New West’s governing board, after a difficult opening year. ‘We were so fortunate to find a leader with charter experience, educational expertise and fiscal management skills,’ Bronowski said. ‘Being super smart didn’t hurt either.’ During Weir’s four years of leadership, New West has raised its Academic Performance Index (API) score from 752 to 867, and has eliminated 82 percent of its debt. Weir is also a champion of charter school facilities rights. In 2008, she led New West to win a lawsuit against the Los Angeles Unified School District that orders the District to provide space for 285 students in conformity with Proposition 39. New West is currently in the penalty phase of the suit. New West is a state-authorized charter school, having been denied a charter twice by LAUSD. The State Board of Education deemed LAUSD’s denial prejudiced and hostile, and in 2007 unanimously approved a second five-year charter. New West is open to allcomers and the selection of 315 students (current representing 52 zip codes) is by open lottery. Established in 1995, the Hart Vision Awards were created in honor of retired California Senator and former California Secretary of Education Gary Hart. During his tenure as legislator, Hart authored California’s charter school legislation, which led to charter status for Palisades High and Marquez, Palisades and Canyon elementary schools in 1993.
Janette Flintoft Tackles Gang Prevention

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Pacific Palisades resident Janette Flintoft spends her days at Horace Mann Middle School, inspiring and coaxing the students, who live in the surrounding gang-infested neighborhoods, to stay in school.   Since August, Flintoft has worked at Horace Mann in South L.A. through the Safe Schools Division of the L.A. Office of the City Attorney. Among her duties, she invites motivational speakers to campus, facilitates leadership workshops and organizes field trips.   ’I do whatever it takes to get students more engaged in school,’ said Flintoft, a 39-year-old city prosecutor who is married and has three children.   Encouraged by the success of a similar program at Markham Middle School in Watts, City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo formed the Safe Schools Division last August in an effort to create a safer school environment in nine Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) middle schools.   The schools were chosen because of the high crime rates surrounding their campuses, coupled with low attendance rates and substandard Academic Performance Index (API) scores. API is a measurement system that the state uses to evaluate a school’s academic achievement.   The division focuses on middle schools because ‘that is the time we can have the most impact,’ Flintoft said. ‘The kids are starting to make decisions and developing their views’this is the population to catch.’   Flintoft, who has worked for the city attorney’s office since 1997, was chosen for the position because ‘Janette expressed an interest in working with students, and we thought her enthusiasm for the new assignment, combined with her experience as a prosecutor, would make her an ideal fit for our new division,’ said Max Follmer, spokesman for the city attorney. ‘Janette has done a tremendous job working to help improve the climate in and around Mann Middle School.’   Flintoft, who grew up in North Hollywood, received her bachelor’s degree in history from UCLA and attended law school at Southwestern University. In her first two years in the city attorney’s office, she prosecuted numerous criminal cases. In 2001, Flintoft began working for the Crime Prevention and Youth Protection Division, which led to her current position.   ’I see children’s upbringing as the root of all future problems,’ Flintoft said.   In January, she started a weekly speaker series for Horace Mann seventh and eighth graders in the Advancement Via Individual Determination (AVID) program, designed for socioeconomically disadvantaged students who want to be the first members in their families to attend college.   ’The goal is to give the students role models; I choose speakers who grew up or work in the area, or in a similar type of neighborhood,’ Flintoft said, adding that she has found speakers through her colleagues and Pacific Palisades friends.   Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Officer Juan Barillas and UCLA assistant men’s basketball coach Donnie Daniels (who both grew up in the neighborhood) recently spoke to students about reaching their goals. Flintoft also tries to improve adolescents’ self-esteem and provide them with alternatives to gang life. She has taken the students to the Museum of Tolerance and the UCLA’s ropes and challenge course. On April 23, they will travel to Southwestern University for a mock trial. On such field trips, Flintoft has paid for lunch out of her own pocket. She has also sponsored a group of girls to attend the annual Young Women’s Conference: Change, Challenge and Choice ‘ A Recipe for Success at Pasadena City College in February. ‘I want to do what I can for them to succeed,’ said Flintoft, who has lived in the Highlands since 1997 with her husband, Gerry, a senior investment officer for L.A. County Employees Retirement Association. They have three children: Collin, 9, Caroline, 8 (students at Calvary Christian School) and Aiden, 4.   Flintoft’s efforts extend to parents whom she will even prosecute for not sending their children to school. She and Horace Mann’s attendance officer canvass the neighborhood for students at home during school hours. Some students are babysitting or running errands with their parents. Before taking legal action, Flintoft explains to parents California’s Compulsory Education Laws, which require children to be in school from age 6 to 18. ‘The goal is to get the kids in school,’ she said. ‘Gang members are truant first.’ To make the campus environment safer, Flintoft works closely with the LAPD’s 77th Street Community Police Station. She reviews police reports for crime patterns, rides along with the police looking for criminals and prosecutes cases on campus and in the surrounding neighborhood. Horace Mann is located at 7001 St. Andrews Place. Marijuana was recently found on campus, so Flintoft will prosecute any misdemeanor cases arising out of the police investigation. For prevention, she has arranged for speakers to talk to the students about substance abuse in May and September. In addition to all of her work at Horace Mann, Flintoft recently helped create an LAUSD training program to teach teachers and administrators how to recognize and report child abuse. She also works in the city attorney’s Gang Division dealing with gang injunctions, a court order that prohibits gang members from engaging in activities such as associating with other gang members. ‘I find it rewarding,’ Flintoft said of her busy schedule. ‘I love what I do’ I feel fortunate to be changing lives and impacting communities for the better.’
Spring Bursts Forth for Annual Garden Tour

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
The annual Pacific Palisades Garden Club Garden Tour and Plant Sale will take place on Sunday, April 26, noon to 4 p.m., rain or shine. The plant market will be open noon to 4 p.m. at 1416 Amalfi Dr. Advance tickets are $25; $30 on day of tour. Proceeds benefit education and beautification in the Palisades. Tickets available in Pacific Palisades at: ‘ The Outdoor Room Nursery, 17311 Sunset Blvd. ‘ Farmers’ market on Swarthmore Avenue on April 19 ‘ Plant market on the day of the tour In West Los Angeles: Yamaguchi Nursery, 1905 Sawtelle Blvd. In Santa Monica: Merrihew’s Nursery, 1526 Ocean Park Blvd. Or by mail: Pacific Palisades Garden Club, 261 S. Carmelina Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90049 423 Abramar For this family, outdoor living is key, and the back yard takes center stage. Once dominated by a 1950’s kidney-shaped swimming pool with a flagstone surround, the area has been transformed into two generous spaces: one for swimming and water play, the other a patio decked out with a gas barbecue and formal dining area’covered with two shade sails, one blue, one yellow. A small bridge of floating concrete pavers crosses a koi pond, which is surrounded by a pygmy date palm, black mondo grass and decorative asparagus. The landscaper extended what had been a meager patio to become an open platform looking out over the same swimming pool’updated with new plaster and a saltwater system that eliminates chlorine. The wall adjacent to the patio is faced with multicolor mosaics, and enhanced by a waterfall. A stainless steel railing, strung with stainless wires offers a transparent safety fence for the guests above. The view from the deck area across the pool is a triumph of color and texture. The landscape designer traveled the world, so to speak, for her plant palette. Trees that help to enclose and provide privacy from the next-door house include a Kentia palm, Eureka lemon and a carrotwood. Large ginger plants and bird of paradise camouflage the aboveground hot tub. 1027 Galloway This tiny taupe cottage sits cheerily, surrounded by a garden that speaks to the owner’s native Kentucky roots. The garden’s evolution began with a small magnolia tree that the owner had planted a few years ago in the front lawn. Now, a lush perennial flowerbed encompasses the ‘Little Gem’ magnolia. Honoring the Victorian garden fashion of strong use of evergreens and topiaries, two vertical evergreens add interest close by. A blue spire of juniper, and a dark green columnar yew stand like two sentries, side by side. As if grown from seedlings dropped from neighboring woodlands, the two differing genera bring a look of natural happenstance and a feeling of grandness to this small garden. These English garden design principles favored in the Southern and Eastern states came into play while garden designer Heidi Santschi worked to create a ‘Kentucky feeling.’ Beds swoon and curve around lawn dotted with Virginia Blue stepping-stones. The same Bluestone brings a touch of the countryside in the form of a traditionally Southern dry stack wall. Pink iceberg shrub roses en masse remind the owner of the pink peonies she loves. Heliotrope and pink diosma sweeten the air. Plants like Geranium maderense suggest peony foliage. Oak leaf hydrangeas give fall color and giant white conical blooms in spring and summer. Heidi searched for plants that would evoke the romantic, fragrant, steamy gardens of the South, but would be adaptable to shale and clay soil. Many more Southern-flavored textures, colors and scents fill the beds and the air in the front and back garden; and beyond a Kentucky whiskey-barrel fountain, a wisteria drips over a neo-classical pergola, where a white old-fashioned metal glider beckons. 721 Via de la Paz Indoors pleasingly meets outdoors at this newer traditional home, with languorous pillared porches gracing both the front and back facades. Landscape designer Laurie Lewis, in collaboration with the owners, decided to scrap an existing white picket fence in favor of placing a low stone wall of warm earth tones along the sidewalk. An interesting mix of grasses and other low-maintenance plants enliven the parkway with texture and color. Once inside the gate, drama unfolds as six evergreen pear trees form a canopy above a long cobblestone path accented with thyme. The journey rewards, culminating at a gravel courtyard where a giant sycamore tree rises majestically. Lavender spills over boxwood to soften the formality. Bay laurel trees, planted for screening along the gravel pathway to the rear, create an unusual, tunneled effect. Once in the back yard, four raised vegetable gardens surrounded by gravel take center stage. Many varieties of lettuce, herbs and peppers are among the bounty. The focal point, a large stone-clad fountain, gurgles from the back wall. As in the front, symmetry reigns, with four California pepper trees arranged in perfect square formation. 708 Wildomar A ranch house with a relaxed, cottage-like feel sets the stage for this delightfully eclectic garden created by owner Mimi Kahn, who heads Mimi’s Garden Design. Drought-resistant plants, highlighted by iceberg roses, give life to the parkway. Softly undulating beds dominate the front yard, with yellow blooms giving punch to an assortment of variegated plants. Handsome pots of ‘Gartenmeister’ fuchsia, a magnet for hummingbirds, accent the front porch Once you enter the back yard, one of the owner’s passions becomes clear. Unusual arrangements of succulents abound, tucked into bamboo, old toy wheelbarrows and other interesting vessels, many garage sale finds. Teak dining furniture and vintage garden chairs dot the landscape, providing ample resting spots from which to gaze upon Japanese maples, Chinese lantern plants and bleeding-heart bushes. A stone pathway leads to a ‘hidden’ garden tucked in the far back corner, where a profusion of vegetables, citrus trees and colorful annuals spring forth in a charmed free-form arrangement. 565 Dryad Rd. Masked behind dense foliage and a ‘bleeding’ brick wall in Santa Monica Canyon is the historic Hacienda Mojica, built in 1929. Now home to La Se’ora Research Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to documenting early California history, the house and gardens sit on hallowed ground. The site was once part of the Rancho Boca de Santa Monica, a Mexican land grant given to Francisco Marquez and Ysidro Reyes in 1839. Nearly a century later, Jose Mojica, a Mexican opera singer and film star, began work on his hacienda, inspired by the wish to recreate his family’s ancestral home in Mexico. Mojica also yearned for plants from his native land and brought many subtropical plants across the border. The design is more English than Mexican in style, with distinct ‘garden rooms’ fashioned throughout the expansive property. The main room is the large patio, where unusual decorative encaustic tiles define the area. Formal beds surround the patio, each with a theme. The largest area has mature sycamore trees; the bed in the shadiest corner is devoted to ferns and orchids; camellias spring forth in another area; and the remaining bed picks up the theme of the theatrical pool area with giant purple and white birds of paradise mixed with King and Queen Palms. Old pittosporum trees line the ‘promenade’ leading to the Rancho chapel, which will be included on the tour and staffed by docents. Koi ponds and stone bridges, dense fern beds and night-blooming jasmine are all part of the mix. Roses are the passion of the current owner and the garden boasts 36 varieties. A small rancho-style vegetable garden planted with onions, tomatoes, artichokes, and beans is also home to large pots of potatoes, figs and navel oranges at this venerable location. 766 Via de la Paz Jill Sullivan’s succulent garden could be leagues under the sea for its jewel-like blooms. Determined not to be a slave to water, Sullivan designed a garden that shows extraordinary research into drought-tolerant plants, expanding the palette beyond the California native repertoire. Greeting the visitor at the parkway is a platoon of agaves, remarkable at this season with their orange blooms. Two large sculptural Aloe striate in huge ceramic pots guard the entrance to the front yard. Three ‘Forest Pansy’ redbud’a purple-leaved understory tree and true harbinger of spring’define the perimeter of the front garden. Sullivan has fun with plants, alternating between the stunning, black-leaved Aeonium arboreum ‘Schwarzkopf’ with the arresting yellow spikes, and a wide assortment of colorful succulents, which bloom successively throughout the year. The back yard is designed for a family that likes to entertain and loves to collect. Jill’s collection of agaves, cactus, bromeliads and artful rocks from China crowd the patio. On one side, a horny-toad fountain spills down toward the back yard. The back yard is bisected by rectangular pavers set in shiny Mexican pebbles that seem to float toward the planter that anchors the back of the property. Honey locust trees (gleditsia), lacey-leaved similar to jacaranda but not messy, line the path. The planter is filled with sand and scattered with seashells, coral and intruded rocks, along with an assortment of fascinating yucca and aloes. Notice the beautiful marble dinner table, supported on stacked bluestone columns.
Violinist Newmark to Perform in Concert

Pacific Palisades resident Mary Lou Newmark, electric violinist, composer and poet, will perform ‘The Tiger is Awake,’ a concert of her original music and poetry on Sunday, April 19, 3 p.m., at the Santa Monica Main Library’s auditorium, 601 Santa Monica Blvd. Admission is free. Newmark’s compositions are a cutting-edge mixture of sound effects, poetry, odd instruments, percussion and beats. Each work has its own organic structure, as dictated by the unique sonic material, both gathered and played, and resulting in compositions that work as a story and as a place to explore. The Sunday afternoon performance will include the ‘Bed, Bath and Beyond Suite,’ a fun, satiric look at consumerism, and ‘The Tiger is Awake,’ a set of three pieces that reflect on the loss of connection to our own animal bodies and rhythms. Also featured: the premiere of ‘La Loba, Wolf Woman.’ An award-winning artist, Newmark has a traditional classical music background, with master’s degrees from USC and UCLA in violin performance and composition, respectively. Her music has been featured at international festivals and on public radio stations worldwide. For more information and for samples of her music, visit www.greenangelmusic.com.
Documentary Photographer to Discuss Work with the Homeless

Jim Hubbard, an acclaimed social documentary photographer, nominated three times for the Pulitzer Prize, and recipient of more than 100 photography awards, will participate in the Palisades Reads program on April 22 at 7 p.m. in the library of Corpus Christi School, 890 Toyopa Dr. The program, ‘Empowering People Through Photography,’ describes Hubbard’s experiences giving cameras to homeless youth in Washington, D.C. (collected in a book, ‘American Refugees’), and to mentally ill women in Santa Monica to let them tell their stories. Hubbard began his career in Detroit during the tumultuous 1960s, when the 1967 Detroit riots became one of the first major international stories he had photographed. He has covered many major stories, including the 1972 Munich Olympics and massacre, the 1979 Cambodian genocide by the Pol Pot regime, and 1973’s Wounded Knee siege. His photographs have been published in many of the world’s leading publications, and he served with the White House Press Corps, traveling with the President during his 16-year staff position with United Press International. Hubbard has photographed five U.S. presidents and numerous presidential campaigns, including Robert Kennedy’s shortly before the senator’s assassination in 1968. His work has also been featured on television shows and feature films. Hubbard is a professor in the Annenberg School for Communication at USC and creative director at Venice Arts, which sponsors photography, art and filmmaking classes for people who live in low-income or underrepresented communities. Currently, he is working with the clients of Daybreak Shelter through a grant from the Los Angeles County Arts Commission. Daybreak is the only program on the Westside which works with women who suffer from long-term mental illness. Please RSVP to info@palisadescares.org. Attendees are asked to bring new socks or toiletries, which will be donated to the homeless.
Thursday, April 16 – Thursday, April 23
THURSDAY, APRIL 16
Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, 7 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. The public is invited. Brendan Brazier discusses and signs ‘Thrive: The Vegan Nutrition Guide to Optimal Performance in Sports and Life,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books. This book presents a highly original plant-based diet and lifestyle plan for achieving maximum health, physical strength and mental dexterity, developed by a top professional Ironman triathlete. Welcoming reception for the spring fellows at Villa Aurora, 8 p.m. at the Villa on Paseo Miramar. Free admission. Please RSVP by calling (310) 573-3603. Shuttle service begins at 7 p.m. from Los Liones Drive, where there is ample street parking.
FRIDAY, APRIL 17
The Palisades Branch Library screens ‘The Painted Veil,’ starring Edward Norton and Naomi Watts, at 1 p.m. John Curran’s 2006 dramatic feature is based on the novel by W. Somerset Maugham. Palisades High alum Brian Eule signs ‘Match Day: One Day and One Dramatic Year in the Lives of Three New Doctors,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. In his nonfiction work, Eule follows three new doctors’all women’and their struggle to balance professional ambitions and personal relationships. Theatre Palisades presents the 2001 Off-Broadway Tony Award winner ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,’ 8 p.m. at Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd. Performances are Fridays and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m., through May 10. Tickets: Call (310) 454-1970 or visit www.theatrepalisades.org.
SUNDAY, APRIL 19
The Temescal Canyon Association hikers will take the beautiful trail up Santa Ynez Canyon to Trippet Ranch and meet with Sierra Club groups to celebrate John Muir’s birthday, a roundtrip of about 6 miles. Meet at 9 a.m. in the Temescal Gateway entrance parking lot for carpooling. Contact: www.temcanyon.org, or call (310) 459-5931.
TUESDAY, APRIL 21
Santa Monica Canyon Homeowners Association board meeting, 7 p.m. at the Rustic Canyon Recreation Center. The public is invited. Book discussion of ‘The Soloist’ with Courtney Overland, 7 p.m. in the Corpus Christi School library, 890 Toyopa. Author Arthur Verge, writer of two books about Los Angeles County and Santa Monica lifeguards, will share his extensive collection of photographs and knowledge, 7:30 p.m. in Woodland Hall in Temescal Gateway Park. (See story, page 14.)
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22
Snap Shots Literary Troupe, hosted by Eric Vollmer, performs at 7:30 p.m. in Village Books on Swarthmore. Acclaimed social documentary photographer Jim Hubbard, nominated three times for the Pulitzer Prize, will participate in the ongoing ‘Palisades Reads’ program, 7 p.m. in Corpus Christi School’s library, 890 Toyopa. The public is invited. (See story, page 14).
THURSDAY, APRIL 23
Pacific Palisades resident Jonathan Varat, a constitutional law professor at UCLA Law School who clerked for the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White, will speak at the Palisades Rotary Club meeting, 7:15 a.m. at Gladstone’s, PCH at Sunset. Contact: (310) 442-1607. Free screening of the 2000 Academy Award-winning documentary ‘Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport,’ 6:30 p.m. at Kehillat Israel, 16019 Sunset. Professor Mark Jonathan Harris, the award-winning filmmaker behind ‘Arms,’ will participate in a post-screening Q&A. Underground parking is provided. Carol Olson and Cherie Rodges discuss and sign ‘PTA: Sex, Intrigue and Designer Handbags,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. This novel is described as the mommy version of ‘Bridget Jones’ Diary.’
Pali Tennis Aces League Test

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
It isn’t taking long for the Palisades High boys’ varsity tennis team to dispatch its Western League opponents this season. In fact, no opposing squad has managed to win so much as one set against the Dolphins, who consider themselves rightful heirs to the City Section throne after falling half a point short last spring. “We definitely think we’ll win it this year. That’s our mindset,” senior captain Che Borja said. “We beat [defending champion] Taft up in Fresno to start the season and we didn’t even have Oliver [Thornton]. We’re going to be that much better when he comes back.” Thornton could return next week, adding more firepower to Palisades’ already potent singles lineup. So deep is the Dolphins’ roster that Coach Bud Kling can interchange positions to rest a injured players or reward one who shows marked improvement in practice. Monday was business as usual for the Dolphins, who needed barely 120 minutes to wallop Hamilton 7-0 at the Palisades Recreation Center courts. The most entertaining aspect of the match was when the teams exchanged colorful nicknames during the introductions. Once play began, though, the Dolphins let their rackets do the talking. “These [matches] are kind of boring but they give us a chance to work on our cheer and important team details like that,” senior Spencer Lewin joked shortly after pairing with Spencer Pekar to win 6-0, 6-1 at No. 2 doubles. “Luckily, we’ve had some good nonleague matches mixed in to keep us sharp.” First off the court against the Yankees was Max Licona, who won 6-0, 6-0 at No. 2 singles. Borja and fellow captain Jeremy Shore won 6-0, 6-1 at No. 1 doubles and Kyung Choi notched the clinching point moments later with his 6-1, 6-1 win at No. 1 singles?quite appropriate for someone his teammates call “The Terminator.” The rest was academic. Brandon Clark (6-0, 6-0) and Kramer Waltke (6-1, 6-2) performed the mop-up duties with easy wins at the third and fourth singles spots and the No. 3 doubles duo of Kenneth Choi and Robert Silvers kept Palisades’ slate clean with a 6-2, 6-1 victory. The Dolphins (16-3 overall, 8-0 in league) and second-place University met at Stoner Park on Wednesday to decide the league championship (results undetermined at press time) and Palisades travels to Westchester today. Palisades will head north next Thursday-Saturday for the Ojai Tournament. No. 1 singles player Justin Atlan will be in the CIF singles (18-and-under) division while Borja and Shore will play in the CIF doubles division. Kyung Choi, Licona, Thornton and Myles Rodgers-Holliday are entered in the boys’ 16s singles draw. “I’m looking forward to it,” Borja said of Ojai, where the Dolphins will vie for the Griggs Cup, awarded to the school with the most combined wins in singles and doubles. “We’re going to have to play really well to advance but we’re up for the challenge.” Palisades will enjoy a “field trip” of sorts on Friday when it goes to travels up the road to Westwood to watch USC battle UCLA for the Pac-10 men?s championship. Baseball The Dolphins’ varsity squad traveled south for the San Diego Lions Tournament over spring break and dropped three straight games to quality opponents. After suffering a 7-2 loss to perennial City power El Camino Real, it was pitching that dominated in Palisades’ next outing–a 1-0 defeat at the hands of Coronado. In the third game the Dolphins’ bats were held in check in a 4-1 loss to Spring Valley Steele Canyon. Palisades (9-8-1 overall, 8-0 in league) returns to Western League play against sixth-place Fairfax on Friday at 3 p.m. in Los Angeles, then hosts crosstown rival Santa Monica in a Redondo Tournament contest Saturday at 11 a.m. The Dolphins have won 38 of their last 39 league games and have outscored league opponents 63-10 so far this season, including three shutouts. Softball Another complete-game effort from pitcher Emily Noel kept Palisades (6-4, 4-2) in third place in the Western League with a 9-6 triumph at University on Monday. The Dolphins spotted the host Wildcats two runs in the first inning before scoring four of their own in the fourth to seize control of the game. Noel Joy had two hits, three RBIs and three runs scored and raised her batting average to a team-best .667. Mara Susser and Hannah Fagerbakke each added two hits while Noel tossed a five-hitter and blasted a two-run homer for the Dolphins, who hosted Hamilton yesterday (result undetermined at press time) and hit the road aganst second-place Venice today at 3 p.m. Swimming Palisades? girls and boys varsity squads won their meets against Western League rival LACES on Monday. The defending City champion girls remained undefeated in dual meets. Boys Volleyball Showing no signs of rust after a week off, Palisades’ varsity made short work of visiting Hamilton on Monday, winning 25-19, 25-21, 25-15. The rest came at an opportune time for the defending City champions, who were beaten in three straight games by Western League archrival Venice at the tail end of a grueling stretch that included 10 matches in seven days. Monday’s result was more decisive than the teams? first league meeting back on March 11 when the Dolphins needed a 10-2 run to pull out the first game 28-26 en route to a sweep. Going into yesterday’s second clash with University (result undetermined at press time), Palisades trailed first-place Fairfax in the race for the league title. The two teams face off next Monday in a rematch of the Lions’ surprising 3-0 victory March 18.
Lemire Singing the Blues

You’ve probably seen at least one of the posters by now: a sun-splash of orange and gold with a stylized figure in the center and funky lettering to suggest a 1970’s-era concert in the park or perhaps a traveling carnival that is coming to town. On closer inspection one discovers the figure is really a woman kicking a soccer ball, and the show is actually opening day for the defending W-League champion Pali Blues Soccer Club. On May 9, as the poster emphatically declares, Blues fans are invited to bring their own ball and attempt to set a world record for most people in one stadium juggling soccer balls at the same time. The poster–and the record attempt–are the brainchild of new Pali Blues General Manager Jason Lemire. “In hindsight I probably should have done a better job explaining exactly what I mean by ‘juggling,'” Lemire says. “People keep asking me about that.” Though the Pali Blues enjoyed an enormously successful inaugural season in 2008, both on the field and in the stands, Lemire feels there were far too many in the community who had no idea there was a championship team right in their backyard. “The first question I ask everybody is ‘Have you heard of my team?'” Lemire says. “Then, when they say ‘No’ I say ‘Great, that’s why they hired me.'” Lemire believes that for the Pali Blues to establish themselves as a true community destination, games need to become all-inclusive, family-friendly experiences. Since most games kick off at or around dinnertime, one of the first things Lemire set out to do was bring in more food venders. Joining Pali Pizza, this year will be local eateries Fiesta Feast and Maui Wowi. Of course, Lemire has more in mind than just food. “I’m looking for a marching band,” he says. “A marching band and maybe a dance team. And for pre-game there is a guy I saw down at the Home Depot Center a few weeks ago who has trained his dogs to play soccer. Absolutely fantastic. We’re hopefully getting him up here for opening day, too. The point is to make every game an event, to make every game memorable.” Then of course, there’s the soccer. Though he had played and coached for years, Lemire began working fulltime in soccer in 2004 in sales for D.C. United of Major League Soccer. From there he moved to Los Angeles, working first on the soccer film “The Game of Their Lives,” then for the L.A. Galaxy, where eventually he met Pali Blues co-founder Ali Mansouri. Lemire also got to know Mansouri playing against him in the Westside’s competitive Olympic League. “I’m a goalkeeper, and Ali’s teams would always beat me seven or eight to nothing, even if I had 30 saves,” Lemire recalls. “Still, no matter what the score I would keep joking and running my mouth. I think he really got a kick out of that.” Working for the Pali Blues has also given Jason a chance to work with fellow NJ native Charlie Naimo. “Charlie is like a maestro,’ he says. “There just aren’t that many people in the world who are that good at what they do.” What Naimo does, better than just about anybody, is build, train and manage championship teams. “You look at the talent that Charlie is bringing in this year–Olympians, NCAA national champions–and you cannot help but want to fill the stadium for them,” Lemire says. “We are going to be an exciting team, an offensive-minded team. Kids will leave our games wanting to go home and practice the moves they saw on the field that night.” It is that connection between players and young fans that Lemire believes in most passionately. “First and foremost the Pali Blues are here to inspire the young people of this community,” he says. “Inspire them with their skill and determination, inspire them with their teamwork and character, inspire them with a smile and an autograph after the game.” Lemire believes that in a world crying out for positive role models’particularly positive female role models’the Pali Blues are a unique opportunity for Palisades families and the rest of Los Angeles to embrace. “Parking is free, the food is good, the tickets are affordable and our players are literally among the best in the world,” he concludes. “If I wasn’t the GM I would be buying season tickets myself.” To learn more about season tickets and the opening day record attempt fans can visit www.bluessoccerclub.com or email Lemire at jason@bluessoccerclub.com.