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Mark and Johanna Lindgren Wed on the Island of F

Johanna and Mark Lindgren
Johanna and Mark Lindgren

Robert and Virginia Lindgren of Pacific Palisades announce the marriage of their son Mark to Johanna ‘sterberg, daughter of Anders and Birgitta ‘sterberg of Gotland, Sweden. They were married August 16, on the island of F’r’. Mark is a pilot for North American Airlines based in New York, and Johanna is a public relations manager at the University of Sk’vde, Sweden. They will live in New York.

Sena, Brown Exchange Vows in Vineyard

Christopher and Alyson Brown
Christopher and Alyson Brown

Alyson Sena, daughter of Dominic and Christine Sena of Pacific Palisades, and Christopher Brown, son of Robert and Barbara Brown of Santa Monica, were married on July 13 at Gainey Vineyard in Santa Ynez, California. Following their wedding, the couple enjoyed a brief honeymoon in Tomales Bay before moving from Los Angeles to the Bay Area, where Christopher began his first year of osteopathic medical school at Touro University. Alyson attended Saint James Episcopal School and Marlborough, and graduated from Brown University in 2001 with a bachelor’s degree in English. A former Palisadian-Post staff writer and associate editor, she is now working in marketing in Berkeley and volunteering with the Children’s Support League of the East Bay. Christopher attended Canyon Elementary School and Crossroads. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English from Brown University in 2000.

Sibelius, Wagner Star at St. Matthew’s in Friday’s Concert

St. Matthew’s Music Guild continues its 24th anniversary season with a concert by the fully professional Chamber Orchestra at St. Matthew’s, under the direction of Thomas Neenan, on Friday, November 14, at 8 p.m. at the church, 1031 Bienveneda Ave. The concert will feature familiar favorites by Felix Mendelssohn, Jean Sibelius, Richard Wagner and Dag Wiren. The program includes Mendelssohn’s lyrical Violin Concerto in E Minor with soloist Yi-Huan Zhao, concertmaster of the St. Matthew’s Chamber Orchestra. Two Romantic tone poems’Richard Wagner’s ‘Siegfried Idyll’ (a Christmas present to his wife, Cosima) and ‘The Swan of Tuonela’ by Jean Sibelius’will also be presented. Both have become popular classics in the orchestral repertoire. Closing out the program will be Dag Wiren’s Serenade for Strings, a piece that may not be familiar by name to many people, but whose tuneful melodies are well known because of their use in radio and television advertising. Tickets are $25 at the door (no advance ticket sales or reservations). Information: 310-573-7422 or visit the Music Guild’s Web site: www.stmatthews.com/musicguild.

Home Sweet Home Tour

15527 Via de las Olas
15527 Via de las Olas
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

The holidays must be upon us! Once again, the Pacific Palisades Junior Women’s Club (PPJWC) returns with its yearly signature event showcasing distinct local homes, all elegantly dressed in the latest holiday d’cor by talented local florists and designers for the 23rdAnnual Holiday Home Tour on Sunday, November 9, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.   Here lies an opportunity to tour three interesting private homes, with all of the event’s proceeds channeled to various community nonprofit organizations. In past years, PPJWC has donated more than $500,000 to local public schools, the Palisades Recreation Center, Palisades branch library, and the Palisades/Malibu YMCA, among others. The Holiday Boutique, open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Recreation Center on Alma Real Drive, will feature an array of gifts, hand-crafted by more than 35 artisans. Early shoppers will receive the coveted PPJWC gift bag upon departure. This year, the boutique will also feature an In ‘N Out Burger catering truck from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For tickets ($40 per person; $25 for seniors over 60) visit www.PPJWC.com or, stop by the Holiday Boutique or visit one of the homes on the tour after 11 a.m. on Sunday.

15527 Via de las Olas — The Romance of the Spanish Riviera

Enter this home and you’ve entered the Spanish Riviera. No detail is left to chance here, from the countless antiques to the colorful tile one might find at the historic Adamson house in Malibu. Architectural accents abound, from the vaulted entryway ceiling to ceramic accents designed to match those of the Biltmore estate in Santa Barbara. Imported antique double-wood doors stand adorned with scrolled wrought iron and touches of colorful leaded glass. A spiral staircase with custom wrought iron railings twists up through the entire house, from basement to roof. Anchoring one of the children’s bedrooms is an antique Chinese opium bed, while the master bedroom offers large, arched glass doors that open up to an ocean view. The basement contains an Old Hollywood-style screening room with stadium seating and hand-painted murals depicting sweeping views of the Pacific coast. A neighboring two-story billiards room houses a whimsical beer-bottle chandelier, while the garage, which can accommodate a small fleet of cars, includes a motorized floor turntable to circumvent the tight turning radius. Each room on the top floor of the home boasts a skylight, while the third-floor glass atrium leads to the roof deck with breathtaking, unobstructed ocean and mountain views.

530 Toyopa Drive — Old New England Charm

Old-world charm meets modern convenience at this year’s featured home, a Huntington Palisades residence bursting with holiday decorations. The striking combination of dark-and-white woods creates an ambiance of crisp detail the moment you pass through this home’s impressive entrance. Natural light fills this six-bedroom, eight-and-a-half bathroom home, which includes spacious room for entertaining, a cook’s kitchen and a breakfast area overlooking a warm and inviting family room replete with striking marble fireplace and full-length porch. The garden level features a billiard room, exercise room and media room, as well as a bar room that spills out onto the well-manicured grounds, alive with a sparkling pool and spa. The master bedroom, located upstairs, includes a sitting room, his and hers baths and closets. But be sure to peer out the window over the treetops toward the clear, clean ocean view.

930 Kagawa Street — Escape to Old-World England

A suit of armor greets you as you enter. That’s because no detail has been spared to transport the best of Old English style to this charming abode nestled in the Alphabet streets. Set foot on the custom-stained oak floors and enter the kitchen, placed at the home’s center and adorned with hammered copper sinks. Tucked on either side of the impressive range are slide-out drawers hidden by decorative columns. All of the cabinet knobs and fireplace bricks have been recovered from the property’s previous home for posterity. Classic cross details can be found on windows and doors. The majority of the lighting, conducted through sconces, dramatically accents the exposed ceiling beams. The Isokern fireplace, a traditional brick-and-mortar fireplace, has been imported from Sweden. Climb the stairs and step through one of the eight-foot doors into one of the upstairs rooms. The guest room features a reading nook tucked in a round turret and a striking bathroom adorned in yellow tile, while a children’s bedroom sports a playroom hidden behind a bookcase, like something out of a fairy tale.

Elvin E. Van Horn, 90; Past Legion Commander

Elvin E. Van Horn, a former commander of the American Legion in Pacific Palisades, passed away peacefully on October 28 at his home in Santa Monica, surrounded by his loving family. He was 90. Van, as he preferred to be called, was born in Long Beach and attended Polytechnic High School. When World War II broke out, he joined the U.S. Army. Stationed in Trinidad and later the Panama Canal Zone, he served as a sergeant in the Army Intelligence Corps. While overseas, Van met and married his first wife, Josephine, who worked in civil intelligence in the Canal Zone. When the war ended, they settled in San Francisco but, missing the balmy climate of the tropics, moved to Pacific Palisades in 1948. They were married for 20 years and had two children. In 1967, Van married Marion Kneeshaw. They were married for 42 years and resided in Santa Monica. A true philanthropist and military veteran who took pride in serving his country as well as his community, Van took the helm as commander of American Legion Post 283 in 1958. He was instrumental in helping to obtain the land where CVS Pharmacy and the U.S. Post Office are now located. Van was also an active member of the Optimist Club and the Elks Club (including the RV clubs within each group), the Drum and Bugle Corps as a Shriner, and the Masons. While living in the Palisades, Van was a real estate agent at Simpson’s Realty and later was manager at Friar’s restaurant in Santa Monica for many years. Prior to his retirement, he was a security supervisor at the Getty Villa. A friend to all and a stranger to none, just like Will Rogers, Van ‘never met a man he didn’t like.’ One of his favorite pastimes was playing his keyboard. Self-taught, he enjoyed donating his time entertaining senior citizens at retirement homes and rehabilitation centers on the Westside. Van is survived by his daughter, Sue Ellen Casalenuovo (husband Mario) of Pacific Palisades; stepson Tom Kneeshaw (wife Barbara) of Santa Monica; stepdaughter Nancy Baak (husband Jerry); four grandsons, nine step-grandsons and 17 step-great-grandchildren. A memorial service will be held at Gates, Kingsley, 1925 Arizona Ave. at 11 a.m. on Monday, November 10. A reception will follow at Legion Post 283 on La Cruz Drive. All are welcome to join in celebrating Van’s life. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Shriners Hospitals for Children.

A Poignant Moment

Beau Biden watches from his room in the barracks at Ft. Bliss, Texas, Tuesday night as his father Joe joins President-Elect Barack Obama on stage in Chicago.  Photo: Rev. Edward Brandt
Beau Biden watches from his room in the barracks at Ft. Bliss, Texas, Tuesday night as his father Joe joins President-Elect Barack Obama on stage in Chicago. Photo: Rev. Edward Brandt

Rev. Edward Brandt, pastor of Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church, previously lived and worked in Delaware, where he was a pastor in the 161st Signal Brigade of the Delaware National Guard. His unit has been called into active duty and is now training in Ft. Bliss, soon to deploy to Iraq.   We received the following e-mail from Rev. Brandt early Wednesday morning: ‘I watched the presidential election returns like I normally do every four years, but this year two things were different: 1) I am at Ft. Bliss, TX; and 2) I watched the returns with my roommate, Beau Biden, who happens to now be the son of the Vice-President Elect. About 15 people crowded into a room built for five; we shared food, munchies and soda. We watched the returns come in state by state and Beau excused himself several times to go outside and talk with his dad and family. The highlight of the night was President-Elect Barack Obama calling Beau (and the soldiers in the room) and giving him a rousing Hoooah!! What an historic night!’

Calvary Holds Obama-McCain Debate

Calvary Christian School sixth grader Cameron Sheldon was one of the nine students who portrayed Barack Obama in a mock debate with John McCain.
Calvary Christian School sixth grader Cameron Sheldon was one of the nine students who portrayed Barack Obama in a mock debate with John McCain.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Seventh-grader Tommy Collins was the first of the tag-team John McCains who fielded questions about what he would do if he were elected president.
Seventh-grader Tommy Collins was the first of the tag-team John McCains who fielded questions about what he would do if he were elected president.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Eighteen students in Rob Young’s elective class, Election 2008, held a Barack Obama-John McCain debate on Monday afternoon. The Calvary Christian sixth-, seventh- and eighth-grade students used talking points from the candidates’ speeches and cited past decisions that the men made as senators in order to present each side’s views. Individual students, acting as presidential candidates, were asked a question and responded, or if they felt unsure, they could tag off to another ‘McCain’ or ‘Obama.’ The first question was asked to McCain: ‘Why are you the better choice?’ The student posing as McCain answered, ‘There are many problems facing the United States, including the two wars and the financial crisis. I’m the better candidate because I have more experience in war and I have been in the Senate for 26 years. I have more leadership ability.’ The student portraying Obama was asked the same question and responded, ‘I know we’re in a difficult time right now, but I know how to fix things. In Iraq, we need a timetable to get us out and to keep us organized. I will give the middle class a tax break.’ As the moderator, Young challenged his students with questions like ‘Many would argue that in the struggle for hearts and minds around the world, the United States is losing. As president, what would you do to help America be liked more?’ After three months of discussing all aspects of the election, the students were up to the challenge and had answers for Young’s questions that parroted the candidates’ responses. After questions about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, tax cuts, the economy, energy independence and foreign policy, the one-hour debate concluded with a reason why an individual candidate should be elected. The Obama portrayer said, ‘We need change. If we elect McCain we get four more years of Bush and we’re not going to make any progress.’ The Republican candidate responded, ‘I am not Bush. I am a maverick. I go beyond my party lines’with age is wisdom.’ The class was the brainchild of Young, who grew up in Pacific Palisades and was in law school at Tulane University in 2005 when Hurricane Katrina struck. He transferred to law school at the University of San Francisco for a year, but realized he wanted to be a teacher. ‘I’m applying for a master’s program that has a teaching credential,’ Young said. He works as a middle-school aid and coaches seventh- and eighth-grade football at the school, but when he had an opportunity to teach an elective last spring (and continuing this fall) he thought this class was timely. He helped students study famous elections and learn about the Electoral College, while having them focus on the issues.   ’I wanted them to leave their preconceived notions at the door and to be open and have respect for other’s opinions,’ Young said. ‘I wanted them to be able to decipher rhetoric from actual plans and then to ask questions about those plans.’ On Tuesday, Young took a straw poll. His students voted 11 to 7 in favor of Obama. Sixth-grade students Gigi Grasska and Katharine Bohlmann reported that when the entire school voted that day, the results were quite different: McCain won 212 to 132. Calvary Christian School sixth grader Cameron Sheldon was one of the nine students who portrayed Barack Obama in a mock debate with John McCain. Rich Schmitt/Staff Photographer

Arts Center Moves, Adds Dance Classes

Stephanie Scaggs works with five-year-old ballet student Wesley MacMiller at her Village Arts Center.
Stephanie Scaggs works with five-year-old ballet student Wesley MacMiller at her Village Arts Center.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Moving to a new upstairs location, Village Arts Center has expanded, and owner Stephanie Scaggs is both excited about the larger space and nervous about the increased financial responsibilities. ‘My overhead is so grand, I have to be inventive to pay the rent,’ she said, but after three years at her old space in the Washington Mutual building on Sunset, she felt ready to gamble. ‘I didn’t have a single window to open, and I wanted cross-breezes and ventilation,’ says Scaggs, who now has a skylight, windows, an additional bathroom and newly painted walls. Her space above Wachovia Bank (15230 Sunset) also features two separate rooms: a toddler area with a spongy-mat floor and a dance studio with a state-of-the-art spring floor. The added studio space enables Scaggs to add ballet and hip-hop classes for teenagers and adults in the evening, drawing on her previous experience: she graduated from SUNY Purchase with a bachelor of fine arts in dance and danced professionally in New York (while also working along the way as a massage therapist and wardrobe stylist for Tina Turner and Janet Jackson). Village Arts Center is known for imaginative classes that allow toddlers and young children full experimentation with the tactile senses. One recent day, two- and three-year-olds played ‘car wash,’ taking plastic play cars that had been ‘dirtied’ with paint and potting soil, and washing them with soapy water that splashed everywhere. Scaggs, 32, was entirely unconcerned about the mess and explained another favorite activity. ‘We put tarps on the floor or on the walls and let the children paint. Many parents like to bring their kids here because they don’t want a mess like this in the house.’ Three years ago, after moving to the San Fernando Valley from New York, Scaggs was working in Hawaii when she was contacted by Palisades clients, who told her that Village Arts was for sale and urged her to buy it. She bought the business sight unseen from Arthur Mortell (who was relocating his family to Washington), using an inheritance from her grandparents. Scaggs admits that she didn’t have a business background when she started and ‘I didn’t have a back-up plan.’ It turns out she didn’t need one, because with her guidance Village Arts continued to thrive. She expanded from having morning programs designed for younger children to include afternoon programs like ballet and music and movement. She currently has about 150 students, ages 2 to 8, and has added Palisades School of Dance to her business name. The ballet classes are age-specific. For example, princess ballet is for two- and three-year-olds who dress up in costume. ‘It’s socialized play,’ Scaggs admits, ‘but we’re also teaching them how to be in a ballet class.’ She teaches the children positions and posture through story telling using Andre, the ballet dog, and friend Froggy, who does yoga but gets everything all mixed up. For example, students try to make ballet legs, versus froggy legs, or Scaggs tells them that Andre has a tickle, which makes the dog tap her toe. As the students pattern themselves after Andre and start tapping, they naturally point their toes without being told. Scaggs finds this method more effective and entertaining for children than just asking them to assume ballet positions. The male version of the princess dance class is called drum and tumble, which allows ‘little boys to be boys,’ Scaggs says. She has also started a dance-based gymnastics class, noting that ‘in the dance world, you need to be able to tumble.’ Students are taught cartwheels, handstands and back handsprings. While expanding her dance program, Scaggs remains committed to the early-childhood classes, the youngest being for three- to nine-month-old infants and their parents. For the slightly older child, Scaggs says she supports ‘attachment’ parenting, which means that she welcomes parents who want to sit and watch. ‘They’re close by and involved, but don’t have to participate,’ she says. ‘Coming here is peaceful for them; they can just sit and relax.’ ‘Children in my class are under no pressure to do anything,’ Scaggs adds. ‘I tell them when they’re ready, they can join us. My motto is to have classes that are engaging and explore creativity, but we’re careful not to overstimulate. Kids leave in a balanced state.’ Scaggs lives in Santa Monica with her boyfriend of five years, Paul Kirkland, also a dancer, who is currently on tour with Madonna. For a schedule of classes, visit www.VillageArtsCenter.com or call (310) 454-4245.

Palisadians Fight for YMCA Pool’s Future

The Palisades-Malibu YMCA swimming pool in Temescal Gateway Park has been closed since February, and awaits its fate: filled in with dirt, or repaired and reopened.
The Palisades-Malibu YMCA swimming pool in Temescal Gateway Park has been closed since February, and awaits its fate: filled in with dirt, or repaired and reopened.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

The former Palisades-Malibu YMCA pool in Temescal Canyon may soon be filled with dirt and converted into a public picnic area. Gary Timm, California Coastal Commission coastal program manager, told the Palisadian-Post that his staff is recommending the Commission grant the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy a coastal development permit waiver to pack the empty pool with 650 cubic yards of fill material. In October, the Conservancy submitted an application requesting the waiver, citing liability concerns. The Coastal Commission will make a decision at its next meeting on Friday, November 14, in Long Beach. If the Commission decides not to grant the waiver, there will be a public hearing at the Commission meeting in December or January. The pool had to be closed in February because of a recirculation leak, which the Y had hoped to repair. The Y, however, discovered that the 50-year-old pipes need to be replaced for an estimated cost of $400,000. Since then, the Y and Conservancy have struggled to reach an agreement on a new lease and the Y has vacated the premises. The Coastal Commission has received numerous letters from Pacific Palisades residents protesting the proposal to fill in the pool, but ‘that is a local issue,’ Timm said. His staff studied the application to determine whether it complies with the California Coastal Act and determined that it did. The Coastal Act outlines standards of development within the coastal zone and is focused on protecting resources.   ’We don’t outline specific uses within public parks if there is not a Coastal Act issue,’ Timm continued. On October 22, Y Executive Director Carol Pfannkuche encouraged Conservancy Executive Director Joe Edmiston to withdraw his application and to negotiate a lease agreement with the Y before filling in the pool. In June, the Y had asked the Conservancy for a 55-year lease agreement, but Pfannkuche has since said the Y would be willing to negotiate a shorter lease. ‘The pool and the future of the entire canyon and all of its facilities and future needs must be considered before a long-term lease is given of state park property for any private purpose, no matter how meritorious such lease may appear to local swimmers,’ Edmiston told the Post on Tuesday.   ’If the YMCA wants to keep the status quo, with the pool empty, skateboarders breaking-in, and the potential (however likely or unlikely) for geological liability, then it can step up to the plate and assume such liability ‘   ’The YMCA can’t try and force a shotgun long-term lease upon the State of California in order for the state to avoid liability for the empty pool,’ Edmiston continued. ‘The state has the right to avoid current liability by doing what its consultants have advised without being forced into a long-term lease situation with a sole-source private entity.’ The Conservancy’s consultants, Penfield & Smith Engineering, recommended filling in the pool, and the Conservancy wants to do so before rainy season begins, said Lisa Soghor, deputy executive officer of the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority. The pooling of rainwater could be attractive to rodents and the leaky pipes could destabilize the slope. Even if the pool is filled in, Edmiston said, that doesn’t mean the ‘YMCA can’t or won’t ultimately have a pool in Temescal Canyon.’ His staff will propose that the Conservancy board adopt a planning process for the canyon’s future at a December 8 meeting in Temescal. At the end of that planning process, the board may decide to have a pool in the canyon, and then the Y and other entities could bid on operating it, Edmiston said. Pfannkuche told the Post in an October 23 article that ‘By filling in the pool and then negotiating, the Conservancy removes the option to fix the existing facility.’ Friends of the Temescal Pool (a group of citizens advocating the re-opening of the pool) ‘are going to do everything we can to stop [Edmiston],’ said Ilene Cassidy, who has been swimming at the pool for 26 years. Cassidy and John Yeh, who serves on the Y’s facilities committee, recently formed the coalition, which has collected about 75 letters protesting the pool’s closure. The coalition has sent the letters to the Conservancy board, Coastal Commission and other political leaders who may have some influence. The coalition has collected more than 550 signatures at the farmers’ market on Swarthmore. The petition urges Edmiston to negotiate a new lease with the Y. ‘We really need community support,’ Cassidy said. ‘Edmiston has to feel the heat.’ The coalition is insisting that the Conservancy re-open the pool because Proposition A funding, which was used to purchase the park, stipulates the land be used for senior facilities in addition to at-risk youth services. Many senior citizens with medical conditions used the Y pool for therapy, said coalition member Jean Rosenfeld. Friends of Temescal Pool’s next meeting will be at 3:30 p.m. Friday, November 7, at the YMCA. The group’s Web site is www.friendstemescalpool.org.

Casting Votes in a Historic Election

Poll worker Tracie Bradley of Long Beach gives an “I Voted” sticker to Olivia Smith, 5, as sister Allegra, 9, and mom Madeline Smith look on at the Bel-Air Bay Club, one of the most beautiful polling stations in the country with its panoramic ocean view.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Pacific Palisades voters helped return U.S. Representative Henry Waxman to office for the 18th time on Tuesday, while reelecting State Assemblywoman Julia Brownley (D-Santa Monica), who received 67 percent of the vote. Former Assemblywoman Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) will succeed termed-out State Senator Sheila Kuehl in the 23rd District after collecting 68 percent of the vote. When the polls opened at 7 a.m., there were already long lines at the seven Palisades voting stations: the Summit Club in the Highlands, Bel-Air Bay Club, Calvary Christian Church, Rustic Canyon Recreation Center, Palisades Lutheran Church, Palisades Recreation Center and the American Legion Hall. Calvary’s first voter was Robert Schibel, who arrived at 6:08 a.m. ‘I have to be downtown by 8 a.m. and I wanted to be sure I would make it,’ he said. Second in line was 90-year-old Arnold Jensen, who arrived at 6:10. ‘I was watching television and I thought there would be a big line,’ he explained. By the time he received his ballot, 85 people were behind him. Not surprisingly a shortage of parking spaces was a problem at most locations, as was the fact that several precincts shared the same polling station, causing an uneven distribution of people waiting in lines. Poll workers at the Lutheran Church, for example, were asked why no one was in one line, while 45 were in the other. ‘Our theory is, we’re fast,’ joked worker Pat Nahigian. Perhaps one of the most beautiful places to vote in the nation is the historic Bel-Air Bay Club, with its panoramic view of Santa Monica Bay. As a bonus, voters were treated to coffee and cookies supplied by the Club. ‘The view is intoxicating,’ said poll worker Alfina Colber, who lives in West L.A. Les Frost, headmaster at St. Matthew’s School, was one of the first in line at Bel-Air, arriving at 6:45 a.m. ‘It went smoothly,’ he said, ‘and took about 20 minutes once they opened up.’ Gena Bell, who cast her vote at the Club, told the Palisadian-Post that she voted for Ronald Reagan in her first presidential election in 1984. ‘My views have changed since then,’ she said, though she declined revealing who she voted for on Tuesday. At Rustic Canyon, Leslie Steiner was in front of the building with her three golden retrievers. ‘I usually vote with the dogs, but I heard the lines were long,’ said Steiner, as she headed home with the dogs before voting. Inside, workers said they had 92 voters in the first hour. ‘The only election that was nearly this big was when Arnold Schwarzenegger was on the ballot,’ said Carolyn Perry. ‘This precinct usually has a high turnout, but this is unusual. The last election we worked, only 35 people voted during the entire eight hours we were here.’ Palisades historian and author Betty Lou Young, 89, was also working at Rustic. ‘I may be the oldest poll worker,’ she said. Helping with provisional ballots at the Lutheran Church was Palisade Jerry Brown, a Wildwood senior who said he had 11 ballots by 9:10 a.m. ‘I have no idea why they aren’t in the book,’ he said of residents who had to vote provisionally. If a person has moved and his or her new address hasn’t been recorded or there is a snafu at the registrar’s office, provisional voting allows that person to vote. The votes are placed in a pink envelope and sent to the registrar, who then checks if the voter is registered. Ballot-box worker Shelley Cohen said the large turnout was proof that ‘They want to make sure the right man wins.’ He refused to say who the ‘right’ man was, because workers are required to remain impartial. Casting her ballot was Eugenia Rohberg, who voted in her first presidential election in 1952 and could easily recall his famous slogan: ‘I Like Ike.’ ‘In retrospect, I don’t know if he was the best choice,’ she said, ‘but I was a college student and I remember it being exciting.’ The Palisades Rec Center had no lines at 9:25. ‘It was insane from 6 a.m. because people were already lining up,’ said Inspector Deirdera Sloyan. ‘At 8:30 it eased off.’ She worked the George Bush/John Kerry election four years ago: ‘It was crazy. We were at Mort’s and we were more disorganized and in a smaller space.’ When the American Legion opened at 7 a.m., voters were lined up outside the building, along Swarthmore almost to CVS Pharmacy, but by 10 a.m. there were 15 people in line. With 100 percent of the precincts reporting, the following state measures gathered the following votes according to the California Secretary of State: 1A. Passenger Train Bond (yes’52.3 percent, no’47.7 percent) 2. Farm Animal Initiative (yes’63.3 percent, no’36.7 percent) 3. Children’s Hospital Bond (yes’54.8 percent, no’45.2 percent) 4. Parental Notification of Pregnancy of Minors (yes’47.7 percent, no 52.3 percent) 5. Nonviolent Drug Offenses (yes’40.1 percent, no 59.9 percent) 6. Police/Law Enforcement (yes’30.6 percent, no 69.4 percent) 7. Renewable Energy (yes’35.1 percent, no 64.9 percent) 8. Same Sex Initiative (yes’52.2 percent, no 47.8 percent) 9. Criminal Justice System (yes’53.3 percent, no 46.7 percent) 10. Alternative Fuel (yes’40.2 percent, no 59.8’percent) 11. Redistricting (yes’50.6 percent, no 49.4’percent) 12. Veterans Bond Act (yes’63.5 percent, no 36.5’percent)