Home Blog Page 2371

Leonard Mautner, 88; Venture Capitalist, Philanthropist, Golfer

Leonard Mautner, 21-year Pacific Palisades resident, philanthropist and avid golfer, passed away on May 18 after an heroic 17-year battle with cancer. He was 88. Born in 1917 in New York City, Mautner moved to Long Island, and attended Peekskill Military Academy. He received a scholarship to M.I.T., where he graduated with a degree in electronics. Later, he worked in M.I.T.’s radiation lab on war priority projects, then joined IFF group at the Naval Research Lab in Washington, D.C. Mautner moved to Los Angeles to work for Hughes Aircraft, and later started his own company and remained in venture capital for the rest of his life. He was also an advisor and lecturer at UCLA’s MBA program. In 1983, Mautner initiated the Mautner Lectures at UCLA with the intention of presenting topics in science for the layman. Some of the renowned speakers in science and technology included Nobel Laureates physicist Richard Feynman, molecular biologist Paul Berg and chemist Roald Hoffman. Mautner married Marguerite Perkins, a longtime Palisadian and community activist, in 1985, and the couple enjoyed many years of travel and companionship. He was a gallant man with a zest for life who took great pleasure from conversation and golf with his friends at the Riviera Country Club. “My grandfather was someone who had many good things to share as a role in my life,” said his grandson Kevin. “He was an honest man who exemplified determination.” In addition to his wife, Mautner is survived by his daughter Karen Brumelle of Vancouver; three stepchildren, Lewis Perkins of Santa Monica, Deborah Perkins of Philadelphia and David Perkins of Santa Monica; and four grandchildren, Colin and Justin Brumelle and Maxine and Kevin Perkins. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to: Angeles Clinic Institute, Dr. Daniel Lieber Research, 2001 Santa Monica Blvd., suite 560, Santa Monica, CA 90404, or UCLA Foundation for Mautner Lectures, UCLA, 1309 Murphy Hall, P.O. Box 951413, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1413.

Christine McEachern, 90; Nurse, Volunteer, Activist

Christine Browne McEachern, 90, loving wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and friend, passed away peacefully at her home on May 22, after a long illness. She was a longtime Palisadian, having moved here with her growing family in 1951. Christine was born on October 6, 1915, in Orange, Texas. Her early years were spent in Brownsville, Texas. She moved to Los Angeles and graduated from John C. Fremont High School. After high school, she joined the student nursing program at Good Samaritan Hospital, where she received her registered nursing degree. During this time she met the love of her life, Thomas Henry McEachern Fr., a mechanical engineer from Louisiana. They were married on December 27, 1941 at Grace Episcopal Church in Los Angeles. The completion of her bachelor’s degree at UCLA was interrupted by the birth of their first child, David, on October 6, 1942. While she stayed at home raising the children, she found time to involve herself in her local community. Thus began Christine’s volunteer life. She and her family became members of the St. Matthew’s Episcopal church in 1951. Ever active and supportive, Christine served on the Altar Guild, was the first woman on the vestry and was a proud supporter and participant in the St. Matthew’s Thrift Shop. Her husband and children were volunteered to repair the items donated to the thrift shop. Active in politics, she participated in Tom Bradley’s mayoral race, Marvin Braude’s City Council bid and the Stop Oil campaign. She was also a member of the League of Women Voters. After her children were grown, Christine went back to school to finish the degree she had started years before. She completed her undergraduate degree at Mount St. Mary’s College in 1974. Ten years later, she retired from the Los Angeles Unified School District as a school nurse. However, she never retired from being a professional volunteer, loving grandma or trusted companion. In Christine’s spare time, she loved to read, paint, watch PBS and listen to music and NPR. She also enjoyed the theater and travel. She and Tom were one of the first ones to fly the polar route to Europe. They traveled all over the globe, including visits to Russia and China. She was always engaged and always engaging. Predeceased by her husband, who passed away on October 6, 2003, Christine is survived by her four sons: David (wife Susie) of Newhall, CA, Tom (wife Christina) of Newbury Park, Jack (wife Carroll) of Santa Monica and Jim (wife Carol) of Susanville, CA; 10 grandchildren: two great grandchildren, and the family pets, Magic the doggie and Rosita the cat. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in her name to St. Matthew’s Thrift Shop, attention Mary Muller, P.O. Box 903 Pacific Palisades, CA, 90272. Funeral services will be held on Friday, June 9 at 4 p.m. at St. Matthew’s, 1031 Bienveneda. The Rev. Michael Seiler will preach.

Haselkorns to Ride as Parade Marshals

Patriotic Palisadians Don and Carolyn Haselkorn are happy to be named marshals for this year's Fourth of July parade.
Patriotic Palisadians Don and Carolyn Haselkorn are happy to be named marshals for this year’s Fourth of July parade.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Riding in the annual Fourth of July parade is nothing new for longtime Palisadians Don and Carolyn Haselkorn. In fact, there are few aspects of the holiday’s patriotic festivities in Pacific Palisades that one or the other has not experienced firsthand. Yet when they were named this year’s parade marshals last month by the Palisades Americanism Parade Association committee, the Haselkorns felt privileged to be part of one of the town’s proudest traditions. “This is a great honor and we’re extremely proud and humbled,” says Don, who rode in last year’s parade as honorary town sheriff. “What we love about the Fourth of July is that it’s one occasion where the whole community works towards a common goal and that is to share our love for America.” The Haselkorns have lived in the same house in upper Marquez for 42 years and have served in numerous capacities around town. One would be hard pressed to find two residents who have expressed their devotion to their neighborhood and to the red, white and blue as boldly and actively as this golden couple. “We live in the most wonderful country in the world,” Don says. “We live in a place where we all have the right to express ourselves and where we have the freedom to be who we want to be and do what we want to do. That’s pretty special.” Don is the former president of PAPA and PAPA People, former president and past zone lieutenant governor of the Optimist Club, and now sits on the local board of both the Optimist Foundation and Palisades PRIDE. As the town’s honorary sheriff, he says he can’t “fix tickets” but he works tirelessly with the Chamber of Commerce, Palisades Patrol and the Palisades-Malibu YMCA to increase young people’s respect for law enforcement. He is also a devoted member of the American Legion. Carolyn, the current vice president of PAPA, has been actively involved with the Palisades Relay for Life for three years and is a former advisory committee member at Marquez Elementary. A native of Los Angeles and a graduate of Dorsey High, she has a master’s in education from Mt. St. Mary’s College. She is retired from the Los Angeles Unified School District, where she worked for 32 years as a teacher, administrator and advisor’primarily in the inner city. She continues to devote her time and energy to education as a field supervisor for Cal State Dominguez Hills and National University, helping student teachers become credentialed. “I’m a big supporter of the public school system,” Carolyn says. “All of our children went to Marquez, Paul Revere and Palisades High. We’re very proud of them.” The Haselkorns have three daughters. The oldest, Mimi, is a cantor at Temple Beth David in Temple City. Their second oldest, Francine, lives in Encino and works for Hebrew Union College. Their youngest, Faye, works for the U.S. Agency for International Development, a division of the U.S. State Department. She is now stationed in Jakarta, Indonesia. “One of the things we love about the Palisades is the interfaith effort,” Don says. “We’re members of both Kehillat Israel and our daughter’s temple, but we appreciate the desire all of the churches in this community have to work together.” Don’s love affair with the Palisades started at the age of 13, when his parents moved the family from Brooklyn, New York, to Santa Monica in 1944. “I can remember us driving through the Palisades quite often when I was a kid and how different it looked then,” Don remembers. The Haselkorns first met as undergraduates at UC Berkeley. They married in 1954 and moved to Southern California two years later. Don bought Knolls Pharmacy on Marquez Avenue in 1962 and commuted through Topanga Canyon from Woodland Hills every day before deciding to relocate to the Palisades in 1968. “All of our money was tied up in my business so we were worried about whether or not we would be able to afford it,” Don recalls. “But I always wanted to live on the Westside. We went looking for the best house on the best lot and it turned out that a customer of mine was being transferred to Florida and was ready to move. Everything seemed to fall into place.” Don sold Knolls Pharmacy in 1986 and still supports local businesses whenever he has a choice. “A lot of people don’t want to intermingle their personal life with business, but to me they were one and the same. Some of the friendships I made will last forever. I wouldn’t have done it any other way.” After retiring as a pharmacist, Don went back to school and earned his MBA from UCLA’s Anderson School of Business in 1989. “Retirement doesn’t mean doing nothing; it just means doing something different,” he says. Don and Carolyn have hardly rested on their laurels. They enjoy spending time with their grandchildren, 14-year-old Michael and 12-year-old Lianna, both of whom followed in their mother Francine’s footsteps by attending Marquez. Don’s interests include going to Dodger games with Mimi, video editing on his computer and playing golf at Mountaingate in friend Carol Witherill’s foursome, while Carolyn is a regular at a local gym. They both frequent local eating establishments and enjoy plays at Theatre Palisades. Don will start the day bright and early on July 4 to register runners for that morning’s Palisades-Will Rogers 5/10K race. That afternoon, he’ll be in a car with Carolyn waving to the many friends and acquaintances he’s met over the years. “I’m looking forward to riding in the parade,” he says. “And I’m happy to have the better part of my existence’the bride of my youth’by my side.”

Brownley and Dolz Now Opponents in November

Julia Brownley, one of five Democratic candidates for nomination in the 41st Assembly District, won Tuesday’s primary. She will now run against Republican Tony Dolz to replace Fran Pavley (Agoura Hills-Dem.) who is termed-out in November. Brownley received 11,380 votes (34.9 percent) over Barry Groveman’s 8,734 votes (26.8 percent). The other Democratic candidates were Jonathan Levey, who received 6,587 votes (20.2 percent); Kelly Hayes-Raitt, 4,873 votes (14.9 percent); and Shawn Casey O’Brien, 1,057 votes (3.2 percent). Dolz won with 10,461 votes (75.6 percent) over Adriana Van Hemert’s 3,387 votes (24.4 percent). “It was a very exciting night,” Brownley told the Palisadian-Post yesterday morning from her home in Santa Monica. “The phone’s been ringing off the hook.” She spent most of Tuesday evening with friends and campaign volunteers at Back on Broadway, a restaurant near her home. She stayed there until about 65 percent of the votes had been counted, and then went to a friend’s house where a group of them followed the race results on a computer. “Fran [Pavley] was with me last night and I had lunch with Sheila [Kuehl] yesterday,” Brownley said of her two most prominent backers. “Zev [Yaroslavsky] came by last night and [Antonio] Villariagosa called me at a quarter to one in the morning, so that was exciting.” She went to bed around 4:30 a.m. on Wednesday morning and woke up at 7:30 a.m. While Brownley said she had “no earthly idea I would win” she “put forward the best campaign I could and worked it as hard as I could. I had a whole lot of volunteers working for me.” Brownley ran on an education platform, with the idea that “I want to be to education what Fran has been to the environment and what Sheila has been to health care.” She is president of the Santa Monica-Malibu School Board. She said Wednesday morning: “My campaign literature was positive and my message resonated. At the end of the day, I think [voters] did equate [my] 11-year commitment to education with a platform that said education was a priority.” Brownley, who has two children, spent part of Tuesday evening at an awards ceremony for her son, Fred, a senior at Santa Monica High School. Fred received an award for being “an extraordinary athlete and an extraordinary scholar,” Brownley said of her son, who will enter UC Berkeley in the fall. “That was a good omen,” she said. “He was a trailblazer for the evening. It was really a double win.” Asked how she plans to campaign against Dolz, Brownley said, “I haven’t thought about that yet but I can tell you that my campaign will be consistent. I can’t imagine changing it in any way, shape or form.”

Republican Dolz: Landslide Win

Republican Tony Dolz handily won the 41st Assembly District race against his opponent Adriana Van Hemert in Tuesday’s primary. Dolz garnered more than 75 percent of the vote and will now be campaigning against Democrat Julia Brownley to replace Fran Pavley (Agoura Hills-Dem.) who is termed-out in the coming November election. Dolz , who lives in Santa Monica, ran on one campaign platform: illegal immigration. “I think the vote reflected exactly what the polls have been saying,” said Dolz in a phone interview from his home where he was enjoying his victory on Wednesday morning. “Eighty percent of Americans and some 70 percent of Republicans are now more concerned with immigration than with the war in Iraq and the economy.” Asked how he planned to campaign against Brownley, who was endorsed by both State Senator Sheila Kuehl (Santa Monica-Dem.) and Pavley, Dolz said he had no plans. “I don’t care what Brownley does. I think she represents ‘politics as usual,’ which is out of step for this election. I think immigration is going to be the big issue and the heat is only going to continue, at every level. Washington is not going to settle this before November and the Governor is in a difficult position.” Dolz, himself an immigrant, said that while the governor is “very aware” of the impact, “both good and bad” that illegals have on the California economy, he also recognizes the need for “at least appearing to have boots on the ground, which is why he reluctantly agreed to sent the National Guard to the Mexican border, but only after President Bush assured him the state would not be stuck with the bill.” Dolz said his first order of business is to get the governor to issue two executive orders: to check the immigration status of every state employee, and to demand that any agency providing benefits verify the immigration status of the recipients. Dolz’s campaign demanded the recovery of what he described as the “illegal misuse” of an estimated $10.5 billion of California taxpayer’s money spent annually to provide services to illegals. “This has got to stop,” Dolz said. “It is taking a terrible toll on our health care and education systems.” A Cuban-born Hispanic, Dolz, 47, came to the U.S. as a child and became an American citizen in 1986. His hardline stance is not unexpected considering that Dolz is a founding member of the Minutemen Project, the self-appointed civil defense corps determined to secure our borders. Dolz spent Memorial Day weekend break ground on the Minutemen Fence at the Arizona/Mexican border accompanied be his family, which includes his Danish-born wife, Bettina, who sells a number of high-end health, clothing and quality linen products on the Internet , and his two children’Dylan, 5, and 11-month-old Sienna. Dolz, a businessman who specializes in information technology and telecommunications, said he voted by absentee ballot.

Cheryel Kanan to Receive Mort Farberow Business Award

Cheryel Kanan, an active resident since 1963 and longtime business manager of the Pacific Palisades Post, will receive a major honor at next Thursday’s Chamber of Commerce installation and awards dinner at the Riviera Country Club. She has been named the Mort Farberow Businessperson of the Year, an award presented by the Chamber on behalf of the Palisades deli owner who died in 1999. “To honor Mort,” said Executive Director Arnie Wishnick, “the Chamber chose three criteria that Mort held dear: community, Chamber and children. Cheryel Kanan exemplifies it all.” Indeed, her list of volunteer leadership roles in the community has been staggering. Currently, Kanan is president of the Palisades Americanism Parade Association (PAPA), the committee that organizes the Fourth of July parade and fireworks show every year. She and her husband, Dan, have also worked at the pre-parade VIP luncheon in the Methodist Church courtyard since 1993. “We’ve only missed two parades since moving to the Palisades,” said Kanan, who rode in the parade in 1994 when she was Chamber president. She hopes that her five children and seven grandchildren will be waving to her from along the route this year. “The parade pulls together the community in a special way, on such a special day,” she continued. “I’m very patriotic; my father was a tail-gunner on a B-17 in World War II, so the flag and what it meant was a real symbol in our home.” Kanan grew up in Venice (her father was a manager for Standard Oil) and was a high school senior when she met Dan, a UCLA student, while working part-time at a McCarthy Drugstore. They were married in 1960 and three years later found a house on Hartzell in the Palisades that was built on two lots. “This enabled us to build a new house [where they still live] and rent the other,” she said. The Kanans were soon sending kids to Palisades Elementary, and it didn’t take long for Cheryel to become a volunteer. “I wanted to start giving back and also meet more people, so when our oldest boy (Daniel) entered kindergarten, I went to orientation and a week later the PTA president called and asked if I would sell ice cream after school every Tuesday. I said yes. Then a couple weeks later she called and said that the Ways and Means chairman had resigned and would I take on that position? Sure, I said, even though I didn’t know what the Ways and Means person did.” Kanan got to know Mort Farberow when she asked him to cater a Founders Day luncheon at the school. “I quickly learned that he was a teddy-bear kind of guy on the inside and a very giving person who was concerned about the community,” said Kanan, who later would be president of the PTA at Paul Revere, president of the Junior Women’s Club and Las Doradas, and an active member of the Assistance League. Before her children were born (Daniel, Debbie, James, Nicole and Tamira), Kanan was a bookkeeper for a catering company, and once they were all in school she began working part-time as a bookkeeper for various professionals in the Palisades. In 1982, she and Dan became co-owners of Medford’s on Swarthmore (now the PaliSkate store). “I loved it and I hoped it would become a family business,” she said, “but the kids all wanted to do their own thing, so we sold the business to Jack Forgette.” After joining the Palisades Post as a bookkeeper in 1984, Cheryel became office manager and, in 1990, business manager. Professionally, Dan worked for the County Assessor’s office from 1960 to 1979, then went into real estate development in Santa Monica, Redondo Beach and West L.A. with his brother, Ed. Like his wife, Dan has been active in various business and charitable organizations over the years, including the Boys & Girls Club of Santa Monica, the Santa Monica Family YMCA and Boy Scout Troop 400 in the Palisades. He also served on the Civic League in the 1980s. “I love this community so much,” Cheryel said, “that I’ve always wanted to give back as much as I could to keep it the way it is, and I’m fortunate that Dan has the same philosophy. We support each other.”

Palisadian Julia Louis-Dreyfus: Queen of “Green”

Palisadian Julia Louis-Dreyfus was a headliner at last week’s “Bring Back the Beach” dinner, Heal the Bay’s annual fundraiser held this year at the Santa Monica Airport. The actress has been on the board of the nonprofit environmental organization for 10 years. Photo: Adam Almeida for Heal the Bay

The paparazzi lined up to photograph Julia Louis-Dreyfus walking down the red carpet at last week’s “Bring Back the Beach” dinner, Heal the Bay’s annual fundraiser held this year at the Santa Monica Airport. The actress definitely stood out. Maybe it was the bright green shirt she was wearing or the color of all the money she has helped raise in her 10 years on the board of the environmental nonprofit. Whatever it is, her presence helped fill the Barker Hangar which was decorated with flying kites. The centerpiece at each table featured a sand castle which turned out to be the dessert (chocolate mousse cake). More than 1,000 guests paid $500 each for the privilege of dancing to the Beach Boys, bidding on one of Brian Wilson’s guitars (which went for $10,000 during the live auction) and to hear Louis-Dreyfus speak. “I just love the ocean,” she told the crowd. “A decade ago our beaches were so polluted they weren’t safe to swim in. While they are better now, we still have a way to go. Today, the State of California, National Geographic, Heal the Bay and other partners are working together to educate schoolchildren from K through 12 in our public schools. That’s six million kids in California schools learning about the environment. That’s huge,” Louis-Dreyfus said to applause. Asked later why she supports Heal the Bay, one of the largest environmental organizations in L.A. County with over 10,000 members, she said “because it’s local and I believe in supporting local, grassroots organizations. It affects me in my back yard, although the issues this organization deals with have national and international implications.” Julia Louis-Dreyfus and her husband, television producer Brad Hall (“The Single Guy”), have lived in the Palisades for 13 years. While they could live anywhere in the world, they choose to live here because “it feels like a small town in a big city and I like that,” Louis-Dreyfus said. “And the proximity to the ocean is divine.” Her favorite place to shop? Elyse Walker and Gelson’s. To eat: Cafe Vida. To play with her children: Palisades Recreation Center and Will Rogers State Beach. Louis-Dreyfus, who has a privileged background and is wealthy in her own right (from ongoing “Seinfeld” residuals), lives a “green” lifestyle. She and her husband both drive hybrid cars and “we’re about to buy a diesel truck,” she said. The couple, who married in 1987, often spend weekends at their “green” house in Montecito with their sons, Henry,14, and Charlie, 9. The family’s vacation home is near Santa Barbara, where Hall was raised. Louis-Dreyfus said their house there is “all-green” because having a second home “is a huge luxury. It’ s solar-paneled, and made of recycled materials and sustainable woods.” Architect David Hertz transformed the couple’s oceanfront bungalow into a high-tech, energy-efficient home that features wall-to-wall windows to maximize the natural light and bring the outdoors inside. Part of the roof is retractable, allowing for a view of the sky. Syndecrete, a lightweight concrete material Hertz makes out of recycled ash and carpet fiber, was used in parts of the kitchen, bathrooms and outdoor terraces. Julia Louis-Dreyfus was born in New York in 1961. Her parents (French billionaire Gerard Louis-Dreyfus and Judith Bowles, a writer) divorced when she was one. The actress spent her childhood dividing her time between her parents’ homes in New York and Washington, D.C. The actress met Hall while both were attending Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. He invited her to join his theater group, the Practical Theatre Company. The couple also performed improv with Chicago’s Second City and were then asked to join the cast of NBC’s “Saturday Night Live”– the only husband-and-wife team to do so in the history of the show. After a three-year stint on SNL (1982 to 1985) Louis-Dreyfus appeared in several films, including Woody Allen’s “Hannah and Her Sisters” (1986), before returning to NBC in 1990 to star in the then low-rated sitcom starring comedian Jerry Seinfeld. How did she get the gig as Elaine Benes, Seinfeld’s neurotic ex-girlfriend? While on SNL, she met writer Larry David, who later co-created “Seinfeld.” David’s wife Laurie and Louis-Dreyfus became fast friends. “When we met, we immediately bonded,” recalled Laurie David. “Since Larry’s married to me and he wrote the dialogue and the character, a lot of me rubbed off on her, and her on me.” Larry David is also the creator and star of “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” In 1998, the year “Seinfeld” ended, Louis-Dreyfus was chosen by People magazine as one of “the 50 most beautiful people in the world,” and was the voice of Princess Atta in the hit Pixar-animated film, “A Bug’s Life,” that same year, After nine seasons, during which time she won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for “Seinfeld,” Louis-Dreyfus took a break before going on to star in three of her own sitcoms: the short-lived “22 Minutes with Eleanor Riggs,” created for her by Hall; “Watching Ellie,” which was canceled after one season; and “The New Adventures of Old Christine,” which CBS renewed last month. While in New York promoting her show, in which she plays a divorced mom, Louis-Dreyfus hosted SNL–the only former female cast member to ever return as host. She appeared with former “Seinfeld” cast members Jason Alexander and Jerry Seinfeld in the opening monologue. Back in L.A. last week, Louis-Dreyfus, 45, said that of all the roles she’s played, it’s her real-life role as “wife and mother,” that she enjoys the most, followed by her work as an “actress and activist.” As a Palisades resident, she worked with her neighbors to get speed humps on Alma Real, “which was purely a safety issue. Drivers were using our street and other streets in the Huntington to avoid the traffic on Chautauqua. And because our streets are wide, these drivers had the false impression that the speed limit was something like 40 to 45 m.p.h., which it’s not. So we as a community worked really hard to get these humps in as we felt it was the only way to get people to slow down, short of putting lights in or having cops at every corner.” Louis-Dreyfus, who is also involved with Laurie David’s National Defense Research Council, feels the best way to make a difference “is to start by making a difference in your own life. I’m drawn to the water and ocean, which are so basic and fundamental that when they are taken advantage of, it bothers me to the core.” Her favorite thing to do at the beach? “Walk, and then watch my children and husband surf.”

CLASSIFIED ADS FROM THE JUNE 1, 2006 ISSUE OF THE PALISADIAN-POST

HOMES FOR SALE 1

LEXINGTON REAL ESTATE PRESENTS AN UNUSUAL DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY: 17,000 + sq. ft. view lot in the Huntington Palisades with plans for 10,000 sq. ft. estate home and 2,000 sq. ft. guest house. For more details contact Dennis Martin or Jeff Gunn, (323) 936-9449 ACROSS FROM THE BEACH in sought-after Tahitian Terrace. Spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bath manufactured home. Each bdrm has its own bath with open floor plan including fireplace in livingroom. Private backyard. Low space rent of $630/mo. Rent control, pets ok. Offered at $325,000. SC Realty, cell (818) 577-7116, office (818) 346-6601, ask for Franklin 17095 PALISADES CIRCLE BY OWNER. “Accepting Bids” $689,500 or Best Reasonable Offer. “HIGHLANDS” Townhome, 2+212 w/ Stunning upgrades. Mtn & “peek-a-boo” OCEAN VIEWS, Pool/Tennis, Security & more. INSPECTION: Sat.-Sun. 6/3 & 6/4, Noon-5 PM. Bids to be received by SUNDAY 6/4 at 8 PM. (310) 573-9939. www.latimes.com

LOTS FOR SALE 1a

OCEAN FRONT LOTS. 5-STAR gated comm. Near Palm Bch Fl. $640K to $1,500,000. Buy while prices still low. 10% down, no closing costs for qual. buyers. Call Lauren, Nilsen Realty, (954) 275-5443

HOMES WANTED 1b

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

HOME EVALUATION 1d

COMPLIMENTARY EVALUATION OF YOUR HOME. It’s fast, easy and it’s free! Visit www.WhatsmyHomeWorth.com

FURNISHED HOMES 2

SPACE, LIGHT, PEACE IN TREETOPS: Greenhouse patio w/ spa. Lndry, cable, phone, dishes et al. For 1-2 non-smokers, no pets 2 to to ?? months. EVERYTHING incl. $2,575/mo. (310) 454-2568 IMPECCABLE 3 BR, 3.5 BA HM w/ oc/mt/cyn vus. Apx 5 min to town & beach. Available for 3 mos. min. Master suite w/ pvt study, cook’s kit, fam rm, vaulted ceilings, FR doors thruout open to patios, BBQ area & gdns. This home has it all. $12,000/mo. Adele Carlson, Prudential CA Realty, (310) 230-3747. ADELLE.MC@verizon.net

UNFURNISHED HOMES 2a

PACIFIC PALISADES WONDERFULLY UPDATED ’60s style house on the Castellammare bluffs. 3 bdrms, 2 ba, newly refinished hdwd floors, all white modern kitchen w/ all appliances, central heating and a/c. 2 car garage, pvt yd with lap pool and bonus rooftop jacuzzi with sunset views of the Pacific. $7,500/mo. 17929 Castellammare Pacific Palisades, 90272. Call Gary C. at the Beaumont Co., (323) 466-9761 (M-F, 8:30-5), (323) 314-7143 (evenings and weekends) GUESTHOUSE. PRIVATE, QUIET 1 bdrm, enclosed separate garage, large private patio. W/D, large sunny kitchen, stove, refrig. Convenient location. No pets, N/S. $1,890/mo. (310) 456-5527 3 BDRM, 2 BA, FURN/UNFURNISHED. 533 Lombard Ave. Separate bonus room with bath. Liv rm w/ F/P, private pool. Available 7/1-12/31. Close to village. $6,200/mo. Call Katy, (310) 230-3708 LOVELY OCEAN VIEW 4 bdrm, 3 ba, 2 fireplaces, jacuzzi tub, yard, patio, coastline view. Available now. (310) 459-4441 or (310) 393-1165 SPACIOUS GRANADA HILLS 5 bdrm, 3 ba home in prime Knollwood estates, charming backyard w/ pool. Has view and access to golf course. $949,000. Agent, Silvia, (818) 326-3373 $2,650/MO. SANTA MONICA small country home in Montana Ave. neighborhood. Designer’s one bedroom. Exquisite attention to detail. High beam ceilings, hardwood floors, woodburning fireplace, shutters throughout, French doors to large private garden with brink patio. New stainless appliances and limestone bath. Completely SECURE and gated environment near 14th and Montana. Enclosed garage, no pets. Available June 1, 2006. (310) 826-7960

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 2c

EDGEWATER TOWERS 1 BDRM, large patio, ocean view. Pools, gated security, covered parking, tennis gym and more. Available May. $2,300/mo. Telephone and fax: (310) 454-5652 PACIFIC PALISADES. S.M. BAY OCEAN VIEWS on private drive, gdn style. Pool, private garage, huge patio, 2 bdrm, 2 ba. $2,900/mo. 2 lease until Feb 07. No extension. (310) 459-6369 $1,600/MO. ALL UTIL INCL. CHARMING, self contained 1 bdrm, private entrance, deck and garden. Great ocean view. No pets N/S. Available 6/1. Call (310) 454-5444 PRIVATE OCEAN VIEW GUESTHOUSE, partially furnished; small but cool; gated, tropical gardens, patio. Near old Getty villa. No pets, no smoking. $1,250/mo. Ready now. (310) 459-1983 NOW SHOWING. $600/MO. Writer’s den with back room, nice light. Call (323) 388-7207. Or email acicchino@sbcglobal.net

ROOMS FOR RENT 3

2 ROOMS+BATH in Brentwood home. Private entrance. Util incl. N/S. $900/mo. Eve, (805) 696-6765

OFFICE/STORE RENTALS 3c

$950/mo. 15115 1/2 Sunset Blvd. #B. LITE & BRITE 2 room office suite. 2nd floor. Call agent, (310) 459-3493 OFFICE FOR RENT: Time-share a 2-room furnished suite in the heart of the village. $500/mo. (310) 459-2757

RENTAL SPACE, STORAGE 3d

ENCLOSED STORAGE GARAGE in village. Available 1 July. $300/mo., $750 security deposit. (310) 454-4668

VACATION RENTALS 3e

PRIVATE FURN APARTMENT IN PARIS. Services available. 24-hour hotline. Starting at $75 a night for 2 persons (studios to 4 bedrooms). Privacy, economy, convenience as you live like a Parisian. 5 day minimum. Established in 1985. PSR 90, Ave Champs-Elysees. PSR, Inc. (312) 587-7707. Fax (800) 582-7274. Web address: www.psrparis.com. Email: Reservations@psrparis.com DO YOU HAVE FAMILY or friends coming in town? Our beautiful 2 bdrm apt will be available 8/10-9/5. Pool, yard. Call (310) 279-8968 SEEKING APT SWAP in Palisades. 2 bdrm NYC UWS. Furnished, doorman apt, approx 7/1-15 or adjustable week. Numerous local references. (212) 662-3111

LOST & FOUND 6a

FOUND: VERY NICE BRACELET week of May 10th in local Dr’s office. Call to identify: (310) 454-5915 LOST: CANE, May 25th in Ralph’s parking lot. REWARD! PLEASE CALL (310) 454-1775

BOOKKEEPING/ACCOUNTING 7b

BOOKKEEPER BY THE DAY. Need help with getting your books in order? Help is near! Call Joanie, (310) 486-1055

COMPUTER SERVICES 7c

PUT YOUR COMPUTER TO WORK – PC BASED CAMERA SURVEILLANCE-Featuring: Live Viewing via Internet & Record to Hard Drive. Easy to Use Low Cost Solutions-4 to 16 Cameras – FRANKEL CONSULTING – 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 COMPUTER CONSULTANT, MAC SPECIALIST. Very Patient, Friendly and Affordable. Tutoring Beginners to Advanced Users. Wireless DSL internet. MAC/PC SET UP – Repair – Upgrade – OS X. Senior discounts! Home/Office. William Moorefield, (310) 838-2254. macitwork.com

GARAGE, ESTATE SALES 7f

PLANNING A GARAGE SALE? a moving sale? a yard sale? a rummage sale? an estate 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

Do you have projects you’ll never get around to? ORGANIZERJESS. Your Professional Organizer & Personal Assistant by the Hour – Home & Office Organization Time Management – Clutter Catch up – Bill Paying – Create Effective Systems, More Space & Clarity – Gift Certificate Available – Impeccable Palisades References – Jessica Schooler Gleason, (310) 429-3289 PERSONAL ASSISTANCE, ORGANIZATION & BOOKKEEPING. Superior services provided with discretion & understanding Palisadian resident. Local references. Call Sarah, (310) 573-9263 HOME & HOME OFFICE MANAGEMENT. Do you need regular assistance, but not full time help? 15 yrs exper, exclnt refs. Website: www.paulapopins.com. (310) 455-4281

WORDPROCESSING/EDITING 7i

TRANSCRIPTION & WORD PROCESSING * General transcription * Medical * Psychology * Psychiatry * Academic * Manuscripts * Mailing Lists * Labels. Quality & Accuracy. Hedy Wolf, (310) 451-7548

MISCELLANEOUS 7j

CUT IT OUT PRODUCTIONS video & editing services. Family albums (weddings etc.), actor’s demo reels, corporate promos & short films. (323) 580-4557, www.cutitoutproductions.net

NANNIES/BABYSITTERS 8a

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 NANNY/BABYSITTER, 11 years experience. Teacher’s education, citizen, own transportation. Looking for part time job. Have experience with newborns. Nadia, (323) 491-4694 BABYSITTER AVAILABLE Mon.-Sat. References, own transportation. Loves kids! Call Rocio, (310) 703-2591 HOUSEHOLD ORGANIZER! Cook, kids, after school, pets, plants, office, light cleaning, errands, laundry, ironing. 20 years experience. Local references. Ruth, (310) 429-2459 NANNY/BABYSITTER AVAILABLE Monday-Friday. Excellent references, experience with newborns. Call Rosie, (323) 962-8486

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, 10 YEARS experience. References. Available M-F. I drive. Some English. Call (213) 383-7260 HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER AVAILABLE M-F. Can work together. Excellent references. 15 years experience. Call Marina, cell, (213) 804-9522 or Arely, (310) 974-8871 HOUSEKEEPER/CAREGIVER AVAILABLE Mon.-Fri., hours open. Great refs, own car, has own equipment if needed. Fluent English. Please call Irma, (323) 525-1960 or (323) 440-7240 EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER SEEKING employment. Excellent personality plus extremely efficient w/ outstanding skills. Have own car. Can speak English. Excellent references. Please call (323) 299-1797 HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE Mon.-Thurs. Very Good! References. Call Divuvina, (323) 422-2419 HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE, Local references, own transportation. Available Thursday & Saturday. Call Marta, (213) 365-6609, or leave message, PLEASE. BABYSITTER/ HOUSEKEEPER MATURE local lady. US citizen, non-drive. Afternoon, evenings. Delfinia, (310) 454-4828 HOUSEKEEPER/NANNY, YEARS of experience. Excellent references. Available Monday-Friday mornings. Reliable transportation. If interested call Maria at (323) 620-1501 or (323) 227-5204 GREAT HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE Tuesday-Sunday. Will do laundry. Local references. I will make your house shine! Call (310) 442-4739 HOUSECLEANING/OR BABYSITTING Available Mon. thru Fri., 7 a.m.-4 p.m. L/I or L/O References, experienced with children. Own transportation. Please call Imelda, (323) 752-5244

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) 692-3692

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 TREE AND LANDSCAPE EXPERT. Horticulturist, arborist, landscape manager/designer. Tree diagnosis, trimming, removal, appraisal/donation for tax deduction. Lawn diagnosis, repair. Sprinklers, drip systems. Expert maintenance. Greenhouse/veggie/herb gardens Comprehensive plant & landscape consulting. Darren Butler, (818) 271-0963 POND CONSTRUCTION & DESIGN: Water gardening. Japanese Koi fish. Filtration pond service, repair & maintence. Free estimates. Cell, (310) 498-5380, (310) 390-1276. Visit us at www.TheKingKoi.com GARCIA GARDENING SERVICE – Maintenance – Sprinkler Systems – Planting – Clean-up – Landscape – (310) 733-7414

MOVING & HAULING 11b

HONEST MAN SERVICES. 14″ van & dollies. Small jobs to 2 bedrooms. Hauls it all. California/Nevada. Over 12 years. Westside experience. (310) 285-8688

HEALTH & BEAUTY CARE 12a

NEED A PERSONAL FITNESS TRAINER? I can customize a workout program just for you! Please call Karen, (818) 368-1205

WINDOW WASHING 13h

HAVING A PARTY? SELLING some real estate or just want to do some spring cleaning? Get those WINDOWS SHINING by calling No Streak Window Cleaning, where we offer fast friendly quality service you can count on! For a free estimate call Marcus, (323) 632-7207. Lic. #122194-49. Bonded EXPERT WINDOW CLEANER 20 years Westside. Clean and detailed. Free estimates, sills and screens included. Up to two stories only. Brian, (310) 289-5279

MISCELLANEOUS 13i

PRESSURE WASHING. Superior cleaning, driveways, walkways, patios. Craig, (310) 459-9000

PET SERVICES/PET SITTING 14g

BE HAPPY TO COME HOME! Trusted house/pet care in & around Palisades since 1986. Educated, responsible. (310) 454-8081 PET HEAVEN TOTAL PET CARE. Training. Walking. Playgroups and hikes. 30-year Palisades resident. References. Call (310) 454-0058 for a happy dog. HAPPY PET – Dog Walking – Park Outings – Socialization. Connie, (310) 230-3829

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.pianoteachers.com/ldlukas INCISIVE SAT Mastery Program developed by Thomas Heys, Stanford graduate. Classes begin end of June. Sign up now: (310) 663-2441 APPLYING TO COLLEGE? Need help? A. Bartle, experienced college counselor. (310) 594-1833

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 grade levels, conversational & all ages. Local refs, flexible hours. Please call Noelle at (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 & AP). In-home tutoring at great rates. Call Jonathan, (310) 560-9134 PIANO TEACHER IN PACIFIC PALISADES! 20 years experience. I teach in your home. Great with children and adults returning to the piano. Call Karen Rae, (310) 383-0200 CLEARLY MATH TUTORING. Specializing in math! Elementary thru college level. Test prep, algebra, trig, geom, calculus. Fun, caring, creative, indivdualized tutoring. Math anxiety. Call Jamie, (310) 459-4722 FRENCH TUTORING FOR YOUNG CHILDREN. 90 min sessions or more, all ages. Good for speakers or non speaker. Great help for Lyc’e Fran’ais students. (310) 621-3113 PROFESSIONAL PRIVATE TUTOR (Mathematics, Science, SATs, ACTS) 9+ years experience, UCLA graduate w/ degree in Mathematics. First lesson half off! Janice, (949) 351-5717; www.TheLATutor.com

CABINET MAKING 16

CUSTOM CARPENTRY – Entertainment Units – Cabinets – Libraries – Bars – Wall Units – Custom Kitchens – Remodeling – Designed to your Specifications – Free Estimates – CA Lic. #564263 – (310) 823-8523 CUSTOM WOODWORK AND CABINETS. Craftsmanship quality, 20 years experience, local resident. Local references available. General Contractor Calif. License #402923. Ron Dillaway, (310) 455-4462. rondillaway@yahoo.com

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

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

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. Senior 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 & refinishing. National Wood Flooring Association member. Lic. #732286 Plenty of local references. (877) 622-2200. www.goldenhardwoodfloors.com

HANDYMAN 16n

HANDYMAN, Since 1975. Call for your free est. Local ref. Lic. #560299. Member, Chamber of Commerce. 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 THE HANDY GUY. Any job, big or small. Over 16 years experience. Lic #B-858574. We’re proud to donate our services to Habitat for Humanity. (310) 216-9034 HANDYMAN SERVICES. No job too small. 10 years experience in the Palisades. Please call (310) 454-3838 for prompt, friendly service. Not licensed. PETERPAN – Quality home repair. Serving entire Westside. (Not lic.) Ask for Peter, (310) 663-3633 AVALON ESTATE MAINTENANCE. Specializing in all aspects of home repair. Reasonable rates. Refs available. Prompt service. Non-lic. Call Dustin, (310) 924-2711 HOWESWORKS. General contractor. Improve – Build – Install – Repair. Professional reliable service. Happiness guaranteed. Lic. #858904. Daniel Howe, (310) 877-5577

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 – 52 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 – General construction. #1 PLUMBING. Mobile, (310) 429-7187. Lic. #668743

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 BASIX DESIGNS & REMODELING, INC. WE DO IT ALL – Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling Specialist – Room Additions – Interior/Exterior Paint – Windows/Doors – Custom Carpentry – Plumbing – Electrical – Call For Free Estimate – Toll Free: (877) 422-2749 – Lic. #769443 COMPLETE CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION. New homes, kitchen+bath remodeling, additions. Quality work at reasonable rates guaranteed. Large and small projects welcomed. Lic. #751137. Call Michael Hoff Construction today, (310) 230-2930

HELP WANTED 17

DRIVERS: EARN MORE AT WERNER ENTERPRISES. Western region runs. Also seeking inexperienced and seasonal drivers. (800) 346-2818 ext 123 BABYSITTER/COLLEGE STUDENT WANTED. Summer hours. Wed., Fri. Great with kids, active, (pool, tennis, beach) English, CDL. (310) 387-7722 FURNITURE SHOWROOM on Abbot Kinney is hiring full time sales associate. Retail experience, 1 year minimum. Must be self-motivated, ambitious, work well with others, customer service oriented and have PC skills. One weekend day a must. Fax resume & salary history, (310) 450-7687 MEDICAL RECEPTION FT/PT. Some back office experience needed. Please call (310) 454-5534 RECEPTIONIST/ADMIN. Fast-paced, upscale office in Pacific Palisades. Will train & reward. PT/FT. Call (310) 454-0317 BACK OFFICE. Fast-paced, upscale office in Pacific Palisades. Will train & reward. Call (310) 454-0317 SECRETARY, EXPERIENCED MALIBU insurance agency. Top notch. Top salary. Immediate (310) 456-3232, fax (310) 456-3368, cell (310) 924-4354. Email for resumes bis@baldingerins.com RECEPTIONIST FOR CONST. CO. Exp. required. $10 to start. Avail. immed. Fax Res.: (310) 573-1686

SITUATIONS WANTED 17a

HOUSE/PETSITTER AVAILABLE: Currently sitting for Emmy Award-winning filmmaker. Looking for next job. Has house/pet sat $2M home in BH. References: well known actor, exec producer. (917) 754-6735

AUTOS 18b

1994 FORD EXPLORER SPORT 4×4, 2 door hunter green. Alloy wheels w/ BFGAT’s. Brand new master cylinder and brakes. 125,000 miles good condition. $3,200 obo. GREAT CAR! (310) 576-0622 CASH FOR YOUR CARS $ Foreign or domestic. Running or not. Friendly professional buyer. We come to you & handle all paperwork. Local references. Please call (310) 995-5898

FURNITURE 18c

ALL ITEMS UNUSED. Queen mattress set, cost $595, sacrifice $195. Dinette set, cost $495, sacrifice $195. Sofa sectional, cost $1295, sacrifice $695. Chest of drawers, cost $595, sacrifice $295. (310) 451-2319

GARAGE, ESTATE SALES 18d

MOVING SALE! 696 Bienveneda Ave. @ Sunset. Everything must go. Some collectibles, prints, paintings, and furniture. TV’s, BDRM/DR/LR furniture. Sat.-Sun., June 3 & 4, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Best Offer! ESTATE SALE! Discounted hand-crafted leather couches, new DR set, 3 pc armoire set, contemp BDRM set, tons of art work. SUN., 6/4, 2 p.m.-6 p.m. 17151 Palisades Circle. Cash, ck ok! Neighborhood GARAGE SALE, 1 street, many houses. Sun., 6/4, 8-11 a.m. 572, 361 Las Casas & 357 Grenola & more! Toys, log cabin, games, books, baby clothes, lawn furn & more. Great cond., great deals!

PETS, LIVESTOCK 18e

WANT A BEAUTIFUL, LOVING, playful dog you can be proud of, a rare, purebred race of English setter and a top hunter for upland birds into the bargain? Come see our Llewellin Setter pups with their sire and dam right here in Pacific Palisades. For viewing hours and location, call Mike at (310) 473-7068 or Margaret (310) 459-9409

WANTED TO BUY 19

WANTED: Old tube guitar amplifiers, ’50s, ’60s, etc. Tommy, (310) 306-7746 – profeti2001@yahoo.com

Adriana Van Hemert: Spurred by the Odds

Dr. Adriana Van Hemert, a Republican running in the 41st Assembly District primary, thinks she has at least a “50-percent chance” of winning against the only other Republican in this race, Tony Dolz. “My opponent is only interested in one issue’illegal immigration,” said Van Hemert, who lives in Santa Monica. “While it affects us all, it’s really a federal issue. There are a lot of other issues in this campaign. We’ll see what the voters have to say June 6. ” Van Hemert believes in fewer government regulations and that the government should be “a facilitator, not a regulator” in the private sector. While she has no children of her own, she is “pro family” and “pro child.” As a social worker, she has seen the system at its worst, having worked with abused children and low-income families in crime-ridden areas of L.A. She said she is running for the Assembly “to ensure that all children within the State of California have the opportunity for a better future. The education system in this state is broken and needs to be fixed. Parents need choices and to be involved. We need more charter schools.” For the past 10 years, Van Hemert has done pro-bono work with the homeless and mentally ill, the elderly and people with addictions. She has also worked with minorities and the Latino population, counseling children in the Compton schools, as well as in their homes. Having visited dozens of L.A. schools, she is concerned with what she sees as an “obvious decline of our educational system. I have worked with seniors in high school who could barely read or write at a third grade level.” While Van Hemert believes in quality education, she also sees the need for an alternative to high school, “a trade school where our children would be afforded the opportunity to learn employable trades, with an apprentice program in which local businesses participate. Every child is capable of excelling at something, given the chance.” Van Hemert was born in the Netherlands, emigrated to the U.S. in 1968, settled in the Salinas Valley and, after the untimely death of her husband two years later in a traffic accident, decided to relocate to Southern California, where she had a number of careers (acting, real estate, business entrepreneur) before becoming a social worker. She holds a doctorate in clinical psychology and a master’s degree in human development with an emphasis on marriage and family therapy. She also trained at UCLA in family mediation and alcohol and drug counseling. In this last week of the primary campaign she said she is going to be precinct walking and cold-calling, looking to conjure up last-minute support. Asked how fundraising for her campaign was going, Van Hemert, 59, told the Palisadian-Post on Tuesday that “it’s going as well as can be expected. I think big money is waiting until after the primary.” Van Hemert, who became a U.S. citizen in 1975, said that since she arrived here 38 years ago, she has seen the “American dream” erode and now elude many citizens, especially in California “due to rampant government spending and wasting taxpayers’ money on programs that don’t work. We need to bring back integrity and accountability to Sacramento,” she said. “I am neither a lawyer nor a career politician. I am a private citizen who understands the concerns of voters.”

Tony Dolz: Dogged on Illegal Immigration

Here’s the deal: contribute $1,000 to Republican Tony Dolz’s primary campaign and receive a luxury down quilt valued at $800. Dolz is offering this in exchange for those who support his sole campaign plank in the 41st Assembly District race: illegal immigration. On one hand, his hardline stance is unexpected considering he is an immigrant himself. A Cuban-born Hispanic, Dolz, 47, came to the U.S. as a child and became an American citizen in 1986. On the other hand, it’s no surprise considering that Dolz is a founding member of the Minutemen Project, the self-appointed civil defense corps determined to secure our borders. In fact, Dolz spent Memorial Day weekend in Arizona with his family, which includes his Danish-born wife, Bettina, who sells a number of high-end health, clothing and quality linen products on the Internet (including the luxury quilts), and his two children’Dylan, 5, and 11-month-old Sienna. Dolz went to Arizona to break ground on the Minutemen Fence. He and hundreds of other volunteers strung barb wire near Palominas, along the Mexican border. The Minutemen’s goal is “to force our President and Congress to secure our borders and to enforce the immigration laws that are in the books now,” Dolz said. “The number of illegal aliens in our country [estimated to be 11 million to 12 million] is proof that our government does not enforce the laws and, despicably, that they do not want to enforce the laws.” Dolz, who lives in Santa Monica, describes himself as a “national security expert” and a Minutemen lobbyist in the official voter’s pamphlet. “Our family celebrates legal immigration and opposes lawlessness” reads his campaign statement. Dolz said he vowed, after 9/11, to dedicate himself to securing the border “so that kind of tragedy would never happen again.” While the immigration debate is heated (the House and Senate bills differ on whether to allow illegal immigrants to qualify for citizenship), Dolz’s stance is clear. “Although English is not my first language, I have less of a problem than our senators, our congressmen, most of our state assemblymen and state senators and many in the media understanding the meaning of the word ‘illegal.’ For example, it is illegal to violate our borders; it is illegal to hire illegal aliens; it is illegal to use a false Social Security card for the purpose of gaining employment; it is illegal not to pay taxes on earned income; it is illegal to use false declarations to obtain a California driver’s license; it is illegal to drive without a driver’s license and without insurance; it is illegal to receive tax-paid social services which only citizens are eligible to receive.” Dolz said his campaign revolves around the recovery of what he describes as the illegal misuse of an estimated $10.5 billion a year in California. “I would like to take much of that improper use of California taxpayers’ money and use it to lower the cost and improve the quality of education and health care in our state,” said Dolz, a businessman who specializes in information technology and telecommunications. “For more than a year I have put my business and personal life on hold and dedicated myself to our national security and to responsible, sustainable and controlled immigration policy,” he said. “My campaign revolves around issues brought about by the dereliction of duty of our federal government and state legislators in bestowing tax-paid services to illegals. I am the best-qualified candidate to deal with these issues.” Dolz said that to be against illegal immigration is not to be confused with “being against legal immigration. It is patriotic to demand that our elected representatives secure our borders for the safety of all Americans. To demand that our immigration laws be uniformly enforced and that our government act responsibly is not racist. And for the President to think that rotating the National Guard every two weeks at the border is going to do what needs to be done is not workable. For one thing, they won’t even be armed, which will only add to the immigration chaos.”