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Psychiatrist Diagnoses Our Consumer-Crazed Culture

Our society’s excessive desire for possessions and status now has a name, thanks to Peter C. Whybrow, M.D. His recently published book ‘American Mania,’ subtitled ‘When More is Not Enough,’ (Norton) takes a novel look at the paradox of how the world’s most affluent nation also has epidemic rates of stress, anxiety, depression and obesity. ”’In our relentless pursuit of happiness, we have overshot the target and spawned a manic society with an insatiable appetite for more,’ writes Whybrow, a practicing psychiatrist who is director of the Jane and Terry Semel Institute of Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA. A British transplant, Whybrow divides his time between L.A. and a second home in New Hampshire. The author will appear at Village Books at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 7. ”Whybrow’s theories and idea for the book stem from having observed the frenzy of the Internet-driven economy of the late 1990s, an environment that created many instant millionaires. Mania, defined in psychiatric terms as a highly energetic yet delusional sense of well-being, seemed to Whybrow a natural metaphor for what he views as a deeply troubled American psyche. ”’Everyone feels that they have to get richer and richer,’ Whybrow said during a recent phone interview. ‘Yet there is no correlation, no evidence that this is making anyone happier.’ ” He points out that despite a massive increase in disposable income, many American families consider themselves too busy to enjoy their affluence. ‘Material wealth has been decoupled from contentment and personal fulfillment,’ he writes. ‘The time investment devoted to securing wealth has crowded out family life and threatens the intimacy on which humans thrive.”’ ”According to Whybrow, human beings in general don’t manage abundance well. But for the United States, a nation of immigrants who by nature are driven and competitive, this over-the-top hunger for acquisition is especially acute. ” He contends that genes play a big role, too, insofar as the human brain is programmed to crave material reward. However, the natural checks to our biologically driven self-interest have been diminished by an increasingly global’and impersonal’society. ”’When Adam Smith wrote ‘The Wealth of Nations’ in 1776, Boston was 10,000 people. The market was the hub of the community, and people learned social and moral rules through the marketplace. That is not the case anymore,’ Whybrow said. ”In short, the founders of the great American experiment in free-market economy could not have envisioned the ‘Fast New World’ of the 21st century, where global business operates 24/7 and megastores dominate the landscape. ”’We have removed from our lives that which gives people a general sense of belonging,’ says Whybrow, referring not only to the loss of the ‘corner store,’ but also to our migratory habits. ‘Most people do not live close to parents and other family.’ ”The author weaves together history, economics, social science and biology in analyzing the malaise of modern life, including a chapter examining the roots of obesity in this country. The book also contains colorful portraits of people who have chosen to step off the ‘American Dream’ treadmill. ”’Ultimately, the only way for change is through individual responsibility,’ says Whybrow, who hopes his book will spur reflection on how to slow down and achieve a better balance between work and family.

Knowledge Is a House with Nine Intelligent Windows

A couple of weeks ago, the Los Angeles Times interviewed four members of the elite club, Mensa’open to those who score in the top 2 percent on an accepted standardized intelligence test. ”The questions were fatuous: What else could they have been? Examples such as ‘How do Mensans go wild?’ or ‘What’s the downside of a high IQ?’ But then the answer to ‘Who was the smartest famous person? was provocative. ‘Benjamin Franklin,’ said one Mensan. ‘He had a grasp of democracy and international relations, and he got along really well with women.’ ”Aha, sounds like multiple intelligences, I thought. MI theory, promulgated by Dr. Howard Gardner over 20 years ago to wrest intellect from test makers, takes an interdisciplinary stand toward looking at intelligence. Gardner posits that all individuals have multiple intelligences’nine, using his criteria. These include linguistic, logical-mathematical (the aptitudes we base our I.Q. tests upon), but also kinesthetic (dancer/craftsperson), interpersonal (understanding of self), intrapersonal (politician/ salesperson), musical, spatial (architect/ sculptor), naturalist (to make discriminations in nature) and the existential intelligence (asking the big question, e.g., What is love? What’s going to happen to our universe?). ”A psychologist and professor of neuroscience at Harvard, Gardner updated educators and parents last week at Seven Arrows School about his theory of multiple intelligences and offered applications of how well this way of looking at human capacity can be used in education. ”All of us have all of these intelligences in degrees. So, when somebody declares that they are not ‘creative,’ it reflects a defeatist attitude, which Gardner attributes to the Western world’s view that there is only one single intelligence that one is born with; ‘If you know who the parents are, you can predict the child’s I.Q., and there is not much you can do about it.’ He leans towards the Asian model, that intelligence reflects effort, which may explain why ‘East Asians are at the top of the intelligence score.’ ”Most schools throughout the world are uniform schools, where everybody is treated the same way. And that way pitches everything in the language/logic intelligence camp. ”’If you don’t think that way, then school is not too contoured to you,’ Gardner says. ”Another approach, one that he advocates, caters to the student’s strengths. ‘You find out all about the intelligences of your students so you can teach things in lots of ways.’ ”Gardner says that the best way to assess intelligences is much more contextual, and cited as an example the preschools in Reggio Emilia, Italy, which teach young children through what they term the ‘hundred languages’ of childhood. These include graphic representations of the children’s thoughts and ideas, and verbal, motor, musical, mathematical, ethical, imaginary, cognitive and other expressions. ”Each infant-toddler center and pre-primary in Reggio has a studio or laboratory, which is filled with natural materials and art supplies. In one area, children manipulate simple machines, such as gears and threaded pipes. In another area, children learn about water from a system of transparent pipes and cascades. ”One center features a table with a Plexiglas cover, lighted underneath, used for drawing and related activities. There is also a center for teachers to document the children’s interests and plan lessons. ”While Gardner reminded the audience that multiple intelligences is not a goal, education is totally a goal-oriented enterprise. ”Schools set goals, such as understanding a discipline, establishing a civil society, service to community, critical thinking. ”Gardner’s own education priority is teaching for understanding in any discipline. ‘If you can take something and apply it appropriately in a new situation, that shows you’ve understood it,’ he believes. ”He cited three ‘topics’ in three disciplines: the theory of evolution in science; the Holocaust in history and Mozart in the arts. ‘If you devote real time to these topics, and are willing to sacrifice coverage for uncoverage and go deeply by activating different intelligences, then you reach more kids and you show what it’s like to really understand something.’ ”For this reporter, the picture of knowledge as a room with many windows, each one an intelligence that can be used to understand, said it all.

Garden Gates to Open for Annual Tour

522 Arbramar Avenue
522 Arbramar Avenue
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Six distinctively designed outdoor spaces will be on view when the Pacific Palisades Garden Club sponsors its annual tour from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, April 10, rain or shine. The event also features a plant market, offering a variety of interesting and unusual plants for sale, from noon to 4 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library, 861 Alma Real Dr. Tickets, $15 for members and $20 for the public, may be purchased in advance at The Outdoor Room, 17311 Sunset Blvd., or on the day of the tour at any of the gardens. 649 San Lorenzo: The Surprise Garden The surprise? Just when the couple’s two children were off to junior high and the house and garden were being adjusted to more grown-up areas, twins were on the way! The owners had to shift gears and make the garden child-oriented, incorporating enclosed grassy areas, a sandbox and shady places to play. Yet this garden works well for every age. By using straight lines and simple plant groupings, the garden gains understated power and a sense of peacefulness. In the front of the house, geometry dictates with pavers, borders, and the lawn set at right angles and accented by an apple fence and gravel path. Cercis canadensis ‘Alba,’ punctuate and give height to parallel borders. The second part, paved with gravel, is an extension of the inviting veranda. Here are square beds of herbs, vegetables and citrus. Lavender borders lead to the sunset garden, named for its magnificent views. The true surprise may well be how a garden designed for young children can be so gratifying for grown-ups. 15935 Alcima: Modelo Shales Nature, in the guise of the geological feature of slippery strata of Modelo shales, dictated the planting scheme here. Plants requiring minimum water were necessary to stabilize the collapsing slope and, consequently, succulents abound. Aloes line the entrance road, and a variety of beautifully arranged succulents accent the hillside paths. A sweep of lawn expands the view outward to a line of ocean. The long, deep border is skillfully constructed using architectural and patterning elements of all types of succulent plants: small and tree size, usual and rare, new starts and specimens of great maturity. Note the parallel verticals of Euphorbia ingens, the wonderfully named dragon tree (Dracaena draco) with its pinched-jointed limbs, and the massive trunk of a huge, shaggy-haired nolina, sheltering a bedding of crassula, sedum, echeveria, and graptopetalum. The balcony of the 1940s cedar house shades hoya. An ancient wisteria skeleton supports ferny vines of Bowiea volubilis which rise from croquet ball-like bulbs collected in pots. Behind the house, tillandsia enliven posts and seven enormous staghorn ferns accent the hillside. The legacy of the former Boyd Walker garden is being lovingly upheld and enhanced by the present owner. 850 Muskingum Avenue: In the Garden of the Buddha The sound of water splashing down its rocky course sings a welcoming note to the world of nature. Birds, bees and butterflies find food and water here. Human visitors find mossy, lichened rocks and delight in the pond and meadow of tall, unmown red fescue. Red-leafed cercis and dodonaea are echoed in the maple grove where Japanese maples show off their beautiful color and form. Past the gate, a black urn centers a courtyard. Around the corner, the garden provides pleasures for family and guests. Here is the outdoor kitchen, ready for pizza and paella, a greenhouse for the orchid collector, pool, fire pit and grassy lawn for ball and badminton. The handsome trellis above the outdoor dining room is the home of the white climbing rose Mme. Alfred Carriere. Terraces enclose perennials, including many roses and flowers for cutting. Among its pleasures, the garden provides fruits: apples, citrus, mulberries and stone fruits. The carefully selected rocks and the collection of garden accessories’urns, pots, troughs and benches’unite the front and back garden themes, while an enormous Buddha blesses all. 655 Brooktree: The Oak Woodland Eight years ago, when the owner-gardener first saw the soaring, curving oak branches on this property, she knew she wanted to live here. To protect the oak roots, instead of digging down to build ponds and stream, she built up to place the shallow-water features on the former surface above the roots. White abutilon, white heliotrope and many kinds of ferns now cover this forest floor. A red bench provides repose and a view through a pond’s purple water iris to the garden beyond. The patio, trellised with wisteria vines, has been planned to provide solitude and comfort. A side path, luxuriant with various ferns, leads to a rose garden that surrounds a pool. Leptospermum and purple flowering buddleja intersperse the many roses. One corner of the back garden is anchored by ferny branches of Acacia cognota, the other side by a rustic twig arch clothed with a purple passion vine and a white climbing Iceberg rose. The owner, a mixed media artist, has placed her own work throughout the garden. 522 Arbramar Avenue: A California Family Garden This Craftsman garden has a California feel with its emphasis on bright sunny colors and the use of local rocks. A native sycamore shades a front border of abutilon, heliotrope, daylilies and fiber optic plant, Scirpus cernuus. Bleeding heart, an experiment in this mild winter zone, is a favorite of the children. While most of the owner’s bromeliad collection is inside, two beauties can be found on the front porch. A side garden with a tiled wall fountain features green striped clumping bamboo ‘Alphonse Karr.’ Grape and hoya vines climb up an unusual fencing called Greenscreen. The back garden is planned for the family with large play areas. Because the children love to pick berries, strawberries are nestled in many borders, and blackberry and raspberry vines are trained on fences. From the upper terrace a rocky stream flows down to a gravel-bottomed pond, around which are various grass-like carex. In an enormous Chinese elm hangs a staghorn fern which the owner has moved from garden to garden for 20 years. 15945 Miami Way: A Gift from the 30s This 1932 brick house and its garden have gathered charm and interest throughout the years. The first house in this area, it originally had a clear view across bean fields to the ocean. A brick walk leads past a strawberry guava tree to the gate where yellow roses, ‘The Mermaid’ and ‘Lady Banks,’ climb. A fountain courtyard is shaded by a long-ago-planted pink flowering brachyciton, or bottle tree, so-called because of the swollen shape of its trunk. An ancient Bird of Paradise grows to the second story roof line. To the east an arch, half destroyed, reaches out with its lantern, lending the aura of an ancient ruin. Behind the arch is the thorny chartreuse trunk of chorisia, the silk floss tree. Lining the flagstone drive is a series of bicolor roses: ‘Betty Boop,’ ‘Peppermint Twist,’ and the climber ‘Berries and Cream.’ A red trumpet vine, its twisted trunks massed at the corner of the garage, has been known to send its red flowers down through branches over the patio table. The current owners enjoy tending to their inherited plants while preserving the charm of this historic house and its garden.

Baseball Wins League Opener

David Bromberg's pitching (left) and Dylan Cohen's hitting powered Palisades to a 3-2 victory over University in its Western League opener Monday.
David Bromberg’s pitching (left) and Dylan Cohen’s hitting powered Palisades to a 3-2 victory over University in its Western League opener Monday.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

One down and 14 to go. That’s how the Palisades High varsity baseball team chose to look at Monday afternoon’s 3-2 victory over University at George Robert Field. It won’t go down in the books as one of the Dolphins’ prettier wins, but it got them off to a winning start in defense of their Western League title. Palisades (5-4 overall, 1-0 in league) finished 14-1 in league play last season and to duplicate that feat or even go undefeated, coaches and players alike know they will need to find ways to win as they did against the Wildcats. ‘We were one hit away from blowing it open,’ Pali co-coach Tom Seyler said. ‘We just couldn’t seem to capitalize on our chances early in the game. But I was happy to see these kids battle the way they did.’ Senior right-hander David Bromberg struggled with his control in the middle innings but pitched effectively out of jams in the third, fourth and fifth innings to keep his team ahead. Throwing his vaunted 90 miles-per-hour fastball, Bromberg struck out the side in the first inning and again in the fifth. ‘This was our first league game, so I looked at this as a must-win situation,’ said Bromberg, who threw his first career no-hitter at Taft on March 15. ‘I felt my changeup and slider were working pretty well and my fastball came through when I needed it to. But it also helps to know I’ve got great defense behind me.’ Pali short stop Dylan Cohen went three-for-three at the plate, including the game-winning hit in the sixth inning that gave Palisades a 3-1 lead. He walked to load the bases in the fourth inning but was stranded when Bromberg popped out to first base. ‘When we play close games, I want to get up so I can get a hit,’ said Cohen, who raised his season average to .592. ‘I’m glad I was able to come through today. We played a good, competitive team.’ University took a 1-0 lead in the top of third on a stand-up double to center field, but Pali answered with two runs in the bottom half of the inning. Monte Doebel-Hickock was hit by a pitch with one out, Cohen followed with a single and took second base on a throwing error, and both scored when Andy Megee’s potential double-play ball was bobbled by the first baseman. Despite the win, Pali stranded eight runners in the first four innings’an area the team will need to improve in if it hopes to repeat as league champion. ‘David struggled at times but he was able to come through with strikeouts when it was crunch time,’ Seyler said. ‘And our fielders did a nice job today, making the plays when they needed to make them. There are a lot of positives we can take from this game.’ Palisades plays University again today at 3 p.m., this time on the Wildcats’ home field. Softball If the Dolphins were looking for a close, competitive game to prepare them for today’s Western League opener at Venice, Monday afternoon’s extra-inning thriller against Cleveland at Stadium by the Sea provided the ideal scenario. Similar to its last game, when it rallied from a four-run deficit in the sixth inning to beat Roosevelt, Palisades fell behind 9-4 but rallied for six runs in the sixth inning to take a 10-9 lead. This time, however, there would be no happy ending. Cleveland tied the game in the top of the seventh, then took a 13-10 lead on a bases-loaded double in the ninth inning. The Dolphins got a run back on Angela Neal’s RBI single but lost, 13-11, and dropped to 3-6.

Crimson United Gave Us All Dream Season

By MICHAEL HIATT Special to the Palisadian-Post Several weekends ago, a group of local 10-, 11- and 12-year-old boys completed one of the most successful seasons any Palisades-based youth soccer team ever has. Dubbed the Crimson United, they advanced all the way to the AYSO Tri-Sectionals in the U-12 division, one of only four teams out of over 2,000 to make it that far. I was one of the few lucky enough to share the experience with them. The season included plenty of thrilling come-from-behind victories and even a couple of heartbreaking defeats. But in the end, Crimson United finished as Region 69 runner-ups and Section 1 champions and did so with character. Even in games in which it trailed, the team never wavered. In the regional finals, United lost to Culver City by one goal, but advanced to the Sectionals as a wildcard and eventually bested the same team on penalty kicks. At the Tri-Sectionals, our Palisades team took third, losing only to eventual champion Downey in overtime. Much of United’s success was due to its head coach, Manny Ghaffari, who consistently pushed his team to compete hard, give more and take risks. Above all, he was fair and respected his players. If they were unhappy with one of his decisions or didn’t understand, he encouraged them to ask why. United was a team that always seemed to rally. Goalies Casey Jordan and Daniel Davis never let a bad goal phase them. There were many injuries, but the team could find a way to win, even without its best all-around player, Turner Hanley, who sat out two games with an injury. Another setback came when defender Jordan Lewis broke his arm early in the season, only to return to make game-saving contributions in the playoffs. Young players like Cole Kahrilis, Barton Richman, Kevin Walker, Stephan Callas and Oliver De Bravennes developed their games. Naturally, the team had reliable scorers as well in Shervin Ghaffari and Parker Hiatt, both of whom developed into impact players and leaders. As a parent of a player, I’ve been involved in AYSO for more than six years. I’ve taken on team responsibilities, developed an appreciation for the game and even learned a few skills as an assistant coach. Crimson United gave myself and everyone involved in their magical run memories that will last a lifetime.

Golf Tourney Honors PaliHi Football Alum

The Stennis Family Foundation will host its first annual golf classic on Monday, April 11, at El Caballero Country Club in Tarzana tro honor the memory of former Palisades High football player Michael Stennis, who died of colon cancer in October 2003. Stennis (Class of 1976) was the starting quarterback of the Dolphins’ varsity team and earned All-Westside, All-League, All-City second team and team co-player of the year honors in leading his team to a 9-2 record. He went on to play quarterback and earn a Fine Arts degree at the University of Hawaii, after which he served as CEO of his family’s business, Golden Bird Resturant, which received recognition by Black Enterprise as one of the top 100 businesses in the country. Stennis was a one-time President of the Magic Johnson Foundation and was involved in countless community service programs. He also had aspirations of getting involved in politics. In 2004, the Palisades High Alumni Association gave away $1,000 in scholarships to Pali Seniors on Senior Awards Night, in Stennis’ name. The president of the alumni association is currently working with Pali High Principal, Dr. Gloria M. Martinez, to retire his football jersey number (No. 1) in the near future. Prior to his passing, Michael and his wife Erin formed the Stennis Family Foundation, a Los Angeles-based nonprofit organization that provides educational outreach to individuals and families in minority communities about colon cancer awareness. Stennis spoke in front of groups of as many as 5,000 people. He was a beloved husband and incredible father to his son Michael, Jr. and daughter, Pilar. ‘The class of 76 was Palisades’ first graduating class that had been totally integrated by the busing program, which began when our class entered seventh grade at Paul Revere in September 1970,’ recalls Jeanne Jensen, Palisades High Alumni Association President and Class of ’76 graduate. ‘We embraced one another, learned from our differences, and grew in our similarities. This ‘blend’ of coming from mostly one race elementary schools allowed us to develope life-lasting friendships with other kids, just like us, who just happened to live outside of the immediate area. Skin color was not viewed as an identifer, and was a good lesson to learn at a young age.’ Jensen describes Stennis as ‘one of those unique individuals who was a friend to all, and he led by example.. He was voted ‘Best Dressed’ and ‘Hot Rodder’ in our senior Surf.. and that smile’wow!’ In addition to being a talented football player, Stennis loved golf. His father was one of the first African Americans to join El Caballero Country Club in the 1970s. Michael participated in numerous charity tournaments and liked nothing better that to be out on the course with friends. It is no surprise, then, that The Stennis Family Foundation should chose this sport to be a part of its fundraising effort. Michael would have it no other way. ‘What I remember most about Michael is his smile — his wonderful, infectious smile that made you feel like all was right in the world because Michael was your friend,’ says Julie Avins Long, Girls Vice President of PaliHi’s Class of ’76. ‘What an honor it was to have known this man, and I will be forever grateful for his friendship.’ Another classmate, Neil Alper, shared another memory: ‘When I first saw Michael arrive at school in his Dino and he was dressed way better than anyone else. I couldn’t believe he was a high school student. He looked like a movie star or something. Whatever the cool garb of the era was, he was in it! He was cool in the best way. He was open, approachable and very friendly, while still being hip.’ To participate in the golf tournament, contact Jensen at Stennis Events@aol.com. To read more about the foundation, visit www.stennis.org.

Jay Sobel and Thea Rogers Are Mr. & Miss Palisades

Jay Sobel and Thea Rogers are the new Mr. and Miss Palisades.
Jay Sobel and Thea Rogers are the new Mr. and Miss Palisades.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

A funny thing happened on the way to the naming of Mr. and Miss Palisades at Pierson Playhouse on March 16. Comedy won out the night. Miss Palisades Thea Rogers, a Marlborough sophomore, performed a comic monologue in which she played a wacky theater director giving notes on a unusual version of ‘Hamlet,’ telling her actors it needs to be ‘fun, fun, fun!’ Mr. Palisades Jay Sobel, a Loyola junior, starred in ‘The Adventures of Pali Man,’ which he also wrote and directed, as a nerdy high schooler who transforms into a superhero, ridding Palisadian heads of unwanted perms. It featured Palisades locales and well-known residents. Five judges awarded the titles to Rogers & Sobel based on their character, talent, communication, poise and presentation. They each won a $2,000 Cathie Wishnick scholarship, named in honor of the pageant’s longtime co-host, from the Chamber of Commerce plus a silver necklace (for Rogers) and a Cross pen (for Sobel) from Denton Jewelers. They will appear in events throughout the year, including riding in the Fourth of July parade, joining Santa on the fire truck for Holiday Ho!Ho!Ho! and appearing at Chamber mixers and events. Runners-up were Julian Hicks, a Harvard-Westlake freshman who gave a magnetic performance, singing ‘Corner of the Sky’ from ‘Pippin,’ and Archer School sophomore Lindsey Van Horn, who exuberantly both sang and danced ‘Music and the Mirror’ from ‘A Chorus Line.’ Both received $200 and will step in for Mr. and Miss Palisades if they are unable to complete their duties. The other talented pageant participants were Christine Kappeyne, a freshman at Palisades High School, who showed ‘Strange,’ the film she co-wrote and directed; Elizabeth Morris, a junior at Notre Dame who sang ‘Always True to You’ by Cole Porter; Dayna Tortorici, a sophomore at Crossroads, who sang ‘Our Love Is Here to Stay’ by George and Ira Gershwin; pianist Jason Barry, a sophomore at Santa Monica High, who played ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ by Queen; Nick Kappeyne, a junior at PaliHi, who performed a scene from ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail’; Michael Nash Lumberg, a sophomore at PaliHi, who played ‘Crazy Train’ by Ozzy Osbourne on electric guitar. The hosts were brothers Christian Saglie, Mr. Palisades 1996, and Fuad Saglie, Mr. Palisades 1990; the panel of judges was composed of Honorary Mayor Steve Guttenberg, Emmy-nominated commercial producer Andy Singer, music executive Wil Sharpe, singer and voice teacher Heather Lyle and actress and former Miss Palisades Jeanne Elfant Festa. The Saglies interviewed the teens, asking about one of their accomplishments, their future plans, and the big question: ‘What is your favorite book or movie and why?’ This is the question the contestants didn’t know about in advance, and later many expressed relief that it wasn’t more difficult. Rogers cited as her favorite book ‘The Great Gatsby,’ which she had just read in English class. ‘I love descriptions that Fitzgerald uses and it puts you back in the ’20s, my favorite decade.’ She also spoke about her trip to Costa Rica this summer to build houses with the Calvary Christian Youth group. Her goals includ a college education. ‘I’d like to study abroad. I moved here from England at age 5. I’d love to go to Oxford like my Dad did.’ Sobel cited the novel ‘Timeline’ as his favorite, which he called ‘so cool’ and his favorite film as either ‘Saving Private Ryan’ or ‘Anchorman.’ He also discussed his community service work with the Special Olympics, where he is co-coach of the Westside tennis team. As for his goals, Jay said, ‘Being in 11th grade, my goals are getting through the SATs.’ His brother Tommy was Mr. Palisades in 2002. Last year’s winners, Gilli Messer, a PaliHi junior, and Riley Karp, a TK senior, gave their farewell performances. Gilli sang ‘Tell Me on a Sunday’ from ‘Song and Dance’ with her rich voice and Riley gave a soulful performance of the third movement of Beethoven’s ‘Walstein’ sonata. ‘The year’s gone by so fast,’ said Messer, who is the current Junior Miss North L.A. and will compete in the state Junior Miss Pageant this summer. The audience was also treated to an original piano piece by co-host, composer/pianist Christian Saglie, while the judges’ votes were tabulated. Sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce, the Miss Palisades competition dates back to 1958; Mr. Palisades portion of the show was added in 1990. ‘It felt really good,’ Sobel, the son of Curt and Connie Sobel, said of hearing his name called as Mr. Palisades. ‘I wanted to do something that had to do with the Palisades,’ Jay said about deciding to make the film, which featured a bad guy who sneaked up on innocent Palisades residents and transformed their hair into a curly mess. ‘I was shocked; I wasn’t expecting it,’ said Rogers, the daughter of Pauline and Peter Rogers. ‘I wanted to harken back to my British roots,’ she said of choosing the monologue by British comedian/writer Victoria Wood. ‘I love theater, and the British part spoke to me.’ She got laughs with lines like ‘Gravediggers, Shakespeare didn’t give you a lot of play with.’ Runner-up Hicks, who has been singing since age 5, said the show was a great experience. ‘All the other competitors were very supportive of each other.’ Van Horn, who has been dancing for 13 years, enjoyed the camaraderie, and she also designed the T-shirts for the opening dance number, choreographed by Thea White. The evening’s co-chairs were Carol Smolinisky and Candida Piaggi. PaliHi music teacher Terry Henderson and his Triumphant Trio also performed.

Jim Spar Wins Post Travel Tales Contest

The winner of this year’s Palisadian-Post Travel Tales writing contest is not short of stories. James Spar, a UCLA professor of psychiatry, has traveled to remote corners of the world in search of wild habitats and animals. For our contest, he chose to write about game viewing in Botswana, where he had the unusual opportunity to see ‘two kills’ in a matter of five minutes. (See page 8 of the Travel Tales supplement.) ‘It was just so extraordinary,’ Spar told the Post Monday from his office at the David Geffen School of Medicine. He and his wife Carol, a child psychiatrist in private practice in Westwood, took the trip (which also included South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe) in 1999. On their third and last day of game viewing in the Okovango Delta, they set out to see African wild dog, a fierce predator that does not kill its prey before eating it. Traveling with a driver and a spotter, the Spars witnessed the wild dogs’ group-killing of an impala, followed by another impala’s quick death-by-crocodile. In his story, Spar describes how he and his wife ‘sat speechless, stunned and amazed by the events of the past several minutes.’ So did the editorial staff of the Post when we read his gripping tale. Spar’s skillful and suspenseful writing made this spine-cracking story entertaining despite the gory details. The Spars started their wildlife-oriented travels in 1992 with a trip to East Africa. They spent about 2-1/2 weeks in Kenya and Tanzania, on safari in the Serengeti and hot-air ballooning over the Masai Mara. ‘It was like the floodgates opened,’ said Spar, a Los Angeles native. ‘I thought you had to be somebody special to get to those exotic places, but it turns out you just have to give people money.’ Since their first trip, the Spars have seen wildlife in India, Mongolia, Nepal, Borneo, Komodo Island (Indonesia), Antarctica, Kodiak Island (Alaska), the High Arctic (on a Russian icebreaker), the Amazon River (Brazil, Colombia and Peru), the Gal’pagos (Ecuador), Costa Rica, Panama, Honduras, Belize, Mexico, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ghana, Gabon, S’o Tome and Principe, Madagascar, the Seychelles, Spain (Do’ana National Park), the Danube delta in Romania and the Kizilirmak delta in Turkey. ‘I was always into animals when I was a kid,’ explains Spar,

Fears of Rent Hikes on Swarthmore

Bob Benton, who has been in business on Swarthmore for 23 years, was hard at work this week, ‘still crunching the numbers,’ he said. Owner of a sporting goods store at the corner of Swarthmore and Monument, and a former Chamber of Commerce president, Benton is still awaiting a resolution of his lease negotiations, which have been going on since November. Benton told the Palisadian-Post Tuesday that, initially, the landlord offered him a five-year lease, which would see his rent jump from $2.50 to $4.50 a square foot per month. After Palisades Partners rejected his counterproposal in early March, he told the Post: ‘If we can’t resolve this, somehow, and I can’t find another location in the Palisades, I guess I will go out of business. I’m still weighing all my options. We’re working the numbers as best we can.’ Yesterday, a trustee for Palisades Partners told the Post that they are still willing to work with Benton to reach an agreement. Benton was the first Swarthmore merchant to be offered a new lease by trustees Bob Stelzl, John Wilson and John Watkins, the three representatives from Palisades Partners, a multi-family trust that owns 18 of the 22 retail and commercial properties on the 1000 block of Swarthmore. On Monday, March 14, the three men met with Katie O’Laughlin of Village Books, kids’ clothier Ivy Greene, and members of the McCrory-Irwin family, owners of Michelle International and Palisades Beauty Supply, to present new five-year leases which include rent increases. Meetings with the remaining Swarthmore merchants, some of which were scheduled for this week, were unexpectedly canceled. Other businesses that will be affected by the proposed rent increases include Mort’s Deli, Palisades Playthings, The Prince’s Table, Roy Robbins, Baskin-Robbins, Wells Fargo and three restaurants’Dante’s, Terri’s and a la Tarte. Bert Yellen, who has owned a la Tarte with his wife Bonnie for eight years, feels the landlord ‘has the right to increase the rent to whatever they want,’ but ‘how much more do they think I can charge for my croissants? Going from $2.25 to $2.35 is already a lot, but it will not pay for the increases I hear they are proposing. While we are prepared to spend $50,000 of our own money to improve our restaurant’we want to put in a second bathroom and get a beer and wine license’we are not prepared to spend it without a lease.’ Terri Festa, who owns a second Terri’s restaurant in Agoura Hills, where she recently moved, said she is ‘frightened’ and ‘saddened’ by what is going on on Swarthmore. ‘I’ve been in business here for 10 years. The landlord called me about six weeks ago and asked if I intended to stay. I told him yes. While every couple of months I have people interested in buying my business, I have no intention of selling. I just hope all of this can be resolved amicably.’ Tonight at 7 p.m. in the branch library on Alma Real, the Palisades Community Council will discuss whether the board should schedule a special April meeting to consider ‘the impending crisis regarding Swarthmore merchants,’ according to Council Chairman Norman Kulla. (Editor’s note: Owners of the new Boca Woman store at 1022 Swarthmore, which opened last November in the former Video 2010 space, have a five-year lease with Palisades Partners. The unaffected businesses on Swarthmore include Whispers, Solis Salon, Fernworks and Paliskate.)

Contract Query Delays Y’s Pursuit of Temescal Parcel

The Palisades-Malibu YMCA and the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy were caught short last week by a surprise question at the California Coastal Commission meeting in Newport Beach. The Y had hoped that the commissioners would vote on its application to divide the 56.78 acres in Temescal Canyon owned by the Conservancy into two lots (3.95 and 52.83 acres) and give ownership of the smaller parcel to the Y, while also allowing the Y to continue its annual pumpkin and Christmas tree sales at the corner of Sunset and Temescal Canyon Rd. Instead, several commissioners asked whether the Conservancy did have a legal obligation to sell the property to the YMCA. ‘This [contract] seemed pretty well established, so the commission’s general counsel hadn’t even been asked to review the documents,’ YMCA lawyer Tom Larmore said Tuesday. Unable to see proof, the commission voted to continue the issue. The legal arrangement came about in 1985 when the original owners of the property, the Presbyterian Synod, gave the YMCA an option to acquire the subject property and continue using the property. Then in 1994, the Synod sold the entire property to the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, which agreed to honor the Y’s options to acquire the subject 3.95-acre portion and the continued shared use and maintenance of the swimming pool. ‘Over the last 20 years, the Y has paid approximately $200,000 to keep their option,’ Larmore said. ‘They have been paying $10,000 a year since 1994. ‘Ironically, because we are in litigation [with opponents of the split], the day after the meeting the Conservancy’s lawyers sent us a copy of the brief, which states in three different places that the Conservancy does indeed have a binding contract.’ Larmore said that the Y’s application will probably be rescheduled for the Coastal Commission’s June meeting in Long Beach.