Home Blog Page 2188

James A. McIntyre, Jr., 52; Passionate Sportsman, Biker

Longtime Pacific Palisades resident and active sportsman James Albert McIntyre, Jr. passed away unexpectedly on February 28. He was 52. Born at St. John’s Hospital in Santa Monica on May 11, 1955, Jim lived his entire life in the Palisades. He attended Marquez Elementary, John Thomas Dye, Paul Revere Junior High, and Palisades High School, graduating in 1973. After graduation, Jim began his long and distinguished career with the General Telephone Company, now Verizon. He had a meteoric rise through the ranks to become an engineer. Jim exhibited an unbelievable exuberance for life. He was passionate about every one of his undertakings. He was an avid sportsman and shared his love of sports and knowledge by participating all his life in community sports leagues. Later, Jim would become an ‘awesome coach’ to many of the teams on which he played as a child. Jim was an avid cyclist, riding from his home atop Bienveneda Place to his work in Santa Monica. He treasured his weekend rides on his beautiful Gold Wing motorcycle with his beloved wife Lynn holding on to him for dear life. Jim and Lynn loved to travel, especially to their home in Cabo San Lucas, where they visited frequently. Most important, Jim loved his home and spending countless hours there surrounded by his family and friends. Jim is survived by his loving and devoted wife, Lynn Edlund-McIntyre, also a native of Pacific Palisades; his mother, Gail Randazzo of the Palisades; his father, James A. McIntyre Sr., of Brentwood and Carpinteria; and his children, Christopher, Sarah (Israwi), James III, Molly and Lily. He was a beloved brother to Melinda (Kolpin) of Pacific Palisades, William of Malibu, Tracy (Fredricks) of Carlsbad, and Kristina (Gough) of Carlsbad. He was a beloved grandfather to his first-born grandson Leighton. Jim is also survived by his many brother-in-laws and sister-in-laws, and the many nieces and nephews who worshiped their ‘Uncle Jimmy.’ He will be remembered by everyone as an individual with great passion for life and having lived it to the fullest. He will be missed by the people who knew him throughout the years. There will be a private family service. The family invites all of those whose lives were touched by his love and friendship to join a celebration of his life at 3:15 p.m. on Saturday, March 15 in the cul-de-sac at Bienveneda Place.

Arnold Anchordoguy, 86; Resident Since 1952, Loved the Outdoors, Photography

Arnold Raymond Anchordoguy, a longtime resident of Pacific Palisades, died at his Highlands home on February 20 after a two-year decline in health. He was 86. Born on January 15, 1922 in Red Bluff, California, Arnold grew up in a happy, warm, sheep-raising family. He left home to attend UC Berkeley, and graduated from there with a degree in engineering in 1943. He then served as a radar and radio intelligence officer in the U.S. Army Signal Corp, and through that position attended Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1949, Arnold married the love of his life, Dorothy Emmenegger, who had also attended Berkeley, though they did not meet at school. They moved to the Palisades in 1952, where together they raised six children. Arnold spent his career working in the aerospace industry, mainly in the early years at Hughes Aircraft and later at TRW. He worked on several projects of national significance including the Thor and Atlas missile programs. Dorothy died in 1995, and Arnold began to rebuild his life without her. An electrical engineer by profession and scientist by nature, he was a kind and gentle man who loved his family, flowers, fall leaves, sunshine and the mountains. He especially enjoyed spending time in Mineral near Mount Lassen with his children, grandchildren and large extended family. After retirement, Arnold took up photography and that hobby greatly enriched his later years. With camera in tow, he chased the wild flowers in the spring and the colorful leaves in the autumn. “Arnold’s memory will live on always in our hearts,” said his family, “and we can be with his spirit whenever we look at his beautiful photographs.” Arnold was predeceased by his son, Arnold Jr., in 1993. He is survived by five children: Ed Anchordoguy of Sebastopol; Rosalie Anchordoguy and Henry Shebitz of Willits; Marie Anchordoguy and Leslie Helm of Seattle; Tom Anchordoquy (wife Hannah) of Lakewood, Colorado; and Jean Anchordoguy of Santa Monica. In addition, he had five grandchildren: Jacob, Mariko, Eric, Carlene and Raymond. A memorial mass will be held at Corpus Christi Church in Pacific Palisades on Saturday, March 29, at 11 a.m., with a reception following. In lieu of flowers, please consider making a donation to your favorite charity.

CLASSIFIED ADS FOR THE WEEK OF MARCH 6, 2008

HOMES FOR SALE 1

HAWAII EXISTS IN LA! NEW INVENTORY. 11 HOMES AVAIL. Terrific Opportunity! PCH/Sunset. Up to 1,600 Sq. Ft. $179,000-1.1 million. Some completely remodeled, many upgrades. Ocean views, wood floors, new kitchens, sun deck, rec center w/ pool/spa/gym. Steps from the sand. Condo alternative. Agent, Michelle Bolotin, (310) 230-2438

LIKE NEW, BUILT IN 2006. 2 bdrm, 2 ba mfg. home across from the beach in sought-after Tahitian Terrace Mobile Home Park. Rent control $738/mo. All ages, Pets ok. Asking $359,000. Agent, Franklin, (310) 592-6696

HOMES WANTED 1b

WE BUY HOUSES, APTS & LAND! ALL CASH, AS-IS, FAST CLOSE. David, (310) 308-7887

FURNISHED HOMES 2

FULLY FURNISHED, CHARMING & quiet 1 bdrm, 1 ba cottage. FP, walking distance to village & bluffs. Short term available. No pets. $2,500/mo.+security. (310) 459-0765

UNFURNISHED HOMES 2a

1 bdrm, 1 ba MOBILE HOME GEM overlooking beach. Nice yard, fresh paint, new fridge & oven. $2,000/mo. (310) 454-2515

3 BDRM, 2 BA in ABC streets. Large lot, nice yard. 2-car garage. Gardener. Quiet. $5,000/mo. Call (714) 526-9046

2 BDRM, 1 BA GUEST HOUSE, semi-furn with family room, no kitchen, hdwd flrs, central heat & air. Cable, internet & util incl. Rec. center. $1,950/mo. Mary, (310) 454-9337

OCEAN VIEW 4 bdrm, 21⁄2 ba. F/P, hdwd flrs, patio, quiet neighborhood. Sunset Mesa, Palisades/Malibu (off PCH). $5,850/mo. (310) 795-8867

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 2c

BRENTWOOD “MINI Penthouse.” 1 bdrm+den/office. Near Brentwood Country club. Charming ambiance. High beam ceilings, brick woodburning fireplace, hardwood floors. French doors to private balcony, shutters throughout. Stainless stove & micro. Privacy & quiet. Nestled among trees & gardens. Immaculate condition, A/C garage, no pets $2,250/mo. (310) 826-7960

WALK TO BEACH! 1 bdrm, hdwd, gated entry, pool and parking. Quiet location near Sunset/PCH. $1,695/mo. (310) 230-7804

PACIFIC PALISADES APARTMENT. Pets ok. Available within walking distance to village with Gelsons, CVS, library, many great restaurants and stores. Beautiful and quiet building with swimming pool. 1 bdrm. Apt. #5. $1,495/mo. Call Jay, (310) 200-0063

PALISADES 1 BDRM, sunny, remodeled, new paint, carpet, gas stove, refrigerator, covered parking, 1 year lease, Non-smoker, no pets, laundry, storage. $1,290/mo. (310) 477-6767

ROOMS FOR RENT 3

PRIVATE ROOM & BATH, Ocean view, access to gym, pool, cable, carport, N/S, N/D, References required. $900/mo. Please call (310) 454-5195

WANTED TO RENT 3b

LOCAL EMPLOYED male seeks guesthouse. Quiet, local references. Non-smoker, no pets. Call Palisades Post, (310) 454-1321

GUEST HOUSE WANTED to rent. Contact Alan at (310) 454-0531

GUEST ROOM WANTED to rent. Contact Alex, (310) 454-6463

OFFICE/STORE RENTALS 3c

PALISADES OFFICE SUITES available in the heart of the VILLAGE including 1.) Single office suites with windows in each office and some with balconies starting from $975 per month and 2.) Office suites ranging in size from 950 s.f. to 4,000 s.f., all with large windows with great natural light. Amazing views of the Santa Monica mountains, private balconies and restrooms. Building amenities include high speed T1 internet access, elevator and secured, underground parking. Call Brett at (310) 591-8789 or email brett@hp-cap.com

OFFICE FOR RENT, Available March 1st. Heart of the Palisades. (310) 454-3521

PALISADES OFFICE SUITE available on Via de La Paz. Approx. 1,103 SF, it includes 2 offices with large windows overlooking a courtyard, front office area for 2 receptionists, conference room, kitchen w/ appliances & 1 bathrm. 2 reserved parking spaces. Perfect for any type of business. $3,305/mo. Call (310) 386-2466 or email info@dslrf.org.

SPACE AVAILABLE, long term lease possible. 925 sq. ft., currently Village Arts Center located in the heart of village. Call Stephanie, (310) 454-4245

VACATION RENTALS 3e

FULLY SELF CONTAINED 24’ Fleetwood Terry trailer across the street from Will Rogers State Beach. Pacific Palisades. $1,400/mo. (310) 454-2515

FULLY SELF CONTAINED 28’ Kit Road Ranger trailer across the street from Will Rogers State Beach in Pacific Palisades. $1,600/mo. (310) 454-2515

MORTGAGES, TRUST DEEDS 4

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL LOANS. Avoid the “Credit Crunch” with our flexible portfolio jumbo loans. No income verification & cash out options. 5, 7, 10, & 30 year fixed (interest only), & 40 year adjustables. $500,000-$20 million+ (high LTVs). Most property types. 100% financing available up to $5 million+. Please visit realloans.com (email: info@realloans.com) for more information. Call Rick at First Financial Bancorp, (310) 571-3600 x203, for a confidential analysis. CA DRE #01144023

BOOKKEEPING/ACCOUNTING 7b

BUSINESS OR PERSONAL bookkeeping & organizing available in the Palisades including financial reports, everything to prepare for your visit to your tax person. Highly experienced, fast, discreet, estate sale management w/ detailed reporting also avail. Excellent local references. Call Shirley, (310) 570-6085

BOOKKEEPING & FINANCE PERSON can help you with handling mail, paying bills, balancing checking and other accounts, preparing for taxes and related planning. (310) 218-6653, (310) 459-2066

COMPUTER SERVICES 7c

COMPUTER SOLUTIONS & SUPPORT. HOME & BUSINESS–Windows Vista/XP–20 Yrs exp. frankelconsulting.com • (310) 454-3886

MARIE’S MAC & PC OUTCALL. I CAN HELP YOU IN YOUR HOME OR OFFICE WITH: • Consultation on best hard/software for your needs • Setting up & configuring your system & applications • Teaching you how to use your Mac or PC • Upgrades: Mac OS & Windows • Internet: DSL, Wireless, E-mail, Remote Access • Key Applications: MS Office, Filemaker, Quicken • Contact Managers, Networking, File Sharing, Data backup • Palm, Visor, Digital Camera, Scanner, CD Burning • FRIENDLY & PROFESSIONAL — BEST RATES (310) 262-5652

YOUR OWN TECH GURU * SET-UP, TUTORING, REPAIR, INTERNET. Problem-Free Computing, Guaranteed. Satisfying Clients Since 1992. If I Can’t Help, NO CHARGE! COMPUTER WORKS! Alan Perla (310) 455-2000

THE DETECHTIVES™. PROFESSIONAL ON-SITE MAC SPECIALISTS. PATIENT, FRIENDLY AND AFFORDABLE. WE COVER ALL THINGS MAC • Consulting • Installation • Training and Repair for Beginners to Advanced Users • Data recovery • Networks • Wireless Internet & more. (310) 838-2254. William Moorefield • www.thedetechtives.com

GARAGE, ESTATE SALES 7f

PLANNING A GARAGE SALE? an estate sale? a moving sale? a yard sale? Call it what you like. But call us to do it for you. We do the work. Start to finish. • BARBARA DAWSON • Garage Sale Specialist • (310) 454-0359 • bmdawson@verizon.net • www.bmdawson.com • Furniture • Antiques • Collectibles • Junque • Reliable professionals • Local References

ORGANIZING SERVICES 7h

PERSONAL ASSISTANCE, ORGANIZATION & bookkeeping. Superior services provided w/ discretion & understanding. Pali resident, local references. Call Sarah, (310) 573-9263

HOME INVENTORY SERVICES 7j

HOME INVENTORY SERVICES for FIRE THEFT, Earthquake, wills/estates, rentals, divorce. Incl video, photos & detailed reports. Pali resident. (310) 230-1437 www.homesweethomevideo.com

NANNIES/BABYSITTERS 8a

VIP NANNY AGENCY. “Providing very important people with the very best nanny.” • Baby Nurses • Birthing Coaches • Housekeepers. (818) 907-1017, (310) 614-3646

EXPERIENCED NANNY & HOUSEKEEPER. Reliable, caring & flexible. Bilingual and I provide my own transportation. Great local references. Call Nancy at (818) 209-6024

CHILDREN’S CARETAKER, 15 years exper. Loves kids & animals. Very good refs. Pleasant, easygoing male. Trustworthy, reliable, flexible. Clean DMV. Safe transport. (310) 597-1617 or (310) 463-7125

DOMESTIC AGENCIES 9

NEVERLAND NANNIES & DOMESTICS. We assist local families in finding domestic professionals for their household needs. Caring nannies, doulas, nurses; attentive assistants, housekeepers, chefs & more. Please call at anytime. (818) 888-9894, (818) 653-6999. www.NeverlandNannies.com

HOUSEKEEPERS 9a

“PROFESSIONAL SERVICES.” We make your home our business. Star sparkling cleaning services. In the community over 15 years. The best in housekeeping for the best price. Good references. Call Bertha, (323) 754-6873 & cell (213) 393-1419

HOUSEKEEPERS AVAILABLE. GREAT REFERENCES. We work as a team to clean your house. Many years experience. Please call Ruben, (213) 481-2545 or Amanda, (323) 828-4770

HOUSECLEANER with many years of experience. Available Wednesday, Thursday & Friday. References. Own transport. Call Lidia, (213) 235-8512, Lidia4172@att.net

HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER Available Monday & Thursday. Own transportation. Local references. CDL. Call Marion, (323) 424-5671

HOUSEKEEPERS AVAILABLE Monday-Friday. Own transportation. CDL, insured, very good references. Call Emilia, (213) 718-0716, or Mercedes, cell (323) 365-7748 or (323) 299-2510

HOUSEKEEPING/BABYSITTER avail. Mon.-Sun. Own transportation. Excellent references. Call Maria, (310) 948-9637

HOUSEKEEPER OR BABYSITTER. Monday-Friday. Own transportation. Very experienced. CDL. Call Jannett, (310) 820-8985

PLEASANT, EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER available Mon., Thurs. & Fri. Live out. Excellent local references. Some English. Please call Reyna, (323) 635-6173

HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE Mon.-Thurs. Live out. Experienced. Good references. Available now. Call Yesenea, (323) 662-6751

HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE, 17 yrs experience. Trustworthy, reliable, local references. Has car. Call Teresa, (323) 754-8058

EXCELLENT HOUSEKEEPER Great with kids & cleaning. Prefer live-in. Perfect references. (310) 689-8015

HOUSEKEEPING, 20 years experience. Good references, available Mon.-Sat. Love pets and children. N/S. Lives local. Call anytime. (310) 572-7984, cell (310) 817-9515

SUNSET HOUSE & CARPET CLEANING • Window washing • House cleaning • Carpet cleaning. Over 33 yrs. experience. Call Barry at (818) 887-7150

ELDER CARE/COMPANIONS 10a

HOUSEKEEPING CHILD & ELDERLY care, experienced CPR, first Aid certified with medical background L/I or L/O, fluent English, references available. Call (888) 897-5888, (818) 486-6432

CAREGIVER/HELPER, Live-in or out. Available for elderly & sickly. $25-$60/hr. Depending on need. Edwin, (323) 470-4510

MALE COMPANION available full-time Mon.-Sun. Experienced, excellent w/ adults & children. Very gd references. Trustworthy, reliable, clean DMV. Own transport. Call (310) 597-1617 pr (310) 463-7125

GARDENING, LANDSCAPING 11

PALISADES GARDENING • Full Gardening Service • Sprinkler Install • Tree Trim • Sodding/Seeding • Sprays, non-toxic • FREE 10” Flats, Pansies, Snap, Impatiens. (310) 568-0989

WATERFALLS & POND CONSTRUCTION: Water gardening. Japanese Koi fish. Filtration pond service, repair & maintenance. Free estimates. (310) 435-3843, cell (310) 390-1276. www.TheKingKoi.com

“CALL CALVIN’S” for rose pruning organic feeding & spraying. Interior/exterior plant care serving the Westside over 50 years. Call for free est. (310) 460-8760

MOVING & HAULING 11b

BC HAULING & CLEAN-UP • Houses • Garages • Apts • & Yards. All junk removed. Home demolition, i.e., patios, yards & walls. Truck with lift-gate. (310) 714-1838

TREE SERVICE 11d

ECCONO TREE SERVICE. Prof. tree trimming & removal. LAFD brush clearance. Monthly gardening service. Lic. #780501. Bonded, insured. Worker’s comp. Free est. (310) 497-8131. www.ecconotreecare.com

WINDOW WASHING 13h

HAVING A PARTY? Selling some real estate, or just want to do some spring cleaning? Get those WINDOWS SHINING by calling No Streak Window Cleaning, where we offer fast friendly quality service you can count on! For a free estimate, call Marcus, (323) 632-7207. Lic. #122194-49, Bonded.

HOUSESITTING 14b

WRITER INTERESTED in housesitting or senior companion/assistant. Professional female with references. Contact (310) 828-4643 or (310) 346-4340

VERY RESPONSIBLE, PROFESSIONAL COUPLE will housesit your home for 6 mos. or more. References available. Call Tim, (310) 889-8257

PERSONAL SERVICES 14f

BAR/BAT MIZVAH SEMINAR. We can show you how to do it yourself on a budget. We’re the ladies who created Young Angels. We can teach you all the secrets of producing a great event for less than you thought. Call for info: (310) 573-9913, Brook & Debbie

PET SERVICES/PET SITTING 14g

HAPPY PET • Dog Walking • Park Outings • Socialization • Insured. Connie, (310) 230-3829

PERSONAL TOUCH DOG WALKING/sitting service. Cats included. Pali resident over 25 yrs. Very reliable. Refs. available. If you want special care for your pet, please call me. Jacqui, (310) 454-0104, cell (310) 691-9893

FITNESS INSTRUCTION 15a

HAVE FUN! GET FIT! NORDIC WALKING CLASSES. Certified Advanced Nordic walking instructor, Palisades resident teaches private/group classes in the Palisades. Weekends. (310) 266-4651

SCHOOLS, INSTRUCTION 15d

CREATIVE HEARTS MUSIC presents 2008 Teen Artist development workshops. • Songwriting • Recording • Performance • Pro-tools • Make-up • Photography. Please call Laurie McNulty, (310) 457-4661

LEARN MANDARIN. Outstanding teacher now forming kid’s & adult classes for conversational Chinese. • Masters Degree-Language Education from CSULA • Friendly, enthusiastic, patient • Excellent with both children & adults • Tuesday evenings-Palisades Village location. One Palisades family has already joined the class. Please call for referral & more details. Chris, (310) 459-3408

TUTORS 15e

INDIVIDUALIZED INSTRUCTION. Children & adults. 25+ years teaching/tutoring exper. MATH, GRAMMAR, ESSAY WRITING & STUDY SKILLS. Formerly Sp. Ed. Teacher. Call Gail, (310) 313-2530

SCIENCE & MATH TUTOR. All levels (elementary to college), Ph.D., MIT graduate, 30 years experience. Ed Kanegsberg, (310) 459-3614

MS. SCIENCE TUTOR. Ph.D., Experienced, Palisades resident. Tutor All Ages In Your Home. Marie, (310) 888-7145

READING SPECIALIST • Master of Education—Reading and Learning Disabilities • Special Education Teaching Certificate: K-12 • Regular Education Teaching Certificate: K-9 • Elementary Education Teaching experience: 12 yrs • Services provided for special & regular education students of all levels • Academic areas taught include reading (phonics and reading comprehension) writing and spelling • Private tutoring includes accessing the student’s needs, developing an individualized education program and implementation of that program. Palisades resident. Call Brandi, (310) 230-9890

PROFESSIONAL TUTOR. Stanford graduate (BA and MA, Class of 2000). Available for all subjects and test prep (SAT & ISEE). In-home tutoring at great rates. Call Jonathan, (310) 560-9134

CLEARLY MATH & MORE! Specializing in math & now offering chemistry & Spanish! Elementary thru college level. Test prep, algebra, trig, geom, calculus. Fun, caring, creative, individualized tutoring. Math anxiety. Call Jamie, (310) 459-4722

EXPERIENCED SPANISH TUTOR • All grades • Levels • Grammar • Conversational • SAT/AP • Children, adults • Great references. Noelle, (310) 980-6071

SPANISH TUTOR CERTIFIED TEACHER for all levels. Has finest education, qualifications, 20 yrs exper. Palisades resident, many good references, amazing system, affordable rates. Marietta, (310) 459-8180

TUTORING & HOMEWORK HELP. Teacher with credentials in Elementary, Special Ed. and Reading. Masters in Education & 23 years classroom teaching experience, 2 years as Reading Recovery specialist. Palisades resident. Affordable rates. Diana, (310) 717-5472 dianaleighw@yahoo.com

TRAVELING TO MEXICO, South or Central America or Spain? For tourism or work? I can help you with Spanish communication. I am a Palisades resident from South America. Great experience. I teach all ages, students, businesspeople. All professionals, groups ok. (310) 741-8422

CREDENTIALED MATH & STUDY SKILLS TEACHER (BA-UCSD, M.Ed-UCLA, Ph.D. candidate-USC) Tutor K-College. Most subjects. 15 years recent classroom experience in the Palisades. Libby, (310) 963-0093

CONCRETE, MASONRY, POOLS 16c

MASONRY, CONCRETE & POOL CONTRACTOR. 36 YEARS IN PACIFIC PALISADES. Custom masonry & concrete, stamped, driveways, pools, decks, patios, foundations, fireplace, drainage control, custom stone, block & brick, tile. Excellent local references. Lic. #309844. Bonded/insured/ workmen’s comp. Family owned & operated. MIKE HORUSICKY CONSTRUCTION, INC. (310) 454-4385 • www.horusicky.com

JOHN & TANGI CONSTRUCTION & Home repair. All concrete • Blockwall • Brick • Stucco • Patio cover • Stamp • Painting • Stone • Foundations • Free Est. (310) 592-9824, (818) 731-6982, (323) 401-1128

CONSTRUCTION 16d

THE TOWN & COUNTRY BUILDERS, General Contractors • State Lic. #441191 • Remodeling • Additions • Masonry • Concrete • Flagstone • Patio • Stone Wall • Tile • Fireplace • BBQ • Deck • Brick • Steps • Retaining Walls • Driveway • PLEASE CALL (310) 578-7108 • FREE ESTIMATES

ELECTRICAL 16h

PALISADES ELECTRIC. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR. All phases of electrical, new construction to service work. (310) 454-6994. Lic. #468437. Insured Professional Service

ELECTRICIAN HANDYMAN. Local Service Only. Lic. #775688. Please Call (310) 454-6849 or (818) 317-8286

FENCES 16j

THE FENCE MAN. 14 years quality workmanship. Wood fences • Decks • Gates • Chainlink & overhang. Lic. #663238, bonded. (818) 706-1996

INDEPENDENT SERVICE CARLOS FENCE: Wood & Picket Fences • Chain Link • Iron & Gates • Deck & Patio Covers. Ask for Carlos, (310) 677-2737 or fax (310) 677-8650. Non-lic.

FLOOR CARE 16m

GREG GARBER’S HARDWOOD FLOORS SINCE 1979. Install, refinish. Fully insured. Local references (310) 230-4597 Lic. #455608

CENTURY HARDWOOD FLOOR. Refinishing, Installation, Repairs. Lic. #813778. www.centurycustomhardwoodfloorinc.com • centuryfloor@sbcglobal.net • (800) 608-6007 • (310) 276-6407

GOLDEN HARDWOOD FLOORS • Professional Installation and refinishing. National Wood Flooring Association member. License #732286. Plenty of local references. (877) 622-2200 • www.goldenhardwoodfloors.com

JEFF HRONEK, 39 YRS. RESIDENT • HARDWOOD FLOORS INC. • Sanding & Refinishing • Installations • Pre-finished • Unfinished • Lic. #608606. Bonded, Insured, Workers Comp. www.hronekhardwoodfloors.com (310) 475-1414

HARDWOOD FLOORS. Professional Service Since 1987. Installation, refinishing, repair. www.designerhardwood.com • Lic. #799101 • (310) 275-9663

HANDYMAN 16o

HANDYMAN • HOOSHMAN. Most known name in the Palisades. Since 1975. Member Chamber of Commerce. Lic. #560299. Call for your free est. Local refs available. Hooshman, (310) 459-8009, 24 Hr.

LABOR OF LOVE carpentry, plumbing, tile, plaster, doors, windows, fencing & those special challenges. Work guaranteed. License #B767950. Ken at (310) 487-6464

LOCAL RESIDENT, LOCAL CLIENTELE. Make a list, call me. I specialize in repairing, replacing all those little nuisances. Not licensed; fully insured; always on time. 1 Call, 1 Guy: Marty, (310) 459-2692

EXPERT HANDYMAN, very experienced. Repairs for small projects: Replacing windows, tilework, doors carpentry, painting. Local refs. Lic. #2190206. Emilio, (213) 272-9699

D.J. CARPENTRY & REPAIRS. Serving the Palisades 13 yrs. Non-lic. No job too small. Prompt, friendly service. (310) 454-4121, cell (310) 367-6383

L.A. UNION CONSTRUCTION. Electric, plumbing, painting, drywall, texture roofing. Free est. Refs avail. Non-lic. Call (818) 849-4144

HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING 16p

SANTA MONICA HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING. INSTALLATION: New and old service and repairs. Lic. #324942 (310) 393-5686

LOCKSMITH 16q

LOCKSMITH • (310) 396-7784 • Bill Walter, Residential & Commercial. License #LCO-4438 Emergency Service 24/7

PAINTING, PAPERHANGING 16r

PAUL HORST • Interior & Exterior • PAINTING • 54 YEARS OF SERVICE • Our reputation is your safeguard. License No. 186825 • (310) 454-4630 • Bonded & Insured

TILO MARTIN PAINTING. For A Professional Job Call (310) 230-0202. Ref’s. Lic. #715099

SQUIRE PAINTING CO. Interior and Exterior. License #405049. 25 years. Local Service. (310) 454-8266. www.squirepainting.com

ZARKO PRTINA PAINTING. Interior/Exterior. 35 years in service. License #637882. Call (310) 454-6604

ALL SEASONS PAINTING, Interior/exterior, local licensed color specialist for 30 years. Kitchen cabinet clean-up. Fast, clean & on time. Lic. #571061. Call (310) 678-7913

PACIFIC PAINTING • SINCE 1979 • Interior/Exterior Residential/Commercial. Wallpaper removal / Competitive rates. Quality workmanship & materials. Bonded & Ins. Lic# 908913. Refs. avail. (310) 954-7170

PLUMBING 16t

JLK PLUMBING. Re-pipe and sewer specialist & all plumbing repairs. Mention this ad & receive 10% off. Lic. #722414. Call (310) 678-6634

REMODELING 16v

KANAN CONSTRUCTION • References. BONDED • INSURED • St. Lic. #554451 • DANIEL J. KANAN, CONTRACTOR, (310) 451-3540 / (800) 585-4-DAN

LABOR OF LOVE HOME REPAIR & REMODEL. Kitchens, bathrooms, cabinetry, tile, doors, windows, decks, etc. Work guar. Ken Bass, General Contractor. Lic. #B767950. (310) 487-6464

COMPLETE CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION • New/Spec Homes • Kit+bath remodeling • Additions. Quality work at reasonable rates guaranteed. Large & small projects welcomed. Lic. #751137. Michael Hoff Construction today, (310) 230-2930

HELP WANTED 17

DRIVERS: TEAMS EARN TOP DOLLAR plus great benefits. Solo drivers also needed for Western Regional. Werner Enterprises, (800) 346-2818 x123

DENTAL-ORTHODONTIC ASSISTANT. Exclusive office in Pacific Palisades. Exceptional opportunity. Call (310) 454-0317

BILLING/COLLECTOR position. 1 year min. Exp. knowledge of ICD9 & CPT codes. W/C exp. a plus. Efficient, reliable, self starter, punctual. Fax: (310) 550-0367 & admin@bluestonemedical.com

OFFICE MANAGER FOR Malibu office: career oriented, organized and detailed, excellent communication, phone and writing skills, computer literate (QuickBooks, Word, Excel, Photoshop). Please e-mail resume to adam@amazingtaste.com

BABYSITTER NEEDED in Palisades 2 days a week, after school (starting at 1:00 or 2:30 p.m.) until 6:30 p.m. Extra hours are available, but not necessary. Must drive, car provided. English required to assist with homework for 2 grammar school children. Must be happy, active person with experience with children. (Tuesdays and Thursdays would be ideal.) Call (310) 740-1266

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CLERK for Malibu business. Must have Quickbooks experience. Part-time. Fax resume with salary history to (310) 456-8986

AUTOS 18b

2003 BMW 325i wagon. Spotless, 65,000 miles, Runs great! Heated seats, premium sound package, iPod adapter, all windows tinted. Warranty 11/08. One driver. Blue w/ tan leather interior. $16,000. (310) 455-3455

2002 TOYOTA 4-Runner SRV, V6, 62k, silver w/ grey interior. Features: moonroof, racks, tow hitch (should you want to tow your boat 🙂 ), tinted windows, CD, tape & radio player. $12,999 obo. (310) 425-6834

2000 DODGE RV, 2,000 miles, good condition, new battery. Small tune-ups recommended. Very low mileage! $30K obo. Carol, (310) 454-0234

1987 MERCEDES BENZ 560 SL. 42,000 miles, mint condition, like new, cherry red. A jewel! $23,000, Possible trade. (310) 710-7798

GARAGE, ESTATE SALES 18d

BRENTWOOD PARK. Huge Estate Sale! ‘50s-’60s Time Warp! 32K sf lot! Whole hse & guest hse incldg fixtures. Fab furn/furnishings/chandelier/lite fixtures/sm. Kendall BG piano! ‘68 Caddy Eldorado! Old iron patio furn & fence. Grt collectible! Fine China/glassware/ linens/Fab hi-end & costume jewelry. Much more! FRI.-SAT. Mar. 7-8; 8 a.m.-4 p.m! 200 No. Cliffwood (N. of Sunset). Info/pix: www.bmdawson.com.

ESTATE SALE. Sunday, March 9th, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Beautiful home furnishings, French urns, designer pillows, silver, china, artwork, jewelry and much much more. 871 Hartzell St. Pacific Palisades, CA 90272

STUFF, STUFF & MORE STUFF! Saturday, March 8, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 17250 Sunset Blvd. (Adjacent to Lake Shrine). Park in front of building or Palisades Dr.

Brentwood Director’s Elegant Estate Sale. 169 S. Rockingham. Sat./Sun., March 8/9, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Movie memorabilia, rugs, major contemporary art work, furniture, depression+cut glass, Spode, Coalport, Staffordshire, silver, crystal, Betty Boop collectibles, extensive library, records, garden items, more.

BIG SALE! GREAT STUFF! 810 Galloway. Sat. 3/8; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Ikea furn., Luna Garcia dishes, clothes, curtains, ex. bike, books, CDs, videos, decor, kitchen, beach, etc. Much new!

PETS, LIVESTOCK 18e

LOVING HOMES NEEDED for 2 adorable “brother” BIZUS, 3 years young, fun & playful. Moving from house to condo. (310) 413-6878, Claire

WANTED TO BUY 19

WANTED: Old tube guitar amplifiers, working or not. ‘50s, ‘60s, etc. Tommy, (310) 895-5057 • profeti2001@yahoo.com

There Will Be Bob: “Bob Dylan’s American Journey 1956-1966” exhibit charts the creation of an icon

A young music fan from Toluca Lake Elementary reaches out to a legend at Skirball Cultural Center
A young music fan from Toluca Lake Elementary reaches out to a legend at Skirball Cultural Center
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

‘Dear Mummy’I’ve gotten very close to Bobby in the last month. We have such FUN! ‘He is beautiful to me. He bought me a beautiful coat and a dress and earrings and he’s just a joy to be with. We understand each other’s need for freedom and there are no chains, just good feelings and giggles and a lot of love. And I enjoy his genius!’ ‘ excerpt from a 1963 letter by Joan Baez to her mother As a Jewish Minnesotan named Robert Allen Zimmerman, he was known to relatively few. As the musician Bob Dylan, he became ‘The Voice of a Generation.’ His evolution from the former to the latter, and his skyrocketing early career trajectory, informs Experience Music Project’s traveling exhibit, ‘Bob Dylan’s American Journey: 1956-66,’ now at the Skirball Cultural Center through June 8. And like one of Dylan’s signature songs, ‘Blowin’ in the Wind,’ the show is a solid, thought-provoking hit. Let’s be honest: there’s an inherent contradiction in seeing a subject as singular, as rebellious, as underground and as revolutionary as Bob Dylan featured in a museum. But Dylan has become so comfortable with and cavalier about his potent artistic legacy that he can let his anti-establishment flag slacken. In the last decade, he’s contributed tunes to studio film soundtracks, released CDs exclusively through the decidedly corporate Starbucks, and has appeared in Victoria’s Secret commercials (!!). The man known for his literary lyrics has even shrugged off a plagiarism controversy in which he was accused of liberally lifting passages from a Japanese novel. So, hey, perhaps it’s about time Dylan endured some scholarly scrutiny. In projecting early Dylan up on several walls, ‘American Journey,’ neither stuffy nor pretentious, hits the right note (so to speak). Enter the exhibit, and what you’ll find is a chronological journey beginning with Dylan’s humble roots in Hibbing, Minnesota, and ending with the high-octane, celebrity-frenzy period immortalized by 1967’s ‘Don’t Look Back,’ D. A. Pennebaker’s cornerstone documentary capturing his chaotic 1965 British tour at the height of Dylanmania. Born in Duluth on May 24, 1941, Dylan was the son of an appliance store owner. His American journey evidently starts at age 15 with his discovery of rock ‘n’ roll and American roots music. A historical timeline at the onset of ‘Journey’ places the development of Dylan’s youthful musical interest in the larger context of what was happening on the U.S. pop charts (the usual suspects’Chuck Berry, Elvis, etc.). Along the way, visitors will find a section of a classmate’s 1959 Hibbing High School yearbook dedicated by the young Zimmerman; encased acoustic guitars belonging to Dylan heroes Woody Guthrie, Bruce Langhorne and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott; even a guitar and harmonica used by Dylan himself during his Greenwich Village days. Another glass showcase boasts original vinyl LPs of contemporaries making waves during Dylan’s folk phase”Harry Belafonte, Carolyn Hester, Dave Van Ronk. The singer/songwriter’s lyrics (always Dylan’s strongest suit) from early gems”’Masters of War,’ ‘A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”’adorn the exhibit’s far walls. Taking some academic wind out of Dylan are interactive set-ups designed to let museum-goers fully experience his musical path. A room dubbed the Interactive Music Experience (designed by the Skirball, in conjunction with Roland Corp. U.S. and Boss U.S.) allows laymen without any musical skill to isolate and manipulate instrumental tracks on ‘Like a Rolling Stone,’ with the same type of Hammond B3 organ used by Al Kooper to famously open Dylan’s acid-tongued kiss-off with. Other installations include drum pads and a kit on which anyone can rhythmically accompany ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ and other early ditties. A listening booth lets you don headphones and dig clear-as-a-whistle audio of Dylan’s first concert (November 4, 1961, Carnegie Chapter Hall), caught on tape by sound engineer Toni Mendell. We learn from this historic recording that Dylan, at 20, was already quite the raconteur with his rambling song segues. The same month of that performance, Dylan scraped together $402 to record his eponymous 13-track debut. Initially, ‘Bob Dylan’ sold only 5,000 copies. In addition to his first album, visitors can enter listening booths and hear his seminal early Columbia Records albums ‘The Freewheeling Bob Dylan’ (1963), ‘Another Side of Bob Dylan’ (1964), ‘Bringing It All Back Home’ (1965), and, of course, ‘Highway 61 Revisited’ (1965), home to ‘Like a Rolling Stone’ and considered by many to be his early masterpiece. All are annotated with footnotes. Throughout this horseshoe-shaped, Dylan-themed art crawl, you’ll find push-button booths where you can access his musical influences, both developmental and contemporary. The former includes Hank Williams (‘Cold, Cold Heart’), Odetta (‘Buked and Scorned’), Woody Guthrie (‘Tom Joad); the latter includes The Beatles (‘I Wanna Hold Your Hand)’, Lotte Lenny (‘Pirate Jenny’), Robert Johnson (‘Hellhound on My Trail’). For all of the high-tech aspects of ‘American Journey,’ the exhibit’s strength comes from its ephemera in pencil, ink, paint”in the hand of Dylan or someone connected to the troubadour. There’s a visceral charge from seeing the original lyrics of ‘It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)’ decorated with Dylan’s sketchy pen noodling along the sheet. Another highlight: a pair of Guthrie’s original pen-and-ink illustrations for his ‘Bound for Glory’ autobiographical account”the book that became the bible and style guide for Zimmerman’s ‘Bob Dylan’ persona, and roused the University of Minnesota student to borrow his ‘rustic attire and Okie accent and memorize his songbook.’ A definite ‘Journey’ highlight is a pair of letters to Joan Baez’s mother by Dylan and by Baez, famous folk singer and the lover via whom Dylan coat-tailed his way into the folk music spotlight and onward to greater fame. In every sense, the contrast between these two missives is glaring. Baez gushes, while Dylan disguises, pretending to be Baez in his letter and wasting her mother’s time with some crazy Seussian yarn. Baez’s correspondence, personal and clean, looks carefully, neatly and respectfully handwritten in pencil. Dylan’s is typed and appears distant, rushed, sloppy with errors. Baez is obviously smitten with Dylan, while Dylan comes off as sardonic and mocking of Baez. These letters stand as a strong testament to the romantic inequity and the careerist nature of Dylan’s whirlwind love affair. ‘Journey’ curator Jasen Emmens has ensured that booths and benches make for a comfortable viewing experience. Monitors play scenes from ‘Don’t Look Back’ and other archival footage. Clips from the Martin Scorsese-produced 2005 Dylan doc, ‘No Direction Home,’ illuminates key Dylan topics”such as ‘Highway 61’ guitarist Mike Bloomfield”in Dylan’s own words. ‘I always thought he should’ve stayed with me instead of go to the Paul Butterfield band,’ Dylan tells the camera. ‘He was the best guitarist I ever heard, on any level. He could flat pick, he could finger pick. It looked like he was born to play guitar, you know.’ Sadly, Bloomfield”a fellow Jewish, Midwestern-bred musical prodigy”died a tragic heroin-overdose death in 1981, not even two decades after he left Dylan to follow his Chicago blues muse. The year 1965 became a turning point in both Dylan’s career and pop music at large. He went electric at the Newport Folk Festival, effectively turning his back on the folk movement, which by the mid-sixties had calcified into a pallid rainbow of pat clich’s that no longer moved its most prominent associate. When Dylan plugged in, he tuned out folk music and everyone involved, including Baez. It was an AC/DC charge that resonated around the world. You could easily call this ‘American Journey’ show ‘Bob Dylan: The Early Years.’ The exhibit wisely ends with 1966, right after the moment in time captured by Pennebaker. In doing so, ‘Journey’ keeps its overview tight and finite, and the exhibit stops short of the wilderness years that followed, which included Dylan’s bust-up with Baez and subsequent marriage to Sara Lowndes, as well as the July 29, 1966 motorcycle accident that nearly claimed his life. ‘American Journey’ serves as an excellent primer for younger fans unfamiliar with Dylan’s musical legacy. Given the Skirball’s Jewish culture mandate, it’s interesting to note that there is no real mention of Dylan’s Jewish origins or background. But recall that during these formative, chameleonic years, Dylan essentially modeled himself after the poor white Appalachian and the blues-playing African-American. He would not embrace his Judaism for another few decades. ‘American Journey’ serves as an excellent primer for younger fans unfamiliar with Dylan’s musical legacy. Given the Skirball’s Jewish culture mandate, it’s interesting to note that there is no real mention of Dylan’s Jewish origins or background. But recall that during these formative, chameleonic years, Dylan essentially modeled himself after the poor white Appalachian and the blues-playing African-American. He would not embrace his Judaism for another few decades. ‘American Journey’ serves as an excellent primer for younger fans unfamiliar with Dylan’s musical legacy. Given the Skirball’s Jewish culture mandate, it’s interesting to note that there is no real mention of Dylan’s Jewish origins or background. But recall that during these formative, chameleonic years, Dylan essentially modeled himself after the poor white Appalachian and the blues-playing African-American. He would not embrace his Judaism for another few decades. In terms of information, Dylanheads may not derive much new data on their idol. Even the accidental fan might go into this exhibit knowing the name of ‘Journey”’s tune. After all, there’s been a recent (apologies to the artist Picabia) ‘Adoration of the Bob’ going on lately, and this period of his life is literally well-documented. A 40th anniversary edition of ‘Don’t Look Back’ came out in 2007. Both the Scorsese documentary and ‘The Other Side of the Mirror: Bob Dylan at the Newport Folk Festival’ are current PBS pledge drive staples. Cate Blanchett, who won a Golden Globe and several critics prizes for her role in last year’s ‘I’m Not There,’ is expected to win the Oscar for her performance on tonight’s Academy Awards broadcast. Even Dylan weighed in on Dylan with his well-reviewed 2004 memoir, ‘Chronicles, Vol. I,’ a New York Times bestseller. Yet for the casual fan and the diehard Dylan fanatic alike, ‘Journey’ is a must-see. Just ask guests at the Skirball’s preview night festivities (which featured a Dylan tribute band), such as Jamie Levenson, who eagerly attended because he considers Dylan ‘a modern day Mozart. He forever stands so far apart from any other artist, including but not limited to, himself. Unlike any other living cultural icon, he gets better with age. He’s tuned into the great big inspiration channel, broadcast universally to a select few, of which he is a lifetime subscriber.” Perhaps it’s best we wrap up our appreciation of ‘American Journey’ with some wise words by Dylan himself, from the lyrics of ‘Up To Me’: ‘If I’d thought about it I never would’ve done it, I guess I would’ve let it slide/ If I’d lived my life by what others were thinkin’, the heart inside me would’ve died/ I was just too stubborn to ever be governed by enforced insanity/ Someone had to reach for the risin’ star, I guess it was up to me.’ Sam Peckinpah’s 1973 Western ‘Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid,’ which features Dylan in a supporting role and on the film’s soundtrack (most famously, the song ‘Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door’), screens tonight at 8 p.m. A gallery tour led by musician/producer David Was will take place on Thursday, March 13 at 7 p.m. Tickets: $10 general, $7 seniors and full-time students with ID; $5 children 2-12. Free to Skirball members and children under 2. Skirball Cultural Center, 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., Los Angeles. Visit www.skirball.org.

PaliHi Team Launches Search For New 2008-2009 Principal

Marcia Haskin, the interim principal at Palisades High.
Marcia Haskin, the interim principal at Palisades High.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Palisades Charter School High School officials have begun the search for a new principal and will soon interview candidates. They hope to replace retiree and interim principal Marcia Haskin, who filled the position last fall after principal Gloria Martinez left in June to work as an education consultant at Loyola Marymount University. If the school does not find a highly qualified candidate, then Haskin has agreed to serve as interim principal again in 2008-09. She has also indicated she’ll stay this fall to mentor the new full-time principal if one is selected. In that capacity, her schedule and pay would be based on need. ‘I felt a connection with this school from the start,’ Haskin, 65, said of her decision to stay. ‘I feel good here. This job motivates me and keeps me young.’ Executive Director Amy Dresser-Held believes Haskin’s presence next school year will provide consistency and stability. ‘She has been very successful in her short time at Pali in building trust among all stakeholders and in increasing accountability across the board,’ Dresser-Held said. Haskin coaches teachers and evaluates their performance in the classroom. In addition, she assists parents with their concerns. Her goal this year is to close the achievement gap between African-American and Hispanic students compared to white and Asian students. She also hopes to improve communication between staff, parents, students and departments. This fall, the school may have a higher staff turnover than usual. In 2003, 92 of the school’s 235 employees took a five-year leave of absence from Los Angeles Unified School District to work at the charter school, and they must decide by April 15 whether to stay at the school or return to LAUSD. With Haskin at the school, she will be able to train new hires. ‘She has tremendous experience in selecting and mentoring educational leaders,’ Dresser-Held said. Haskin, who commutes from Marina del Rey, worked as a principal for Palms Middle School for three years and was the director of secondary services for LAUSD for two years. In that role, she supervised principals at five schools. She retired in 2005 after working in education for 38 years. If Haskin continues as interim principal in 2008-09, her salary will be based on whether she can receive an emergency exemption from the California State Teachers’ Retirement System. In order for retirees to receive their benefits, they can only earn an annual salary of $27,900. However, they can apply for an emergency exemption that allows them to make half the annual salary of a high school principal, who typically earns around $110,000. CalSTRS will allow Haskin to earn the higher salary in 2008-09 if school officials can demonstrate that they made reasonable efforts to recruit a principal with the experience and credentials of Haskin and could not find such a school leader, Dresser-Held said. Last August, Haskin was hired to work at the $27,900 salary. In January, she realized she qualified for the emergency exemption for 2007-08 because the school did not have much time to replace Martinez, who submitted her resignation in May. Haskin began making the higher salary this month. Haskin will help to select the new principal as part of a hiring committee consisting of teachers, parents, classified staff, administrators, board members, community leaders and students. The committee will consider candidates’ instructional expertise, leadership skills and their track record of successfully leading large secondary schools, Dresser-Held said. The candidate must have at least four years’ experience as a principal. ‘Because we have so many veteran teachers, it would be difficult for a new principal to get the same level of respect as someone with more experience,’ said Colleen McCarthy, human resources director. McCarthy has posted the job opening on the school’s Web site, www.palihigh.org, and has attended job fairs to recruit candidates.

Junior Women Give $104,040 in Local Grants

The Junior Women’s Club announcement of grant awards is eagerly anticipated in Pacific Palisades. This year proved to be no different as the group awarded a record amount of money ($104,040) to a record number of groups (37). ‘It’s an exciting night for the club and the community,’ Club President Annie Barnes said. ‘It brings joy to be able to do so much for the community.’ The nonprofit organization raises money from the annual Holiday Home Tour, the boutique and the ads sold for the event. They also sponsor Fiesta Night and Casino night. Barnes was quick to thank the community for its support, which in turn makes the grants possible. ‘The purpose of life is to live a life of purpose,’ Barnes said before introducing Christine Bishop, grant chairperson. ‘This year we had more applicants than we’ve ever had,’ Bishop said. ‘The diverse groups who are receiving funds support our community in so many ways.’ The recipients were divided into four groups: beautification, education, arts and recreation, and community and charitable groups. In the beautification category, a total of $11,000 was awarded to five groups. Palisades Beautiful received money for tree planting; Palisades PRIDE for additional sidewalk benches, Palisades Garden Club for money for speakers; and the Village Green Committee for motion sensor lights for nighttime security. The Rotary Club received a one-time grant to install a solar-powered irrigation control system for watering new plants that will be grown at the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highway. Junior Women gave $24,000 for various projects at local public schools. At Canyon Elementary, the grant will fund a new kindergarten playground structure and landscaping. Marquez’s money will help fund two additional teachers to lower class size, and Palisades requested money to complete renovations in its library. Paul Revere Middle School received grant money for new computers, and Palisades High got money for its college center. Arts and recreation received $43,100 and included grants to the Palisades Recreation Center for refurbishing the little gym’s floor; Palisades-Malibu YMCA for beautification of the Temescal/Sunset corner; and the Maggie Gilbert Aquatics Center at Palisades High. ‘The pool will be a tremendous boon to the high school, but also a tremendous boon for the community,’ Beverley Auerbach said in accepting the grant for the aquatics center. Movies in the Park received money in order to keep the program free to the public and possibly purchasing new equipment. Chamber Music Palisades and Palisades Symphony Orchestra both received grants to continue their programs. The Palisades Art Association received money for its speaker series and Theatre Palisades will use its grant to complete the building of the storage facility. ‘Thank you no only for what you do for us, but what you do for the rest of the community,’ Theatre Palisades acceptor Eva Holberg said. ‘We have set aside 100 tickets for the Junior Women to use for a fundraiser.’ Local AYSO Commissioner Debbie Held received money to investigate putting artificial turf on the PaliHi baseball field, and Calvary Christian School received money for benches for its athletic field. The Historical Society received money to continue preserving Palisades historical photos, and the Camp Josepho Scout Facility in Rustic Canyon was awarded money to refurbish the barbecue area with gas grills. The Palisades Community Center, a nonprofit organization that funded the building of the Field of Dreams, received money for its newest venture: stairs from the parking lot on Frontera to the baseball fields. Dubbed ‘Stairway to the Field of Dreams,’ the project completion date is August, according to Rick McGeagh, who accepted the award. Recipents of the $25,940 that was given to community and charitable groups included the Woman’s Club, Chamber of Commerce holiday decorations and disaster preparedness, Boy Scout Troops 223 and 400, The Kris Kelly Foundation, Nature of Wildworks, Meals on Wheels, the Wellness Community and Palisades Hunger Walk. Palisades Cares received money to buy recycling bins for the Rec Center and playing fields. In accepting the grant for the Palisades Americanism Parade Association, Rich Wilken said, ‘This is helpful in kicking off our fundraising campaign. We are going to need about $80,000 this year, so this will help.’ Firemen from Stations 23 and 69 were grateful to the Junior Women’s Club and thanked them not only for this year, but for their past grants. Firefighters at 69 will use their grant for equipment for the weight-training room, and Station 23 will use its money for landscaping at the station. ‘On behalf of all the members of Station 23, thank you,’ Captain James Varney said. ‘I’ve never seen such a closeness in a community as there is here in the Palisades.’ ‘It is so neat to support your own town,’ Christine Bishop said in summing up the evening.

Three-Car Crash Snarls PCH Traffic

A week ago Thursday, Pacific Palisades residents driving on Pacific Coast Highway between 7 and 8 p.m. were caught in a traffic snarl because of a three-car accident in the 400 block (near Back to the Beach Cafe), located between the California Incline and the Beach Club. According to Santa Monica Public Information Officer Lt. Alex Padilla, a 2008 Toyota Corolla headed southbound in the number one lane and driven by a 27-year-old male, veered into the number one northbound lane, colliding head-on with a 1992 Toyota Camry, driven by a 19-year-old female. The Camry was driven back into a 2001 Honda, driven by a 30-year-old female. All three drivers, as well as a 19-year-old passenger in the Corolla, were transported to local hospitals with non-life-threatening injuries. The crash closed traffic both ways on PCH as well as on the Incline. Cars northbound on PCH between the Incline and the accident scene were forced to make U-turns and exit by the Pier. Traffic was heavy on side streets and through Santa Monica Canyon, and was backed up past the McClure Tunnel onto the 10 Freeway. Coincidentally, at about the same time, the California Highway Patrol was involved in a westbound car chase on the Santa Monica Freeway. Due to McClure Tunnel traffic, the suspect’s car, as well as the patrol cars, came to a complete stop. The suspect was forced out of the car and taken into custody. Padilla did not know what the driver was charged with. An earlier accident on Sunset Boulevard, just east of Palisades Drive, closed two lanes of traffic. Theresa Heim-Kilkowski, the Palisadian-Post’s Highlands correspondent, reported that the accident occurred around 5:30 p.m. ‘I was turning right onto Sunset, going to the Spectrum Club, and I saw the flares up, but I couldn’t see much because they were in the opposite direction.’ Fire Station 23 Captain Bill Ernest reported that a woman in her 60s, driving west, lost control of her late-model Jaguar, which hit the right embankment, flipped and landed on the roof. The car was totaled and the woman was transported to St. John’s Hospital with what firemen termed ‘non-life-threatening injuries.’ Two westbound lanes of Sunset were closed.

Fifth Annual Pacific Palisades Film Festival Launches March 6

Filmmaker Loren Mendell really appreciates the Fifth Annual Pacific Palisades Film Festival, which begins tonight at Pierson Playhouse. ‘Living in Los Angeles, it’s always nice to have a hometown crowd for a documentary,’ says the Santa Monica-based filmmaker, whose ‘Adjust Your Color: The Truth of Petey Greene,’ will close out the three-day event on Saturday at 8 p.m. Mendell, whose 2005 short, ‘Our Time Is Up,’ received an Academy Award nomination, has fond memories of when he showed ‘Bad Boys of Summer’ at last year’s Festival. ‘The crowd was really receptive,’ he says. ‘It was really a good experience. It felt like a small-town festival as opposed to a huge corporate festival.’ Kicking off the Festival will be ‘Fields of Fuel,’ a documentary exploring America’s addiction to oil and its consequences, that drew attention at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. Directed by another PPFF alumnus, Josh Tickell (‘Veggie Van Voyage’), ‘Fields’ will screen at 7 p.m. tonight. If the subject of Mendell’s profile, Ralph ‘Petey’ Greene, rings a bell, that’s because Don Cheadle portrayed the controversial African-American radio talk show host”who overcame drug addiction and an armed robbery prison sentence, to become one of Washington, D.C.’s most revered broadcasting personalities”in Kasi Lemmons’ recent feature ‘Talk to Me.’ Pelagius Films wanted Mendell’s film to coat-tail ‘Talk to Me”s July 2007 theatrical release. Then ‘Adjust’ was set to be a bonus film for the ‘Talk’ DVD. ‘My goal was to always have it be a stand-alone,’ Mendell says. ‘Adjust’ became its own project when the producers found 30 hours of television footage of Greene that had been assumed destroyed. Once the pressure was off on piggybacking ‘Talk”s release, ‘we made it pretty quickly,’ Mendell says. ‘We started production in June and it took about six months. ‘Petey was such a dynamic personality. There’s no one in the media like him right now. If you were a fake or a phony, he exposed it on the show.’ It didn’t take much arm-twisting to bring the biopic’s star aboard as narrator. ‘Don loves Petey,’ says Mendell of Cheadle, a Palisades resident. ‘He does a fantastic job.’ After playing Slamdance in January, ‘Adjust’ will make its West Coast premiere at the PPFF. ‘The producers are still talking to distributors,’ Mendell says. ‘We don’t have a deal in place yet.’ Translation: the PPFF is your only chance to see ‘Adjust’ in the near future. Mendell, producer Bob DeMars, and executive producers Joe Fries and Joey Rappa will answer questions following tonight’s screening. Tickets (454-1970) are $15 tonight; Friday and Saturday $10. For the Film Festival schedule, visit www.FriendsOfFilm.com. Actors Seymour Cassel (‘The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou’) and Robert Guillaume (‘Benson’) will receive the Festival’s Lifetime Achievement Awards at a private ceremony on March 6.

Cinematic Love for “Yiddish Theater”

Yiddish actress and firebrand Zypora Spaisman lights the menorah as Yiddish theater actor Felix Fibrich watches in a scene from “Yiddish Theater: A Love Story”

‘I never saw a play in Yiddish and, to be honest, I never thought I would,’ says Dan Katzir, expressing a sentiment not uncommon among many young Jewish people. Yet unlike the situation of most Jews, that changed for the Israeli-American filmmaker after he met Zypora Spaisman, a vivacious octogenarian. His resulting film, ‘Yiddish Theater: A Love Story,’ is an English language documentary about one little old lady’s fight to keep her Yiddish theater open against all odds and, by extension, keep a moribund culture alive. ‘Yiddish Theater’ plays this weekend in Santa Monica. ‘I was vacationing in New York and I met Zypora by chance,’ Katzir tells the Palisadian Post. ‘She was the grand dame of Yiddish theater. She did everything to keep her show going”from acting to sweeping the floors.’ The 80-minute ‘Yiddish Theater’ follows Spaisman through a hectic week during which she must raise enough funds to keep her production of Peretz Hirschbein’s classic Yiddish-language play ‘Green Fields’ going, or see the theater that she started, the Yiddish Public Theater, come to a close’in tandem with her acting career. Filmed during Chanukah 2000, which that year culminated on New Year’s Day, the Jewish Festival of Lights adds meaning and structure to Katzir’s real-life drama. Ostensibly, the filmmaker uses the eight days of Chanukah as a device to provide suspense”each lit candle calibrating a day”as viewers sit at seat’s edge to see if Spaisman’s cast will prevail. They encounter extreme highs (The New York Times gives the production a glowing review) and lows (a severe snowfall slams New York). Obstacles materialize in between, from potential investors flaking, to the attendance-draining Christmas holidays. The movie culminates on New Year’s Eve 2001, nine months before the events of September 11, adding an unintended layer of poignancy to the viewing; ‘Yiddish Theater’ gives a glimpse of a more innocent, bygone Manhattan in more ways than one. ‘Everything what I do is Yiddish,’ Spaisman says in the film. ‘I live Yiddish, I eat Yiddish, I breathe Yiddish.’ In the 10th century, Yiddish became the official language of Central and Eastern European Jews (Ashkenazi Jews). A hybrid of medieval German and Hebrew, the Yiddish language, written in a Hebraic alphabet, also borrowed some English. Today, even non-Jews pepper their vocabulary with this expressive dialect; words such as schmooze, kibbitz, schlep, putz, and chutzpah have entered our lexicon, thanks largely to our country’s long tradition of Jewish entertainers. Yiddish culture also consists of a theatrical tradition that bridged the shtetls (Jewish villages) to early 1880s American life at a time when pogroms in Russia and Eastern Europe caused Jews to immigrate to the United States. By 1924, two million Jews had arrived, bringing with them a rich culture. When the Folksbiene Theatre was founded in 1915 on New York’s Lower East Side, 14 other Yiddish theater companies existed. But as the U.S.-born children assimilated into the mainstream, this theater audience dwindled with Yiddish culture among the new generation. ‘There’s one thing that can be said about the Yiddish theater that can’t be said about any other foreign-language immigrant theater,’ says Palisades resident Marvin Zuckerman, a Yiddish culture authority. ‘It’s the longest-lasting.’ ‘The Yiddish theater is generally thought to be started in Romania by Avrom Goldfadn,’ explains Zuckerman, dean emeritus of Los Angeles Valley College. ‘Goldfadn [1840- 1948] is considered the guy who tied it all together. He wrote Yiddish operettas. The Broadway of Yiddish theater was Second Avenue”Yiddish art theater, vaudeville, musicals.’ Yiddish theater enjoyed a respectable reputation in its 1900-1950 heyday. Lincoln Steffens called it the best theater in New York. The genre, which peaked in the 1940s, coincided with Yiddish cinema (i.e., ‘Yidel Mitn Fiedl’ with Molly Picon) produced in New York and pre-war Poland. Hirschbein wrote ‘Green Fields’ in 1908 in Odessa, and a 1937 film version was shot in upstate New York. ‘He happens to be buried in Los Angeles behind Paramount [at Hollywood Forever cemetery],’ says Zuckerman of Hirschbein, who died in 1948. ‘He was a world traveler, he wrote for travel books, and he wound up in L.A.’ ‘A lot of famous American actors came out of the Yiddish theater,’ continues Zuckerman, husband of Kathy Kohner Zuckerman, the real-life ‘Gidget’ recently profiled in the Post. ‘Edward G. Robinson, Paul Muni, our very own Palisadian, Walter Matthau.’ Joel Grey’s father was renowned comedian Mickey Katz, who incorporated Yiddish into his act. The grandfather of conductor Michael Tilsen Thomas was the great Yiddish actor Boris Thomashefsky. One of Thomashefsky’s rivals was Jacob P. Adler, whose wife, Sara, was a prominent Yiddish theater actress. If his surname sounds familiar, it could be because his daughter was Stella Adler, whose acting disciples included Marlon Brando. The unspoken irony for the filmmakers is that Spaisman’s mission is a metaphor for their movie”itself a valentine to the culture and something of an underdog. ‘Yiddish Theater’ has squeaked by from screening to screening since its 2006 premiere in San Francisco. ‘It’s sad,’ Katzir notes, ‘that after 1,100 years, just as Hitler lost in his attempt to destroy this Yiddish culture, it’s fading away in the secular world. I’m Israeli. For Israelis, Yiddish is even more foreign than it is for Americans.’ In Israel, Yiddish culture has not been preserved among the overwhelmingly secular youth. As if to make that point, the lead in Spaisman’s play, a young Israeli, ironically shows off armfuls of tattoos (a corporeal desecration forbidden in the Jewish religion) after acting in Hassidic garb. But Eric Gordon, director of the local Yiddish culture society, The Workman’s Circle/Arbeter Ring of Southern California, quibbles with Katzir’s premise that Yiddish culture and theater is dying. ‘The movie has a kind of quality of lamentation about it that I take issue with,’ Gordon says, pointing out that the Folksbiene remains vital. mount major annual productions and stages plays in both English and Russian translations. Gordon’s own Workman’s Circle chapter celebrates its centennial this year, while California’s oldest Workman’s branch, in San Francisco, turns 101. What’s sure about ‘Yiddish Theater’ is the passion for Yiddish culture exuded by both Spaisman and the filmmakers. Another Palisadian, Los Angeles Times movie critic Kenneth Turan, called the film ‘charming and disarming.’ ‘Nothing can take away from the flavor of being caught up in the battles and dreams of a formidable group of people,’ Turan continues in a November 2007 review. ‘For a brief moment in time, we share their struggles, and that feels like a privilege.’ There’s something wonderful about seeing these dedicated actors, young and old, partaking in their uphill production. ‘Yiddish Theater’ is as much survival story as it is love story, and tenacious firebrand Spaisman’s spirit is entertaining, contagious and ultimately inspiring. ‘We live in a Seinfeld society where everything is fast, edgy, funny, but also smells a little cynical and jaded,’ Katzir says. ‘Yiddish has a lot of heart and emotions.’ ‘Yiddish Theater: A Love Story’ screens Saturdays and Sundays at 11 a.m. at Laemmle’s Monica, 1332 Second St. Katzir and Markus will speak following each screening. For tickets, call (310) 394-9741 or visit laemmle.com/viewmovie.php?mid=3304. The movie’s Web site: yiddishtheater.net.

Dolphins Cover All the Bases

Ace right-hander Jonathan Moscot gets pitching advice from Coach Mike Voelkel at Monday's practice.
Ace right-hander Jonathan Moscot gets pitching advice from Coach Mike Voelkel at Monday’s practice.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

It’s that time of year again. Time for the Palisades High varsity baseball team to make another run at the Western League title. The defending champion Dolphins have a new head coach, a bevy of new players and, most important, a whole new mindset. “Overall we have less experience but we’ve raised our level of competitiveness and I like what I’ve seen,” Coach Mike Voelkel said. “Our biggest question will be pitching. So far, they’ve held together pretty well.” Of the eight players who will take their turns on the mound, seven are right-handers: Marlon Zamboni, Elliot Engelman, Adam Flores, Zach Dauber, Riley Evans, Jared Sklar and Jonathan Moscot. The lone lefty is Buck Traweek. Moscot, a junior, has emerged as one of the Dolphins’ aces. He has a variety of pitches in his arsenal, mainly the slider, changeup and fastball. “We had a great veteran staff last year and I learned a lot from those guys,” Moscot said. “I’d say my biggest strength is knowing how to control the game. Not to let the crowd affect my concentration.” Adjusting to a new coach is often difficult for returning players and Moscot is no different. “I was a little skeptical at first because you’re never sure what a new coach is going to be like,” he said. “But Coach Voelkel really knows what he’s doing and he’s helped all of us become better ballplayers.” Returning behind the plate is Garrett Champion and backing him up at catcher is Damon Ray. Lucas Berry and Zach Dauber will play first base, Flores and David Skolnik will play second, Moscot and Ray will play third and shortstop will be shared by Zamboni and Julian Barzilli, Patrolling the outfield will be Jared Sklar and Ryan Holman in left, Brett Whalen (the Dolphins’ leadoff batter) in center and Alex Meadow and Jake Kramer in right. Palisades lost its first two games last week by scores of 5-0 and 6-0, but Voelkel is confident his team will turn it around. “We’re going to start hitting, trust me,” he said. “We had chances in the first two games where some of the kids were a little out of their comfort zone. The main thing is we made some errors that really hurt us.” Champion believes defense and pitching will be the keys to the team’s success. “We’ll be really good defensively and our pitchers do a good job of keeping it low and getting ground balls,” said Champion, who bats in the clean-up spot. “Jonathan [Moscot] has really good location and throws all his pitches right where he wants them.” Monday’s practice was fill of pep and if Palisades brings the right attitude and work ethic to the field every time it stands a good chance to win yet another league title. “We’re still getting into the groove offensively,” Moscot admitted. “Coach likes to bunt a lot so we’ll do that but we’re going to have our share of home runs, too.” Emblazoned on the Dolphins’ practice jerseys is the phrase: “Get to the yard early, leave late” and that’s been Voelkel’s mantra since he arrived. Station-to-station workouts consist of numerous hitting, throwing, pitching and fielding drills, many of them conducted by assistant coach and former Dolphins’ catcher Nick Amos. Six errors led to four runs in Palisades’ season opener at Sun Valley Poly, but Voelkel was pleased with Zamboni’s pitching. “For a first game I thought Marlon was outstanding,” Voelkel said. “He really picked it up, threw very well and didn’t walk anyone. In other phases of the game maybe we were a little too excited but I think we have some gifts in disguise.” Palisades played Panorama on Wednesday and hosts Marshall on Tuesday. The Dolphins then travel to Rancho Buena Vista March 19 before opening Western League play against Venice March 24 at George Robert Field.