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The Santa Monica Conservancy presents THE MOVIEGOER’S GUIDE TO SANTA MONICA

Join local author and film historian Harry Medved for a lecture, screening and walking tour featuring Santa Monica locations that starred in the movies. Co-author of the recently published “Hollywood Escapes: The Moviegoers Guide to Exploring Southern California’s Great Outdoors,” Medved will explore the history of filming in Santa Monica with clips from movies such as Rebel Without A Cause, It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, Get Shorty, The Truth About Cats & Dogs, and Oceans Eleven, and the 1973 Best Picture Oscar Winner, The Sting. The program is free and open to the public. Beginning with the Vitagraph Studios next to the Rapp Saloon in 1911 up to the present, Santa Monica’s famed natural and architectural environment has hosted Hollywood film-makers using a wide range of locations. Medved’s lecture/screening is followed by a walking tour of historic Palisades Park, exploring cinematic locations. The program is free; however, books will be available for sale, benefiting the Santa Monica Conservancy. K-MOZART 105.1 FM personality and Santa Monica local Rich Capparela will introduce the event, which takes place on Sunday February 11th at The Fairmont Miramar Hotel, 101 Wilshire Blvd. (at Ocean Ave.), beginning at the hotel’s Malibu Bungalow at 2 PM. The tour will conclude at the hotel at 5 PM. Hotel valet parking is available but is not validated. Alternatively, use street parking or nearby city parking structures. Please wear comfortable walking shoes, as the walking tour is a 1.5 miles round-trip stroll. The Santa Monica Conservancy is a nonprofit organization dedicated to educating the public about preserving Santa Monica’s cultural heritage. For more information, check their website at www.smconservancy.org, or call (310) 496-3146.

Sewage Spill Forces New Beach Closure

Will Rogers State Beach is expected to be open this afternoon

A sewage spill midday Tuesday prompted the closure of Will Rogers State Beach by County Public Health officials. This is the second time in three weeks that the beach was closed due to a sewer main break. The beach is expected to be opened this afternoon, pending the results of water tests, said Eric Edwards, the acting chief environmental health specialist with the county. An eight-inch sewer line near the corner of Pacific Coast Highway and West Channel Road broke after a private contractor installed a liner at 135 Ocean Way. Sanitation crews estimated that 431 gallons spilled into an adjacent city catch basin, which is a tributary to the beach. County health crews closed the beach 100 yards on both sides of that tributary. The Los Angeles Times reported that city sanitation crews notified county public health oficials about 3 hours after they discovered the break. This spill was significantly smaller than two spills that occurred on January 19, which collectively spilled 75,000 gallons of raw sewage. Those spills prompted a four-day beach closure. These recent spills come on the heels of a County report, detailing the hazard to public health posed by aging sewer infrastructure and poor communication between sanitation operators and public health officials. As previously reported in the Palisadian-Post, that report estimated that 11.6 million gallons of sewage hadspilled in the Santa Monica Bay watershed since 2002. According to the county’s detailed investigation, only 10 percent of 202 sewage spills since 2002 were properly recorded. No records were found that the county’s Public Health Department was ever notified by local wastewater agencies of spills after they occurred. For up-to-date information on beach safety, visit the County’s public health website: www.lapublichealth.org/beach ———— Reporting by Staff Writer Max Taves. To contact, e-mail: reporter@palipost.com; Phone: (310) 454-1321 ext. 28.

Temescal Renovations Approved (and Needed)

The city park in lower Temescal Canyon was allocated $250,000 in Prop. K funding last year to upgrade its wooden pagodas, park benches and picnic tables. Currently, two picnic areas have no benches or tables. Dry-rotting wooden beams have fallen from two pagodas.
The city park in lower Temescal Canyon was allocated $250,000 in Prop. K funding last year to upgrade its wooden pagodas, park benches and picnic tables. Currently, two picnic areas have no benches or tables. Dry-rotting wooden beams have fallen from two pagodas.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

A guide to the city’s park in lower Temescal Canyon might read: Caution! Beware of dry-rotting pagodas, ramshackle tables, wobbly benches, misfiring water fountains, mud puddles and West Nile Virus! The City Council approved $250,000 to renovate the park in Temescal last June, using Proposition K funds. Progress there awaits a Bureau of Engineering pre-design expected within the month and approval from a local oversight committee. But change seems like a distant reality for park visitors, who have complained about lackluster facilities and deficient upkeep for years. ‘It’s a disaster,’ said Palisadian Ted Mackie who frequently walks his dog through the park. ‘It’s miserably maintained. It doesn’t look like the lawn is fertilized or the bushes trimmed.’ Barbara Kohn, a Palisadian, remembers visiting the park four years ago with her four-year-old grandson. ‘It was so filthy, I couldn’t sit on the benches,’ said Kohn, who was recently appointed by Councilman Bill Rosendahl to help direct funding for city parks within the district. ‘Plus, there were splinters everywhere. I was appalled, and I haven’t been back ever since,’ There are seven pagoda-style picnic areas in the park along Temescal Canyon Road, but few of the areas seem habitable’or even safe’for picnickers. Wooden beams weakened by dry-rot perch precariously above picnic tables’some punctuated by exposed concrete rebar. In fact, yellow tape emblazoned with ‘Caution!’ closed off access to one of the pagodas Wednesday morning. At two upper pagodas, there are no benches or picnic tables. Mini-pools of stagnant water and mud have replaced park benches there, simultaneously repelling humans but attracting mosquitoes. One pagoda has a warning sign from the County Vector Control, urging caution of West Nile Virus. The city’s Department of Recreation and Parks is charged with maintaining the park. In a conversation with the Palisadian-Post Tuesday, Debby Rolland, superintendent of the department’s operations in West L.A., defended the maintenance of park but acknowledged the need for new infrastructure. She said staff crews clean the park daily, but recent community demands to uproot homeless from the area have diverted crews from their normal operations. She also said that staff frequently tries to clean out water to prevent stagnant pools from forming but that a large amount of water from local backyards often clogs drains. ‘The condition of the pagodas is very poor, and the picnic tables are falling apart,’ Rolland said. ‘But they are going to be replaced with Prop. K funding.’ Lower Temescal was one of few parks that was allocated Prop. K money last year, but visitors may not benefit from the new funding until July 2008, according to Neil Drucker, who oversees Prop. K funding for the Bureau of Engineering. The bureau has 142 projects to review for the Recreation and Parks, and construction at lower Temescal will be contingent on the progress of those other projects. He said that a preliminary design of the project is expected to be completed within the month. After that, a group of community members selected by Councilman Rosendahl, called a Local Volunteer Neighborhood Oversight Committee or LVNOC, will draft a final plan and hold three public hearings. ‘Construction has to be awarded by July 2007, but there is no legally mandated completion date,’ Drucker said. ‘The goal would be to have it completed by July 2008.’ ———– Reporting by Staff Writer Max Taves. E-mail: reporter@palipost.com; Phone: (310) 985-1607 ext. 28.

LAUSD Rejects Pali Funding Request

Lack of funding means that hundreds of books lie haphazardly stacked in the library at Palisades Charter High, thanks to a shortage of shelf space.
Lack of funding means that hundreds of books lie haphazardly stacked in the library at Palisades Charter High, thanks to a shortage of shelf space.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

An application for more than $1 million in funds to address years of delayed maintenance and accommodate expansion of student enrollment at Palisades Charter High School was rejected by the Los Angeles Unified School District in early January. This means that the school’s plans to modernize the library, relieve overcrowding at the cafeteria and build needed lockers will continue to be shelved. L.A. voters have approved several school bonds since 2004, including Measure R, that promised to repair and upgrade aging school infrastructure, reduce overcrowding and furnish classrooms and libraries at charter schools. But PaliHi’s requests for a piece of the $120 million allotted for charters have been rejected, delaying many school plans. Last year, when PaliHi’s earlier application for nearly $1 million was rejected, school officials felt confused by the district’s budgeting process. The district’s rejection of their application this year has left administrators feeling no less confused’and even a little slighted. ‘They gave us a blanket rejection,’ said Greg Wood, chief business officer at PaliHi. ‘It wasn’t an all-or-nothing application. We were applying for several things.’ Enrollment at PaliHi has increased nearly 60 percent since the early 1990s, and the school has added 400 students, or 16 percent, since 2002, bringing enrollment to 2,780. Because growth in school infrastructure has not kept pace with the increase in enrollment, students and teachers share fewer and fewer resources, say administrators. For example, dozens of teachers do not have their own classrooms. According to school estimates, there are only three library books per student, and hundreds of books lie haphazardly stacked in the library because of a shortage of shelf space. A lack of cafeteria tables means that hundreds of students don’t have tables for lunchtime, and hundreds of students who not have their own lockers. Despite the school’s needs for funding after years of growing enrollment, the district rejected PaliHi’s application because the school had no future plans to continue expanding. ‘The basis for the program was the expansion of charter seats,’ said Ken Hargreaves, director of operations and new construction for LAUSD. ‘In the case of PaliHi, they were not expanding. We don’t try to be hard on the charters, but we have to apply consistency.’ Although the school reserves more than 40 percent of its seats for students from ‘severely overcrowded’ schools throughout the city, the image of Pacific Palisades as a wealthy community unfairly hampers PaliHi’s ability to acquire funding from the district, said Amy Held, executive director. Accessing the district’s bond money has eluded not only PaliHi but many other charter schools as well. ‘At the rate charters are growing’about 20 per year’the district has promised scraps,’ said Gary Larson, spokesperson for the California Charter Schools Association (CCSA). ‘And they’re not even allocating that money. That’s frustrating.’ More than half of the $120 million that the district has allocated for charter schools remains unspent or unallocated. Still, Hargreaves said that he has facilitated 11,000 new seats at charters using Measure R funding. The CCSA has met with LAUSD to facilitate funding for charter schools, but PaliHi’s repeated failure to secure district funding has lowered its expectations. ‘This process has dampened our enthusiasm,’ said Wood, who will be tasked with preparing any future applications. ‘It seems like if they want to give you money, you’ll get it. If they don’t, you won’t. That’s the sense I get.’ PaliHi receives the overwhelming majority of its funding from the state Department of Education, which will also reimburse the school for hundreds of thousands of dollars next school year. Sometime this month, Pali students and teachers will begin to use nine new portable classrooms given by the district. The school hoped to use part of its $1-million request to furnish the classrooms, but the school will now have to use its own budget instead. Administrators hope that the classrooms will reduce overcrowding and teacher-traveling. ——— Reporting by Staff Writer Max Taves. E-mail: reporter@palipost.com Phone: (310) 985-1607 ext. 28.

Homeless Friends Watch a Homeless Sweep

Two of the homeless men who live at the bottom of Temescal Canyon, Rick (left) and Randall Bartoshevich, stand next to Bartoshevish's scooter, which he bought by saving some of the $900 a month he receives from disabiity. The men were watching a recent cleanup of homeless encampments near their hidden belongings. Photo: Sue Pascoe
Two of the homeless men who live at the bottom of Temescal Canyon, Rick (left) and Randall Bartoshevich, stand next to Bartoshevish’s scooter, which he bought by saving some of the $900 a month he receives from disabiity. The men were watching a recent cleanup of homeless encampments near their hidden belongings. Photo: Sue Pascoe

On a Thursday morning in late January, three homeless men watched as an L.A. Recreation and Parks Department crew cleaned out a homeless encampment in lower Temescal Canyon, near the park bathrooms. Two armed police from the city’s General Services Department were also on hand, along with Palisades Senior Lead Officer Michael Moore. According to Moore, the workers were taking away items that belonged to Seth Greenspan, who is currently in jail because of a probation violation involving a robbery at the nearby Tahitian Terrace mobile home park. The three homeless men knew him. ‘Seth was cool,’ said Randall Bartoshevich. ‘He’s fine when he’s on his meds.’ Bartoshevich and his friends, who identified themselves only as Rudy and Rick, had hidden their belongings once they received the mandatory 72-hour notice of the sweep. They talked openly about their situation. Rick and Rudy said they are both on medication, which doesn’t allow them to work. ‘I’m having a good day, today,’ said Rudy, who is from Burbank. Rick joked, ‘I’m not crazy, I’m just a little unwell.’ Bartoshevich has neuropathy in his left arm and both legs, which prevents him from standing for long. ‘Medi-Cal wouldn’t give me a wheelchair,’ he said, so he recently bought an electric scooter for $1,050, after saving some of the $900 a month he gets from disability. He plugs in the scooter in at a friend’s house and can travel 40 miles on a six-hour charge. ‘I’m a happy homeless person,’ Bartoshevich said. ‘I don’t bother nobody.’ All three men were fiercely protective of their ‘home area,’ and complained about the homeless who move in when homeless sweeps are conducted in other areas like Santa Monica and Topanga. ‘They steal from us, just like they steal from you,’ Rudy said. ‘We don’t like to wake up and find some of our stuff stolen. We try to run the idiots out.’ The three describe their turf as a ‘retirement center.’ If people are on drugs and come to where they are, the three send them to ‘Meth Mountain,’ their term for the brush-covered terrain below Via de la Olas. ‘You look down from Via at night and you see the fires burning,’ Rick said. ‘That’s where all the dopers hang out,’ Bartoshevich added. The three said they have known each other for close to 20 years. As they chat with a reporter, their radio on a picnic table is tuned in to Rush Limbaugh. ‘He’d like to kill us,’ said Rudy, ‘but we listen to him anyway.’ They make it clear that they have never hurt anyone and that they cause no trouble. If they want to get warm, they light a fire in one of the barbecue grills in the park (just north of PCH). They were upset about the ‘Chico’ fire, which burned a patch of hillside above Temescal Canyon Road in October. The three name each fire after the person who starts it. They claim they had warned one LAPD officer that the man burned candles and was a danger. ‘He was passing out with candles burning.’ ‘Chico’ is no longer in Temescal. ‘We ran him out of this canyon,’ the three said. In early January a year ago, another fire on the other side of the canyon was called the ‘Smiley’ fire. ‘We ran him out, too.’ They understand that homeowners along the canyon rims worry about their homes. ‘We’re angry, too,’ Rudy said. ‘They have a $2-million home, but mine was $22 and I don’t want to lose it, either.’ Randall Bartoshevich wasn’t always homeless. He shared an apartment with his wife until they lost one of their jobs and had to move outside. Then his wife died four years ago, after being struck by a car along PCH. He has no other family. For $435 a month, he could have an apartment downtown on Skid Row, which consists of a small room, a bed and a sink. But, he said, ‘You have to step over bodies on Skid Row. I can’t live there.’ The three friends continued listening to their radio as the sweep continued up the canyon. Six large encampments and several smaller ones were cleaned out. Mattresses, chairs, tables, lawn furniture, wood and other bulky items as well as numerous bags of debris and garbage were hauled out. The load packer, which has a capacity of eight tons, was filled.

Norris Hardware Spans the Town’s History

Ellen Norris Sears (center) with her husband Grant (right) and her brother, Alan Norris, at their hardware store on Sunset. Above them is the clock from when the store was on Swarthmore.
Ellen Norris Sears (center) with her husband Grant (right) and her brother, Alan Norris, at their hardware store on Sunset. Above them is the clock from when the store was on Swarthmore. “It

As corporations around the world report their 2006 earnings, there’s good news at Norris Hardware, the town’s venerable hardware store and the only third-generation, family-owned business in Pacific Palisades. ‘We had the best sales day in the history of the store on Saturday, the weekend before Christmas,’ said Grant Sears, who runs the store with his wife, Ellen, granddaughter of founder Robert Norris. ‘And we had a very successful year.’ ‘Our sales have been increasing year,’ noted Ellen, who works with her husband in a second-floor office that was once the projection room for the Bay Theater, which closed its doors in 1978 and left the Palisades without a movie house. The two Bay Theater screens were at the far end of the current Norris building (next to the car wash), ‘and the floor slanted down’ for audience viewing, ‘so Dad had to bring dirt in to level the floor,’ Ellen explained. ‘When he was working with the contractor, he saved a [40-ft.] strip of tile from the old sidewalk entrance and left it there when they laid new cement, as a reminder for people who walk by. I think he did it for nostalgia.’ Ellen’s father, Chuck, was the fourth baby born in Pacific Palisades (on September 29, 1923), and his life traced the town’s evolving history from a tent community in Temescal Canyon to hillside mansions in the Highlands. Following its dedication as a permanent town on January 14, 1922, the Palisades began to attract early “settlers” who lived in tents while waiting for the first homes to be built on the adjacent mesas. These first families included Robert Norris and his wife, Clarissa, sister of the town’s founder, Methodist minister Charles Scott. Norris had been called from Long Beach to put in the first plumbing lines and was responsible for nearly all the plumbing installed here those first few years. He also established a plumbing shop on the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Beverly Boulevard (now Sunset), which in 1925 evolved into Norris Hardware in the new Business Block building. In 1956, Norris moved his store to Swarthmore (in the space now occupied by Benton’s and Dante’s), and in April 1979–with Chuck now in charge–the store moved into its current its 10,500-sq-.ft. location on Sunset. Chuck, who had been stationed in England during World War II after joining the Army Air Corps in 1943, returned to work at Norris Hardware and shortly thereafter met his wife, Vera. They had four children’Bridget, Alan, Ellen and Melissa’and were able to celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary in the fall of 1996, shortly before Chuck died of cancer. After his death, June Phelps wrote “A Tribute to Chuck Norris” letter to the Palisadian-Post, describing him as ‘a person we thought of as ‘Mr. Palisades.’ There are a number of such local proprietors that over the years have made our Village life special, but Mr. Norris would be a charter member on my list.’ Ellen Norris said that her grandparents built two houses on Kagawa, and that her dad built a house on Las Lomas after the war, with help from his Army buddies. She attended local public schools, graduating from Palisades High in 1971, and continued working at the family store while attending Santa Monica College. She married Grant in 1978 and they now have a home near Calabasas, next door to her brother Alan, who has worked at Norris since his teenage years. Bridget is married and lives in Mar Vista with her two children, and Melissa lives with her mother, her husband and two children in the Palisades. The sisters no longer work at the store. In an interview last week, Grant Sears recalled that after growing up in the South and serving in the military, he moved out to California and eventually worked for United Airlines at LAX for about 15 years. In the mid-1980s, he said, ‘I decided to try something new. I talked to Chuck and Alan, who were running the stores, and asked if I could learn the business. I did a little bit of everything’sweeping floors, selling, working the service counter.’ ‘You swept the floors?’ Ellen said, looking up quizzically from her computer. ‘That’s what I used to do at the old store.’ In 1998, about a year after her father died, Ellen and Grant signed a 20-year lease (‘at very reasonable terms for this area,’ he said) and have since been adding floor employees as well as a general manager and an assistant to help run the business. They currently have 16 full-time employees. When asked what business lessons she learned her father, Ellen replied, ‘Work hard. My dad worked six days a week, and he closed the store on Sunday–that was his day off, but he ended up working around the house. He didn’t have a lot of free time. I don’t work as hard anymore, now that we have managers. But it seemed before that I was working all the time.’ She later added, ‘It’s not easy owning your own business. People think it’s easy, but you have to keep up on all the changing laws and regulations for different products, and you have to worry about finding and keeping good employees.’ Norris pays competitive salaries, provides medical benefits and offers a 401-K plan, she said. Although business is good, thanks to a loyal customer base and continued sales to general contractors and remodelers working throughout the Palisades, the challenge is to stay ahead of the curve by keeping the store stocked with quality merchandise while anticipating ‘what people will need and what they will want in six months when we do our seasonal ordering,’ Grant said. ‘That’s also one of the fun things in this business.’ Even then, there’s no predicting the sudden demand for space heaters during the recent cold snap, nor the persistent lack of demand for rainy-day staples like plastic sheeting and Henry’s roof tar. But ‘hoses are moving,’ Grant said, along with other lawn and garden supplies as people are encouraged to work outside in dry winter weather. What is the number one selling product at Norris? ‘Light bulbs, storage containers and plumbing supplies are the mainstays,’ Grant said. ‘We’re selling the new energy-saving fluorescent bulbs, which are a little more expensive initially, but will save people money over time.’ While managing to attract customers with the appeal of staying in the Palisades to shop and finding good service (‘Go to Home Depot and try to get anybody to help you,’ Grant said), the owners of Norris Hardware are realistic. ‘The family-owned, privately owned hardware store is a dinosaur’it’s going away’and I think it’s going to be a big loss to communities everywhere,’ Grant said. ‘But our business was around and survived the Depression, so it’s a pretty decent business’a good business.’ Looking ahead to 2018 when the lease comes due, he laughed and said, ‘I hope we have 10 more years in us!’

St. Matthew’s: Owner of Prime Real Estate

Headmaster Dr. Les Frost came to St. Matthew's in 1984. During his tenure, the school population has remained at 325. However, the campus has expanded considerably.
Headmaster Dr. Les Frost came to St. Matthew’s in 1984. During his tenure, the school population has remained at 325. However, the campus has expanded considerably.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

When six Pacific Palisades women wrote Bishop Bertrand Stevens in August 1941 asking for an Episcopalian mission for their town, they likely never envisioned the current 42-acre site that today encompasses St. Matthew’s Parish, complete with an architecturally acclaimed church building, a large school and a state-of-the-art library–all in an idyllic canyon setting that contrasts to the blue sky. Ironically, however, the first church services were not held here on Bienveneda Avenue, north of Sunset. In October 1941, local Episcopalians gathered at the Presbyterian Conference Grounds in Temescal Canyon. However, when the small congregation learned the space was unavailable that coming summer, it subsequently moved to a parishioner’s studio. While the group briefly considered meeting in a tent, it was able to secure a site at the southwest corner of La Cruz and Swarthmore, where a simple redwood church was constructed. According to a 40-year history of St. Matthew’s School compiled by Sallie Smith and Nancy Schroeder, the Parish decided that its ministry would be centered on youth, which meant they needed a building for Sunday School classes and a possible school. Money was raised and a two-story Parish House with classrooms was constructed for $55,000 next to the church. The first classes in the building were pre-school classes, which started May 2, 1949 with 24 children, whose parents paid $15-a-month tuition. Parish board members made the art easels and wood blocks, the women made curtains and another parishioner constructed the sand box. After a year, the school was deemed successful because after paying faculty salaries of $100 a month and spending $367.40 on other improvements there was still a balance of $167.92 in the bank. In 1950, kindergarten and the first four elementary grades were added to the school, bringing the total enrollment to 105. Father Kenneth Worthington Cary reported, ‘We look forward to the addition of grade 5 next fall. Of prime importance now is the development of permanent housing for the preschool, kindergarten and the added grades. We look forward to continued growth and service to children.’ More space was needed for playground and classrooms and an expansion committee was formed. The committee wanted at least five acres and at the time there were three properties for sale in the Palisades that met that requirement: Conway Ranch (where Palisades High School stands), Marquez Knolls acreage (now Marquez Elementary School) and the Garland Ranch, also known as the ‘Southdown.’ A 1949 listing brochure described the Garland Ranch as a ‘Gentleman’s Country Estate for Sale, 85 acres of undulating paradise that provide a thousand vistas to intrigue the eye and banish worldly burdens.’ The Garland property extended from the current St. Matthew’s property on Bienveneda to the beach. The asking price was $250,000 and included, according to the brochure, ‘nine miles of bridal paths, stables and a riding ring, 20 landscaped and planted acres (sprinkled automatically), a commodious and hospitable farm house (fully furnished), brilliantly flood-lighted grounds, a cozy and practical beach cottage, a gateman’s cottage, city water, gas, electricity, telephone and real California sub-tropic climate.’ The expansion committee instantly settled on Garland Ranch, but there was a ‘small’ problem: the combined balance in the school and parish bank account was $125. They needed $5,000 for a 30-day option to buy the estate. According to one report, members went door-to-door to the parishioners and the money was raised. On September 14, 1952 the Swarthmore property where the church stood was sold to the General Telephone Company and the Parish House/school was sold to Vilma B. Ebsen for a dance studio. (The school was later the site for Archer Girls School and now Seven Arrows Elementary.) The church building was cut in half and transported to the new site on St. Matthew’s property. The school was established in the Garland farmhouse, which was eventually renamed ‘Founders’ Hall’ after the original members of the parish. A large poultry building, sometimes referred to as the turkey coops, was turned into a five-room school building. Two other classrooms were crafted from a large garage. In 1953, an eighth grade was added, giving the school a 200-student enrollment. The parish sold off acreage below Sunset to help defray costs and pay for a multi-purpose building, which was the first of the long-range expansion program for St. Matthew’s School. A year later ninth grade was also added, but in 1956 the school went back to K-6. The multi-purpose building was dedicated in 1958 and the elementary school classrooms were built in 1964. During the ’60s and ’70s, additional buildings including the library, two clergy residences, and the Olympic-size swimming pool were built, keeping the integrity of the meadow and canyon intact. The massive brush fire of 1978, which started west of the 405 freeway and burned westward to Topanga, destroyed 161 hillside homes in Brentwood and the Palisades, including St. Matthew’s church. Describing the disaster in the parish newsletter, Reverend Peter Kreitier wrote: ‘As I sit on our lawn the day after, looking across the hills charred by the fire, I can only offer thanks to God that the school, the parish offices (Founders’ Hall), Briggs Hall, the rectory and our home were spared. As the fire rushed down the hill with the intensity of a burning hurricane, the final eight of us to leave were convinced that all was lost. Ashes and fire balls were dropping everywhere; the smoke was asphyxiating and the police were demanding we leave under threat of arrest.’ A striking new church building, designed by Charles Moore and Associates, with input from the congregation, was rebuilt in 1983 and was called ‘mystical, not modern’ by Newsweek magazine. Meanwhile, spared by the fire, the school continued to flourish. In 1979, seventh and eighth grade were brought back to campus, which brought the school enrollment to 325, which is the current total. The Marie Osborne Keck Building was dedicated, adding sorely needed classrooms. St. Matthew’s has continued building and refinishing classrooms, keeping with the founders’ intent that the permanent policy of the ministry would be centered on youth. ‘We’re not doing this to expand the number of students at St. Matthew’s,’ said Headmaster Les Frost, who came to St. Matthew’s in 1984 and lives in the community with his wife, Marilyn. ‘We like it the size it is.’ Rather, the emphasis is on giving students the best possible learning environment. In 1997, the science and technology building was opened as well as the Sprague Center (which is the gym and performing arts center). In 2000, the preschool was remodeled and from 2004 to last fall, a new building which houses grades 1-4 and a new library were built. The award-winning Lake-Flato architectural design for the new classrooms and library is remarkable in its simplicity. The choice of wood, cooper and smooth stucco blends perfectly into the canyon. The library, which is built against a hill, lies in the center of the campus buildings. ‘It should be in the heart of the campus,’ Frost said. The library includes a faculty lounge and lunchroom, a story-telling corner in a little amphitheater, bay windows, maple window seats and a technology room. There is a wood walkway about the balcony of the library that connects to the third and fourth grade classrooms upstairs. ‘For me the third grade classroom has the best views,’ said Frost. ‘For others it is the fourth grade because it feels like you’re in a tree house.’ The current St. Matthew’s School is an aesthetic, yet functional campus that blends into the canyon. It is not uncommon for deer to wander onto the meadow. ‘Schools are really about people who populate them,’ Frost said as he praised the caring teachers and the community who made the buildings possible. It seems that the founders would agree with his assessment that the original idea of centering on the youth has been brought to spectacular fruition.

CLASSIFIED ADS FOR THE WEEK OF FEBRUARY 8, 2007

HOMES FOR SALE 1

HIGHLANDS BEAUTIFUL 5 BDRM MEDITERRANEAN. Must see, former model, superb condition home on gate, guarded street. Large romantic bathroom w/ jacuzzi tub. 2 large mstr bdrm suites w/ panoramic ocean views, extensive use of marble Italian tile, hdwd flrs. 2 FP, freshly painted, large ocean view deck off of mstr bdrm, landscaped yard, w/ patio, 2-car gar. Walk to Summit club, pool, tennis courts. $1,775,000. 2 1/2% broker co-op. (310) 889-6922 or (818) 817-3691 MALIBU TENNIS ESTATE. One acre, 4 bdrm, 3 ba, pool, spa, gorgeous huge kitchen. Views, downtown, Century City, Santa Monica, ocean. $2,375,000. Malibu Surf, Tom, (310) 739-4886

HOMES WANTED 1b

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

FURNISHED HOMES 2

CHARMING FURNISHED 3 bdrm, 13/4 ba home, hardwood flrs, F/P, walk to village & bluffs. Short term avail. (310) 459-0765

UNFURNISHED HOMES 2a

SERENE CANYON VIEW. 761 Chautauqua, 2 bdrm, 2 ba, den, lanai, formal din/rm, fireplace, hdwd flrs, enclosed backyard, gardener incl., 2 car garage. $4,000/mo. lease. (310) 454-8282 HIGHLANDS BEAUTIFUL 5 BDRM MEDITERRANEAN. Must see, former model, superb condition home on gate, guarded street. Large romantic bathroom w/ jacuzzi tub. 2 large mstr bdrm suites w/ panoramic ocean views, extensive use of marble Italian tile, hdwd flrs. 2 FP, freshly painted, large ocean view deck off of mstr bdrm, landscaped yard, w/ patio, 2-car gar. Walk to Summit club, pool, tennis courts. $7,995/mo. 2 1/2% broker co-op. (310) 889-6922 or (818) 817-3691 FOR RENT: 1135 Galloway, 4 bed, 4.5 bath. 3,661 sq. ft. Lot 6500. Newly built 1999. Available March 1st. $10,395/month. Call Jodi @ Amalfi Estates, (310) 883-5271 PALISADES HIGHLANDS 3 bdrm, 2 ba, dining room, living room, large kitchen with den, community pool+3 tennis courts, exercise room. Call Judy, (310) 454-0696 BRENTWOOD GUESTHOUSE, 2 bdrm, 2 ba home, living room with F/P, dining room, garden, brick patio, no dogs, no children. $2,750/mo. Call (310) 472 -2835

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 2c

PALISADES 1 BEDROOM, upper remodeled, carpet, stove, refrigerator, covered parking, storage, new paint, Non-smoker, No pets, one year lease, laundry. $1,275/mo. (310) 477-6767 LARGE 2 BDRM+2 BA, carpet, w/d, dishwasher, balcony, walk-in closet, F/P & jacuzzi, village close, controlled access bldg. Call (310) 230-4110 SPACIOUS BACHELOR UNIT behind house with kitchenette. Not furnished, includes utilities, private entrance, on a beautiful street close to beach. $1,250/mo. Call (310) 230-0230 BRENTWOOD ‘CHARM’ 1 bdrm+den. Best Loc. Near Country Club. Hardwood floors, woodburning fireplace, shutters, French doors to garden patio, garage, no pets. $2,150/mo. (310) 826-7960

CONDOS/TOWNHOMES FOR RENT 2d

2 BDRM, 21/2 BA UNFURNISHED Highlands condo. 2 car garage, den, W/D, fireplace, patio. Community center with pool, tennis, gym. $3,000/mo. (310) 383-0852 PACIFIC PALISADES FOR LEASE. Stunning totally remodeled townhome, granite kit, 2+2 ‘+den, mtn view, hdwd flrs, high ceilings, pool, tennis, 2-car pvt garage. $3,350/mo. (310) 260-7764 PACIFIC PALISADES. $2,300/mo. 1+1 condo, new maple floors, 800 sq. ft., pool, tennis, vu, gardens, security bldg, utils paid, utils. paid, near beach, no pets. Available now. PP. (310) 230-7737

OFFICE/STORE RENTALS 3c

OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE in professional building in Palisades village. Completely renovated. 862 sq ft. Call Ness, (310) 230-6712 x105 FULLY FURNISHED office in village. Quiet location. Short term available. (310) 459-3493 TIRED OF COMMUTING DOWNTOWN? Fully furnished office for lease near Pacific Palisades Village (on Sunset). Prices range from $300-$1,000 for desk cubicles or executive office suites. Receptionist, copy machines, laser printers, fax, kitchen, conference rm w/ computer, monitor, TV & VCR. Incl cleaning service & alarm system. Call (310) 254-5496

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 5

ATTENTION AFFLUENT PROFESSIONALS: HASSLE-FREE BUSINESS with proven track record. Not everyone will qualify. (570) 971-7527 ‘ www.SeekFinancialFreedom.com GOLDEN FINANCIAL OPPORTUNITY. Want to create your own income? Have control over your lifestyle? What is Financial Freedom? Call direct: (619) 825-9883

MISCELLANEOUS 6c

HUICHOL INDIAN SHAMANISM with Brant Secunda, world famous shaman-healer. Ceremony ‘Healing’ Inspiration’Huichol Art. February 24-25, 2007. Los Angeles, near Pacific Coast Dance of the Deer Foundation. (831) 475-9560. www.shamanism.com

BOOKKEEPING/ACCOUNTING 7b

BOOKKEEPER/PERSONAL ASSISTANT/NOTARY PUBLIC, personal bookkeeping & financial organizing, clerical duties, honest, reliable, discreet. Excellent references. Patti, (310) 720-8004 ACCOUNTANT/CONTROLLER Organize for the new year! Quickbooks/Quicken Setup. Outsource the hassle ‘all bookkeeping needs including tax prep for home or office. (310) 562-0635

COMPUTER SERVICES 7c

COMPUTER SOLUTIONS & SUPPORT ‘ HOME & BUSINESS’20 Years Microsoft Experience ‘ HELPING WITH: Windows XP’Windows Media Center. www.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. End Run-around. Pop-up Expert! 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 ‘ Furniture?’ Antiques ‘ Collectibles?’ Junque ‘ Reliable professionals ‘ Local References

ORGANIZING SERVICES 7h

CLARE’S SECRETARIAL SERVICES: Business support company specializing in the organization of your home or office. Trained in U.K. References available. (310) 430-6701 PERSONAL ASSISTANCE, ORGANIZATION and bookkeeping. Superior services provided with discretion & understanding. Pali resident, local references. Call Sarah, (310) 573-9263 HANDS-ON ORGANIZERS FOR HOME OR OFFICE! Get rid of clutter! Moving help? Packing/unpacking. Sheila, (213) 705-0968. www.blueroomstudios.biz/clutter_busters.htm

HOME INVENTORY SERVICES 7j

HOME INVENTORY SERVICES for fire, theft, earthquake, wills/estates, rentals, divorce. Includes video, photos & detailed reports; Palisades resident. (310) 230-1437 ‘ www.homesweethomevideo.com

NANNIES/BABYSITTERS 8a

VIP NANNY AGENCY. ‘Providing very important people with the very best nanny.’ (818) 907-1017, (310) 614-3646 GREAT PRE-SCREENED Nannies available. Let us help you with your nanny search. We are a dedicated, professional agency and we will find the right match for you. Whether you are looking for full time or p/time, L/I or L/O help, we can help you. Call Sunshine Nannies at (310) 614-5065 or (310) 801-8309

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 HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER w/ many years experience. Palisades references, own car, CDL insured, available Wed. & Thursday plus weekends. Please call Lilian, (310) 390-9235 or leave a message. EXCELLENT HOUSEKEEPER Great with kids cleaning. Prefer live in. Perfect references. (310) 689-8015 HOUSEKEEPERS, EXPERIENCED, references, own transportation. Avail Mon.-Fri., reliable good workers. Palisades & Malibu. Call Marlene & Martha, (323) 930-2850, (323) 298-1813 or cell (323) 229-4931 HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE to clean your home Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday. Great references. Please call Martina, (323) 877-6053 or (818) 693-2231 HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE ‘ Local references ‘ Own transportation ‘ Avail Thursdays. Call Marta, (213) 365-6609 after 5 p.m. or leave a message, please. BABYSITTER/HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE Monday-Friday, own transportation. CDL. Babysitting license. References. Call Rosibel, (213) 487-7868 HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE, 10 years experience. Fair prices, good references. Available Tues.-Fri. Daily rates. Call Maria, (310) 977-0142 HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER many years experience. Own transportation, CDL, insurance, great references, Mon.-Fri. available. Call (323) 766-8145 and leave message HOUSECLEANING: We Clean Houses, Apartments. Great Job, Great Prices! Limpiamos Casas, Apartamentos, Buen Trabago, Buen Precio! Dinora Gonzalez, (323) 467-2676 HOUSEKEEPER 10 YEARS experience. References. Available M-F. I drive. Some English. Call Ruth, (213) 383-7260 HOUSECLEANING, MANY YEARS EXPERIENCED, Monday-Friday available. Great references. Please call any time. Camilla, (323) 296-4410 or cell (323) 301-8173 HOUSEKEEPER, REFERENCES, EXPERIENCED. Own transportation. Speaks some English. Available Monday-Sunday. (323) 299-1797. Call evenings, or cell (818) 742-5680 EXCELLENT HOUSEKEEPER experienced, references, speaks English, great with kids. Call Arlina, (323) 229-9327 HOUSEKEEPER EXPERIENCED 17 YEARS, reliable, local references, own car, CDL, insurance, Available Tuesday & Sunday. Please call Rufina, (310) 836-8853 or (310) 663-4853 HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE Monday & Wednesday. References, many years experience. Call (213) 382-8204 or (323) 627-3928 HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE Monday-Friday. References, experienced. Call Julia, (323) 251-2991 or (212) 382-8204 HOUSEKEEPING Full time, 8 a.m.-4 p.m., Mon.-Fri. Local references, very experienced. No car. Pleasant. Please call Tina, (818) 759-5361 HOUSEKEEPER, EXPERIENCE & LOCAL references. Own transportation. Looking for full time Mon.-Friday, English speaking. (323) 646-4300, call anytime. HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER available Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Own transportation, CDL, local references. Call Mabel, (213) 618-1969 or (213) 383-2631, after 5 p.m.

ELDER CARE/COMPANIONS 10a

CAREGIVERS/COMPANIONS Live in/out. Minimum 2 years experience. 3 work related references required. CNA ‘S/CHH’S welcomed. Bondable. Call (323) 932-8700 EXPERIENCED CAREGIVER & COMPANION for seniors ‘ Lives in Pacific Palisades ‘ Speaks English ‘ Has reliable transportation ‘ Flexible schedule ‘ References available ‘ Call (310) 459-2861 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 ELDER CARE IN YOUR HOME. Available days, Mon.-Fri. Excellent local references, 10 yrs exper, own transportation, CDL, insured. Call Sandy, cell (818) 272-3400, or hm (818) 896-7696

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. Cell, (310) 498-5380, (310) 390-1276. www.TheKingKoi.com

MOVING & HAULING 11b

HONEST MAN SERVICES. All jobs, big or small. Hauls it all. Homes and businesses. 14 foot van/dollies. 15th year Westside. Delivers to 48 states. (310) 285-8688

MASSAGE THERAPY 12b

AWARD WINNING MASSAGE by Natalie. Deep tissue specialist. Call (310) 993-8899. www.massagebynatalie.faithweb.com

HOUSESITTING 14b

PROFESSIONAL MIDDLE-AGE couple seek house sitting position. Excellent references. (310) 459-6252

PARTY ENTERTAINMENT 14e

MAGICIAN’MAGIC UNLIMITED. Magic shows for birthday parties, Scout meetings, kid’s and family events. 30-year Magic Castle member. Balloon animals available. Greg, (310) 266-4443

PET SERVICES/PET SITTING 14g

PET HEAVEN ‘ TOTAL PET CARE ‘ Training. Walking. Playgroups and hikes. 30 years Pali resident. References. Call (310) 454-0058 for a happy dog. HAPPY PET ‘ Dog Walking ‘ Park Outings ‘ Socialization ‘ Connie, (310) 230-3829

FITNESS INSTRUCTION 15a

HAVE FUN! GET FIT! NORDIC WALKING CLASSES. Certified Nordic walking instructor teaches private/group classes in the Palisades. Weekends. Call for schedule & rates. (310) 266-4651

SCHOOLS, INSTRUCTION 15d

PIANO INSTRUCTION. Give the life-long gift of music! Very patient, creative teacher. Music degree, USC. Qualified, experienced, local. Lisa Lukas, (310) 454-0859. www.palisadesmusicstudio.com NEED HELP WITH COLLEGE ADMISSIONS ESSAY? Recent graduate & professional writer available. Will help to perfect essay for admissions success. Call (310) 985-1607 or e-mail maxtaves@gmail.com VIOLIN INSTRUCTION. Expert, friendly guidance at all levels by highly qualified teacher. Home or studio. Teaching in Palisades 20 years. Laurence Homolka, (310) 459-0500

TUTORS 15e

INDIVIDUALIZED INSTRUCTION. EXPERIENCED TUTOR 20+ YEARS. Children & adults, 20+ yrs teaching/tutoring exper. MATH, GRAMMAR, WRITING & STUDY SKILLS. Formerly special ed teacher. Call (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 EXPERIENCED SPANISH TUTOR ‘ All grades, levels ‘ Grammar ‘ Conversational ‘ SAT ‘ Children, adults ‘ 7 yrs exper. ‘ Great refs. Noelle, (310) 273-3593 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 TUTORING. Specializing in math! Elementary thru college level. Test prep, algebra, trig, geom, calculus. Fun, caring, creative, individualized tutoring. Math anxiety. Call Jamie, (310) 459-4722 MATH & SCIENCE TUTOR Middle school-college level. BS LAUSD credentialed high school teacher. Test Prep. Flexible hours. Available to help NOW! Seth Freeman, (310) 909-3049 SPANISH TUTOR, CERTIFIED TEACHER for all levels. Has finest education, qualifications, 18 yrs exper. Palisades resident, many good references, amazing system, affordable rates. Marietta, (310) 459-8180 EXPERIENCED (7 YRS.) & PROFESSIONAL tutor; Ph.D. (physics) UCLA; distinguished teaching fellow awards; physics & math (algebra, precalculus, calculus, AP) high school to college levels, SAT 1 & 2, ACT; student-friendly. Call (310) 280-8624 HOMEWORK, MOM’S & TUTOR, HELPER. Teacher 15 Years. TA Paul Revere. Available Part-Time & Flexible. Call JUDI, (805) 383-0575 (Moving to PP)

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

CONSTRUCTION 16d

CASTLE CONSTRUCTION. New homes, remodeling, additions, fine finish carpentry. Serving the Westside for 20 yrs. Lic. #649995. Call James, (310) 450-6237 ALAN PINE, GENERAL CONTRACTOR ‘ New homes ‘ Remodeling ‘ Additions ‘ Kitchen & bath ‘ Planning/Architectural services ‘ Insured ‘ Local refs ‘ Lic. #469435. (800) 800-0744 or (818) 203-8881 J. BELL CONSTRUCTION ‘ Custom new homes ‘ Additions ‘ Kitchen remodels ‘ Bathroom Remodels ‘ Established 1979 ‘ Lic. #00376978 & Bonded ‘ (310) 714-1116

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 (Not lic.). 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 16l

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 HART HARDWOOD FLOORING. Best pricing. Sr. discounts, quality workmanship. Bamboo, maple, oak and laminate. Installation & refinishing. Call for free quote. Lic. #763767. Ron, (310) 308-4988 GOLDEN HARDWOOD FLOORS. Professional Installation and refinishing. National Wood Flooring Association member. License #732286. Plenty of local references. (877) 622-2200 ‘ www.goldenhardwoodfloors.com

HANDYMAN 16n

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) 455-0803 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 HANDYMAN – PAINTING – DRYWALL REPAIRS – Water damage repair – Small carpentry work – 17 years EXCELLENT service & experience. FREE ESTIMATES! Call (310) 502-1168. Not lic. LOCAL HANDYMAN just moved to Palisades. All aspects of building repair/maintanance. No job too small. Local references. Available. Detail oriented, reliable. Non-lic. (310) 230-6942

HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING 16o

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

PAINTING, PAPERHANGING 16q

PAUL HORST – Interior & Exterior PAINTING – 53 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 SPIROS PAINTING, INTERIOR/EXTERIOR. Painting on the Westside since 1980. Lic. #821009. Fax and phone: (310) 826-6097. NO JOB is too small or too big for Spiro the Greek ZARKO PRTINA PAINTING, Interior/Exterior. 35 years in service. License #637882. Call (310) 454-6604

PLUMBING 16s

BOTHAM PLUMBING AND HEATING. Lic. #839118. (310) 827-4040 JLK PLUMBING. Re-pipe and sewer specialist & all plumbing repairs. Mention this ad & receive 10% off. Lic. #722414. Call (310) 678-6634 WHITTLE’S PLUMBING ‘ Drain & sewer problems ‘ Garbage disposal & H2O heaters ‘ Copper repiping & gas lines ‘ Fixtures, remodels ‘ Gen. Construction ‘ Free est. Lic. #668743. (310) 429-7187

REMODELING 16u

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) 455-0803 COMPLETE CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION ‘ New homes ‘ Kitchen+Bath remodeling ‘ Additions. Quality work at reasonable rates guaranteed. Large & small projects welcomed. Lic. #751137. Call Michael Hoff Construction today, (310) 230-2930

HELP WANTED 17

DRIVERS: 150K PER YEAR-TEAMS! Earn more plus GREAT Benefits! Western Regional Solo and Team Runs. Werner Enterprises, (800) 346-2818 x123 ADVERTISING SALES REP for weekly community newspaper. Experienced self-starter, full time, excellent benefit package. Resume attention: Publisher, P.O. Box 725, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, or fax (310) 454-1078 or email: info@palipost.com DENTAL’ORTHODONTIC ASSISTANT. Exclusive office in Pacific Palisades. Exceptional opportunity. Call (310) 454-0317 FAMILIAR WITH COMPUTER program, i.e. Quickbook & Excel, full time, $20-30/hr. for construction company. Send resume to 123456inc@gmail.com MOTHER’S HELPER wanted for 8-month-old boy. 10 hours/week, flexible times. High school/college student preferred. Starting $8/hour. Call Nicole, (310) 926-8826 WE LIVE IN the Palisades Highlands. Looking for a housekeeper/nanny 6 days a week, LIVE-IN OR LIVE-OUT, must speak English and have a valid driver ‘s license. Fax resume or references to (213) 244-1102 CEO & AUTHOR seeks energetic & seasoned personal executive assistant. Successful candidate must have 5 years experience as senior personal assistant to CEO or president. (company 10 million revenues) or A-list celebrity. Exceptional computer literacy. (Office 2003, 60 wds per minute, 200-300 emails per week) & auditory retention. (short hand, diction at regular speed of speech; writing letters & proposals; complex travel arrangements:) Ability to track & follow-thru on dozens of tasks & ongoing projects. Email resume to Bob@abacuswealth.com WEATHERVANE ON MONTANA AVE., Santa Monica, is looking for a stock person to work in the office. Duties include receiving, ticketing, steaming merchandise, and some assistance to the office manager. Part-time, flexible hours, 2-4 days a week, 3-4 hours. Please apply to Gretchen, (310) 451-1182, for appt. PART-TIME Test Administrator/Proctor. Regular, PT work in Westlake Village, growing co. Administer exams; calm test takers; enforce procedures; PC skills. Approx.15-25 hrs./wk., Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m.-8:45 p.m., varies. $10.50/hr. Apply @ http://www.pearsoned.com/careers or 1 (800) 456-4077. EOE’m/f/v/d PEARSON VUE BRENTWOOD ART CENTER seeks great people-person with outstanding customer service and administrative skills. Best candidate is conscientious, attentive to detail, friendly and outgoing. Requires computer skills. Willing to provide training to capable, computer-literate candidate. Must be available two Saturdays per month. Medical & dental benefits. Email resume to: jordan@brentwoodart.com ANIMAL BATHER, FULL or part time for busy grooming shop in town. Prior grooming experience preferred but will train. Benefits provided. Salary based on experience. (310) 459-2009 CUSTOMER SERVICE. Here’s a great full or part time steady job. Applicant must enjoy assisting customers over the phone. Must speak good English & have basic computer skills. Stevenson Ind. 881 Alma Real Dr., Ste. 310. (310) 459-9393 x202

AUTOS 18b

’95 SATURN SC Coupe. 49,700 miles, A/C, $2,500 obo. (310) 393-3295, ask for Rich FORD F150 2000 & UP, Hard Toneau cover with HYD shocks, side step bars, $400 for all. Will sell separately. Call (310) 393-3295 2000 SUBARU OUTBACK, winter green, tan leather, 6 CD player, good condition, one owner, new tires, $9,200. Call Jessica, (310) 459-5137, day time (310) 245-1254 2000 BMW 323i, 58K miles, excellent condition. $16,000, financing available. (310) 454-2075 or winfieldking9@gmail.com

PETS, LIVESTOCK 18e

HORSE FOR LEASE In Pacific Palisades. Exp. Adult rider. Call Kelly, (310) 666-7038

MISCELLANEOUS 18g

CANYON FIREWOOD. Featuring local soft & hardwood. Delivery & stacking anywhere on premisis with no hidden cost. Also willing to haul away wood of any kind for a nominal fee. Contact Doug, (323) 293-7675 or (310) 753-3307 or email RobinQueen@sbcglobal.net

WANTED TO BUY 19

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

Review: ‘Flyin West’ is Armed with Spirit

Markietha Ka'Von as Sophie and Justin Biko as Frank go head-to-head in 'Flyin' West,' running through February 17 at the Morgan-Wixson Theatre. Photo: Teresa Dowell Vest
Markietha Ka’Von as Sophie and Justin Biko as Frank go head-to-head in ‘Flyin’ West,’ running through February 17 at the Morgan-Wixson Theatre. Photo: Teresa Dowell Vest

The latest production at the Morgan-Wixson Theatre transports viewers to the late 19th century, when hundreds of thousands of United States citizens migrated west for ‘free land.’ The Homestead Act granted 160 acres of land to any settler who agreed to live on it for five years and improve it. Among these settlers were large groups of African Americans–many former slaves–who created communities of their own in the western states. With the title to their land, they gained a sense of freedom and ownership that was often absent from their lives in the post-Civil War South. Pearl Cleage’s ‘Flyin’ West’ is the story of a small group of black women from Memphis, Tennessee, who settle just outside the all-black town of Nicodemus, Kansas. The play, set in 1898, was commissioned by The Alliance Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia, and premiered there in November 1992. The Santa Monica Theatre Guild production of ‘Flyin’ West,’ directed by Ter’sa Dowell Vest, is both a history lesson and a suspenseful comedy-drama driven by strong performances from the female leads. On opening night, the initial scenes felt a little stiff, as if the actors were performing on stage without an audience, but once they settled into their characters, we became more engaged. By intermission, I was eager to see how the rest of the story would unfold. Each of Cleage’s four female characters is distinct and well-written: from the elderly but strong-willed Miss Leah (Paris Davis Dean), a storyteller with vivid memories of her slave past, to Sophie (Markietha Ka’Von), the fiercely independent head of the household who–armed with a shotgun and sharp gaze–is determined to protect the land from white ‘speculators.’ Ka’Von, a petite woman, delivers a riveting performance, capturing Sophie’s pride with her body language–a puffed-out chest, steady gait and firm grasp on her gun. Sophie looks out for her sisters Fannie (Kasi Jones) and Minnie (Chelsea Wafer), who are more gentle, vulnerable and free-spirited. But when Minnie’s abusive mulatto husband Frank (Justin Biko) threatens to sell her share of the land, the women must join arms to defend their personal property–land, body and soul. They’re assisted by their soft-spoken neighbor Wil Parish (Adrian A. Thomas), a true Southern gentleman who courts Fannie and will do anything to protect her family. Thomas’ crisp narration in between scenes adds structure and an artistic touch to the production, as does the creative staging of certain scenes such as the ‘ritual’ performed by the three young women who hold hands and recite affirmations downstage center. Adorned in their long prairie skirts and blouses (costume design by Sherry Coon and Anne Gesling), they are the picture of frontier spirit. ‘Flyin’ West’ explores many of the same issues Fannie Flagg addressed in her novel ‘Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Caf’–racism in the American South, domestic violence, the power of female friendships or ‘sisterhood,’ and the danger of internal prejudice, from within one’s own tight-knit family circle or community. Cleage, an Atlanta-based author, has written a dozen plays and three novels, including ‘What Looks Like Crazy on An Ordinary Day,’ an Oprah Book Club selection in 1998 that appeared on the New York Times bestseller list for nine weeks. ‘Flyin’ West,’ produced by Larry Gesling and Donis Leonard, runs through February 17 at the Morgan-Wixson Theatre, 2627 Pico Blvd. in Santa Monica. Performances run Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. For tickets ($18 for general admission, $15 for seniors and students), call (310) 828-7519. ———- Reporting by Associate Editor Alyson Sena. To contact, e-mail: newsdesk@palipost.com

Good, Healthy Eats, Brought to Your Door

Healthy eating requires knowledge and time–knowledge about what one’s body needs in terms of nutrients and calories, and time to go grocery shopping, and select and prepare nutritious foods. Some people don’t have the time and others won’t make the time. Many are in the dark about what they should be eating or don’t know how to balance their body’s needs with their food preferences. That’s where Jackie Keller comes in. A nutrition and health coach, Keller runs a West Los Angeles-based company called NutriFit that provides gourmet food service and healthy lifestyle education programs. NutriFit’s meal programs are tailored to each client’s goals, nutritional and caloric needs, allergies, likes and dislikes, exercise regimen, family history of disease and lifestyle. The food is prepared and packaged by a 15-person crew in the company’s commercial kitchen, and delivered to a client’s home or office. “Philosophically, we feel that healthy food has to fit into your life; otherwise, it’s not going to make a long-term impact,” says Keller, who founded NutriFit in 1987 with her partner, now husband, Phil Yaney. “It’s well and good to say you’re a ‘diet company’ and you can make people lose weight, but that’s not what it’s about for me. It’s about long-term health.” For Pacific Palisades residents Jackie and Dennis Horlick, NutriFit has become a way of life. Middle-aged foodies, the Horlicks started using the service last May because they wanted to lose weight. ‘I always had that 15 pounds I couldn’t shake,” says Jackie Horlick, who had tried another nutritional program that didn’t work for her. But even before the Horlicks reached their goal weights, which took a few months on the NutriFit program, they started feeling and sleeping better. Horlick believes that what distinguishes NutriFit from similar companies is Keller’s approach and special attention to customizing meal plans. “Whereas a lot of companies claim to customize, eliminating peanut butter if you don’t like it or are allergic, NutriFit is not just about food preferences but about your personal lifestyle and physiology,” Horlick says. NutriFit offers metabolic testing and body-composition analysis in order to gauge an individual’s caloric needs. The company then calculates how many calories the person can consume and still lose weight at a safe, sustainable weight. “There are ways to cut excess calories out and not necessarily eat less volume, but just eat more intelligently and more mindfully,” Keller says. “We try to encourage people to cut out mindless eating, to be aware of what they’re putting in their mouth and try to tune into whether or not they really want to be eating at that moment or if it’s just a reflex reaction to something else that’s going on.” Keller, a native Southern Californian, was “food obsessed” as a teenager and spent the summer after her high school graduation studying at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris. After graduating from USC with a bachelor’s degree in business in 1976, Keller began her career in the hotel and restaurant industry. She worked nine years in major hotels such as the Westin Bonaventure, the Ambassador and several Stouffer properties. Keller’s passion for health and physical fitness led her to spend an increasing amount of recreational time teaching fitness classes (she has a certificate in professional fitness instruction from UCLA Extension). So, when a female pupil approached Keller about teaching her how to cook to lower her cholesterol, Keller took the challenge. “We brought her cholesterol down from over 300 to 160 in a matter of months,” Keller says. “I trained her, cooked for her and cooked with her. We had such tremendous success that it really validated me.” While this case encouraged Keller to start NutriFit, her drive to help people live longer and healthier lives was rooted in personal tragedy–the death of her father from a heart attack at age 47. At the time, Keller was just a freshman in college. “My whole world was shattered,” she recalls. “When I did come to terms with [his death], it led me to do what I do now.” She adds, “If my mom had known what I know now, we probably could have done something about [his heart disease].” Keller encourages all of her clients to meet with her and have metabolic testing done. But she understands that that’s more than what some people want to do, and she can work with basic biometric data such as a person’s height, weight and exercise/activity level. Based on the Horlicks’ test results, Keller created two separate calorie- and portion-controlled meal plans for Jackie and Dennis. Because they are not big breakfast eaters, they chose to order lunch, an afternoon snack and dinner six days a week. NutriFit offers clients 13 weeks of nonrepeating meal plans, available up to seven days a week. The complete meal service includes breakfast, a morning snack, lunch, an afternoon snack and dinner (dinner includes salad and dessert). NutriFit uses fresh vegetables and reduced-fat cheeses in its dishes, from portobello mushroom omelettes to rosemary-scented lamb with Moroccan couscous and Mediterranean vegetables. The company asks clients to rate their meals–“Great,” “Good,” “OK,” or “Pass”–and this data is entered into the client profiles so they do not receive a dish they didn’t like a second time. “Some people are really thrilled that they’re trying foods like collard greens,” Keller says. “We also do wonderful desserts. Personally, I feel that desserts are an important part of life. I don’t believe in eliminating entire groups or categories of foods.” That said, Keller adds, “There are a few things that don’t find a place in our kitchen. We avoid transfat. We don’t use real butter or real bacon.” While NutriFit will design meal programs that comply with various diets, such as a Mediterranean, South Beach or Zone diet, Keller will not design an Atkins-based program, which she believes is “fundamentally unhealthy.” Jackie Horlick’s plan includes “lots of pasta” because she’s “a carb person,” she says. Her favorite NutriFit food is the fudgy brownie. The Horlicks take Sundays off from the NutriFit meal plan but have found, when they dine out at restaurants, that “we’re so used to portion control now, that we just can’t eat more even if we think we can.” They also added up their pre-NutriFit grocery bills, take-out and restaurant bills, and discovered that they’re actually spending less on the program. A four-week pre-paid plan ranges from $19.50 per day (for breakfast, lunch and a morning snack) to $39.95 per day (for the complete meal service). In addition to providing the Horlicks with customized meal plans, Keller also put them in contact with a trainer who started them on an exercise program. “We push exercise,” Keller says. “That’s where the biometric data really comes in handy because we find out [how many calories] a person burns and can tell them ‘If you added exercise, here’s what else could be done.’ We have step counters and journals for our clients–simple aids to help people get into the exercise mentality and bring some level of exercise into their life.” Contacts: www.nutrifitonline.com and (800) 341-4190.