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Monsignor Liam Kidney Celebrates 40th Anniversary

Monsignor Liam Kidney is celebrating his 40th anniversary in the priesthood.
Monsignor Liam Kidney is celebrating his 40th anniversary in the priesthood.

Monsignor Liam Kidney, pastor of Corpus Christi parish, celebrates his 40th anniversary as a priest this year. To mark this milestone, a special Mass will take place at Corpus Christi Church on Sunday, April 27 at 11 a.m. On May 2, the parishioners will honor Monsignor Kidney with an anniversary dinner and celebration at the Luxe Hotel in Brentwood. Now in the second of two six-year terms, Kidney has overseen an increasingly busy and vibrant parish, says Jane Richardson, who has both a personal friendship and pastoral relationship with Kidney. A 21-year parishioner, Richardson, now on staff at the church, says the pastor wants to see things happen. ‘He’s a dreamer, who doesn’t just dream, but formulates ways to make things happen.’ Richardson points to Kidney’s keen interest in ecumenism especially in these racially and ethnically charged times. ‘He has advanced these themes in his adult education classes and has invited academics such as Dr. Amir Hussain, an associate professor at Loyola Marymount University, to discuss Islam.’ Former Corpus Christi Principal Sister Patricia McGahan marvels at Kidney’s unbounded optimism and a positive attitude, but still wonders how he can always be so upbeat. ‘I guess we share a certain thinking of Irish people, but he’s far more ‘out there’ than I,’ she says, sharing her boss’s Irish sense of humor. The eldest of five boys, Kidney was born in Cork City, Ireland, in 1944 to Kitty and Denis Kidney. He attended Mungret Jesuit School in Limerick and earned a degree in philosophy. Following a visit by Los Angeles Auxiliary Bishop Timothy Manning in 1962, Kidney was invited to Los Angeles to study for the priesthood. In 1964, he attended St. John’s Seminary in Camarillo and was ordained a Catholic priest on April 27, 1968. In his quest for knowledge and continuing education, Kidney completed workshops in youth ministry, Bible studies and pastoral care. In 1978, he obtained a master’s degree in administration from St. Mary’s College, and continues his study of church history. He is an authority on first-century Christianity. Kidney has led a varied and fulfilling life in ministry for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, including posts in youth ministry, bereavement, high school teaching and leadership, associate pastorships and pastor positions. He also ministered in radio and television media from 1979 to 1989 for the Archdiocese. One of the highlights of his media ministry was serving as the executive producer of the Papal Youth Conference when Pope John Paul II came to Los Angeles in 1987. His many appointments have included serving the people of God in Long Beach, Hacienda Heights, Brentwood, La Puente, Santa Fe Springs, Venice and Camarillo. He served as principal at Bishop Montgomery and St. Bernard High Schools. Monsignor Kidney was the founding pastor of Padre Serra parish in Camarillo, where he served for 12 years. His ministry there included the planning, financing, and building the new parish church and center. Following the retirement of Monsignor John Mihan in July 1999, Kidney was appointed pastor of Corpus Christi, and in November of that year he was honored with the title of Reverend Monsignor. At Corpus Christi, Kidney has overseen a flurry of activity, increasing the number of church ministries, strengthening the church’s support for the interfaith Palisades Ministerial Council, and defining his strength as leader and organizer with understanding and compassion. “When I was principal and awaiting the new pastor, I had never met Liam; I had only seen him on TV,” Sister Patricia recalls. “From the beginning, he was respectful of my opinion and dedicated to education–and to the importance of the whole spiritual dimension as a key for life. In my career, I have worked with five pastors, and he tops them all.” Both Richardson and Sister Patricia are impressed not only with Kidney’s intellect and spirituality, but also with his intuition and humanity. What was once an aging parish population has seen an inundation of young families, Richardson says. At the same time, there are parishioners who have been in the church from its founding in 1952, and a very active seniors group has sprouted under Kidney’s tenure. ‘Liam has an extraordinary ability to be in touch in the society’where we are and where people are coming from,’ Sister Patricia says. ‘He wants to know what the people want and makes his decisions based on those priorities.’ Kidney’s Irish gift for communication remains his strength. His sermons are often laced with everyday metaphors, often from his youth in Ireland, which help to illuminate the gospel. ‘He can speak with the smallest child and to the poor and the rich,’ Patricia adds. Perhaps the most telling proof of his profound belief in the goodness of mankind is found in his discovery of the positive themes in movies, even the most violent of the lot. One recent Sunday, he was talking about the outlaw shoot-’em-up ‘3:10 to Yuma’ and commenting on contemporary political and moral issues, Sister Patricia recalls. ‘After Mass, he was stopped outside the church by a young couple who started talking about the movie. They then turned to introduce Liam to the director and producer.’

Everychild Foundation Awards $1 Million Toward Youth Center

Everychild Foundation founder Jackie Caster.
Everychild Foundation founder Jackie Caster.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

At a time when the State of California proceeds with more crippling cuts to health services and education, the Pacific Palisades-founded charitable organization Everychild Foundation continues to contribute to improving the future of Los Angeles by donating $1 million to Mar Vista Family Center that will be earmarked to create a new state-of-the-art Youth Center. Founded by Jacqueline Caster nine years ago, Everychild is comprised of 225 Los Angeles women who each donate $5,000 in annual dues in lieu of putting on fundraising events. Since in 2000, Everychild has donated just under $6 million in grants. Prior grants have funded a mobile dental clinic, construction of 15 new libraries in public elementary schools, the renovation and expansion of a child abuse counseling center, the establishment of a youth learning center at a home for troubled teens, and the purchase of a transitional home for emancipating foster youth. Each year, Everychild invites roughly 30 to 50 nonprofit organizations to apply for its single annual grant. Mar Vista Family Center is a grass roots agency serving a low-income, densely populated and gang-ridden neighborhood adjacent to the only federal housing project in West Los Angeles. A two-story, 11,500 square foot Youth Center will be created to allow Mar Vista to clear its 300-child waiting list by increasing its program capacity by 50 percent, from 650 to about 1,000 kids. On March 24, Everychild broke ground on a project for its 2007 recipient, Heart of Los Angeles Youth (HOLA), a multi-cultural center that offers fine arts, athletic and education programs for more than 1,300 underserved youth annually throughout the city. The funds will transform the Lafayette Park Community Center, located in a dangerous park in the blighted Rampart District, into a safe space for neighborhood children. Soon, more than 2,300 at-risk youth will have an enriching safe haven with learning spaces and a wireless technology center at the L.A. Recreation and Park center, thanks to Everychild’s $1 million dollar grant. Everychild Foundation began when Jacqueline Caster recruited people to take part in her unique humanitarian project. She sought the assistance of many in the Palisades community, including Caster’s Highlands neighbors, founding members Cynthia Alexander and Debra Colbert. About 56 women participated in making the first grant of $230,000, awarded to QueensCare, which went to the outfitting of a new mobile dental clinic serving students in low income elementary schools within L.A.U.S.D. Everychild also raised the money for the new playground, which was recently unveiled at L.A. Orthopaedic Hospital. ‘Soon, that number of children will almost double with the opening the new playground where more than 128,000 children are anticipated to visit it annually,’ Caster said. In addition to Everychild’s efforts, satellite organizations with similar charitable ambitions have mushroomed. ‘We have already directly inspired the creation of seven other foundations based on our model, the newest being the Women’s Fund of Northern Santa Barbara County,’ Caster said. ‘They just launched themselves this month and we will be very excited to watch their progress.’ Created in 2004 after its founders read an article about Everychild, Women’s Fund has since donated more than $1.4 million in the Santa Barbara area, which includes some very large matching grants. In addition to Women’s Fund, Everychild spawned the creation of the local Women Helping Youth, and the Today and Tomorrow’s Children’s Fund at Mattel Children’s Hospital, which, in three years, has amassed some $400,000 for medical research projects. Heather DuBoef (sister of Everychild member Tawny Saunders) works for the three year-old Nevada Women’s Philanthropy Foundation, which, at the end of this year will have donated more than $1 million. Everychild member Robin Broidy founded the AVIVA Platinum Associates, serving troubled girls, while Everychild member Stefania Magidson founded the Blue Heron Foundation, which assists Romanian orphans.

Council Hears Proposal for Full Public Funding in City Elections

A debate has begun in Los Angeles about whether the city should provide full public funding for city election campaigns, and last Thursday members of the Pacific Palisades Community Council expressed their views. The council did not formally vote on whether to support public financing for political campaigns. However, the majority of council members and about 10 residents who attended the meeting indicated they supported the effort. The Rules and Government Committee of the Los Angeles City Council has asked community and neighborhood councils to share their opinion. ‘This is a rare opportunity where the city is asking for feedback on such an important policy,’ said Trent Lange, board president of the California Clean Money Campaign, an organization dedicated to eliminating money as a barrier in election campaigns and reducing the influence of interest groups. Lange presented information about full public funding for election campaigns at last Thursday’s meeting and asked Council members and attendees to fill out a questionnaire about how the program should work. California Clean Money and the Los Angeles Department of Neighborhood Empowerment will compile citizens’ comments into a report that will be released in June or July. Based on recommendations in the report, a ballot measure will be written for a 2009 or 2010 election, Lange said. California Clean Money has met with five community groups already, and Lange said the majority of residents have expressed support. L.A. City Council candidates who raised the most money for their campaign won 78 percent of the elections from 1993 to 2005, Lange said. Seventy-two percent of the money raised came from outside the district the candidate represented. About half of the money came from corporations, developers and unions. Candidates would have the option of participating in the full public financing program, which would have specific restrictions on private fundraising and using personal funds, Lange explained. Arizona, Maine and Connecticut and the cities of Portland, Oregon, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, provide full public financing for elections. The estimated cost of this program is $6.1 million to $9 million more than what the city spends now for its partially funded public financing program. That program costs about $2 million annually and is paid for through the city’s general fund. Candidates can voluntarily participate in the partially funded public program, which provides limited matching funds to those who raise a certain amount of money and agree to limit personal funds. The concern is that unlike full public funding systems, candidates can still raise money from special interests to receive matching funds, Lange said. ‘With the budget crisis we have in this state,’ said Council member Jack Allen, ‘I don’t see how we can afford to finance a clean money campaign. I don’t think the taxpayers will be receptive. Why should a taxpayer have to finance a candidate they don’t support?’ Council member Mike Stryer, however, disagreed. ‘I think we will save a tremendous amount,’ he said. ‘We will reduce some of the frivolous spending by our councilmen.’ The city gives huge breaks to corporations, resulting in millions of dollars, added Palisades resident Maureen Cruise from her seat in the audience. ‘The system now is absolutely shameful.’ The public funding program would give community members who wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford a campaign the chance to run for office, said Council member Janet Turner. ‘I think a lot of really good people might run and might contribute.’ To learn more, visit the California Clean Money Campaign’s Web site at www.caclean.org or call (310) 481-0814.

PaliHi Grad Tours in ‘High School Musical’

As soon as Helene Yorke graduated from the University of Michigan last June, she packed her belongings in three suitcases and headed to New York. She sublet an apartment in Queens and began taking the subway into the city every day to audition for musicals. ‘It was me growing up,’ said the 22-year-old Palisades Charter High School graduate who had majored in theater in college. At some of the auditions, Yorke thought she would be perfect for the part, but she didn’t hear back. After two months, she landed a small role in her first off-Broadway show, ‘Walmartopia,’ that ran from September 3 to December 31, and then came her big break: She is now touring with Disney’s ‘High School Musical.’ ‘Sometimes I am sitting in the dressing room, and I think I am getting paid to do this; I feel so lucky,’ Yorke told the Palisadian-Post from Minneapolis. Yorke was the youngest person on the 11-member cast for ‘Walmartopia,’ a musical about a single mom who speaks up to her corporate employer and finds herself and young daughter jettisoned to a future where Wal-Mart dominates the entire world. She played various roles in the political satire, from a Wal-Mart executive donning a patriotic tie and a man’s wig to a Hooters’ girl in a skimpy outfit. The show, directed by Daniel Goldstein, was performed at the Minetta Lane Theatre in Manhattan. ‘Walmartopia was a learning experience,’ Yorke said, noting she picked up valuable tips from cast member John Jellison, who has 17 Broadway credits. While performing in ‘Walmartopia,’ Yorke auditioned twice for one of the main characters, Sharpay Evans, in Disney’s ‘High School Musical’ and was hired to replace actress Chandra Lee Schwartz. When she opened her first show of the national tour in Baltimore on February 19, reviewers described Yorke as ‘scene stealing’ and ‘sizzling in stilettos.’ She is now performing in venues across the nation until August, including the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa Mesa, June 17-22. The musical is based on the Disney Channel movie with all the same characters and songs. ‘I just love playing the misunderstood mean person,’ Yorke said. ‘She’s funny, you can laugh at her.’ She plays a drama-club president who schemes to keep her talented peers, characters Troy Bolton and Gabriella Amontez, out of the high school musical in order to keep her role in the limelight. ‘It’s ironic that I’m playing the queen bee of the high school because that was not who I was at all,’ Yorke said. ‘I was an awkward, goofy person. I was a drama geek.’ At PaliHi, Yorke performed in four musicals: ’42nd Street,’ ‘Oklahoma!,’ ‘Crazy for You’ and ‘Les Miserables.’ Her high school drama teacher Victoria Francis, who retired in 2004, said Yorke grew tremendously as a performer between her freshman and senior years. ‘She was vocally outstanding in ‘Les Miserables’ and ‘Crazy for You,” Francis said. ‘Even as a senior, I could see her going on to Broadway.’ In high school, Yorke took singing lessons, danced with the Westside Ballet in Santa Monica and attended acting classes in London and on the East Coast. She thanks her parents, Rhos and Andrea Dyke, for finding her opportunities to pursue her love for theater. She has two brothers: Lance, 21, who attends Shimer College in Illinois and Sutherland, 19, who is at a military preparatory academy in New Jersey. Yorke began ballet dancing at three years old and first discovered her love for singing and acting in her drama and choir classes at Paul Revere Middle School. ‘I knew she was going to be a success,’ said Janet Smith, her middle-school choir teacher. ‘She had a strong work ethic, a beautiful singing voice, a delightful personality ‘ I knew there was a lot of potential in her.’ Yorke credits Smith, who retired in 2003, for her accomplishments. ‘She was so encouraging about what I was doing,’ Yorke said. ‘She made me believe it was possible.’ Yorke auditioned for seven universities with musical programs and chose the University of Michigan, where she performed in the musicals ‘Jesus Christ Superstar,’ ‘Seussical the Musical,’ ‘The Boys from Syracuse,’ ‘Tommy’ and ‘The Pajama Game.’ ‘There is something so freeing, spiritual about being on stage and communicating with an audience,’ Yorke said. ‘There is a conversation, an energy that you receive from an audience.’ She now enjoys sharing that energy with the pre-teens who attend ‘High School Musical.’ Many ask for her autograph after the show. ‘I love being able to bring theater to youth,’ she said. She performs the musical for young people eight times a week and lives in hotels or with friends as she travels across the country. Yorke hopes to perform in a Broadway musical one day. ‘There is so much more I want to accomplish. This is just the tip of the iceberg.’

Palisades Resident Becomes New Pali Elementary Principal

Palisadian Joan Ingle is Palisades Charter Elementary School
Palisadian Joan Ingle is Palisades Charter Elementary School
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

After finishing her first week as Palisades Charter Elementary principal, Palisadian Joan Ingle’s optimistic manner and 32 years of education experience is helping the school make a seamless transition after the unexpected departure of principal Tami Weiser in February. On Monday morning, the school office was surprisingly cheerful with roses from Ingle’s mother’s garden joining a platter of freshly baked muffins. ‘I love to bake,’ Ingle said, and promised that one of her specialties, cupcakes, would be coming soon. Ingle’s charm and warmth are matched by her educational qualifications. In 1976, after graduating from San Fernando State College in art and art therapy, she went to work at a private school in Honolulu. ‘It was an interesting three years,’ she said. ‘I would’ve stayed on, but I had allergies to everything.’ After moving back to Southern California, Ingle helped start a private school, the Pasadena Waldorf School, where she became interested in students’ ‘invisible disabilities,’ such as difficulty in learning due to processing and reading issues. ‘We have to look at differentiating for all students; that’s good teaching,’ Ingle said in an interview, pointing out that the numbers of students identified as special needs has grown. ‘We’re better at identifying those students.’ Ingle also worries that young children are subjected to academics too early. ‘Are we really honoring the phase of childhood of letting them play?’ she asked. ‘Children are overscheduled and don’t have enough free time.’ After three years at the Waldorf School, Ingle established a home-based nursery school. At that time, kindergarten classes in LAUSD often had more than 30 students, so Ingle offered an alternative for parents who felt that their children were unprepared to thrive in such a large classroom. While running the school, she also took graduate classes and, by 1991, had completed her master’s in special education with an emphasis in educational therapy. Later that year, she moved to Chicago with her husband, Jeffrey, who owns the Ingle Group, a custom publishing firm. They lived there for six years and their youngest two children, Ana and Dan, attended SPAN schools, which are public schools that encompass kindergarten through high school. While in Chicago, Ingle and her husband went back to school; he finished his master’s and Ingle studied psychology (specifically psycho-educational diagnosis). In 1997, they moved back to the Palisades and her children enrolled in Revere. Ingle found a job in Sulfur Springs Unified (Santa Clarita), as an educational therapist, working with special needs kids. In 2000, she accepted her first position with LAUSD in the same field. Her office was at Local District D (now District 3) and she went from school to school on the Westside. She even worked for a year at Palisades High, when her son, Dan, was a senior. While working at the local district, Ingle completed a master’s degree in administration, which enabled her to work three years as assistant principal at Westwood Charter School. Even though she liked the school, in order to one day become a principal, she needed a second job as an assistant principal, which she filled at Roscomare School. ‘It wasn’t a charter, but it’s a high-performing school, with an AP of 942,’ Ingle said. ‘Palisades Elementary is 920. The schools are similar because they both have dedicated parents and good teachers.’ Ingle is worried about LAUSD’s impending budget cuts and hopes that it doesn’t mean that class sizes will be increased. She also worries that many young good teachers will be let go elsewhere in the district. She’s already well familiar with Palisades Elementary, calling it ‘a wonderful choice for parents who want to have their children attend a home school and for it to be such a good one.’ Ingle son Andrew is attending Cal State Channel Hills, Ana graduated from Empire State in New York and is an administrator at a small liberal arts college, and Dan has received a full seven-year scholarship to an MD/Ph.D. program at the University of Iowa.

Green Day in the Palisades

Palisadian-Post Columnist Sunday was a green day in Pacific Palisades (and a hot one)! During the Chamber of Commerce’s Health and Environmental Fair, the Village Green area was the headquarters for eco activities by local groups including Palisades Cares and local Girl Scout Troop 985. The new blue recycling receptacle was dedicated, and 17 local students received awards as Young Environmentalists. The scouts passed out flyers they had designed about recycling and also performed two environmental skits. The scouts, all middle-school students, had been inspired by the earlier work of high school Girl Scouts in Troop 128. Community members dedicated the recycling bin, which is the first to be placed in a public area anywhere in Los Angeles. The Palisades Cares committee (including Toni Balfour, Lester Wood and Sid Greenwald) received a matching grant of $9,600 through the city’s Office of Community Beautification for the purchase and installation of 15 such recycling bins, which will be placed throughout the Palisades commercial district. The community helped provide the necessary matching funds to make this project possible: service organizations, including Rotary, Optimists, Lions and the Masonic Lodge; Michael Edlen, Denise Melas, Charlene Ahern, Josie Tong, Betty Resnick and Kevin Niles; plus volunteer hours from several scout troops and schools. The Village Green Committee, Palisades PRIDE, Councilman Rosendahl’s office, and many residents also provided support. The proposed locations for recycling bins are listed at www.palisadescares.org. Bin sponsors will be recognized with plaques on the bins. Some bin sponsorships are available. Please contact Marie Steckmest at (310) 459-1614 or info@palisadescares.org regarding sponsorships. All recycling bins, which are marked ‘RECYCLE,’ will be placed adjacent to trash bins. Anything you recycle at home in the blue bin can be put in the ones on our city streets. The contents of the bins will be picked up for free by Chrysalis Recycling. Seventeen students received Certificates of Appreciation from Councilman Bill Rosendahl in recognition of their environmental activities. Nine members from Troop 128–Rachel Birenbaum, Gina Doland, Karli Feder, Aurelia Friedman, Sabrina Giglio, Shannon Kelly, Juliette Sadhvani, Chelsea Shannon and Ariel Wexler–were recognized for their organization of the plastic bag-free weekend that involved flyers, YouTube videos, and designing and handing out reusable bags. Joshua Corwin was recognized for founding the ‘Go Green Club’ at Willows Community School and writing eco columns for the school’s on-line newsletter. Kevin Rosen was recognized for collecting take-home handouts at Marquez and showing how much paper is wasted. Seven members of Troop 985–Megan Wheeler, Alison Vining, Kimi Skaaning, Sarah Emerson, Loren Feder, Melissa Schem and Sarah Popelka–were recognized for designing flyers about recycling that they distributed in Santa Monica and the Palisades. At the ceremony, Councilman Rosendahl applauded the students and stressed that young people hold the key to protecting the environment. He emphasized that when it comes to the environment, kids are teaching their parents what’s important and how to make a difference. Rosendahl also announced that the blue bin on the Village Green was the first such bin in a public area in the entire city of Los Angeles. He said that Venice will soon have recycling bins at the beach and that Brentwood is considering installing recycling bins as well, based on what the Palisades has accomplished.

Marquez Wins ‘Distinguished School’ Honors

Marquez Principal Phillip Hollis received a call from State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell last week to personally congratulate him because Marquez Charter Elementary had won a coveted California Distinguished School Award. “I am so proud to have this honor awarded to Marquez,’ Hollis told the Palisadian-Post. ‘Two years ago when I accepted the position of principal this was a goal that I knew we could achieve. I am excited that I was able to help Marquez receive the distinction it so deserves.” In a public announcement about the winners, O’Connell noted that 343 Elementary schools had received the reward, including 23 from LAUSD. ‘Sixty-four of these schools come from small, rural communities, 11 are charter schools, and nearly half or 156 schools have significant populations of students living in poverty and are supported by federal Title I funding,” he said. Statewide, 839 schools entered the competition. Marquez joins Palisades Charter Elementary, Paul Revere Charter Middle School and Palisades Charter High in receiving the California Distinguished School designation. Elementary and secondary schools are recognized during alternate years. In order to be selected, schools must first meet the eligibility requirements, including an Academic Performance Index (API) greater than 800 (Marquez had an API of 880 last year) and demonstrating adequate yearly progress. Hollis filed for a nomination and started the process of preparing the 40-page application. He credits the PTA and Friends of Marquez for holding brainstorming sessions to come up with ideas and arguments they felt were important to include in the application. PTA President Katy Anastasi helped summarize all ideas onto an organizational chart and a group of four teachers–Julia Yoshida, Dana Fein, Nancy Seid and Vida Brucker–helped Hollis write an exhaustive rubric that covered rigorous standards; curriculum, instruction, and academic support; assessment and accountability; leadership and collaboration; professional development; students with special needs; student support; family and community partnerships; and school environment and culture. After reading Marquez’s application, two judges recommended that Marquez receive a site visit to verify the accuracy of the information provided. A team of four validation review personnel visited Marquez on March 13, just before spring break. This team interviewed students, parents, teachers and a leadership team that included Hollis and Local District 3 Superintendent Michelle King. In addition, the team went into every classroom and also observed the newly developed Caring Adults Teaching Children How (CATCH) program. After the visit, the lead member of the review team, Annette Star, told Hollis, ‘You understated your application.’ On April 7, the school learned it received the award. Hollis and four teachers will attend the awards ceremony in Anaheim on May 16. A recognition ceremony unveiling the official Distinguished School seal above the Marquez auditorium will be held on May 18.

Charlton Heston Funeral at St. Matthew’s

About 250 invited guests, including family members, politicians and film industry A-listers, attended the funeral service for actor Charlton Heston on Saturday at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Pacific Palisades. ‘I certainly knew him as a great gentleman of great warmth and hospitality,’ said Rev. Michael Scott Seiler, who officiated at the services. Heston, 84, died April 5, after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease. He and his wife, Lydia, had attended Sunday services at St. Matthew’s since the early 1980s. ‘The relationship between Mr. Heston and his wife made the greatest impression on me,’ Seiler told the Palisadian-Post on Monday. ‘Just a few days before he passed away, Lydia told me that they had just celebrated their 64th wedding anniversary. They had one of those extraordinary rare marriages. Even after all the years they were married, you could sense there was a magic between them.’ Appearing frail and delicate, Nancy Reagan entered the church on the arm of actor Tom Selleck. Following the nearly two-hour ceremony, Reagan left the premises with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Entertainment-industry friends of Heston present at the funeral included actress Olivia DeHavilland, actor Keith Carradine, directors Oliver Stone and Rob Reiner, and singer Pat Boone. Several eulogies were delivered, including one by Shakespearean actor Julian Glover and a pair by Heston’s children. His daughter, Holly Heston Rochell, recalled her father’s love for Shakespeare and Tennyson, and Fraser Clarke Heston reminisced about his father’s fondness for tennis. One of the last stalwarts of Old Hollywood, Heston was as devoutly religious as he was patriotic. “Charlton sat every Sunday morning right there,” said Seiler at the service, pointing to a front pew. The reverend later told the Post that members of the congregation respected Heston’s celebrity and didn’t impose upon him. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Heston felt comfortable here,’ Seiler said. ‘There was a sense that they were a part of our community in a very wonderful and ordinary way.’ Recalling that Heston was the star of such biblical epics as ‘Ten Commandments’ and ‘Ben-Hur,’ Seiler added: ‘There was the one time when I had to read from the text of Moses and the burning bush and there he was near the front row,’ Seiler said, chuckling. ‘The irony was not lost on either of us.’

Mona Malley Greenberg, 57; Dedicated Volunteer

Mona Malley Greenberg
Mona Malley Greenberg

Mona Malley Greenberg’s celebration of life ended peacefully on April 7 in Los Gatos, California, at the home of her loving companion Kevin Walters, following a valiant two-year battle with cancer. Mona Lee Malley was born on March 15, 1951 in Fayetteville, North Carolina. She lived most of her adult life in Pacific Palisades, where she raised a family with her former husband, Stanley Greenberg. Mona was active in her children’s education and participated in numerous volunteer activities, including a stint as president of the Board of Trustees at Windward School, which her son Evan attended. She also helped manage her daughter’s club volleyball program. In recent years she resided in Los Gatos, where she was an invaluable and beloved volunteer for the Santa Clara University women’s volleyball program. Mona is survived by her son, Evan, who just finished his first year of Santa Clara Law School; her daughter, Rachel, who works for Google and lives in San Francisco; her sister, Lynda Zeringue of Cheyenne, Wyoming; her brothers Chuck Malley of Bend, Oregon, and Mike Malley of Houston, Texas; 10 nieces and nephews, and hundreds of dear and valued friends. A Mass was celebrated on April 10 at the Santa Clara Mission, located on the grounds of Santa Clara University. Donations in Mona’s name may be sent to the Santa Clara Women’s Volleyball Program, 500 El Camino Real, Santa Clara, CA 95050.

Lynda Peitzke, 63; Lifelong Palisades Resident

Lynda Hopper Peitzke
Lynda Hopper Peitzke

Native Palisadian Lynda Hopper Peitzke, a beloved employee at St. Matthew’s School, died on January 2 after a year-long battle with nonsmoking lung cancer. She was 63. The daughter of Raymond and Elizabeth Hopper, Peitzke was born on September 10, 1944 and lived in the home on Charm Acres Place her parents bought in the early 1940s. For three years, from 1958 to 1961, she lived in London for her father’s work with the FAA, but returned to the states for her final year at University High School. Peitzke attended Santa Monica College, where she met her husband Bob, whom she married in 1967. She received her A.A. degree in 1969. The young couple lived first in an apartment on Sunset and Muskingum before buying their own home on Charm Acres Place, across the street from Lynda’s parents. In 1980, after her younger daughter Megan was in preschool, Peitzke started a long association with St. Matthew’s, where she began as an assistant teacher in the preschool. Later she transitioned to preschool secretary and then to assistant controller in the school’s business office. A longtime parishioner, she loved the school and her work there. One of Lynda’s favorite memories was the annual St. Matthew’s Towne Fair, when she and her husband volunteered with a group of other young parents to set up the booths, work in the booths and break them down at the end of the day. ‘This was always a long, exhausting day,’ Bob recalls. ‘But it was always filled with fun and a sense of fulfillment in helping raise funds for enhancements of the school’s facilities and programs.’ Peitzke also enjoyed getaway weekends with Bob, and loved reading, cooking and gardening, a passion she shared especially with her daughter Megan. She also became a USC football fan during Megan and her husband Corey’s undergraduate period. Lynda and Bob attended all home games with their best friends, John and Barbara Ingram. Peitzke is survived by her mother Elizabeth of Pacific Palisades; Bob, her husband of 40 years; daughters Jennifer Virmani (husband Moe) of Columbia, Maryland, and Megan Peitzke (husband Corey Beasom) of Los Angeles, and infant twin granddaughters Marella and Lauren Virmani. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May 3, at St. Matthew’s Church, 1031 Bienveneda. Contributions may be made in Peitzke’s honor to the St. Matthew’s School scholarship fund. Contact Les Frost, headmaster at St. Matthew’s, for details: (310) 454-1359.