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Halloween Fests This Weekend

Marquez Elementary, October 30 Marquez Charter Elementary School, 16821 Marquez Ave., will hold its 2005 Halloween Festival on Sunday, October 30, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event will include activities, arts and crafts, games, a haunted house and a costume parade, as well as food, a bake sale, entertainment and prizes. Palisades Rec Center, October 31 The Palisades Recreation Center Halloween Carnival will be held October 31 from 4 to 8 p.m. at 851 Alma Real. Activities will include a puppet show at 4:30 p.m., along with carnival games, candy, prizes, a haunted house, pony rides and a petting zoo. Admission is free. Heal the Bay at SM Pier Aquarium, October 29 and 30 Heal the Bay is hosting a Halloween weekend for the whole family, this Saturday and Sunday, October 29 and 30, from 12:30 to 5 p.m. at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium, 1600 Ocean Front Walk. Activities will include a “Mad Scientist Laboratory” complete with microscopes and creepy critters; presentations on “Creatures of the Deep,” featuring “Invasion of the Body Snatchers: How Spooky Ocean Creatures Take Over and Control the Bodies of Other Animals”; “Trick-or-Treater” beach-cleaning activity designed to show kids how littering on the coast hurts animals in the sea; free face painting; movies, stories and speaker presentations about the deep, dark sea. Children 12 and under are admitted free. Adult admission is $1. For more information, call 393-6149. Waldorf in Santa Monica, October 30 The Westside Waldorf School will be holding its annual Halloween Enchantment Festival on October 30 from 5 to 9 p.m. on its campus in Santa Monica, 1229 Fourth St. Unlike traditional haunted houses, the Halloween Enchantment Festival offers a gentler experience, based on a combination of Harvest celebrations and fairy tales. Children of all ages are guided by an angel through classrooms that have been transformed into magical realms. All are welcome. Advance tickets are available at wswaldorf.org, and a limited number of tickets will be sold at the door. Rustic Canyon Rec Center, October 31 A free Halloween carnival featuring games, prizes, costume parades and refreshments will take place at Rustic Canyon Recreation Center, 601 Latimer Rd., from 4 to 7 p.m. on Monday, October 31. Parade times are as follows: age 3 and under will parade at 5 p.m.; ages 4 to 7 will parade at 5:30 p.m.; ages 8 and up will parade at 6 p.m. Contact: 454-5734.

The Master of Modern

By acquiring the archives of internationally renowned architectural photographer Julius Shulman, the Getty now boasts having one of the most important centers for the study of 20th-century architecture through photography.

Julius Shulman in his studio, 2001. Photograph by Phil Ethington. Courtesy of Phil Ethington. “Mobil Gas Station,” Anaheim, CA, illustrates Julius Shulman’s gift for framing a subject using dramatic perspective. (Smith and Williams, architects; gelatin silver print, 1956)

Much of what we know, and think, about modern architecture we learned from Julius Shulman. The living legend, now in his 96th year, has lent his discerning eye to documenting countless celebrated structures throughout the world. It’s through his lenses that our perception’particularly of mid-century, cutting-edge houses in Southern California’has been shaped and defined. Shulman’s elegant compositions, exalting the cool, clean geometry of modernism, stand in sharp contrast to his own avuncular manner (he refers to himself as “Uncle Julius”)’one that is at turns both boastful and self-effacing, all dispensed with charm and wit. His endearing personality and iconic photographs were headlined recently when the Getty celebrated his 95th birthday party, in tandem with the opening of his photographic exhibition. The event began with an open conversation with Shulman, moderated by Wim de Wit, the Getty Institute’s curator of architectural drawings. The Getty Research Institute is positively giddy about its new acquisition, one that has catapulted this scholarly arm of the institution into a surprisingly popular venue. The archive, officially transferred to the Institute last April and containing 260,000 negatives, prints and transparencies, has already received more viewing requests than any other holding. “The reference staff is busy fielding calls from all over the world,” says Christopher Alexander, co-curator of the exhibition. The exhibition, “Julius Shulman, Modernity and the Metropolis,” is a “greatest hits” compilation of images by this rock star of architectural photography, with 83 works on view. Of course, the most famous photograph of all’Pierre Koenig’s Case Study House #22’is among the picks. It is perhaps the ultimate expression of the glamorous L.A. lifestyle Shulman’s photographs often promoted, with two women relaxing in a glass-enclosed living room that is dramatically suspended above the city lights of Hollywood. “In many ways, he was selling modern architecture,” says the Getty’s Alexander. “Shulman’s photographs not only are dynamic, but they also helped convince people of the livability and comfort of these houses.” During a recent telephone interview with the Palisadian-Post, Shulman chimed in about his most famous work. “The picture of those two girls in conversation is so natural and looks so comfortable,” he says. “Seeing the photograph is how a New Yorker could identify with what it’s like being in Los Angeles. “If you add a little substance to it, it sells the product,” continues Shulman, who purports to be a businessman as much as an artist. Not only were his powerful angles and perspective groundbreaking, but Shulman’s accessorizing’daring to put people and furnishings in the picture’was a big innovation. It all began in 1936 with a chance visit to Richard Neutra’s Kun house in the Hollywood Hills, where Shulman casually snapped a few photographs. When Neutra saw the pictures, he was sufficiently impressed to have hired Shulman to document all his buildings. “With his invitation to photograph other projects, I was suddenly a photographer,” writes Shulman in his 1998 autobiography. Three years earlier, Shulman had received a Kodak Vest Pocket camera as a 23rd birthday gift and he became an avid picture-taking hobbyist. However, he writes: “Becoming a photographer was still the furthest thing from my mind.” A steady stream of commissions from other major architects, people like Rudolf Schindler, Raphael Soriano, Frank Lloyd Wright, Charles and Ray Eames, and Gregory Ain followed, and Shulman’s career as an architectural photographer’a goal he had never consciously sought’took off. Along with photographs commissioned by these visionaries’including many California Case Study Houses’the exhibition also features lesser-known images of gas stations, movie palaces and markets that eloquently tell the story of L.A.’s growth. Shulman, who is fond of prefacing remarks with “Now that I’ve reached middle age,” was born in Brooklyn on October 10, 1910. He grew up on a Connecticut farm and moved to Los Angeles at the age of 10. He credits an affinity with nature, nurtured early on, as the most significant influence in his work, one that allows him to intuitively frame and assemble the elements of design to create a statement. “In the early years, when we lived on a farm, they used to have to go and look for me,” he says. “I was always lost in the woods somewhere.” Although officially retired, Shulman continues to take photographs, often collaborating with Juergen Nogai. The two recently returned from Germany, where they photographed an early Neutra house in Frankfurt. “When the prints were completed, I immediately called Juergen,” Shulman says. “‘They are wonderful,’ I told him. ‘You and I are good photographers.'”

Julie Dresner’s Jewelry Reflects a Vintage Style

Julie Dresner can take a little credit for bringing back the era when men carried pocket watches and every little girl wore a locket. The Palisadian jewelry maker has been incorporating gold watch chains, T-bars, swivels and fobs into her bead necklaces as part of her vintage line since she started designing jewelry seven years ago. And for women, Dresner often uses old-fashioned lavaliers, pendants that hang from a necklace, in much the same way they were worn by Duchess de La Valliere herself in the18th century. An inveterate flea market habitue, Dresner has always been interested in vintage treasures. When she was a young girl in New York, she would take period clothes and update them into something more contemporary. In college she studied fine arts, and later narrowed her interest to fashion design, which she studied at the San Francisco School of Fashion Design. Her career centered on the movie industry, where she worked as a costumer. Dresner retired from the intensely stressful job for health reasons and to stay home with her daughter, a decision that serendipitously ricocheted her into making jewelry. “When I left costume design, I had collected odd bits and pieces of jewelry, buttons, chains and pins that nobody else wanted,” Dresner says. “I kept them, and then started incorporating them into what I was developing as my own look.” Dresner’s signature designs celebrate precious and semiprecious gems and pearls, fabricated into necklaces and earrings. A selection of her vintage and contemporary lines will be for sale at a one-day trunk show on Saturday, October 29 from noon to 6 p.m. at Boca, a woman’s clothing store at 1024 Swarthmore. A Pacific Palisades resident since 1992, Dresner learned jewelry-making techniques such as soldering, silver- and goldsmithing, wire-wrapping and fabrication, at Rustic Canyon Recreation Center. She uses other artists to cast some vintage pieces and to help her fabricate certain components which give her jewelry a handcrafted look. Dresner’s necklaces are distinctive for their long strands and nature-colored stones’topazes, rubies, and different-colored sapphires. For her vintage pieces, she no longer prowls antique stores, but instead has developed relationships with certain dealers who bring her a selection from which she chooses. “I used to buy on eBay, but now that has become too competitive, so I rely on my contacts I developed from attending various antique shows around town,” Dresner says. While she stays clear of copying other designers, she stays up with trends, even leading the vanguard on the current popularity of lockets and chandelier earrings. “A few years ago, I couldn’t give the chandelier earrings away, now they’re hot.” Julie Starr Dresner Jewelry is sold all over the United States in about 33 different boutiques. She also sells her jewelry to studios, outfitting the women on such television shows as “Medium,” “Will and Grace” and “Love Inc.” “I love working with the studios because I know what they’re looking for,” Dresner says. She also works with Denise Martinez, the co-owner of Boca. “Every season I sit down with Denise and she tells me what colors and styles she will be showing so I can bring her a compatible selection of jewelry.” Although Dresner says that she misses the interaction with people, she finds that she looks forward to the work. “Everything chills when I go into my studio space. In the beginning I worried that I might be consumed by this, but I have been able to find a nice balance with interruptions to meet friends for coffee and do my exercise.” Dresner and her husband Paul Maibaum, currently director of photography for “Related” on the WB network, have a 19-year-old daughter, Shanna, who is a sophomore at San Diego State. Contact: 459-7259.

Bush’s Motorcade Wreaks Havoc

Editorial

The nightmare that we all imagine could happen one day, that Sunset would harden into one solid parking lot, became reality last Thursday evening and Friday morning, causing residents from Beverly Hills to Pacific Palisades to react with consternation and ire. President Bush was scheduled to come to a private home in Bel-Air for a fundraiser Thursday night to be followed by an overnight stay in Brentwood and a visit to the Reagan Presidential Library Friday, but the federal government failed to inform city officials as to the exact arrival time and destinations off Sunset. “We got the word 24 hours before, but we didn’t know where or when the president was going to be in my district,” Councilman Bill Rosendahl told the Palisadian-Post this week. “We weren’t even clear if the mayor or I should greet him, but then we found out it was a quick hit for money.” Rosendahl said that closing Sunset from the 405 freeway to Allenford caused between 12 and 20 hours of disruption. His office phones were ringing off the hook with constituent complaints. One Paul Revere parent called the Post Friday morning and said that Sunset traffic eastbound was backed up all the way to Capri, which resulted in large groups kids piling out of cars and walking down the hill to get to their classes on time. The co-owner of the Palisadian-Post, Tom Small, even weighed in and encouraged our paper to make an exception to our usual local focus to comment on a national issue. As a Brentwood resident, he reported being a prisoner in his own neighborhood north of Sunset for hours at a time for two days. “Not only was it causing ill will towards Republicans,” Small said, “but the more important issue was that if there had been an emergency, people couldn’t get to the airport, schools, jobs and doctor’s appointments.” Brentwood Senior Lead Officer Dennis Hinman reminded us that this is standard procedure whenever a high-level dignitary comes to town, but that the motorcade route is predetermined by the Secret Service. Councilman Rosendahl didn’t buy the standard procedure. He said that he was outraged by the lack of coordination and cooperation with local authorities. “It was another colossal example of our president not working with the local community.” We understand that security is important, but this was overkill. We propose that if politicians’Republicans and Democrats alike’want to come to our fair city and steal our money for fundraising, they should all be required to hold their parties within five miles of the Palmdale Airport, where there is plenty of open land and little traffic congestion. They have a Ramada Inn, a Super 8 Motel and a Motel 6 up there that would graciously welcome any presidential or politician’s entourage. We also think that the City of L.A. should receive 20 percent of all fundraising proceeds before politicians are allowed to leave town. And for good measure, the proceeds should be invested in easing our traffic congestion.

Transient Arrested After Marquez School Incident

A white male transient gained entry to classroom 23 at Marquez Elementary Charter School on Tuesday evening, October 18, setting off a chain of events that was finally resolved on Tuesday this week. Third grade teacher Amy Halliburton came to school early Wednesday morning, October 19, in order to prepare for back-to-school night that evening. She found books strewn outside the classroom and noticed that the cabinet outside the classroom was open. Halliburton unlocked the door to the classroom and had trouble getting the door open because there was debris in front of it. When she finally pushed into the classroom it looked as if the place had been turned upside down. “I thought an earthquake had happened,” Halliburton told the Palisadian-Post. “It was back-to-school night and all I could think about was having to clean up the mess.” According to Halliburton, a white male who looked as if he could have been from the neighborhood was suddenly standing in front of her. “I asked him, ‘Who are you?'” Halliburton said, and he mumbled, ‘I was sleeping.'” She looked into his eyes and realized something wasn’t right and turned around and went to the school office. The police were called. As the transient walked off campus, he stopped an aide and asked, “Where’s the Santa Monica Airport?” Senior Lead Officer Chris Ragsdale said that the man, in addition to ransacking the classroom, had eaten the hamster food and vomited on the carpet. According to Halliburton, the transient had not gone into the refrigerator in the classroom, nor had he touched the children’s desks. It appears that the man had jumped a fence to gain entry. He had defecated on the other side of the fence and left his backpack, including ID, opposite where police think he gained entry to the yard. The police believed he gained entry to the class through an unlocked window. The carpet and the beanbag chairs were destroyed. The children were moved to a different classroom for the day, and that evening, parents who had children in that classroom met in the library. The transiet who had caused the damage was not located until this past Monday. A concerned neighbor in the 100 block of Entrada in Santa Monica Canyon called the police because two white males had set up a mattress in a parking lot used by an area restaurant for valet parking. The area is clearly marked “No Trespassing.” Ragsdale responded to the call at 5:30 p.m. When he arrived, he found the two males with a bottle of whiskey, clearly violating the posted sign. He detained the two trespassers. One was cooperative, one was not. As the uncooperative male became combative, Ragsdale called in an additional unit. The use of force was required to make the arrest. Once the officers gained the man’s identity, they confirmed that he was the transient who had been involved in the Marquez School incident. Ragsdale said the transient frequented the Venice and Santa Monica areas as well as Pacific Palisades. Whether it was a drug issue or a mental health issue, Ragsdale couldn’t confirm. “What I’ve experienced,” Ragsdale said, “is that often mental health issues usually follow some sort of drug experimentation.” Teacher Halliburton said everyone at the school, from the teachers to the parents, to the staff were extremely supportive during the incident’s aftermath.

Local ‘Pumpkin Man’ Grows a 660-Pounder in Backyard

Tait Johnson, 13, embraces the family's giant pet pumpkin in the El Medio bluffs neighborhood.
Tait Johnson, 13, embraces the family’s giant pet pumpkin in the El Medio bluffs neighborhood.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Pumpkin carving is a large but thrilling task for the Johnson family, whose giant homegrown pumpkin this year weighs 660 pounds. Their El Medio bluffs neighbors will finally be able to put a face to the enormous squash come Halloween, when it will be on display in the Johnsons’ front yard. Craig Johnson became interested in growing monster pumpkins more than 10 years ago and challenged himself to grow bigger ones each year. This year’s king of the patch is “tied with last year’s,” Johnson told the Palisadian-Post yesterday. “It was a great seed, a very strong pumpkin, but it slowed down a bit early.” At its peak, the pumpkin was gaining about 20 to 25 pounds a day, until its growth rate slowed down around the first week of September. “We were on vacation,” said Johnson, who suggested that lack of fertilizer during that time might be one reason why the pumpkin failed to reach its full potential, which he said could have been about 700 pounds. Johnson purchases his seeds on an Internet site for Howard Dill Enterprises in Canada, and uses only organic fertilizer. “This year, I was more aggressive,” he said. “I increased the amount [of fertilizer] and the frequency of application. I didn’t put as much fertilizer on the leaves, so I didn’t have any leaf stress this year.” Leaf stress, Johnson explains, occurs when growers spray the leaves generously with fertilizer, which causes them to become brittle. Johnson weighs his pumpkin using what’s called the “over the top” method, which he explains as “three measurements that put you within a couple pounds [of the pumpkin’s actual weight].” He measures the pumpkin from side to side and front to back, as well as the circumference; the total number of inches is then applied to a chart that translates to pounds. On either Saturday or Sunday, Johnson will move his pumpkin into the front yard, using a pumpkin-lifting tarp made by the Amish. Moving the pumpkin requires the help of five or six guys. “I’m a pumpkin artist,” said Johnson, who will begin sculpting his creation on Sunday, using tools purchased at a modeling store that sells art equipment. “I really don’t start focusing on [the design] until a day or two before.” The carving and sculpting process takes about a day. A trick to preserving the pumpkin for three or four days, Johnson says, is spraying cheap hairspray over the surface of the carved pumpkin. “It’s fun for the neighborhood, mostly the younger kids,” said Johnson, whose children, Beck, Teal and Tait, are ages 18, 16 and 13. The three of them will have their own 100- to 200-pound pumpkins to carve. Craig and his wife, Kelly, also donated a 400-pound pumpkin to be auctioned off at Calvary Christian School, and they delivered the pumpkin to the Yeh family in the Marquez area about a week ago.

AYSO Roundup

U-10 Boys A strong Blue Crush kept the ball deep in CPK territory for almost the entire game allowing the Crush to come away with a 2-0 win. Nico DeCardinis scored the first Crush goal in the first quarter off of an assist from Max Bennett. Then John Copses scored off of a pass from Elliott Baumoll for the final goal. Charlie Wyman played made numerous saves in goal for CPK. U-12 Boys Striker Jack Ramsey and co-captain Matthew Wade scored two goals to lead Bulldogs FC to 4-1 victory over Blue united. Ramsey scored both goals in the first half, assisted by co-captain Chase Pion and defender Jack Jordan. After Evan Meister scored off of an assist by Brett Elder to pull Blue United within a goal, Wade scored off of an assist by Henry Levinson in the third quarter to give the Bulldogs a 3-1 lead. Mathew Wilson’s pass set up Wade’s second goal. Bulldog goalies Jordan Bostick and Justin Kuyper were helped by defenders Austin Gelber, Eeman Khorramian and Jack Wyman.

Revere Flag Football Wins

Paul Revere’s eighth-grade all-star flag football team finished undefeated at the LAUSD Interscholastic tournament at Marina Del Rey Middle School last week, winning all four games it played. Coached by Ray Marsden and led by quarterback Julian Taylor, Revere advances to a higher division tournament this weekend at the same site. Revere has never won a higher division tourney. The Roughriders’ girls volleyball and tennis teams have begun their fall seasons against local private schools. The girls volleyball teams started off haky, losing to Crossroads and St. Martin of Tours. The junior varsity won its first game during a home rematch with St. Martin. Revere will host its first volleyball tournament Sunday, November 19. If you have questions or are interested in entering a team, call Stacey Foxson at 451-5789, ext. 385. Revere’s tennis team got off to a great start with a 6-2 win over Crossroads, winning four out of six singles sets and both doubles sets. Samantha Kogan won 4-0 at No. 1 singles; Elizabeth Silvers lost 4-3 at No. 2; Vanja Serbedzija lost 4-1 at No. 3; Malina Loeher won 4-2 at No. 4 singles; Dasha Suharev won 4-0 at No. 5 singles and Alana Hunter won 4-1 at No. 6. Kogan and Silvers paired to win 4-1 at No. 1 doubles and Serbedzija and Loeher won 4-1 at No. 2. Revere’s cross country team will begin its competitive season today. Revere will host a two-mile course using the field and rolling hills around the perimeter of campus. Special thanks to the team sponsors: Benton’s Sports Shop, Bizzy Blondes, Ralphs (Venice Beach) and Surf Mania.

Football Unable to Settle Score

Wildcats Pull Away in Second Half to Beat Palisades, 36-19

One of the Palisades High football team’s most humiliating losses last season came at the hands of University, which drubbed the Dolphins 52-14 at Stadium by the Sea. So Pali wanted nothing better than to return the favor on the Wildcats’ home field and put an end to University’s undefeated record. Instead, a game the Dolphins needed to win to stay in the Western League playoff hunt got away from them in the second half as the host Wildcats outscored Palisades 28-13 in the second half to post a 36-19 victory and remain in first place. Despite having been routed by defending league champion Venice the week before, Palisades (3-4, 0-2) arrived at Wildcat Stadium expecting to win its second road game of the season. Instead, the Dolphins remained winless in league and must win two of their final three games to avoid a fifth straight losing season. With Robert Gillett injured on the bench and Marquise Coleman and Ryan Henry unable to run the ball (they combined for just eight yards in eight carries), Pali quarterback Raymond Elie was forced to pass on almost every play. He finished 10 of 36 for 210 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions. Elie also scored Pali’s final touchdown on a one-yard sneak with 4:26 remaining. University (7-0, 2-0) missed an early chance to score after intercepting a pass by Elie deep in Dolphin territory. The Widcats were stopped on downs, but late in the first quarter Uni defensive back Jason Robinson intercepted Elie at the Dolphins’ 40-yard line and returned it to the 16. Five plays later, Aaron Grims scored from 18 yards out and Douglas Nelson caught Robinson’s two-point conversion pass to give Uni an 8-0 lead. Palisades responded just before halftime when Elie rolled out and found receiver Ryan Henry in the corner of the end zone for a 17-yard touchdown that pulled the Dolphins within two points. But the ensuing two-point conversion pass was batted down before it could reach tight end Deonte Baker and Pali trailed 8-6 at halftime. Daryl Butcher returned the second half kickoff 48 yards to Palisades’ 44-yard line and it took the Wildcats only five plays to increase their lead to 14-6 on Robinson’s five-yard run. After Paliw as stopped on downs, Uni took possession at its iwn 38-yard line and again drove downfield to score, this time on Robinson’s six-yard run. Early in the fourth quarter, Henry caught a second 17-yard touchdown pass from Elie, Esteban Moreno kicked the extra point, and it appeared the Dolphins were back in the game trailing only 20-13. However, Uni seized control for good when it got the ball back. Driving 51 yards in five plays, the Wildcats scored on a one-yard plunge by Anthony Ederson and Butcher ran for the two-point conversion to build Uni’s lead back to 28-13. Palisades responded with its best drive of the game, marching 77 yards in nine plays and scoring on Elie’s keeper that closed the gap to 28-19. Elie was tackled a yard short of the goal line on the two-point conversion attempt. Although the Dolphins recovered an onside kick attempt, it was ruled they recovered before the ball had traveled the necessary 10 yards and the Wildcats were awarded possession at midfield. Uni put the game away five plays later, scoring on a 25-yard pass from Robinson to Butcher. Cedric Hayes ran in the two-point conversion to provide the final margin with 1:54 left in the game. Not only did Palisades lose but its next opponent, Hamilton, beat Westchester and enters Friday night’s game at Stadium by the Sea with confidence. Palisades’ frosh/soph team also lost, 20-6.

Guy Hayes, 80; Mortgage Banker, UCLA Teacher

Guy Hayes, a resident of Pacific Palisades for many years, died on October 13. He was 80. The son of Guy and Helen Hayes, he was born on July 21, 1925, and was raised in Beverly Hills, where he attended Beverly Hills High (class of ’43). He graduated from UCLA with a B.A. in history, and was affiliated with Phi Kappa Psi. Hayes proudly served his country in World War II for three years as chief petty officer on the USS Birmingham, a light cruiser in the Pacific Theater. He saw dramatic action in several major battles, including Iwo Jima and the battle of Leyte Gulf. A mortgage banker for 30 years, he also taught real estate finance at UCLA. His family and friends will miss his humor, generosity, loyalty and kindness. He is survived by his wife of 52 years, Barbara Hullet Hayes; his sons Stephen Hullet Hayes (wife Rhea) of Santa Barbara and Gregg Hunter Hayes (wife Robin) of Phoenix; and grandchildren Andy, Matthew, Tyler and Kelly.