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Hiking Local Trails Requires Planning

As part of their normal duties, firefighters at Stations 23 and 69 on Sunset often facilitate airlifts for stranded hikers in the Santa Monica Mountains. Captain Dan Thompson (Station 23) and his fellow firefighters want to remind people that even if a hike up to the waterfall in Temescal Canyon seems simple and doesn’t require planning, common sense and a few preventive measures should still be used: 1. Know where you plan to hike and the difficulty of that trek. If you are unfamiliar with the trail, research the route and approximate the time that it will take. Several years ago, several hikers got lost on the trail that links Will Rogers State Park and Temescal Gateway Park, which necessitated a search party. The cost of the rescue efforts could have been avoided if these hikers had used a map or checked with a park ranger. 2. Be aware of the local wildlife, especially rattlesnakes, and learn how to avoid them. 3. Weather changes during this time of year can be dramatic, so dress accordingly. Before dusk, the sun on the mountains can be hot, which means that overdressing can lead to overheating. After dusk, the temperature drop can cause discomfort to people who are unprepared and become stranded. 4. Always bring water and, if you are hiking with children, make sure they are drinking it, too. During hot afternoons, dehydration is a dangerous possibility. 5. NEVER HIKE ALONE. There is a greater chance of becoming lost or sustaining injury hiking alone, so go with a buddy or a group. Additionally, always tell a friend or family member where you are going and when you plan to return. 6. Carry a small flashlight or a light stick. ‘It helps us find people at night,’ Thompson said. 7.’Firefighters have seen many people hiking through the local mountains carrying only their cell phones. ‘They’re relying on the phone to get them out of trouble,’ Thompson said, ‘but there’s no reception in many areas of the mountains.””””’ Following a few simple tips can help keep a hike fun and prevent it from turning into an unplanned airlift.

Palisadian Artist Cheryl Kline Receives Excellence Award

Palisadian Cheryl Kline won the Portrait Society of America’s Certificate of Excellence Award for her portrait, “Heather.”

Pacific Palisades artist Cheryl Kline won a Certificate of Excellence Award at the Portrait Society of America’s 10th Annual International Portrait Competition. Her portrait, ‘Heather,’ was one of 32 finalists out of more than 1,200 entries from around the world. Winners were honored last month in Philadelphia at a black-tie dinner, which attracted more than 800 guests. The Portrait Society of America is a nonprofit organization that aims to foster and enhance an understanding of the practice, techniques, and applications of traditional fine-art portraiture and figurative works. The organization’s international presence facilitates an impressive roster of members, including presidential portrait artists Raymond Kinstler, Daniel Greene, Burton Silverman, Nelson Shanks and David Lefell. Kline’s signature ‘California Caravaggio’ style is reflected in ‘Heather,’ and developed as a result of many years of classical training. She studied with noted artist Jan Saether for two years and at the Florence Academy of Art for five summers. She is also known in the local community for her dramatic sky paintings, and has exhibited at galleries in Malibu and Beverly Hills. In 2007, the painter opened The Kline Academy of Fine Art, a hybrid space incorporating the classroom, studio and gallery. The Kline Academy fosters classical painting instruction in a setting where the attitude is noncompetitive, and each student receives individualized assistance. Students usually begin with ‘Foundations In Classical Painting,’ an ongoing class with initiation exercises to learn how to handle paint. Other classes for intermediate and advanced painters include Portrait Painting, Figure Painting with Hal Yaskulka, and Explorations in Contemporary Art with guest artists, Plein Air Painting with Gary Blackwell, and, this summer, a children’s art program. Kline’s Academy is located at 3264 Motor Ave. Contact: (310) 927-2436; visit www.klineacademy.com.

The Minimal Man: Aram Saroyan

Author Aram Saroyan reads from “Complete Minimal Poems” on Thursday, July 17 at Village Books.

By Stephen Motika Palisadian-Post Contributor A book that could be read cover to cover in a couple of minutes? That’s what Edwin Newman did on the six o’clock NBC local news in New York City with Aram Saroyan’s first poetry collection some 40 years ago. Self-titled, the book, published by Random House, featured 30 short poems typed on letter-sized pages of the author’s own design. The longest poem was 14 words, the shortest just one. It was one of these single-word poems, ‘lighght,’ that caused a huge uproar when selected by George Plimpton for the second volume of ‘The American Literary Anthology,’ resulting in a cash award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Saroyan received a check for $750, which enraged members of Congress and fueled Jesse Helms and others to attack the NEA for paying hundreds of dollars to an artist for spelling a word incorrectly. Now, with the publication of ‘Complete Minimal Poems’ (Ugly Duckling), Saroyan’s poems are receiving acclaim in the pages of the New York Times Book Review, and he received an award from the Poetry Society of America. Saroyan reads from this and other works at Village Books on Swarthmore on Thursday, July 17 at 7:30 p.m. Saroyan, 64, was raised bicoastally, spending a couple of years on Maroney Lane in the early 1950s when the ranch homes in upper Las Pulgas Canyon were first being built. In an interview with the Palisadian-Post, he remembers it as an ‘idyllic neighborhood for a young kid.’ When his mother moved him and his sister to live in New York, he likens the initial shock to ‘Hey, what the hell happened?’ As he grew older, Saroyan began to appreciate the city, and after a couple of attempts at college, found himself trying to find his way as a poet in Manhattan. Now he looks back with affection and wonder on the minimal poems he wrote in his early 20s. ‘It was a good beginning. I got into being in the world in a minimalist way,’ he laughs, noting that the poems represent ‘a young man in his room and at the door to his room. It’s curiously domestic work.’ He describes the poems as a result of a ‘cross-fertilization going on’ in the New York poetry community of the mid-1960s. Saroyan’s own interest in Black Mountain poets, such as Robert Creeley, was coming into contact with the ‘playfulness’ of the New York School poets, epitomized by his friend Ted Berrigan. Additionally, Saroyan became aware of and inspired by visual artists such as Andy Warhol and Donald Judd. He believes that the ’60s gave us permission to be more playful, that there was a reaction to the high-modernist poets, William Carlos Williams and e. e. cummings.’ His experimentation, with a typewriter and marijuana, resulted in a collection of minimalist poems, as much to be looked at as read, that now seem a forerunner of everything that followed in the 1970s, including experimental poetry and the visual artists’ play with language. The poems, such as ‘a leaf/left/by the/cat/I guess’ and ‘the radiator, the radio louder,’ exhibit Saroyan’s warm humor and generosity of spirit even while practicing great economy. Random House published his second book of poems in 1968, but by then, Saroyan had left it all behind. He says: ‘It was 1968, one of the darkest moments in history. There were the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy. Five hundred American lives were being lost every week in Vietnam. Playful minimal poems weren’t striking the right note.’ Saroyan met his future wife, Gailyn, moved to Massachusetts, and tried to ‘get on with my life.’ He didn’t return to writing until 1972, when he and his family settled in Bolinas, in Marin County, where they lived for the next dozen years. He embarked on an ambitious writing career, producing novels and nonfiction, including a biography of his late father, the playwright and fiction writer William Saroyan, and a book about his mother, Carol Matthau, and her friendships with Oona Chaplin and Gloria Vanderbilt. After three years in Connecticut, Saroyan moved to Southern California in 1987and now lives with his wife in Village Green, at the foot of Baldwin Hills. He has recently been pursuing playwriting, which he finds to be very satisfying for the immediate audience reaction, as well as teaching at USC. Even though it has been decades since he wrote the minimal poems, Saroyan appreciates the renewed interest in the work. He took an active role on the design of ‘Complete Minimal Poems,’ insisting that the poems be typeset using today’s technology, the computer. This time the poems appear as though they were written using a word processing program, rather than on a typewriter, and the book includes headers, footers, and page numbers. Saroyan wished for the poems to appear in a new way, having already experienced publishing the work with the typewriter typeface and wanted to ensure that a contemporary reader felt comfortable picking the book up. One suspects that he wants to share his history with the next generation. He says, ‘I see those early years as a kind of cognitive self-notation in the moment in whatever environment I was in. I was waking up in the world.’

Bonnie Black, 76; 1952 Miss Arkansas, Model and Realtor

Bonnie Black
Bonnie Black

Bonnie Black of Pacific Palisades, a former beauty pageant winner and judge, passed away peacefully on July 3 at St. John’s Hospital in Santa Monica. She was 76.’ Bonnie was born in South Chicago, Indiana, to Peter and Mildred Nicksic, and they moved to Hot Springs, Arkansas, in 1946. She graduated from the University of Arkansas and was crowned Miss Arkansas in 1952.’ Following that, she was a model for the Patricia Stevens Agency in Chicago. Bonnie married Robert Branch in 1956.’ Bonnie was a successful realtor in Pacific Palisades and Beverly Hills for 30 years and also spent many years judging beauty pageants in several states. She was active in WAIF and other community charitable organizations, and was a devoted member of St. Matthew’s Parish. Bonnie married Charles Black in 1982.’ She is survived by her husband, Charles Black; her beloved mother, Mildred Nicksic of Hot Springs, Arkansas; daughter Laura Branch Rehnert of Weston, Massachusetts; son Peter Branch of Westchester, California; and five grandchildren and’three stepsons. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to St. Luke’s Episcopal School-Debt Reduction Campaign, P.O. Box 1117, Hot Springs, AR 71901.’Interment will be in Hot Springs. A celebration of Bonnie’s life will be held, at a date to be announced, at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church on Bienveneda.

Elnora Thompson; Multi-Talented

Elnora Thompson
Elnora Thompson

Elnora Thompson, a resident of Pacific Palisades since 1997, passed away on May 20 at the age of 93. Born in Royersford, Pennsylvania in 1914, Thompson was the grandchild of immigrants who traveled by sea from Germany in an open boat, and the child of Pennsylvania Dutch/Mennonite parents. She and her five siblings were reared in a hearty, no-nonsense, God-fearing home. During the Depression, Elnora learned the art of resourcefulness, creating for herself elegant dresses fashioned from fine silk slips her aunt gave her. She carried her gifts of creating into her married life in New Hampshire, where she and her beloved husband, Walter, moved from New York City, leaving forever the city life for the country. In Mont Vernon, they reared their four children on raw milk, real churned butter, and eggs collected from the chicken house. She expanded her arts to include braided and hooked rugs, knitting, croqueting, sewing, ceramics, beading, as well as antiquing and wallpaper hanging. One of her most enduring qualities was her ability to amuse everyone with her outrageous remarks, facial expressions, and imitations which in her later years left people astounded at the elasticity of her mind. Thompson read widely and was particularly interested in animals, nature and the news. She variously taught Sunday School and vacation Bible school, directed a junior choir, sang in adult choir and led women’s meetings. At the age of 82, after the death of her husband, Walter, she moved to Pacific Palisades to live with her daughter, Kathleen. She said it took all of five minutes to get used to her new surroundings. When she could no longer attend church, she delighted in watching Dr. Billy Graham classics every Saturday evening, commenting on how his sermons of 30 years ago were just as applicable today. Thompson many times declared that her death should be the occasion of a big, happy family party without much fuss, and only a small picture of herself. Her family will honor this request, but reserve the right to be sad at the passing of an interesting, funny, talented, Christian lady who left a big picture in everybody’s minds. She is survived by her four children, Denice Glover of Francestown, New Hampshire, Carole Rodriguez of Santa Clarita, Kathleen Howarth of Pacific Palisades, and Walter Thompson (wife Babbette) of Manteca; and her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Michaels Wins Orange County Title

Brandon Michaels follows through on a forehand winner. Rich Schmitt/Staff Photographer
Brandon Michaels follows through on a forehand winner. Rich Schmitt/Staff Photographer
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Palisades Tennis Center star Brandon Michaels won the boys’ 12-and-under championship in Orange County last week, knocking of Titus Strom of Texas in a final that proved to be a junior version of Sunday’s epic Wimbledon final between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. ‘ The second-seeded Strom hadn’t dropped more than two games in any of his matches leading up to the finals. Michaels, however, got off to a fast start, winning the first set and building a 5-3 lead in the second. Strom fought back to take the set in a tiebreaker, forcing a decisive third set. Once again, the players matched each other shot for shot. The third set also went to a tiebreaker, but this time Michaels turned it on when he needed to and pulled out a 10-8 victory. Michaels, who attends Corpus Christi School, beat Ian Ross, Saumaun Heiat and Tyler Lu on his way to final.’The Orange County tournament had over 200 entries from California, Texas and Nevada. “Brandon is an incredible work horse and a humble, wonderful child,” says PTC Head Pro Jon Neeter. “He is on track to have his pick of colleges’that is for sure!” Michaels trains Monday through Thursday at the PTC Crunch Camp and is ranked in the top 10 in Southern California in his age group.

Blues Play Home Finale Thursday

The Pali Blues play their final home game of the regular season Thursday against the Real Colorado Cougars. Kick-off is at 7 at Stadium by the Sea. The Blues clinched first place in the W-League’s Western Conference with a 1-0 victory over the Seattle Sounders on Saturday. The local women’s club soccer team stayed undefeated (10-0-0) on a goal by Collette McCallum in the 72nd minute. The Blues beat the Sounders by the same score June 24 in Seattle. “Seattle is an incredibly organized team, very well coached,” Blues Coach Charlie Naimo said. “Their game plan was very effective and although we held more possession and had more chances they certainly could have stolen that one.” The Blues wrap up the regular season next Friday night at the Los Angeles Legends-a team the Blues beat 4-0 in their first meeting May 17. Tickets for Thursday night’s game against Real Colorado (3-1-2) are $10 for adults ($8 with student I.D.) and $5 for kids under 12.

PTC to Host Pro Shotgun Event

The Palisades Tennis Center has released its summer tournament schedule, which includes junior tournaments for novice, satellite and Open level players as well as a one-day drop-hit event featuring some of the sport?s biggest stars. The PTC is pulling out all stops on Sunday, August 3, when it hosts the first annual Shotgun 21 World Championships. The drop-hit tournament will include men, women, juniors and college players. So far, ATP Tour players Vince Spadea, Justin Gimblestob, Murphy Jensen, Zack Fleishman, Phillip King, Steven Amritraj and Nick Monroe have indicated that they will participate. Event promoter Steve Bellamy said Andy Roddick and brothers Mike and Bob Bryan will also be invited. All comers can show up at noon and try to qualify for the 32-player main draw, which runs from 3 to 6 p.m. Then, August 4-8, the PTC will host a USTA-sanctioned novice and satellite tournament for boys and girls ages 8-18. Novice events are for beginners while satellite events are for kids who have moderate skill and can rally consistently. One week later, August 11-15, the PTC will host a USTA- sanctioned Open tournament for juniors. Finally, on September 27-28, the PTC will host another USTA- sanctioned novice tournament for boys and girls ages 8 to 18. Visit www.palitenniscenter.com for more details.

FOURTH OF JULY PARADE HIGHLIGHTS

Actress Marion Ross (“Happy Days”) greets crowds along Via de la Paz as the 2008 parade grand marshal, joined by her husband, Broadway actor Paul Michael.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Enthusiastic young members of the Palisades-Malibu YMCA sang the 1978 disco anthem
Enthusiastic young members of the Palisades-Malibu YMCA sang the 1978 disco anthem
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Since 1977, residents and visitors have been celebrating the Fourth of July in Pacific Palisades by following the same popular script from early morning to late evening. Promptly at 8:15 a.m. last Friday, Corpus Christi eighth-grade teacher Ryan Bushore sang the national anthem, and Fire Station 69 paramedics Dane Coyle and Ed Strange followed by starting the 31st annual Will Rogers 5/10K race, which was dedicated to local firefighters and paramedics. Almost 3,000 runners of all ages ran and walked from the Palisades Recreation Center though portions of the Huntington Palisades and Will Rogers State Historic Park, then back to the park’s finish line. Others pushed strollers or walked dogs, and thousands came out to cheer on the runners and visit with neighbors. Some residents provided hoses so that competitors could cool off as they ran by. At 12:30 p.m., the second major event of the day was heralded by the VIP luncheon in the Methodist Church courtyard, just yards from the parade’s starting point at Bowdoin and Via de la Paz. Those who give more than $150 to the Palisades Americanism Parade Association (PAPA) to help defray costs were invited to mingle with parade dignitaries and politicians. (See story, page 7.) While nearly 300 guests enjoyed ‘a taste of the Palisades’ from numerous local restaurants and eateries, parade floats and bands were lining up on Via de la Paz. The first float in line, constructed by John Hart at the Green Floats Company, represented the American Legion and celebrated the organization’s 80th year in Pacific Palisades. Hart said that because he has a warehouse of supplies and props, it took him only a day to assemble the float (at a cost of about $3,000). The cost was justified when the Legion won the parade’s Float Sweepstakes Award for the second year in a row. Farther down the street was the Theatre Palisades entry. ‘We had fun making it,’ said Andy Frew. ‘We started about 9 a.m. this morning by dismantling the truck and turning it into a work of art.’ He pointed to the nearby Palisades-Malibu YMCA float and said, ‘They’re still decorating that one,’ as he watched several people taping up bunting. The PPBA’s annual World Series float carried the three winning teams, the Pinto and Mustang Cubs plus the Bronco Dodgers. ‘It probably took two hours to do the top and we did the wheel cover in one hour,’ said Mustang player Brady Engel. Later came the Palisades Charter High float built by the school’s student marketing club to publicize the proposed Maggie Gilbert Aquatic Center. The students began working on the float on Wednesday, creating signs and putting papier m’ch’ on three dolphins, stuffing a fourth with tissue paper, and painting the canvas on the side of the truck. Although the skydivers had already landed at 2 p.m. to start the parade, Dr. Mike Martini, a former Citizen who marches with the Optimist Club Drill Team, was strolling on Swarthmore. ‘We’re near the end of the parade,’ he said as a way of explaining his lack of urgency to get in the lineup. Scott Smith was the first skydiver to land, followed by Tom Falzone, Annie Helliwell and Rich Piccirilli, who carried the American flag. ‘The clouds were better this year,’ said Helliwell, who is a world-famous BASE jumper. ‘Last year we couldn’t see the landing area until the airplane was right on top of it.’ (BASE stands for ‘buildings, antennas, spans or earth’ and those dives are significantly more dangerous than skydiving from aircraft.) The PaliHi band finished the parade on a high. ‘They kept seeing their friends along the way and waving,’ said director Arwen Hernandez. ‘It’s a good beginning and next year the band will be bigger.’ Not all of the Patriotic Pooches were able to trot the distance, and Kelly Costa, 11, carried nine-month-old Buddy. ‘He got tired, so I picked him up,’ she said. ‘Then I put him down, he walked, then he got tired and then I picked him up again.’ Wylie Hays, 12, brothers Nico, 11 and Finn, 8, pushed their grandmother’s dog in a baby stroller. ‘Abby is about six or seven,’ Wylie said. ‘We put her in the stroller, because she can’t walk the whole way, and besides it was more festive.’ Near the end of the parade route, Dash Aarniokoski, 6, and brother Hunter, 9, were selling lemonade, candy, brownies and cupcakes. ‘We’re raising money for my Boy Scout Troop 400,’ said Hunter. By the time the parade had ended, they had raised a couple of hundred dollars. One of the parade’s most tearful sights was in front of Jackie Leebody’s house on Sunset. A chair was decorated with flags, flowers and photo of her late husband, Bob. ‘He sat here and watched the parade every year,’ Jackie said of her husband of 44 years, who died last September. ‘He loved this country, he loved America. Whenever the American flag went by, he’d stand up. ‘This is the first year he’s missed,’ she said. ‘I know he’s here watching the parade. I can feel it.’ In the evening, the PaliHi football field was filled with people swaying and dancing to the music of The House Band, a rock band made up of Palisades dads, with a special guest appearance by drummer and parade president Ron Weber. At 9 p.m. the fireworks exploded from a new location, the high school quad, which is about 30 ft. higher in elevation than the former firing site. Although the fireworks permit was almost denied because LAFD felt the firing site was too close to the school buildings, the night went off without a hitch, capping a perfect ending to another Palisades Fourth.

Giglio, Keller Win Parade’s First Patriotic Essay Contest

Ava Giglio (left) and Claire Keller were the winners of the parade committee's inaugural Fourth of July essay contest for first- through fifth-graders.
Ava Giglio (left) and Claire Keller were the winners of the parade committee’s inaugural Fourth of July essay contest for first- through fifth-graders.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Ava Giglio and Claire Keller won the inaugural Fourth of July essay contest, initiated by members of the parade organizing committee. Children in grades one through five submitted essays of not more than 150 words on the parade theme: ‘America! Land That We Love.’ Both students received a $100 savings bond from US Bank, and were invited to the pre-parade luncheon, where they read their winning essays. They also rode atop a fire truck in the parade. Their essays, along with other contest entries, are being bound and will be delivered to U.S. troops overseas. Keller, 8, wrote about America’s freedoms. ‘In some countries you are not allowed to speak freely about the government or its leaders,’ she said. ‘I think it is important to be able to say what you think and not be punished for thinking differently than other people.” Keller, who completed second grade at Carlthorp School, was born in Philadelphia but has lived in the Palisades for the last seven years with her parents and two younger brothers. In addition to playing piano, swimming and reading, she likes to play with her friends. ‘I was excited to write about the freedom that I enjoy in this country,’ said Keller, a member of the local Mormon Church. Giglio, 11, also wrote about personal freedom. ‘In other parts of the world (like the Middle East) girls have to wear what they are told to wear, or they are punished. But in America we are allowed to wear practically anything (as long as it’s not flip flops at school).’ Growing up in the Palisades, she has attended Marquez Elementary and will enroll at Paul Revere Middle School in September. She has been in more than 14 musicals and plays at theaters in the area. In addition to being a talented tap dancer, Giglio also plays basketball at the park and belongs to the Palisades Presbyterian Church, where she is a member of the choir and church band. ‘My favorite thing about living in the Palisades is the Fourth of July parade and fireworks,’ Giglio said.