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Palisadian Is CEO of Weaver’s Coffee

It is hard to make good coffee if you don’t start with properly roasted beans, and in order to produce them, a master roaster is needed. One such man is John Weaver, who apprenticed under the legendary Alfred Peet and Sal Bonaviat, and worked for Peets for almost three decades.   When Peets acquired new coffee roasters that roasted as much as 800 pounds of beans at a time, Weaver, who was used to roasting 80 pounds at a time, decided it was time to make a move. So in September 2007, he teamed with Pacific Palisades resident Michael Brown (whom he had met two years earlier when Brown was working as a consultant for an Hawaiian coffee company) to launch Weaver’s Coffee & Tea. They also founded Wild Card Roasters, LLC.   ’We’re putting 100 percent of our efforts into building Weaver’s,’ said Brown, the company’s CEO. Headquarters are in San Francisco, with branch offices in Hawaii and Toyko. Coffee roasting is done in Emeryville in one of Peet’s original plants, on a vintage Probat machine that Weaver learned on. Currently, Weaver’s is the sole retail brand to be sold through Wild Card Roasters.”””   Weaver’s carries organic and fair trade coffees including French roast, Sumatra, Peru, Africa and espresso blends, Hawaiian Kona Reserve and house blends. The French roast is smooth and strong, without the bitterness that sometimes accompanies other brands of that coffee. The Holiday blend is flavorful, with a smooth taste, which was achieved by Weaver mixing seven different coffee beans and three roast levels.   ’John is a true artisan,’ Brown told the Palisadian-Post. ‘One reason he left Peets was the new roasters. As he said, it’s the difference between playing a synthesizer and playing a Stradivarius.’   Weaver said that it is still possible to roast great coffee on the large roasters, but with smaller ones, you have more immediate control. ”””   The company is expanding, and although people have expressed an interest in opening a Weaver’s coffee store, the short-term business focus is on grocery and specialty stores. The coffee was initially sold in six Whole Foods stores in Northern California and is now available in all of their Northern California stores.   ’We’re part of the coffee setups in those stores,’ Brown said. ‘Our shelf space has been tremendous.’   Although the company plans to make inroads into Southern California this year, Brown said he agrees with Weaver that ‘there’s a great business in not getting too big, by not being everywhere. We direct deliver and we have a 90-day pull date on all our grocery coffee to ensure better quality control.’   Weaver’s coffee can be found locally at Chefmakers on Via de la Paz, at the Rosenthal Tasting Room in Malibu, at Vicente Foods in Brentwood and at The Victorian and Duck Duck Mousse on Main Street in Santa Monica.   After placing Weaver’s coffee and tea in more specialty grocery stores on the West Coast, the company plans to eventually push eastward.   ’We’re only growing as fast as we can control the quality of customer service,’ said Brown, who has spent most of his professional career directing retail activities. ”   After graduating from the University of Oregon in 1986 with a degree in political science, Brown worked as a sales representative covering Texas and New Mexico for Koret, a sportswear company. Two years in Lubbock was enough for a fellow who grew up in Newport Beach, and Brown left the company for Banana Republic, working first in San Francisco and then in Hawaii.   In 1993, he was hired by Warner Bros. to open their studio stores nationally. His success enabled him to become vice president of international retail business development, where he designed, developed and implemented new retail businesses in the Asia/Pacific region (Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan and Korea). In 2003, he returned to Los Angeles.   ’When I was in Burbank at the home office, it wasn’t stimulating,’ Brown said. ‘I liked being out of the office.’ In October 2004, he went into private consulting; his first client was an Hawaiian coffee company that wanted to expand into Asian markets.   Brown brought aboard Bryce Inouye, whom he had worked with at Warner in Hawaii and Southeast Asia. For two years they strove to expand the coffee company, while learning the ins and outs of the business’and meeting Weaver. About the same time their consulting job ended, Weaver had decided to leave Peets.   ’I had a great career at Peets, but after 25 years, it was just time for me to go out on my own,’ Weaver said. Wild Card Roasters was founded, with Inouye as chief operating officer (now based in Toyko) and Weaver as the master roaster.   Brown and his wife Renee have a son, Alexander, who attends St. Matthew’s School in Pacific Palisades. She’s a writer and producer with her own company, Chatty Mac. Her good friend Amy Bonetti has a firm called Big Mouth Communications, and the two companies have been handling public relations and marketing for Wild Card Roasters and Weaver’s Coffee & Tea.   Visit: www.Weaver’scoffee.com or call (800) 328-1178.

Thursday, January 15 – Thursday, January 22

THURSDAY, JANUARY 15

Yogaworks Studio hosts the monthly Chamber of Commerce mixer, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at 15327 Sunset. The public is invited to enjoy hosted hors d’oeuvres and a drawing for gifts donated by Chamber members.
Jonathan Kirsch discusses his latest book, “The Grand Inquisitor’s Manual: A History of Terror in the Name of God,” 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 16

The Palisades Branch Library presents “Cat Ballou” with Jane Fonda and Lee Marvin, 1 to 3 p.m. in the library’s community room, 861 Alma Real. Free admission.
Hallie Ephron, the award-winning book reviewer for the Boston Globe and sister of Nora, Delia and Amy, signs copies of her debut novel, “Never Tell A Lie,” 7:30 p.m. at Village Books, 1049 Swarthmore.
Villa Aurora welcomes Winter Fellows Peggy Buth, Albert Weis and Anna Faroqhi at an 8 p.m. reception at the Villa, 520 Paseo Miramar. Reservations: (310) 573-3603.
Theatre Palisades presents Neil Simon’s “Lost in Yonkers,” through February 15 at Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd. Directed by Sherman Wayne and produced by Martha Hunter and Pat Perkins, the play runs Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. For tickets call (310) 454-1970 or visit www.theatrepalisades.org.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 20

Santa Monica Canyon Civic Association board meeting, 7 p.m. at Rustic Canyon Park. Public invited. Agenda items include a discussion of “Santa Monica Canyon tsunami issues.”
The Chautauqua Series presents “Birds: The Local Story,” a talk by Santa Monica College biology professor Walt Sakai, 7:30 p.m. in Woodland Hall in Temescal Gateway Park. Public invited.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 22

Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, 7 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. Public invited.

Conservancy Fills in Temescal Pool

By Monday, workers had nearly filled in the Temescal pool. Above, they prepare to put soil on top of the gravel already in the pool.
By Monday, workers had nearly filled in the Temescal pool. Above, they prepare to put soil on top of the gravel already in the pool.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

‘I could weep,’ cried out Pacific Palisades resident Michelle O’Neill as she watched workers dump gravel into the Temescal Canyon Pool last Thursday. O’Neill received a phone call that morning that the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy had begun filling in the 50-year-old pool, and she was among a handful of citizens who rushed to the site. ‘This is such a loss,’ fellow resident Ilene Cassidy said. ‘This pool was so special; there has never been anything like it.’ At a December 2 meeting, the Conservancy board voted to develop a master plan for Temescal Gateway Park before possibly offering a new pool lease. In the meantime, the Conservancy decided to temporarily fill in the empty pool, declaring liability concerns. The Palisades-Malibu YMCA had operated the pool until February, at which time the facility was closed for repairs estimated to cost $400,000. After that December meeting, Friends of the Temescal Pool members spoke with Conservancy Executive Director Joe Edmiston about the potential of repairing and reopening the pool in the immediate future, said Jane Albrecht, president of Friends, a nonprofit organization dedicated to saving the pool. ‘We were in the process of developing a business plan with potential operators,’ Albrecht said. ‘Joe had indicated he would be interested in talking about it when the plan was done.’ In two separate e-mails to the Palisadian-Post Edmiston acknowledged he had talked with Friends members about a possible business plan, but that he was still moving forward with filling in the pool. ‘I will just reaffirm that nobody has stepped forward to assume the liability of the pool, even as groups like Friends have urged the State of California not to take reasonable steps to reduce liability,’ he wrote on Friday, January 9. Dudek, an environmental and engineering consulting firm hired by the Conservancy, sent a letter to the California Coastal Commission on October 15 requesting a coastal development permit waiver to fill in the pool. The Commission was to vote on that waiver at its January 7-9 meeting in Oceanside, said Gary Timm, the Commission’s coastal program manager. To expedite the process, Dudek sent another letter to the Commission on December 8 asking instead for an emergency coastal development permit. ‘In a recent soil investigation report, the pool sidewalls were identified as being weak against the soil forces pushing against them. This is evidenced by visible cracks currently in the pool sidewalls,’ Dudek planner April Verbanac wrote. ‘The coming rainy season will result in increased pressures against the pool sidewalls. Without proper abandonment, the pool sidewalls could collapse and soil erosion could occur, possibly destabilizing the surrounding area.’ Dudek attached a letter prepared by the geotechnical firm Penfield & Smith, which detailed how the pool would be abandoned, but did not mention the need to do so urgently. Without Penfield & Smith’s affirmation, the commission decided to wait until January to vote on the waiver, Timm said. The matter was scheduled for a hearing on Wednesday, January 7, but that morning Albrecht faxed a letter to the Commission indicating that the public had not received adequate notification. She said a member of Friends had contacted the Commission and was told the item was not on the January agenda. ‘Moreover, 70 members of our organization who submitted letters on the matter in November were not notified,’ Albrecht wrote. After receiving the letter, the board decided not to vote on the waiver. ‘Our big concern was public notice,’ Timm said. However, that same day, Penfield & Smith explained the emergency situation to Commission Deputy Director Jack Ainsworth, who decided to issue the emergency permit. He had the authority to do so without board approval, Timm said. Ainsworth did not return numerous phone calls from the Post. ‘It was total evasion of the law,’ Albrecht said of the Commission’s decision to issue an emergency permit rather than vote on the waiver at a future hearing, which would have allowed the public to comment. ‘It was not good government.’ After receiving Ainsworth’s verbal approval on Wednesday, the Conservancy wasted little time and began work Thursday morning. The Commission did not actually issue the written emergency permit until Friday. ‘They did not have the permit yesterday,’ Timm told the Post on Friday. ‘They did have verbal authorization at the hearing on Wednesday and as far as we are concerned that authorizes the work. It’s not uncommon when it’s an emergency situation for work to begin before the permit is issued.’ On Thursday, January 8 (the day work began on the pool), Penfield & Smith submitted a letter to the Commission summarizing the reasons for needing to urgently decommission the pool. Timm said he had asked for the letter because he wanted written documentation of Wednesday’s conversations. ‘If the pool remains ‘as is’ or is filled with water (from rain or other sources) without being repaired first, sediment transport would likely occur under the pool, pool deck, driveway, utilities and adjacent structures,’ wrote Bret Foster, an engineer with Penfield & Smith. ‘This would pose a very real threat to the overall stability of the site and the residences [above] the pool.’ Albrecht said the Conservancy’s actions might have damaged the pool, which she considers a valuable asset with 10 to 20 more years of life. She argued that the pool did not need to be filled in at all. In fact, a 30-page geological report released June 3 comes to a conclusion opposite from Penfield & Smith’s. According to the report conducted by Grover Hollingsworth and Associates, ‘The existing pool pad and the slopes that descend from the pool pad are considered grossly stable. In the event that the pool and/or plumbing should develop large leaks, this water will not have a deleterious effect on the gross stability of the pool pad, nor will they affect the stability of the ascending slopes to the east and north of the pool pad enclosure.’ Before attempting to negotiate a new lease with the Conservancy, the YMCA staff had asked for the report in the spring to determine whether the pool site was stable. Albrecht argued that this report is unbiased because it was not done by a company hired by the Conservancy and was completed prior to talk of filling in the pool. ‘It is also the only in-depth report,’ she said. Friends had submitted the report to the Commission, and when Timm was asked if it was considered, he responded, ‘It’s very common for us to get opposing geotechnical reports from proponents and opponents of a project. For the emergency permit, we accepted the rationale of the Conservancy’s consultant.’ On Friday morning, Friends members were in court trying to obtain a temporary restraining order against the Conservancy to prevent continued work on the pool. Judge David Yaffe denied the request, saying ‘Whatever damage to the pool to make it inoperable had already been done,’ attorney Mark Holscher of Kirkland & Ellis wrote in an e-mail. Friends, along with a group of elderly and disabled residents, are now suing the Conservancy and its partner, the Mountains Recreation & Conservation Authority (MRCA). They are arguing that the Conservancy violated its agreement with the Presbyterian Synod, from which the state agency purchased the land in 1994. In that contract, the Conservancy agreed to honor ‘the existing pool lease between the Synod and the YMCA for the term of that lease, and will continue the lease on the same terms thereafter for the existing useful life of the existing pool. The parties agree that on the expiration of the said existing life, the parties will enter into negotiations for the possible replacement of the said pool.’ The lawsuit claims the Conservancy ‘unilaterally declared the pool to have exceeded its useful life, when it was merely in need of repair’ and ‘failed to offer the YMCA terms identical to the pool lease.’ The plaintiffs also contend that the land was purchased with Proposition A funding, which is partly intended to create recreational facilities for senior citizens. ‘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,’ according to the lawsuit. The plaintiffs are 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. Edmiston said the state’s Office of the Attorney General has instructed him not to comment on the lawsuit. Since Thursday, the MRCA workers have cut an eight-inch hole in the deep end to allow for drainage and have filled the pool with gravel and soil. All of the water and electrical services to the pool and pool equipment have been disconnected. The workers did not touch the plumbing, so the pool could potentially be reopened in the future, said Ken Nelson, MRCA chief ranger. They also used tractor equipment with rubber-tracked wheels so as not to damage the pool bottom. ‘It can all be excavated,’ Nelson said, adding that the area will soon be used for picnicking.

Ex-Brentwood Escrow Manager Charged with Embezzlement

Former Brentwood Escrow manager Barbara ‘Bobbi’ Lynn Brown has been charged with allegedly embezzling money and property while employed at the Pacific Palisades branch office, which recently closed after being in the community since 1994. Brown, 48, faces one felony charge of grand theft by embezzlement on or between January 17, 2007 and August 10, 2007, said Shiara Davila-Morales, spokeswoman for the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office. Brown pleaded not guilty at her arraignment last August 22. Brentwood Escrow originally filed the police report accusing Brown of embezzlement, said Officer Sam Park with the Los Angeles Police Department media relations office. The Department of Corporations, which licenses and regulates a variety of businesses, also conducted an investigation of Brown after she applied on July 6, 2007 for an escrow agent’s license to start her own company, Onlinescrow, Inc. ‘The special examination was commenced after the Department of Corporations received information from Brentwood that Brown had been involved in numerous suspicious transactions involving trust funds, which Brentwood believed had created a trust account shortage,’ according to documents issued by the department. Based on a review of Brentwood’s books and records, the department found that Brown made at least 47 unauthorized disbursements totaling $190,581 to herself and others such as her mother, brother and landscaper. She allegedly made an unauthorized disbursement to her landscaper in the amount of $10,000 on July 3, 2007 and $38,159 on August 10, 2007. She purportedly made an unauthorized disbursement to her brother, Warren Brown, of $1,600 on January 17, 2007 and $3,000 the next day. The department found that she falsified documents to hide her actions. She hid an unauthorized disbursement of trust funds in the amount of $1,110 to her mother, Frances Brown, ‘by describing it on the closing statement as having been paid for cleaning services’ and of $3,000 to herself ‘by describing it simply as a disbursement paid to Wells Fargo Bank on the closing statement with a corresponding escrow fee discount to offset the disbursement.’ As a result of its investigation, the Department of Corporations denied Brown’s request for an escrow agent’s license for Onlinescrow on December 18, 2008 and barred Brown from ‘any position of employment, management or control of any escrow agent.’ The department is now sharing its findings with the District Attorney’s office, said department spokesman Mark Leyes. Yesterday, a new date was set for Brown’s preliminary hearing, which will be held at the Airport Courthouse, Department 142. The date was not available at press time. Brentwood Escrow owner Diana Stewart founded the business 30 years ago and also had an office on San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood, which she closed in March. She retired in December and closed the Pacific Palisades branch, located at 970 Monument St. Charlene ‘Charlie’ Schutz, who assumed Brown’s management position, has since opened a new escrow company, Perennial Escrow, in the former location of Brentwood Escrow, with Pacific Palisades resident Bud Petrick.

Case Study House Property Goes Up for Sale

Living room with unobstructed view of the Pacific Ocean. Case Study House No. 9 (Los Angeles, Calif.), 1950, gelatin silver, J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography
Living room with unobstructed view of the Pacific Ocean. Case Study House No. 9 (Los Angeles, Calif.), 1950, gelatin silver, J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography

‘The intention of the Entenza house is to eliminate structure . . . to be as anonymous as possible.’ Edgardo Contini, who was the structural engineer for Case Study House No. 9 was describing the house’s concealed columns and beams, but he could have been commenting on the house itself, which for 50 years has been hidden within a secluded enclave off Chautauqua Boulevard, with head-on views of the Pacific Ocean. Designed by Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen in 1949, the Entenza house was restored 14 years ago and now serves as the guesthouse for a 9,700-sq.-ft. estate designed by Barry Berkus. The entire estate is on the market for $14 million. Strolling through the Entenza house this week, one could have been walking right into the Julius Shulman photos taken in 1950. ‘The house was a mess before Berkus brought it back to its original state,’ said Jan Horn, the Coldwell Banker listing agent (in the Beverly Hills office). From its structural clarity to the interior design, the house could truly serve as a ‘case study’ of mid-20th-century American architecture. The Entenza House, built for Arts & Architecture editor John Entenza, was never intended for the architectural attention it holds today’in 1991, it was designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural monument. This protects it from demolition or extensive remodeling. Indeed, the design for the house had been submitted to Arts & Architecture for its postwar housing competition in 1943, which challenged some of the most important architects of the region (including Charles and Ray Eames, Craig Ellwood, Pierre Koening and Raphael Soriano) to help shape the course of the post-World War II building boom toward widespread acceptance of modern architecture and to offer technologically based and affordable housing. The Entenza plan won the magazine’s first prize. Case Study No. 8 (the Eames House) and Case Study No. 20 (the Bailey House, by Richard Neutra), completed the Case Study enclave on Chautauqua. Looked upon as the architectural opposite of its neighbor, the Eames house, which flaunts its steel structure, the Entenza house conceals its steel-and-glass structure under concrete and wood paneling. One of the first steel-framed Case Study houses, Entenza follows a simple design’a straightforward 42-ft. by 42-ft. cube in plan. It consists of two small bedrooms, three baths and kitchenette and extensive space for entertaining. Four slender columns in the center support the frame and shift the load to the outer rim. This frame and all but one of the four columns are completely concealed under plaster walls and a wood-paneled ceiling. All the drama is concentrated in the 36-foot-long open space, which serves as a flexible living and entertaining area and looks to the view through the floor-to-ceiling glassed south wall. John Entenza required minimal bedroom space, guest and bath facilities, and reserved a small windowless study for himself. The house today maintains the original architects’ concern for the organic unity of furniture and architecture. Eames and Saarinen had developed this idea while working together at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan in the early 1940s, where they designed their award-winning molded wood furniture for The Museum of Modern Art’s Organic Design in Home Furnishing competition of 1940-41. In choosing the furnishings, the two men paid attention to the house’s overall visual and functional scheme. The freestanding steel-and-brick fireplace, between the built-in couch and the carpeted, raised living area, is painted orange-red to contrast with the neutral colorings of the beige carpet, linen sofa covering and wood-and-plaster interior surfaces. Several plywood chairs and the plastic-laminated plywood coffee table designed by Charles and Ray Eames, and the bench/bank by George Nelson are in situ, as is the built-in cabinetry by Charles Eames in the living room.

Stephen Leventhal, Distinguished Judge

Steve Leventhal
Steve Leventhal

By MARTIN SUGARMAN Special to the Palisadian-Post Stephen Alan Leventhal, a Brentwood resident and distinguished Westside judge for 28 years, passed away on January 4 at the age of 69. Beneath his public demeanor as judge, a position from which Leventhal retired three years ago, there was a very private man who lived a life of civility and civic mindfulness. He treasured the cultural diversity in Los Angeles, the city’s colorful history and its surrounding countryside. He frequently retreated to the beach or the mountains, where he found solitude and peace. He was also an environmentalist who understood the importance of protecting our natural world. Born in Los Angeles in 1939, Leventhal was the only child of Charles and Genevieve Leventhal. His parents came from modest backgrounds, but understood the value of education and having a solid work ethic. Growing up, Leventhal was an avid piano player and pretty good baseball player. He had a lucrative paper route and later worked in a gas station at $1.25 per hour. Graduated from Los Angeles High School and UCLA, Leventhal earned a law degree from Loyola Law School and went to work as a forceful prosecutor in the Los Angeles City Attorney’s office. As a judge, he earned the respect, admiration and trust of the Los Angeles Police Department, California Highway Patrol, and other law enforcement agencies. A tall, sturdy and strikingly handsome man with a white mane of hair, Leventhal was passionate about filmmakers, painters, writers and politicians, and was fond of discussing and debating such topics. He was the consummate gardener, especially tending to his rose bushes, and he loved to travel with his wife, Brenda. They visited Europe and Turkey last year and had planned to celebrate his birthday in Mexico this March. At our last meeting, Steve explained that the valuable experiences one collects while traveling’both the monumental and the trivial minutiae’far outweigh the mindless hoarding of material goods. He and Brenda loved the western United States, and would ride horseback in our national parks. Even in retirement, Leventhal was never idle. He spent long hours reading quality fiction, history and biographies, and enjoyed going to the theater or to musicals with Brenda. He appreciated art and had planned to volunteer at the Getty Center. In addition to Brenda, the love of his life for 47 years, Leventhal is survived by his children, Marc, Dana, Sandy and Eric (all of whom attended Palisades High); and his grandchildren, Daniel, Matthew, Sarah, Eliza, Katie, Sadie, Sam, Lucy and Chase. Donations in his memory can be made to The Yosemite Fund, 155 Montgomery St., Ste. 1104, San Francisco, CA 94104.

Eva Lux, Longtime Palisades Hairdresser

Eva Lux
Eva Lux

Eva Lux, who worked as a hairdresser in Pacific Palisades for more than 30 years, passed away on January 11 after a long battle with cancer. She was 72. Born in Vienna on December 8, 1936, Eva moved at age 17 to a small town near Salzburg, where she met the love of her life, Franz Lux, while taking night classes in English. They soon married and, after a few years, immigrated to America and settled in Venice, where they raised their family and spent their life together. Eva worked as a hairdresser for Peter Csato on Via de la Paz and then at Solis Salon on Swarthmore. She had many longtime clients who adored her. She will always be remembered for her sweet and kind nature, always doing for others and being a strong and amazing person. In addition to her husband Franz, Eva is survived by her daughter, Isabella Solis (husband Gary) of Pacific Palisades; her son Gordon (wife Sandra) of Santa Fe, New Mexico; and granddaughters Danielle Solis, Lauren Solis and Isabella Lux. A funeral mass will be held at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, January 17, at St. Monica’s Church, 725 California St., in Santa Monica.

Stanley Sevilla, 88; Lawyer, Longtime Marquez Activist

Stanley Sevilla
Stanley Sevilla

Stanley Sevilla, a treasured family man and resident of Pacific Palisades, passed away unexpectedly on Saturday, January 3, owing to complications associated with pancreatic cancer. He was 88. Born April 3, 1920, and raised in Cincinnati, Stanley was the son of Dienna and Isadore Sevilla, immigrants from the Spanish enclave of Istanbul, Turkey. The Sevillas ran a pharmacy in Cincinnati. Stan graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Cincinnati in 1942, and from Harvard Law School in 1948. In between, he served as a captain in the Army Air Corps from 1942 to 1946, stationed in Puerto Rico. Stan briefed bomber crews on how to navigate their way from Puerto Rico, hopping from island to island on the route to Europe. This gave him a lifelong interest in aircraft and flying. After graduation from Harvard, Stan married Lois Howell in 1948; they moved to Los Angeles to start their married life and Stan’s law career. They moved to their new home on Merivale Lane in the Palisades in 1962. Stan practiced law with Bernard Axelrad and Alan Ross, partners and close lifelong friends. More recently, he ran his law practice from home with the able assistance of his daughter Carol. Stan served on many boards of directors, including Caesar’s World and the Casper Mills Scholarship Foundation, which provides scholarships for orphans. He was a founding member of the Marquez Knolls Neighborhood Association, once serving as president. He was a member of the Pacific Palisades Optimist Club as one of its most optimistic members. Golf was Stan’s great enthusiasm, at first on public courses and later as a longtime member of the Riviera Country Club. He introduced his children to backpacking, camping and fishing. He loved the views of the Sierras and hiked to the top of Mount Whitney several times. Stan traveled extensively to other places as well, visiting 34 countries and six continents. He enjoyed a cruise down the Amazon in 2003 and attended reunions at Ramey Air Force Base in Puerto Rico in 2005 and 2007. Last June he went on safari in Botswana. Above all, Stan was a loving family man who was most proud of his children, putting all five of them through college. When this was accomplished, he put his wife Lois through college as well (at UCLA). In addition to Lois, his wife of 60 years, Stan is survived by his beloved children, Stanley O. (wife Julienne) of Torrance, Susan (Richard Low) of San Francisco, Donald of Tujunga, Carol of Santa Monica, and Elizabeth (Robert Reeves) of Culver City. He loved and greatly admired his eight grandchildren. Stan is also survived by his sister Eugenia and her husband, Raymond Chuan. The funeral was private. A memorial service is pending. In lieu of flowers, donations for a scholarship in Stan’s name may be made to the Casper Mills Scholarship Foundation at 12340 Santa Monica Blvd., Suite 212, Los Angeles, CA 90025.

One Woman Can Make a Difference

Santa Monica resident Stephanie Waisler Rubin founded the Unatti Foundation to raise funds for food, shelter and education for children in Nepal.
Santa Monica resident Stephanie Waisler Rubin founded the Unatti Foundation to raise funds for food, shelter and education for children in Nepal.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

By VICTORIA TALBOT Special to the Palisadian-Post In Santa Monica the door is ajar. Stephanie Waisler Rubin is seated at her desk in traditional Nepalese garb. At home, she is a photographer and art teacher at the Brentwood Art Center. In Bhaktapur, she is the American mother to a dozen young girls. Her narrow office is flanked with photos. Photos of smiling family members are on one wall and faces of Nepalese children line the other. She glides up the stairs to make tea in an apartment that is clearly home to small children. Stephanie is married with two children of her own. Toys litter the floor in a happy heap, and Hindu deities grace the d’cor. Her calm demeanor reigns over the pleasant dishevelment. In 1998, Stephanie traveled to New Delhi with her father, Lee, to document on film his work as an artist for the National Gallery of New Delhi. On the trip, she began photographing kids for a book she imagined on Third World children. She took a side trip to Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, and visited nearby Bhaktapur, Nepal’s third-largest city. Outside her hotel, two ragged boys, Rajesh and Ramu, offered their services as her city guides for a few rupees. Over the next few days, they showed her the ancient city. They were dirt poor. When she returned to the United States, Stephanie was moved to do something significant for the pair. With a receipt from some handcrafts she had purchased from a merchant the two had referred to as ‘uncle,’ she contacted the man and suggested that she would like to help the boys get an education. Several months later, they had worked out the details. She held her breath and sent funds to the uncle to place the boys in school. Three months later, Stephanie received proof that a small contribution could really make a difference. She received a letter from their headmaster with their school report. Excited by the news, she enrolled their siblings until her funds were exhausted. A photographer and children’s art instructor, Stephanie was far from wealthy. But it cost only $900 a year per child to feed, clothe and educate them at boarding school. That is when the concept of a nonprofit foundation came into focus. She returned to Bhaktapur and met a five-year-old girl, Unatti, at Bal Mandir, the state-run orphanage. As a single woman, she could not adopt Unatti, but the seed for the creation of a permanent home for underprivileged girls in Nepal was planted and Unatti Foundation was born. The word unatti means progress and development. Bhaktapur, at the foot of the Himalayas, is a center of culture and religion, noted for architectural and natural beauty. The economy depends for the most part on tourists and the trekkers who stop on their way to climb Mt. Everest. At her Santa Monica home, Stephanie dives into her passion for her girls. Every Monday, there are business meeting on SKYPE, and she ‘talks’ to her girls. Ebullient, she fetches their school reports. ‘See,’ she says. ‘Our girls are learning English on their own computers.’ Through the years, Stephanie has learned that she has a better chance of succeeding if she can start the girls at a younger age. Many have never lived in a family or a home. The most recent additions are 3′, 4 and 5 years old. Ramesh Pradhananda is head of operations for Unatti. His family is fifth generation Bhaktapur. ‘People tell him of orphans and needy kids,’ Stephanie says. ‘He knows; he sees kids on the street. When we have space available, we have potential candidates.’ The new girls include one who lived in the streets with a schizophrenic mother, another child with no mother and a father with tuberculosis, and another girls whose mother committed suicide rather than remain in a bad marriage. When the children arrive, they often suffer from malnutrition and other health issues associated with poverty and poor hygiene. Rajesh and Ramu received three to four years of education. Today, they still correspond with Stephanie. Rajesh is a Malaysian security guard and Ramu is still a city guide. ‘Ramu dropped out early, but his younger siblings finished high school,’ Stephanie says. ‘The lack of support [for sponsored children] from their uneducated parents had been a big struggle in getting the children to continue their studies. They are thinking of finding food for dinner now; not seeing the possibilities of four more years of school.’ She learned a lot from that experience. The Unatti home is simple and clean, but does not provide all the modern conveniences we live with in the affluent West. In Nepal, the average income is $250 a year; literacy is 46 percent and unemployment 42 percent. ‘For me, it’s a fine line between maintaining the integrity of their community and giving them luxuries we take for granted, like hot running water,’ Stephanie explains. ‘My girls have never sat in a bathtub of hot water. I struggle with wanting to take them all to my hotel and let them enjoy what my kids get every night: a bath.’ What started as schooling for two children has grown into a nonprofit organization that is educating a second generation of women. They attend the two top English schools in Bhaktapur (there are seven English schools). They are no longer living in poverty and their future is bright. But Stephanie has big plans. Unatti Foundation has secured land to build a permanent home for the children. The property is large enough to raise chickens and water buffalo, and to plant a kitchen garden. She hopes the girls will learn self-sufficiency and manage the finances for this and their handicrafts business. Today, the project is entirely dependant on donations, but Stephanie plans to teach the girls skills to create handicrafts, manage the business, and market, sell and distribute the products themselves. She hopes the operation will be nearly 50 percent self-sufficient by 2013. In the process, these girls will elevate their entire community. She also hopes to open a school for local women. ‘Everything comes from individual donations from people I know who have seen me travel back and forth. One reason I can do it is because no one here takes a salary,’ Stephanie says. ‘The entire project runs on $30,000 a year. For us, $1,050 takes care of one girl for a year, including everything.’ Only $90,000 is needed to build their dream home. Next year, Stephanie Waisler Rubin and her young family will travel to Nepal. They will not be alone. About 10 families of donors will be joining them. ‘They want their children to meet the children they have been supporting, and we will do a huge child-to-child delivery,’ she says. For that, children here gather used clothing. ‘We hand-carry these items to Nepal where the Unatti girls organize giving these gifts to children even less fortunate than themselves. We document this very moving day and bring the images back to show our American children, who will be able to see the boys and girls who are enjoying their old shoes. By putting a face on it, the kids at home can really see the process.’ For more information, visit www.unattifoundation.org

Las Madrinas Celebrates 75 Years of Tradition

Palisadians include, back row, from left: Sarah Rose McMahon, Molly Marilyn Peterson, Bridget Florence Hearst, Katherine Claire Kanoff, Marin Margaret Dennis, Stephanie Anne Hinds Front row, from left: Lindsay Louise Simon, Eleanor Galt Crowell, Christina Morgan Irvin, Alexis Bailly Dunne, Erin Moore Hookstratten
Palisadians include, back row, from left: Sarah Rose McMahon, Molly Marilyn Peterson, Bridget Florence Hearst, Katherine Claire Kanoff, Marin Margaret Dennis, Stephanie Anne Hinds Front row, from left: Lindsay Louise Simon, Eleanor Galt Crowell, Christina Morgan Irvin, Alexis Bailly Dunne, Erin Moore Hookstratten

In December, Las Madrinas honored 39 Southern California families and their daughters for their service to the Southern California community and Childrens Hospital Los Angeles at the annual Las Madrinas Ball. Las Madrinas, which has supported pediatric medicine for 75 years, is one of the first Affiliate Groups of Childrens Hospital Los Angeles. Since 1939, the organization has been honoring families who have demonstrated a commitment to the civic, cultural and philanthropic life of the Los Angeles community by presenting their daughters at the annual Las Madrinas Ball. Donations made in honor of the young women by their families and the annual support of the members and friends of Las Madrinas have created six research endowments at the hospital since 1988. This is the second year of support for the Las Madrinas Endowment for Autism, Interventions and Outcomes. Researchers are working on developing and analyzing new technology for early diagnosis, testing and evaluating therapies and to tracking outcomes. Founded in 1901, Childrens Hospital Los Angeles has been treating seriously ill and injured children for more than a century. It is one of America’s premier teaching hospitals, affiliated with the Keck School of Medicine at USC for more than 75 years, and is a leader in pediatric research.