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When Construction Never Stops (or Re-Starts)

City, Castellammare Neighbors Powerless to Complete a House 10 years in the Making

The house at 17484 Tramonto Dr. is 4,000-square-feet, pink, three stories tall and made of stucco. But that’s not how neighbors describe it. They prefer “the never-ending nightmare next door.” Construction began at the steep Castellammare site, which looks south over Santa Monica Bay, 10 years ago last month; but the house owned by Hans Schollhammer is still incomplete. There are open trenches in the front yard where utility lines are supposed to lie. Windows are broken, boarded or both. Loose conduits lie haphazardly. The front door is covered with pierced paper-board. Rebar and PVC protrude from a smashed–or is it half-finished?–concrete pillar. For several years while the house has lain vacant, near completion and under siege–literally–from vermin and vandals, neighbors have faced a dilemma: What do you do when a homeowner, for all intents and purposes, lets his house go? In the summer of 2006, L.A. County’s Health Services Department found a rat infestation on the property. It ordered Schollhammer, a professor at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management, to eliminate the rats and close the openings to his house through which they entered. The Castellammare Mesa Homeowners Association said it received complaints about the infestation from neighbors and even people driving past the property. For Schollhammer’s next-door neighbor Vince Flaherty, a producer and 1980’s TV actor, the problem had become so bad that rats and ground squirrels burrowed underground into his cliff-side basement. “You can still smell the urine in the basement,” says Flaherty, who claims he spent more than $10,000 pouring concrete to fix the problem. “The only good thing about [the house] is that there’s nobody there, so we have privacy. But it’s such a blight on the neighborhood. People call it the abandoned Taco Bell.” Neighbors of Schollhammer even admit to offering to buy the property from him. “I live directly across the street,” says Cort Wagner, a Grand Am race-car driver. “It’s such an eyesore, and I have to look at it. I asked him how much he wanted and offered to write a check right there.” Schollhammer rejected Wagner’s offer and numerous others. The homeowners association contends that the professor has broken the due-diligence clause of its CC&Rs, which demands that construction be pursued diligently and continuously and within two years from its start. But the association, which only collects voluntary dues, has been wary of a long, expensive lawsuit, so it has turned to the city for help–with negligible results. Only after repeated efforts over several years has the city’s Building and Safety Department responded to Castellammare residents’ concerns, says Kim Clary, the association’s president. In June 2006, the city declared the building a ‘vacant structure’ that had violated several building codes. It ordered Schollhammer to waterproof the house and fix its “general dilapidation.” With few signs of progress at the house, the City Attorney took Schollhammer to court last January. There, the owner pledged to finish the house by January 2008. But even if he reneges, the city has little power. “As long as the property is kept clean and secure, there isn’t anything we can legally do to him,” said Frank Bush, the city’s chief building inspector. In other words, the city can’t force property owners to finish their houses. Despite Schollhammer’s new pledge, neighbors aren’t optimistic. That’s because the professor, who specializes in business ethics and intra-organizational conflict, has plowed through other deadlines before. In September 2004, he told the Canyon News that he hoped to complete construction within five months. And in February 2006 when the house was still incomplete, Schollhammer told the homeowners association that the house would be ready for occupancy by August 2006. That deadline came and went. “I don’t understand his motives,” says Cort Wagner, who lives across the street. “The real estate boom has come and gone.” (Still, nearby houses on the street were recently sold for $3 million and $7 million.) Schollhammer says his neighbors have unfairly blamed him for the delay, which he attributes to a series of unfortunate and uncontrollable events. He cites his contract with an “admittedly slow” contractor, Ralph Herman (the contractor rejects that characterization). He points to a series of vandalisms, which he insinuates his neighbors have caused. His windows have been smashed, rocks thrown on the roof and ‘dog feces smeared’ on his house’s walls. (Before Schollhammer began building his controversial home, he built and sold an adjacent house in the mid-1990s. That house, he says, was built on schedule–a fact he attributes, in part, to using a different contractor.) In April 2003, his nearly complete house was severely vandalized. In addition to breaking windows and the front door, someone flooded his and Flaherty’s house with a hose over a long weekend. To make things worse, says Schollhammer, the insurance company forced him to use a different contractor to repair the damage. The police never caught the wrongdoer, but they suspected Wagner. “The cops came over and named me as a suspect,” Wagner says. “I told them it doesn’t surprise me because I hate the house and despise [its] owner. But I told them if I had anything to do with it, I would have done much worse. I would have burned it [to] the ground!” Schollhammer says that vandalism in 2003 delayed construction by 18 months. This summer a drunk driver caused $11,000 of damage when he smashed through his fence and knocked off a corner of the house, Schollhammer says. But his neighbors reject his explanations. “So what!” Clary says. “These are all excuses. Even if some of these things are true, it shouldn’t have stopped him from completing it. And many of these events wouldn’t have occurred if [the house] had been completed and occupied.” Schollhammer’s contractor attributes much of the slow construction delay to the professor’s indecisiveness. “The whole house has been design-as-you-go,” Herman says. “It takes [Schollhammer and his wife] a long time to make a decision. They spend a lot of time deciding what color the stucco will be, what the door will look like, etc. And then sometimes, they change their minds. I’m not sure even he knows what to do.” According to the contractor, the house still lacks underground utility and site plans, which are needed for completion. Ten years into construction, both Schollhammer and his neighbors are embittered and resigned. “I would never want to live in this neighborhood,” says Schollhammer. “I’ve thought many times about letting someone else finish the house, but I have a contract.” For one of his neighbors living across the street, she’s stopped caring. “The thing that is really disconcerting to me is that I’ve had to call their contractor to push them as if I were the owner,” says the neighbor, who requested that her name be withheld. “I’m not wasting my time anymore. I’ve let my tree grow large, so I don’t have to see the place.” —– To contact Staff Writer Max Taves, e-mail reporter@palipost.com or call ext. 28.

Corpus Cruises at Revere Tourney

Corpus Christi Coach Haley Jorgensborg (second from right) and her players with their first-place trophies from the Rider Volleyball Tournament.
Corpus Christi Coach Haley Jorgensborg (second from right) and her players with their first-place trophies from the Rider Volleyball Tournament.

Although she may not possess the “Midas Touch,” Palisadian Haley Jorgensborg certainly knows how to get the best out of her players. And in a team sport such as volleyball, that trait is worth its weight in gold. Since Jorgensborg took over as head coach of the Corpus Christi girls squad last year, the Condors have seemingly forgotten what it’s like to lose. The latest example came Saturday at the Rider Cup tournament, where Corpus won every game en route to the championship at Paul Revere Middle School. The Condors were clicking on all cylinders from the moment the first ball was struck, even winning one game 11-0 on the ace serving of Courtney Levan. She also served an ace on championship point. In an interesting twist, the Corpus varsity had to play the Corpus JV in the semifinals. With a roster full of local players, the Condors have been on a roll since winning the American Martyrs Mustangs tournament September 15 in Manhattan Beach. Jorgensborg, herself a Corpus grad who went on to play volleyball at Marymount High and UCLA, has molded a talented group of girls into a cohesive unit on the floor. The Condors consist of eighth-graders Levan, Christine Irvin, Lanti Moye-McClaren, Meghan Middleton, Erica Wahlgren, Lauren Waters, Sophie Zaloom, Izzy Desantis and Lucy Tilton and seventh-graders Katie Kaufman, Annie McCroskey and Ariel Wilbur.

Football Goes from Worst to First

Dolphins Beat Hami in League Opener, Halt a Four-Game Road Losing Streak

Linebacker Terrance Quarles drags down Hamilton wide receiver Donnie Duncan in the third quarter of Palisades' 21-14 victory last Friday afternoon.
Linebacker Terrance Quarles drags down Hamilton wide receiver Donnie Duncan in the third quarter of Palisades’ 21-14 victory last Friday afternoon.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

It was only one game, but for a Palisades squad that had lost four in a row, Friday afternoon’s 21-14 victory over Hamilton might just as well have been the Super Bowl. Not only did it give the team some much-needed confidence, it also vaulted the Dolphins into a share of first place in the Western League. “I’m pleased as punch but we have a long way to go,” PaliHi Head Coach Kelly Loftus told his players in the team huddle after the game. “We have a long way to go and a statement to make.” Palisades had the worst record of any of the league’s six teams going into Friday’s opener. Now the Dolphins find themselves not at the bottom, but the top–and they intend to stay there. “Our new motto is ‘Keep it rolling,'”‘ Loftus said. “It starts at practice Monday through Thursday and hopefully carries over to Friday night.” Up next for the Dolphins is Fairfax (4-2), which also opened league play with a win. The junior varsity game kicks off at 4 p.m., followed by the varsity at 7 p.m. Just like it had at Reseda the week before, Palisades marched downfield for a touchdown on its opening drive Friday, setting the tone for a hard-hitting, physical game that was dominated by the defenses. “Getting that first score was huge because it showed we could play with them,” Loftus said. “Our offense got us the lead in the first half and our defense kept us in the lead in the second half. Even though we lost last week I thought we started playing better and that effort carried over to today.” Leading 21-7 at halftime, the Dolphins (2-4) forced a three-and-out on Hamilton’s first possession of the third quarter, but Pali’s offense was unable to capitalize. The Yankees’ defense also buckled down and when Joe Berman’s punt was blocked and recovered by Hamilton at Pali’s 24-yard-line early in the fourth quarter, the Dolphins’ lead looked in jeopardy. Their defense stiffened, however, and Hamilton turned the ball over on downs. “That was a huge turning point in the game,” Loftus said afterwards. “If they score there they get the momentum and anything can happen.” Hamilton (3-3) pulled to within a touchdown on a desperation 29-yard touchdown pass with 35 seconds left, but Palisades recovered the ensuing onside kick and ran out the clock.

Writing in the Fast Lane

Motorcycle enthusiast and new author John Stein, surrounded by several vintage bikes in the garage of his home on Chatauqua.
Motorcycle enthusiast and new author John Stein, surrounded by several vintage bikes in the garage of his home on Chatauqua.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

By Shuhei Matsuo John Stein has had many successes in his advertising career, but he now can add an accomplishment just as impressive to his resume. He is now officially an author. Driven by his passion for motorcycles, the 15-year Pacific Palisades resident published his first book, “World’s Fastest Motorcycle: The Day The Bonneville Salt Stood Still,” on August 31, thus fulfilling one of his lifelong goals. Stein will discuss his book and autograph copies for guests at Village Books on Swarthmore Avenue next Wednesday, October 24, at 7:30 p.m. Stein’s talents as a creative thinker and writer have always served him well in his advertising career. In 1988, he founded Stein Robaire Helm, which was named the West’s fastest growing agency in three years. In 1995, he founded Band of Gypsies, a creative consulting firm that has developed campaigns for a number of famous companies such as K-Swiss, Baja Fresh, HealthNet and UPN. He now serves the firm as the president. While Stein has worked on just about every kind of product imaginable, cars and motorcycles are where his passion lies. Over the years, he has created advertisements for Nissan, Volkswagen, Peugeot, Isuzu, Suzuki, Daewoo and Porsche as well as Honda, Yamaha, and Indian Motorcycles. So one day, he decided to write a book about his life’s passion. “I’ve always done advertising as a profession and I’ve always been with motorcycles as a hobby,” Stein says. “Ever since I was 12 or 13, I’ve been fascinated by them.” In “World’s Fastest Motorcycle,” Stein journeys the Bonneville Salt Flats to chronicle the history of motorcycle land speed racing and the monumental 2006 BUB Motorcycle Speed Trials, where three of the sport’s leaders campaigned for world record honors. Stein uses his advertising creativity in the book, which includes over 200 photographs and gives readers an opportunity to experience the triumphs and failures of landspeed racing alongside the fastest men in the world. Stein began writing his book about two years ago and despite the amount of information he had to cover, he says finishing it was “not that hard.” “I knew there would be information in old magazines or books,” he says. “I knew because people are so passionate about it, it wouldn’t be difficult to get them to talk. It’s not like they are hiding anything, but they are only too happy to talk about it.” Sure, interviewing those motorcyclists may have been easy, but that is only one part of publishing a book. What about the writing part? “To me it was like doing a college term paper,” Stein admits. “But just 50 times more because of the amount of the tale.” Still, Stein claims the whole process wasn’t hard to do because he knew he had a good idea. “It was just a function of hours and determination,” he says. However, Stein faced the most difficult time during the process when he lost months’ worth of work on his computer. He abandoned the project for about a month but decided to get back into it once he realized there was nothing he could do to get the lost work back. Finally, after two years of writing, Stein has a sense of satisfaction from publishing his first book and says the experience taught him an important life lesson. “Maybe it sounds like a cliche, but if you set your sights on doing something and just keep at it, the chances are very good that you’ll do it,” he says. “If you have an idea, go for it.” His wife Marilyn, is an L.A. native, plays volleyball four times a week and also teaches special education at a local school. He has a son, Nick, 26, who is learning to be a film editor and a daughter, Liz, 23, who works in advertising sales at MTV. In some ways, Stein says, writing a book is similar to racing a motorcycle in that both require the utmost discipline and determination. “These are larger-than-life guys that are kind of like in the Wild West,” he says. “You know, like an Olympian, ‘I want to be the fastest man in the world, not second or third,’ and they do it. That’s really great.” Although he has 25 motorcycles at his house, including a 50cc Grand Prix roadracer, Stein says he doesn’t ride them very often for safety reasons. Yet he has always been fascinated by them, and they are one of the reasons he moved to Southern California 20 years ago. “If you are into theater, you go to New York,” says Stein, a native of St. Louis. “But if you are into cars and motorcycles, some of the most talented, knowledgeable people are around here [in Southern California].” A stereotypical image of Southern California, especially areas like Pacific Palisades, might be someone driving a fancy car along the beach. And it is true that many people in the Palisades do drive fancy cars, but they know about their cars, Stein says. “In the Palisades you see a lot of beautiful cars, but there are also several people who are what I call ‘gear heads,’ meaning that for them it’s not just about driving a fancy car, it’s about actually knowing how to take it apart,” Stein explains. “There is an interesting collection of people around here who really do know about their cars. They can’t just write a check, but they know how to take it apart. So I found this interesting and surprising.” A “gear head” from Pacific Palisades has got his thoughts together and published a book on motorcycles. What’s his next goal? “When I went to Bonneville [in the beginning of September], I had one gentleman approach me about maybe doing some television, related to the same subject,” Stein says. “And I had other interesting books related to this, maybe biographies of some of these people, as opposed to this more general book about this subject.” Published by Parker House Publishing, World’s Fastest Motorcycle is available at Village Books, 1049 Swarthmore. (Editor’s note: Shuhei Matsuo is a senior journalism major at Pepperdine and sports editor of the student newspaper, The Graphic).

Calendar for the Week of October 18

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18 All are invited to join a Peace Vigil hosted by Palisadians for Peace every Thursday from 5 to 6 p.m. at the corner of Swarthmore and Sunset. Palisadian Janette Rainwater discusses and signs ‘2060: A Love Story in a Utopian Future,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. Rainwater is a retired clinical psychologist who earned her Ph.D. from Berkeley in 1964. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19 Palisades Beautiful meeting, 10 a.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. Upcoming neighborhood tree planting will be discussed. Members, friends and the general public are welcome. Contact: www.palisadesbeautiful@earthlink.net.’ A free screening of ‘Call Me Madam,’ starring Ethel Merman and Donald O’Connor, 1 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. This monthly program is co-hosted by Friends of the Library and the Palisades AARP chapter. Gala opening concert of the 2007-2008 season by the St. Matthew’s Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Thomas Neenan, 8 p.m. at St. Matthew’s Church, 1031 Bienveneda. Tickets at the door: $25. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20 Friends of the Library used book sale, 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., the Palisades Branch Library parking lot, 861 Alma Real. All proceeds benefit the library. Volunteers are invited to join the monthly work party on the Village Green from 9 to 11 a.m. Just bring shears and gloves. Contact: Marge Gold of the Village Green Committee at 459-5167. Holiday Boutique & Crafts Fair, today and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m., Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine Temple, 17080 Sunset Blvd. Free parking and free admission. (See story, page TK.) Singer/musican Shakeh and guitarist Chris Pinnick (formerly with the group Chicago) present a concert of adult contemporary eclectic music, 2 to 3 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library, 861 Alma Real. Free admission; donations are accepted. Everyone is invited to an Oktoberfest meal, 6 p.m. in Luther Hall at the Palisades Lutheran Church, corner of Sunset and El Medio. For ticket prices and other information, call (310) 459-2358. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21 Tenth Annual Town Fair, sponsored by the Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Antioch, between Swarthmore and Via de la Paz. The Westside Waldorf School holds a benefit event to help pay for a traffic signal at Sunset Boulevard and Los Liones Drive, 3 to 7 p.m. at The Outdoor Room at 17311 Sunset, across the street from the school. Palisades Symphony will perform ‘The Newspaper Suite for Trombone and Orchestra’ and other classical music, 7:30 p.m. at the Palisades Lutheran Church, 15905 Sunset. Free admission. MONDAY, OCTOBER 22 Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy meeting, 7:30 p.m. at Stewart Hall in Temescal Gateway Park. Public testimony begins at 8 p.m. Pacific Palisades Residents Association and No Oil, Inc. invites the community to a combined annual meeting on Monday, October 22, 2007, in the main meeting room of the Pacific Palisades Women’s Club, 901 Haverford Street, Pacific Palisades CA. Beginning at 7 p.m. refreshments will be available, followed at 7:30 by a short business meeting and election of the 2007 ‘ 2008 Board of Directors. Ms. Joy Horowitz, author and journalist, will discuss her recently published book parts per million, the poisoning of Beverly hills high school. Guest speaker, Los Angeles City Councilman Bill Rosendahl, will discuss important community and regional district issues. There will be time for audience discussion with the speakers. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23 Chamber Music Palisades opens its season at 8 p.m. at St. Matthew’s parish, 1031 Bienveneda. Tickets at the door: $25. Artist and educator Ruth San Pietro addresses the Palisades Art Association at 7 p.m. at the Palisades Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24 Palisades AARP Travel Group features a slide presentation on Myanmar by television’s Dr. Art Ulene, 2 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. Weekly writing meeting for members of all 12-Step programs or anyone with a habitual problem or illness, 7 to 8 p.m. at 16730 Bollinger Dr. Telephone (310) 454-5138 or e-mail info@12stepsforeverybody.org. A three-hour writing workshop is held at the same location every third Saturday at 9 a.m. Pacific Palisades resident John Stein discusses and signs ‘The World’s Fastest Motorcycle: The Day the Bonneville Salt Stood Still,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. (See story, page 8.) THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25 Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, 7 p.m., Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. Public invited. ‘Thanking Father Ted: Thirty-Five Years of Notre Dame Co-Education,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.

Collection Ignites Creativity

Native Palisadian and artist Tom Hofer, whose exhibition of matchbook collages is now on display at The Hidden Cafe, 1515 Palisades Dr., through November 30.
Native Palisadian and artist Tom Hofer, whose exhibition of matchbook collages is now on display at The Hidden Cafe, 1515 Palisades Dr., through November 30.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Phillumeny is the word ascribed to the hobby of collecting matchbooks or other match related ephemera. Some people pick up matches as souvenirs or reminders of places they’ve visited; others seek out matchbooks because they are interested in the different labels and advertisements; and still others save them for their obvious function, lighting cigarettes. Native Palisadian Tom Hofer, though, has a different reason. Part phillumenist, part artist, Hofer recently created 18 matchbook collages, 11 of which are on display at The Hidden Cafe in the Palisades Highlands, by recreating his favorite matchbooks, on a much larger scale, complete with striker and staple. ‘I don’t consider myself a matchbook collector, but I am collecting them,’ Hofer says. ‘I collect them for their artistic resource, so I can turn it into something else.’ Hofer began creating collages several years ago. In an attempt to recreate the artwork of one of his favorite artists, Hofer quickly became aware that paint was not his medium. He was much more adept in working with paper and glue, in part due to his job as a graphic artist at the Palisadian-Post, since 1989. ‘It was a lot easier for me to recreate something by cutting out paper and creating different layers,’ Hofer says. ‘It was easier for me to do it with paper than paint.’ Soon after making his first collage, based on a painting by Shag, Hofer discovered his father’s large collection of matchbooks, mostly from places he had been. His father, Arnold, who came to America from Germany in the 1950s, had been collecting matchbooks since he arrived. ‘I happened to see my dad’s matchbook from the House of Lee and I thought, ‘Hmm, I can reproduce that and I’m not limited to paper if I’m doing an object,” Hofer says. ‘I can go for different texture for the striker and stick a staple on the bottom.’ After completing the House of Lee collage, representing the legendary Chinese restaurant on Sunset, and several others, Hofer moved on to other artistic endeavors. A bass player, songwriter and vocalist, he focused his creative energy on his music for a couple of years. But after cleaning out an art file at work, and beginning to compile a portfolio, Hofer’s interest in creating collages was sparked once again. ‘Earlier this year I was trying to work on music, but it was creatively just not happening, so I thought I would give the collages another go. Suddenly I began throwing myself head-first into those and having a blast doing it.’ Working at his parents’ house in Pacific Palisades, Hofer completed several collages the first weekend. ‘I had always meant to come back to them because I had plenty of matchbooks I had left to do,’ he says. ‘Now that pile is growing daily.’ The variety of collages he has created range from Las Vegas hotels, to bars and diners, from beverages to historical establishments such as Don the Beachcomber. And although many of his inspirations are from his father’s extensive collection, Hofer is always on the lookout for visually interesting matchbooks to recreate. ‘The first dozen or so that caught my eye were from my dad’s collection,’ he says. ‘Now I just go on eBay and spend far too much time looking up matchbooks I haven’t seen before that feature good artwork.’ In the beginning Hofer was much less selective, bidding on small lots of matchbooks, confident that somewhere in the pile would be a matchbook he could recreate. ‘Now I take closer looks at the images on eBay and make sure there is something worth my while before I even start to bid.’ After Hofer selects the matchbook he wants to recreate, the artistic process begins. He scans the image into his computer and blows up the image to the size he wants to recreate, then visits the art store to find the paper or matboard whose colors match the original matchbook most closely. After creating a template on his computer, he begins the tedious process of cutting out each individual element of the matchbook, and assembling the pieces to create the final product. ‘Working on them is my version of meditation because I get sort of lost in the period and the art of the matchbook,’ Hofer says. ‘By doing the collage it’s almost like I’m dissecting the artwork of the original piece and seeing it for its elements of shape and color and rebuilding it.’ After completing 18 collages, and receiving numerous compliments from those who had viewed his work, Hofer began exploring the idea of having it displayed somewhere. After reading a story in the Post about a local artist whose work was shown at The Hidden Cafe (1515 Palisades Dr.), Hofer scouted the location and then contacted owner Mary Autera. ‘It was amazing. It went great,’ Hofer says of their meeting. ‘She even suggested that I could start hanging them that night.’ Although Hofer waited a few days before doing so, giving him a chance to frame them, he soon had 11 of his collages on display in the restaurant, and the following week held an artist’s reception, where he received enough positive feedback to encourage him to continue this artistic endeavor. Hofer now hopes to begin selling his pieces commercially and displaying them in more places. He plans to take some of his Vegas-inspired collages, which are among his favorites, to different hotels or restaurants in Vegas, to see about having them hung there. With three more collages in the works, Hofer intends to continue recreating matchbooks, incorporating new media like fabric, wood or found objects and he wants to begin new collages inspired by stained glass art, stamps, album covers and comic books. For more examples of Hofer’s work, go to www.tomhofer.org

Bringing the Reality of War Down Stage

Director Teresa Dowell-Vest double cast the roles in “A Piece of My Heart.” Fro left are Steele (Tiffany Snow and Vivian Vanderwerd), and Martha (Diane Cummings and Tess Sorensen).

The debate on the war in Iraq stirs the political cauldron. On one side, there are those who believe that the mission must be completed; on the other side are those who insist that the mission should be aborted. Both sides acknowledge the brutal and debilitating circumstances American servicemen and-women face, with one side validating the hardship while the other calls for immediate relief. But few people want to talk about the fallout facing the nation when thousands of men and women return home. Are we prepared for the massive number of both physical and mental postwar victims, the economic reintegration and the social cost of assimilating these war-worn servicemen and-women back into the American culture? The arc of war begins with marketing the cause and swiftly moves into the realities on the ground, the heightened sense of danger and adrenalin and finally life after war. ‘ A Piece of My Heart,’ based on the true stories of six women’four nurses, a Red Cross volunteer and an USO entertainer–confronts the audience with the truth these women lived and their struggle during the Vietnam war and after, which reverberates as we are engaged in another war. The play by Shirley Lauro, now on stage at the Morgan-Wixson through the end of the month, is based on the book by Keith Walker, which records the memories of a war in the words of women who went to war, each for a different reason, and were courageous enough to detail the truth of their experiences. In Lauro’s adaptation, the shock begins with the expectations and exigencies of military rigor. The women are humiliated by the brusque impersonality of the commanding officers, rudimentary living conditions, and relentless heat, fear and exhaustion. The women find relief and release in booze, sex and the camaraderie of the sisterhood. But above all, they find comfort by sharing their feelings with one another, which are unfettered and frighteningly boundless. In this production, director Ter’sa Dowell-Vest has double cast each role, with one actor playing the younger woman in war, and the other playing the same woman 20 years later. The device works well not only for the clarity it offers the audience, but for extending the breath of the drama as well. women can remain forceful in their exuberance, naivet’ and hopefulness. With simple staging, a few benches and an evocative backdrop of shredded canvas, the drama unfolds. One girl joins the army to leave home: ‘I wasn’t into anything, I was out of Erie, Pennsylvania.’ Another, a Vassar graduate and Junior League provisional, is excited about going to Vietnam, where French is spoken, because she ‘took her junior year in Paris.’ Another was a hippie, anti-war, who was moved by President Kennedy’s call for service. The play moves swiftly to the war theater, which to these young recruits still feels surreal. ‘How can there be a war down there: it’s green, so green?’ The truth about war engulfs these tender hearts quickly and urgently. The wounded and dying soldiers occupy their days and nights, especially nights, ‘the hardest, because people die at night.’ Their world has collapsed into chaos, fear and terrific loneliness. One girl sums it up: ‘ I have got to go home, it’s getting a little crazy here. It’s like no other place, no other time on earth.’ And then, it’s time to go home. Act II reminds us that the war doesn’t end on the battlefield, but seethes and brews inside. The women are disoriented”I have feelings I don’t understand. I’m the only thing different since I got back.’ Their three years’ experience is discounted; they suffer flashes, night sweats and ennui. In the end, these six women achieve some kind of peace; some go back to school, one finds God, another becomes a lobbyist fighting for the rights of those who have been sickened from Agent Orange. The message for us resides on the Wall on Washington, where the 58,000 names that shine have touched us all. ‘ A Piece of My Heart’ continues at the Morgan-Wixson, 2627 Pico Blvd., through Saturday, October 27, with performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. For tickets ($18 and $15) call (310) 828-7519.

U.S. Supreme Court Denies Palisades High Appeal

Expected Decision Paves Way for Harassment Trial

The U.S. Supreme Court chose not to hear an appeal from Palisades Charter High School at the beginning of October. The court’s decision all but assures a trial for the sexual harassment lawsuit that has been mired in lower-court appellate decisions since the case was filed in June 2004. The high court’s decision was not unexpected; it reviews only a small fraction of the thousands of cases submitted each year. PaliHi Executive Director Amy Held would not comment on the court’s decision. In December, a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court will probably assign a trial date for the case. Unless the case is settled out of court, a trial is expected by next summer, said Ed Carney, the lawyer representing plaintiff Thomas Knapp, M.D. Knapp, a Pacific Palisades resident, filed the lawsuit on behalf of his daughter, who visited the school as a prospective student in February 2004. The suit alleges that European history teacher Ron Cummings made disrespectful comments about her religious background, interspersed a lecture with unnecessary sexual innuendo and commented on her body. The California Commission on Teacher Credentialing reprimanded Cummings for his actions but did not revoke his credential as demanded by Knapp. The school’s insurer decided to appeal to the Supreme Court in hopes of overturning a series of rulings made and affirmed by California courts that the California Charter Schools Association (CCSA) says could be devastating to the legal and financial protections of independent charter schools statewide. Because state courts redefined Palisades High as a nonprofit public benefit corporation, the school as well as all other independent charter schools could lose the benefits of being a public entity. The CCSA expects that less legal immunity for schools and their employees could mean the cost of insuring charters will rise. Originally, Knapp’s suit demanded only compensatory damages of $120,000, which he said was the cost of private-school tuition (since his daughter had decided against attending PaliHi). But last month, Knapp changed his complaint to also seek punitive damages from the school. (Only non-public entities can be ordered to pay punitive damages.) The amount of those damages would be determined by a jury. A judge approved the change, but left the school the possibility to contest punitive damages. Knapp’s lawyer says he hopes to punish the school for not having a credible disciplinary system. But he says demands for punitive damages are not inevitable. ‘If [the school] issued an apology to [my client’s daughter] and instituted a disciplinary procedure, my clients wouldn’t care about the money,’ Carney said. Cummings continues to teach AP European History on a part-time basis, said Amy Held, who would not make further comments on the case. —– To contact Staff Writer Max Taves, e-mail reporter@palipost.com or call (310) 454-1321 ext. 28.

Local Authors Nominated for Book Award

Palisadians Jody Roberts and Lisa Gelber’s photographic ABC book, “P is for Peanut” (Getty Publications, 2007) was recently nominated for a Southern California Independent Booksellers award.

As children’s art teachers, Palisadians Jody Roberts and Lisa Gelber try to expose kids to as many forms of art as possible. Several years ago, they decided to do a photography project with their students. The two scoured bookshelves looking for the perfect resource to introduce children to the beauty and creativity of photography, but they couldn’t find anything inspiring, so they decided to create their own. The result, ‘P is for Peanut,’ (Getty Publications, 2007) a photographic ABC, by Roberts and Gelber was published in May. ‘It went from a traditional ABC book to something really playful and surprising, more of a discovery than just nouns that simply describe what you see there,’ Roberts said. Now ‘P is for Peanut’ has been nominated for a Southern California Independent Booksellers Association (SCIBA) Book Award, as one of five finalists in the Children’s Picture Book category. In order to be eligible for a SCIBA award, an author must reside between the Central Coast and the Mexican border, and the selection committee tries to choose titles that reflect a uniquely Southern California experience, local culture or setting. They are awarded in five categories: fiction, nonfiction, mystery fiction, children’s novels and children’s picture books. Roberts and Gelber will attend a ceremony on October 20 at the Biltmore Hotel downtown, where awards will be given. ‘We’re excited. It’s a big event, with big names in literature,’ Gelber said. ‘Ray Bradbury is nominated.’ Still, although thrilled by their nomination, the two seem most excited about the process through which their book was developed. ‘We had some great ideas for a concept and then realized we have a great resource in our backyard,’ Roberts said. ‘The Getty was growing its photo collection at the same time and we had the idea to use their collection as inspiration to introduce and get kids excited about looking at photography.’ Soon, after presenting their idea to Getty Publications and getting the go ahead, Roberts and Gelber were delving through the photo files at the Getty Center. They began their exploration at the Getty Research Institute, a facility open to the public. Then, after nearly a year, they were given access to the Getty’s department of photographs. ‘It was the greatest day when we got access to the photography department’s collection,’ Gelber said. The collection contains more than 30,000 images, ranging from photography’s experimental beginnings in England and France in the 1830s to the 20th century, kept in binders that Roberts and Gelber went through one by one. Still, choosing the photographs was only half the fun, because the two would also have to come up with fascinating words to run alongside the captivating photos. ‘Our first priority was to find photos that were really child friendly and accessible, fun, humorous, playful and interesting for children to look at,’ Roberts said. ‘We would be in love with a photograph, but not sure a six year old would be in love with it like we were, or see what we saw,’ Gelber added. ‘And we always had word lists and were thinking of new words, because we didn’t want just nouns.’ The appendix even features a fact section with thumbnails of the art used, and bits of information about the artist or photograph. ‘It provides a way to get into the photographs a second or third time so you go back and start a dialogue about it,’ Gelber said. ‘Jody and I were in heaven. We would gather books and articles about the artists, cull everything together and come to each other with all these great facts.’ The final product is a delightful photography book, featuring 26 different artists like Walker Evans, Julia Margaret Cameron and Dorothea Lange juxtaposed with engaging and inspiring words, like ‘explore,’ ‘yikes’ and ‘kooky,’ which can be enjoyed by children and adults alike. ‘We’re hoping when an adult or child reads it,’ Roberts said, ‘the fun or surprising word will spark their imagination.’

Bette Koupal, 64

A Church’s Wedding Director for 22 Years

Bette Koupal, a former resident of Pacific Palisades for 32 years, died peacefully in Los Angeles on October 5 from the effects of a brain tumor. She was 64. Born in Omaha, Nebraska, on August 23, 1943, Bette was raised in California in both Santa Monica and Chula Vista. In the early 1960s, she became a flight attendant for United Airlines. She met her husband, Wayne, in 1965 in Playa del Rey. They were married in 1966 at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Pacific Palisades. Their first son, Marc, was born in 1969. The following year, they moved to Pacific Palisades, where they lived on Livorno Drive for 32 years. Their second son, Drew, was born in 1971. Bette stopped flying for United after her marriage, and in the early 1970s started working at the Westwood United Methodist Church. She first worked as secretary to a number of ministers, then began a 22-year career as the wedding director for the church. Bette was very active in the schools her boys attended, which included Marquez Elementary, Palisades Village School, Paul Revere Junior High, and Palisades High School. In 2002, the Koupals moved from the Palisades to an apartment in Westwood, until Wayne retired in 2004 from Merrill Lynch after 40 years as a financial advisor. They then moved to a home they had purchased in Lake Arrowhead. In addition to her husband of 41 years, Bette is survived by her sons, Marc and Drew, who both live in the greater Los Angeles area; her brother, Jon Calkins of Malibu; and a sister, Genene McGovern of Brentwood, plus numerous nieces and nephews. Memorial services will be held at 4 p.m. on Sunday, October 21, at Westwood United Methodist Church, 10497 Wilshire Blvd. Because of construction at the church parking lot, a shuttle service will be available at 10351 Santa Monica Blvd. (the red brick building northeast of the intersection at Beverly Glen). Street parking near the church is very limited. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Bette Koupal Mission Fund, c/o the Westwood United Methodist Church (Los Angeles, CA 90024). ‘Bette’s warm spirit was felt by all who knew her,’ said Joan Sather, a friend in the Palisades. ‘Her many friends will always remember her amazing smile and fun-loving attitude.’