Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski, in attendance at the Community Council meeting last Thursday, gave a brief overview of her compromise master plan for rebuilding LAX, which was presented to L.A. City Council Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. The result of the vote was not known as we went to press. The Alternative D Master Plan expansion, which has been separated into two phases by Miscikowski, was passed in June by the Boards of Airport and Planning despite opposition by communities surrounding the airport. Projected cost of the project: $11 billion. Expected completion date: 2015. ‘We don’t want to jettison everything, just get something done right now,’ said the councilwoman. Asked where the financing for the proposed improvements would come from, she said 100 percent ‘must come from the airport itself’airlines, concessions, and so on. There is no ability to use city funds whatsoever.’ Alternative D calls for the work to be done in two phases. The first, or ‘green light’ phase involves reconfiguring the south runway to make it safer, controlling auto access (including car rentals and taxis services) by building a people-mover transit hub, and adding more gates. Cost: $3 billion. The ‘yellow light’ phase includes two new terminals as well as one of the most controversial aspects of the plan, the relocation of passenger check-in services off site to Manchester Square in Westchester. Opposed to Plan D is Denny Schneider, vice president of ARSEC (Alliance for a Regional Solution to Airport Congestion). He referred to a September 2004 Rand Corporation report which indicated that the proposed improvements would not make the airport, which is considered a prime terrorist target, ‘any safer.’ Schneider said that while the overall plan for LAX is acceptable, ‘the problem is the implementation.’ His biggest concern is that work will go ahead ‘without proper studies being completed. ‘It’s sort of like building a house, then checking to make sure you have enough foundation. Before September 11, 68,000 people a year used the airport. There is concern (Continued on Page 4) that it will go as high as 80,000 to 90,000. What is the impact of that on traffic and the neighboring communities? There are now in excess of 33,000 pages of documentation on this project, if anyone is looking for bedside reading.’ POTRERO CANYON Miscikowski, who has endorsed a plan to sell the 22 city-owned lots on the canyon rim and redeposit the proceeds in a fund specifically earmarked for finishing the Potrero Canyon project, gave an update on the motion and how the community will be involved. An estimated $1.2 million is needed to compete Phase II, which includes repairing two recent landslides and grade the remaining stockpiled soil. The final phase, Phase III of the estimated $30-million project, includes establishing a 7-acre riparian habitat at an estimated cost of between $7 and $12 million. Miscikowski’s motion has received support from the Arts, Parks, Health and Aging Committee and was approved by the Budget and Finance Committee on Tuesday. It is expected to be presented to the full City Council on Oct. 27 or Nov. 3. Still to come is approval from the California Coastal Commission. When the Coastal Commission originally approved the project in 1986, it placed restrictions on the sale of the city-owned lots straddling Potrero until the riparian habitat and park construction requirements were completed and funding for inspections and maintenance had been identified. However, Commission staff has indicated it would be willing to waive these restrictions if the city designates the separate account into which all lot proceeds would be deposited, the funds to be used only to complete Phases II and III. The buildable lots are located on Friends, DePauw and Earlham, as well as two lots on Alma Real which Miscikowski said will be the first lots to be sold. She also indicated, after discussion with council members, that any development of those two lots, ‘which are fairly isolated on the rim,’ would be subject to the existing CC&R’s of the Huntington. Council member Carl Mellinger had concerns about how the properties will be sold (‘through auction’) and if the number of sales per person would be limited (‘We’re looking into that’). Questions were then asked about the community’s involvement in the project. While a 15-member Potrero Canyon Community Advisory Committee will be appointed to work with the city, ‘only five will be from the community,’ noted council member Stuart Muller, who was also concerned about the ‘scope’ of this committee. He also wanted to know who would be responsible for maintenance once the park is complete. While the Council unanimously voted to support Miscikowski’s motion to sell the Potrero lots, it did so with two conditions: that the configuration of the advisory committee be revised to include more community representation, and that there be a clearer definition of the advisory committee’s duties and responsibilities. RENAISSANCE ACADEMY Kurt Toppel gave a brief report on the status of the subcommittee formed regarding Renaissance Academy. ‘We have met three times so far,’ said the council vice-chairman. ‘We have no specific recommendations yet. We will be meeting again next week.’ Michael McRoskey, who is on the council’s Renaissance subcommittee representing neighboring residents, inquired about the parking variance required under the Palisades Specific Plan and the discrepancy he saw between the over 300 students such a variance would presumably allow and the fact that as far as he knows his committee is only ‘working towards 90 students being permitted in the Alma Real building.’ McRoskey also said Renaissance is currently looking into ‘alternate locations.’ Miscikowski replied that as far as she knew the school had not yet officially applied for the parking variance and ‘whether it even qualifies for the variance is a delicate question right now.’ Saying she was aware of how ‘volatile’ the situation with Renaissance is in the Palisades, ‘we really have to look at the long-term implications.’ The councilwoman made it clear that her main concern was and still is ‘the life safety issue, which seems to have been resolved with the fire department,’ referring to the fire marshal’s approval two weeks ago to allow up to 215 students to occupy the space on the two floors the school has leased in the commercial/business building. ‘If that hadn’t been approved we would have shut the school down.’ Noting that there are now issues with ‘Building and Safety’ as well as between ‘the tenant and landlord,’ Miscikowski said that there was going to have ‘to be more accountability’ given recent events. DWP In a brief discussion on the Department of Water and Power’s efforts to reposition power lines under PCH, as has already been done for half a mile at the Topanga Canyon intersection, Miscikowski pointed out that while ‘the Coast Highway is not a city street,’ she thought the city might be able to help. DWP, which has no beautification budget, has already said a deal has to be made with the city and that there needs to be an assessment district established. The cost of moving the aging electrical lines underground is 10 times the cost of fixing the existing lines above ground.
Local Environmental Activists Support Proposition O Nov. 2
Longtime friends and environmental activists Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Laurie David have come together to support Proposition O, the only city bond measure and the only environmental measure on the November 2 ballot. Called the ‘Clean Water, Ocean, River, Beach, Bay Storm Water Clean-up Measure,’ the proposition is the result of years of work by scientists and environmental activists. If the measure is passed, the city would incur bonds of $500 million for projects that would clean and treat storm water before rain, irrigation and other sources wash the pollution into the ocean and rivers. ‘This is the greatest environmental opportunity of this region, without overstatement, a once-in-a-lifetime chance,’ David told a group of Proposition O supporters at the National Resources Defense Council headquarters in Santa Monica last week. ‘Proposition O is a first of its kind effort to finally solve water pollution problems that plague the L.A. region.’ According to Palisadian Fran Diamond, chair of the California Regional Water Quality Control Board for L.A., storm water pollutants cause serious human health problems. Prop O funds would pay for storm water treatment methods, pollution prevention technologies, habitat and wetlands restoration, water conservation, creating green space and drinking water protection. ‘Literally billions of gallons of polluted urban runoff, a ‘witches’ brew’ of trash, pesticides, oil, grease, bacteria and live viruses, bombard Santa Monica Bay every year,’ David, an NRDC board member, said at the Prop O event. ‘This is what you, and your kids and tens of millions of visitors swim in during warm summer afternoons at Temescal Canyon, Will Rogers or by the Santa Monica Pier. ‘This is a problem that can be solved. But it won’t happen until Los Angeles fixes the system that delivers polluted storm water directly to the ocean without doing anything to clean it up first. No filtering, no removal of trash’no treatment of any kind. Proposition O will give our City the money it needs to fix this problem once and for all.’ The measure has been endorsed by the Los Angeles Times, as well as the Los Angeles City Council (which placed it on the ballot by a unanimous vote), Mayor Hahn, the Sierra Club, Heal the Bay, Santa Monica BayKeeper and other environmental, business and local groups. The measure would allow Los Angeles to comply with a strict federal court order to clean up its storm drain and runoff system. The projects would have independent financial audits and a citizen advisory committee would decide where the money would be spent. There is no official opposition to the proposition, which must pass by a two-thirds vote. The bond would be funded by money from property taxes, an estimated average increase of $35 a year for 24 years, according to Diamond, who says, ‘for our coastal economy, we can’t afford to continue having beaches closed. The money is well spent and long overdue.’ ‘We have the most impermeable city in the nation,’ says Diamond. ‘We have so little green space that all the storm water starts at the eastern end of the city and flows downhill to the ocean. When you have more green space, the water is captured and naturally gets filtered down to the groundwater. We throw away almost as much water as we import. It’s tragic and sad that we are throwing away this water that could be replenishing groundwater.’ Activists David and Louis-Dreyfus became friends when Louis-Dreyfus was cast as Elaine in ‘Seinfeld,’ the hit TV show created by David’s husband, Larry. ‘When we met, we immediately bonded,’ recalls 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.’ The Palisadians have a lot in common. ‘We love clothes, the environment, flea markets, we’re both activists and we’re both married to comedy writers,’ says David, whose husband is the creator and star of ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm.’ Louis-Dreyfus’ husband, Brad Hall, is the writer/producer of ‘The Single Guy’ and ‘Watching Ellie.’ David, who has lived in the Palisades for 10 years, is very impressed by the community’s dedication to the environment. She noted how she sees many hybrid cars in town, and that Bobby Kennedy’s book ‘Crimes Against Nature,’ a critique of the Bush Administration’s environmental policies, is displayed in the window of Village Books. Both David and Louis-Dreyfus were inspired in their activism by Kennedy’s work. The two have teamed up to work together on a number of other environmental projects, including the hybrid bill AB 2628, introduced by Assemblymember Fran Pavley and signed by Governor Schwarzenegger. If approved by the federal government, it will allow hybrid vehicles to travel in California’s carpool lanes. David holds numerous briefings and salons at her home to educate people about environmental topics, and every other year she chairs an NRDC event which has raised as much as $3 million for the environmental organization in one night. ‘She speaks with a pure heart about what she believes,’ says Ari Emanuel, founder of Endeavor Talent Agency, who works together with her on many issues. This weekend, he helped with a fundraiser at David’s home for his brother, Illinois congressman Rahm Emanuel, at which Senator Hillary Clinton spoke. David does what she can in her day-to-day life to help the environment, including driving a hybrid car, but says ‘nobody’s perfect. Nobody’s even 80 percent.’ David uses both sides of paper for faxing and printing, composts in her garden, brings her own garment bag to the dry cleaners, avoids taking bags at stores when she can put something in her purse, and tells her daughters (Cazzie, 10, and Romy, 8) when they brush their teeth or wash their hands not to waste water. ‘I’m really immersed in these issues and really passionate about them,’ says David, who previously produced the sitcom ‘Get a Life’ and worked on the David Letterman show, and who now devotes herself to environmental activism full-time. Her projects include a documentary on global warming that she is producing for HBO. ‘We don’t want this to be a wonky science issue. We want to bring it to the popular culture and get everybody activated. ‘Most of the issues I work on affect everybody. If you’re a parent, you can relate to them’there’s nothing more relatable than wanting clean air and clean water.’ Louis-Dreyfus, the mother of two boys, has lived in the Palisades for 11 years and is on the board of Heal the Bay. The driver of a hybrid vehicle, she is involved in the NRDC’s executive forum and action forum. She is also on the board of Heal the Ocean in Santa Barbara where she and her husband have a second home. ‘We realize it’s a huge luxury, so we made it an all-green house. It’s solar-paneled, and made of recycled materials and sustainable woods. ‘I’m drawn to the water and ocean which are so basic and fundamental to life that when they are taken advantage of, it bothers me to the core,’ she says. ‘It’s such an important issue and unprecedented,’ Louis-Dreyfus says of Proposition O. ‘Such an extraordinary opportunity for California to be on the cutting edge.’
Council Names Parking Structure Task Force

Photo by Linda Renaud
A transportation task force was launched at last Thursday’s Community Council meeting in an attempt to relieve the longstanding parking congestion in the Palisades. Representatives from the L.A. Department of Transportation were present to offer counsel and field questions about the feasibility of using parking meter funds to build a parking structure’a proposal which was originally put forth over two decades ago. The task force consists of Palisades residents, with ex-officio representation from the LADOT and Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski’s office. Members include Steve Boyers, David Hibbert, Steve Lantz, Tom McKiernan, Wally Miller, Patti Post, Milt Weiner and David Williams. ‘There’s a parking shortage in the village. It’s just that simple,’ council chairman Norman Kulla said to council members and a small audience in the community room of the Palisades Branch Library. Kulla identified two goals for the task force. The first ‘and perhaps more attainable goal’ he listed is ‘to improve parking in the village and reduce and redirect employee parking from surrounding residential streets. One logical solution is to build a new public parking lot,’ Kulla wrote in a brief to council members. ‘Identifying where such a lot would be most suitable and how to fund its construction and operation will be a primary objective.’ The second, ‘and likely more challenging goal,’ Kulla noted for the task force is ‘to improve the existing local transportation system, including both public and private options, particularly for seniors, young adults, teenagers and preteens.’ Kulla advised the task force to review past efforts, such as the 1988 Chamber of Commerce-sponsored parking evaluation and American Association of Retired People (AARP) Transportation Survey released last February. In addition, the task force will consider how to make existing transportation options”Cityride, Mahood, Access, Metro, Blue Bus, Pali Rider”more effective. Kulla also recommended the group evaluate the feasibility of ‘establishing Dial-a-Ride, reestablishing DASH, or other creative environmentally friendly projects. The overall objectives for the task force are to develop recommendations to bring back to the community council, win approval, and initiate action to improve our quality of life.’ Allyn Rifkin, principal transportation engineer of the LADOT, offered his support for the newly developed transportation task force and described how parking structure proceedings operate. Martin Bland, LADOT senior management analyst II was also present and will serve as a liaison between the transportation task force and LADOT. ‘In the past year, the [L.A.] City Council directed there be a parking facility committee to monitor the Special Parking Revenue Fund (SPRF),’ Rifkin said. ‘All the nickels, dimes and quarters that come from [L.A.’s] parking meters are allocated into this fund and the money cannot be used for anything but parking.’ Chaired by the City’s Chief Legislative Officer, the SPRF Capital Project Oversight Committee includes a representative from the mayor’s office, chairman of the City Council Transportation Committee, LADOT, City Administrative Officer and the City Engineer. L.A. parking meter revenues total $30 million annually, with the majority of the funds allocated to operating the 115 parking lots already in existence, Rifkin said. ‘There is approximately $4.5 million in unappropriated funds.’ He also noted that the SPRF committee is ‘looking hard’ at funds that have been appropriated for parking projects, that for various reasons, have not moved forward. ‘Any project that comes forward will be reviewed by the SPRF committee and at the recommendation of the [L.A.] city council, funds will be appropriated,’ Rifkin said. Along with assisting communities construct a parking structure, the SPRF committee also looks at additional opportunities to develop parking, which include working with local schools and city departments. ‘We’re also anxious to work with chambers of commerce and neighborhood groups to look at commercial buildings to see if there are opportunities to lease spaces on weekends when the office buildings don’t need the parking,’ Rifkin said. Council member Harry Sondheim told Rifkin he believes numerous other communities in L.A. will want to build parking structures. He asked how the SPRF committee is going to decide ‘who’s first in line’ for funds. ‘The task force has not yet developed criteria,’ Rifkin replied, adding that the committee hopes to have guidelines developed by the mayor’s election [in March 2005]. Council member David Williams, president of the Palisades Chamber of Commerce, asked if the SPRF establishes partnerships with regard to parking structures. Rifkin said that ‘since land is so expensive, the LADOT would entertain a partnership with a private or public entity to fund extra parking.’ He cited ‘a train station where the [SPRF committee] issued a proposal for developers to participate and make use of the city’s land, and in Hollywood, where a developer entered into an agreement to add extra parking in their lot.’ Constructing a parking structure in the Palisades village has been debated for years. In 1985, the Palisades Chamber of Commerce formed a committee to work on obtaining a parking structure that could help provide all-day parking for employees in the business district. Three years later the group reached an agreement with Topa Management for a joint retail-parking project to be located at the corner of Sunset and Via de la Paz (still occupied by a small outdoor parking lot adjacent to the medical building and Bank of America). The five-level (three underground and two above-ground stories), 180-space parking structure would have included 8,500 sq. ft. for retail shops. The structure would have been no taller than the two-story Business Block building, and would have been designed to blend in with its architectural style. Estimated construction costs were $2.6 million, with important financing coming from available parking meter funds at that time’$640,000 in the Palisades Parking Meter Zone, plus an additional $961,000 in Council District 11 parking meter funds. These ultimately unused funds were eventually later absorbed into the city’s general fund. The recession also helped scuttle the plans. In 2001, the Palisades Chamber of Commerce organized another parking-structure committee, this time focusing on the existing parking lot behind the Swarthmore business block, which is entered off the alley that runs from Swarthmore to Monument. The lot, if developed into a three-level structure (one below ground), could provide 302 spaces, adding about 160 spaces to the existing supply, according to a L.A. Department of Transportation report in March 1988. The committee quietly dispersed ‘after failing to gather any answers from the city about our town’s claim on parking meter revenues,’ said Arnie Wishnick, executive director of the Palisades Chamber of Commerce. ‘Also, the landlord was not receptive to building a structure.’
PaliHi Grad Helps Campaign in Swing State
(Editor’s Note: Philip de Vellis was born and raised in the Palisades, where he attended Marquez Elementary School, Paul Revere Junior High School and Palisades High School.) For nearly six months, Philip de Vellis has been campaigning for the Democratic National Committee in Ohio. Having served in two different directorial positions, de Vellis has gained experience and insight that provide a close look at the critical swing state’s political atmosphere leading up to the election. ”When he received his first assignment as canvass director for the Cleveland office of Grassroots Campaigns at the end of May, de Vellis says he ‘barely knew where Cleveland or Ohio were on the map, but I was aware that this state would play a decisive role in this election.’ ”’No Republican has ever won the presidency without carrying Ohio. In 2000, Gore lost this state by only 3.5 percent even after pulling all his staff and commercials off the air six weeks before Election Day. It’s dumbfounding to think that if we’d invested a little more energy here last time, then Florida would have been irrelevant.’ ”As canvass director, de Vellis managed ‘an ever-evolving group of 25-30 canvassers with the help of four assistant directors’ whose primary goal was to run door-to-door fundraising drives for the DNC in the Cleveland area. ‘But we had the added responsibility of representing the party in this critical battleground state.’ ”In his current position as regional volunteer director for Ohio Victory 2004 (the Ohio coordinated campaign), de Vellis recruits and trains volunteers with the five volunteer coordinators in Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland and 50 other municipalities. ”’Cuyahoga County has the largest concentration of Democratic votes in the state, and a high turnout on election day is required to carry the state,’ he says. ‘This area has been especially hard hit under the Bush Administration. Cleveland is now the poorest big city in America and suffers heavily from the outsourcing of factory jobs overseas.’ ”So while it is exciting for de Vellis to be in this critical location during the election, he says, ‘It is depressing to see what a bleak future young people face here.’ ”A graduate of Palisades High School, de Vellis attended University of Massachusetts Amherst and earned his bachelor’s degree in history from UCLA in 1996. Having worked for the past five years as an editor and graphic designer in television and commercials, de Vellis says, ‘I’ve always been a news junkie, and worked as a volunteer for the 1992 Bill Clinton campaign, but kept politics as a hobby until I was swept into the enthusiasm of Howard Dean’s primary campaign early last year.’ ”During the primary season, de Vellis organized several large events for then Vermont Gov. Dean’s campaign, including a project that brought 600 volunteers from across the West to the early nominating contests in Arizona and New Mexico. ‘After the disappointing loss of my candidate [Dean] and a two-week European vacation, I headed back onto the campaign trail as the Cleveland canvass director,’ he says. ”In this position, de Vellis observed that fundraising was relatively easy at first, in the eastern suburbs of Shaker Heights and Cleveland Heights, which he says are ‘filled with educated, middle-class liberals.’ However, ‘that territory soon expired…and the reality of the Rust Belt sunk in.’ ”He learned that fundraising was a difficult task in Cuyahoga County, where the unemployment rate was ‘well above the national average’ at about 6.8 percent, while ‘Cleveland proper had a staggering 15 percent of its citizens unemployed. These figures are just the tip of the iceberg. Once this city had over one million residents, but now has shrunk to half that size. Large portions of Cleveland now lay abandoned and there are only a few blocks in the entire city with houses worth more than $100,000.’ ”De Vellis says that the ad in the Plain Dealer newspaper classifieds that his team used to recruit canvassers generated over 120 calls a day for a job that only paid $300-$500 a week with no benefits. ‘Our applicants ran the gamut from laid-off plant managers, teachers, factory workers and college kids to fast-food workers, high school dropouts and ex-cons. Most had a sincere desire to beat Bush, but they all needed the money just as much. ”’Many times we questioned the wisdom of such an enterprise in this area, but I was reminded of how Howard Dean used fundraising to solidify his supporters by getting them to invest in his campaign,’ de Vellis says. ‘I was surprised at first when I met a Republican willing to donate to the Democratic Party. Later I received contributions daily from Republicans and Independents who not only wanted to give us their vote, but the [money]. In fact, the largest donation I received at the door’a $1,000 check’came from a registered Republican.’ ”Yet de Vellis says that the smaller donations were more important to him. By adding their names to the over 50,000 DNC contributors that Grassroots Campaigns gathered each week, donors ‘were demonstrating that our campaign was funded by average citizens, not multimillionaires who can afford to write $25,000 checks to the Republican National Committee.’ ”In order to make the canvassing team, a canvasser had to raise at least $100 on his or her first three days on the job. ‘While this is a simple task in cities like San Francisco, where canvassers average over $300 a day, it can be a herculean effort in this town,’ de Vellis says. ‘We had to let many dedicated and educated people go, because they couldn’t scrounge more than $40 a night from these suburbs.’ ”Other canvassers ‘left the job out of frustration after having too many conversations with Democrats who thought that posting a John Kerry lawn sign should excuse them from even contributing $5 to our campaign.’ ”Now working on the volunteer side, de Vellis says, ‘We need volunteers to carry out many diverse tasks for the campaign, including phone banking [campaigning by phone], canvassing, and staffing events that include the candidates and well-known surrogates like Madeleine Albright, Richard Holbroke and Puff Daddy.’ ”Specifically, de Vellis runs the program for out-of-state travelers coming to Cuyahoga County to campaign for Kerry. ‘Every morning, new staffers and volunteers arrive from out-of-state to our office,’ he says. ‘We need to recruit 2,000 to 6,000 for November 2. The scale of this operation is daunting.’ ”Local residents are also becoming more interested in the campaign as election day nears.’A shipment of 10,000 yard signs flew out the door in three days,’ says de Vellis, who recently began planning phone bank operations for the big day. ‘Edwards and Kerry are constantly visiting the state. The level of intensity grows every hour.’ ”With the atmosphere changing daily, de Vellis says that ‘the debates have completely changed the race. Thousands of supporters watched the [VP] debate outside the hall [Case Western Reserve University’s Veale Center in Cleveland] on a very cold night and cheered Edwards at a midnight rally. It was a great experience to be a part of. Our supporters are much more confident about our chances. We just have to keep on pushing in the coming days. Only a fool would expect anything less than a nail-biter in the end.’ ”On election day, de Vellis will be working as a regional phone bank coordinator, calling registered voters and helping to reach the DNC’s goal of making 150,000 phone calls in Cuyahoga County on that day. ”No matter what the outcome, de Vellis, age 31, says he feels his experiences will be worthwhile. ‘I do think, however, that this country’is ready for a change, but some people still need a nudge. Television commercials or mass mailing won’t sway them. Talking to these undecided voters one-on-one is the only way we can win for sure
Roderick Duignan Turner, 84; Pioneer in Cystoscopic Surgery
Roderick Duignan Turner passed away at his home in Pacific Palisades on October 10. He was 84. ”Dr. Turner was born April 12, 1920, in Toronto, Canada. He grew up in Niagara Falls, Ontario, which instilled in him a life-long fascination with the daredevils who went over the falls. He was the second of four children; his siblings, Betty, Jay, and Tim were his closest friends. While Rod was a good student in grammar school, by the time he reached high school there were many distractions such as sports and travel, and he felt that school was a hindrance to seeing the world. At age 16, he rode his bicycle 900 miles round trip to New York City. He ate lunch with heavyweight boxing champion Jack Dempsey, played the piano on Major Bowe’s Amateur Hour on CBS Radio and was given the keys to the city by Mayor La Guardia. While still a high school student, Rod took another long trip. This time he hitchhiked across the United States, going into 38 states and having many adventures. He sent weekly articles to three newspapers: The Niagara Falls Evening Review, Niagara Falls Gazette and the Buffalo Courier Express. In 1941, he began pre-medical studies at the University of Toronto; he later recalled that it was the hardest he worked in his life because he wanted to be among the few to qualify for medical school. World War II interrupted his studies and led to a lifelong love of the Canadian Navy and World War II history. ”Rod served on a corvette in the North Atlantic convoy from 1943-1945. After the war, he returned to U of T to complete medical school. In 1946, he met his future wife Nancy Marlow; their marriage in 1948 led to a life-long romance. After medical school, he and Nancy moved west to Vancouver, and later to southern California with $12 and their infant daughter, Toni. ”Rod completed his urology residency in Hollywood at the Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital; during that time, he worked as an attending doctor for Paramount Studios and enjoyed home visits with Hollywood stars. In 1955, upon the opening of the UCLA School of Medicine, Rod started at UCLA as an assistant professor and moved the family to Pacific Palisades. He worked closely with Dr Willard Goodwin to develop new cystoscopic techniques for noninvasive treatment of prostatic hyperplasia and biopsy of bladder tumors. ”During his career, Dr Turner helped many patients with urologic problems and performed over 10,000 transurethral cystoscopic procedures. Rod’s work at UCLA allowed him to combine two of his great loves: medicine and athletics. He enjoyed his many years as a team doctor at UCLA, and cherished the friendships he made through work and sports. He took a sabbatical leave to work in France from 1961-1962. While on sabbatical he published a textbook, ‘Office Urology,’ which became a standard medical text for many years. He continued to work as a surgeon, and opened his own private practice in Santa Monica; he had a long tenure on the medical staff at Saint John’s Health Center. Rod loved traveling, animals, storytelling, piano playing by ear, movies, photography, painting, playing bridge, and being with family. He played tennis his entire life, including a weekly doubles match. As a boy, Rod spent his summers camping with his family on an island in the woods of northern Ontario in Algonquin Provincial Park. Eventually he and his brothers each built a cottage alongside their parents’ cottage, and the family still enjoys summer vacations there today. During his retirement, he enjoyed teaching urologic surgery in Africa. Rod is survived by Nancy, his wife of 56 years, his friend and helper John Singleton, and his faithful airedale terrier, Sondy. He is also survived by his daughter, Toni Turner Hopkins and her husband Robert of Healdsburg, CA, and their children Whitney and Emmett; his son Rod Turner and wife Michele of Pacific Palisades, and their children, Kathryn and Anne; and daughter Dana Witmer and her husband Ted of Kijabe, Kenya, and their children Paige, Luke and Gregory. He is also survived by many beloved nieces and nephews. ”A memorial service will be held on Saturday November 6, 11 a.m., at Calvary Church. In lieu of flowers, the family would direct donations to Saint John’s Health Center Foundation (1328 22nd St., Santa Monica CA 90404; tel. 829.8348), where a memorial fund has been created in his name.
Margaret Gilbert, Loving Daughter and Friend

Margaret (Maggie) Gilbert passed away suddenly on August 26, having suffered a fatal embolism. Gilbert was the daughter of Rose and the late Sam Gilbert. She was a graduate of University High School, UCLA and UCLA Law School. ‘We had just spent three-and-a-half weeks together in England, where we saw 23 plays and had so much fun together,’ said her mother Rose. ‘After we came home, we were watching the Olympics together and then she drove home to her apartment.’ Later that evening Maggie suffered a fatal embolism. Rose Gilbert, 86, has been teaching at Palisades High School since the school opened in 1961. This fall she is teaching four AP English classes. In addition to her mother, Gilbert is survived by her brother Michael (his wife Karen) and Robert (wife Caprice), nephews and nieces David (wife Sheila) Jeff (wife Gabi), Fabienne (wife Dima) Cezanne, Savannah and Dominoe, and grand nieces and nephews. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the National Kidney Foundation, 30 East 33rd St, New York, 10016, or any charity of your choosing.
Former NBA Wife Sends An Empowering Message
Proceed and Prevail! That is the signature line of Palisadian Angela Wilder, who recently wrote her first book: ‘Powerful Mate Syndrome: Reclaiming Your Strength and Purpose When Your Partner Is the Star of the Relationship.’ The book is aimed toward women (and men) who are in relationships where they feel less powerful than their partner. Calling herself the ‘Reality Godmother,’ she admonishes women to let go of the fantasy of the princess whose prince will rescue her, and guides them to take responsibility for themselves. ”Wilder, a marriage and family therapy intern and former NBA wife who has personally experienced what she writes about, will sign her book and speak on Wednesday, October 27 at 7:30 p.m. at Village Books, 1049 Swarthmore. ”Wilder met basketball player James Worthy when they were both students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. They maintained a long-distance relationship after he was drafted by the Lakers, and until she moved to L.A. in 1984 to marry. The couple divorced in 1996. ”’When I was first married, I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be great if someone wrote a book about what you’re entering into?” she recalls. ”Wilder, whose ambition since she was a young girl was to be Barbara Walters, found herself giving up many parts of herself and feeling insignificant in comparison to her husband, who had a high-paying, successful basketball career. ”’A lot of athlete’s wives feel almost unentitled to have a life of their own,’ says Wilder, who mentions some of the other challenges of being an NBA wife. ‘It’s not a world where marital fidelity is greatly encouraged. You’re always dealing with people who want to be a part of your world for all the wrong reasons, and it’s hard to know whom to trust.’ ”’There were wonderful parts of it too,’ she adds. ‘There are some experiences I will treasure forever.’ ”In her book, Wilder shares her own experience and that of many others she’s talked to who have been in relationships with powerful mates. She is quick to point out that that doesn’t necessarily mean their mate is rich or famous’they could be important in the community, have a forceful personality, or be powerful in their mate’s eyes. ”’I didn’t feel empowered to pursue my own interests,’ she said. ‘I bought into the idea I was supposed to be a princess. Princesses are not empowered people. I sought his approval for everything, and I thought I had to be less, in order for him to be more.’ A member of Screen Actors Guild, she worked occasionally as an actress during their marriage. ‘I would audition every now and then, but if it conflicted with a game or something he was doing, I turned it down.’ Wilder points out that this isn’t something her husband told her to do, but a choice she made on her own for which she takes responsibility. ”She says that the male partner, if he is the powerful one, often doesn’t like being in that situation either. ‘I’ve had many men respond positively to the book. I don’t think men want princesses either, or to be burdened with the responsibility for their partner’s happiness.’ ”In the book, she identifies the aspects of Powerful Mate Syndrome, which she calls ‘the other PMS,’ and offers a plan for individuals and couples to take back their own power, including couples creating a ‘game plan’ for the relationship. ”’Proceed and Prevail’ could also apply to the author herself. Perseverance was an important part of her writing the book and getting it published. The mother of Sable, 14, and Sienna, 12, both Windward students, Wilder began writing her book five years ago during her children’s orthodontist appointments, gymnastic lessons and soccer practices. ”When she began the book she was also a graduate student in psychology at Antioch University. ‘Even busy, busy moms, if there’s a book in you, it may take you a decade to do it, but you can do it,’ she says. ”’Who I am with my daughters is very real and up front,’ Wilder says. ‘I think it’s more rewarding and fun to be a real woman than be a princess.’ ”When she married Worthy, Wilder was immediately in a situation where she had money at her disposal, without any experience in how to handle it wisely. ”She believes it’s important for women in a relationship with a powerful mate to take part in caring for the finances, and to have her own funds, as well as a job or volunteer work of her own”something you can call your own.’ ”She has seen many women married to a wealthy, powerful man go to work, including herself: ‘I want to counter the fairy godmother. People are empowered by a dose of reality.’ ”One dose of reality she gives her readers is to suggest that people begin a relationship with an end in mind. ‘Every marriage is going to end someday [due to death or divorce]. If people realize the truth in that, they’ll have more fulfilling relationships.’
Jerry Mayer’s Play ‘2 Across’ Challenges Crossword Lovers
When it comes to crossword puzzles, the world is clearly divided between those who always finish and those who, well, don’t. This premise lies at the heart of Jerry Mayer’s new play ‘2 Across,’ a romantic comedy where opposites (puzzlers, that is) attract on a commuter train. ”This is Mayer’s seventh play and collaboration with producer Emily Mayer, his wife of 51 years. During a recent interview, the couple, longtime Palisadians, frequently referred to the new work as ‘our play,’ showing the synergistic devotion each brings to the task.’ ”Rehearsals are taking place in the garage of the Mayers’ Paseo Miramar hilltop home, where an authentically reproduced BART train interior’soon to be transferred to the Santa Monica Playhouse for previews beginning October 22’is the setting for the action. ”A man and woman meet on the train at 4:15 a.m. as it leaves San Francisco station on its way to the East Bay. She takes crosswords’ and life’very seriously, and he treats both like a game. ‘She’s successful, he’s a free spirit who is not task-oriented,’ Mayer explains. ‘The minute he hits a stone wall with the puzzle, he heads to the sports section.’ By the time they reach East Bay 80 minutes later (the play is acted out in real time with no intermission) their lives have changed. ”During the course of writing the play, Jerry Mayer himself crossed over from casual puzzler to one who is driven to finish. Not surprisingly, he sees solving crossword puzzles as a metaphor for life. ‘The idea of completing something can help you with everything,’ Mayer says. ‘It’s about not giving up. ”’Most of my plays have to do with love, and the main idea here is never giving up on finding it. It’s a topic that interests everyone.’ He adds: ‘If you’re lucky enough to marry the right person, it’s more important than anything in life.’ ”Clearly the Mayers are in the lucky category, with a fun-loving and easy rapport characterizing their teamwork. ‘When I hear ‘Jerry, you’ve gone too far,’ I change it,’ says Mayer, referring to Emily, his chief reader and critic. ‘She keeps me honest.’ ”Not only does she have major artistic input, Emily handles financial affairs and all the scheduling for Jerry’s plays. ‘I do everything’place stamps on envelopes, deal with actors, call press people, you name it,’ Emily says with a laugh. ‘It’s really a labor of love.’ ”The Mayers’ own love affair began in St. Louis when both were teenagers. After marrying, Jerry originally set out to work in his family’s construction business, but knew in his heart he wanted to be a writer. ‘I was always the class clown,’ he recalls. ‘I felt I should be writing comedy.”’ ”Success selling a spec script to the television sitcom ‘McHale’s Navy’ prompted a daring move to Los Angeles in 1966 with their three kids when the couple were in their 30s. After what Mayer refers to as a ‘suitable period of struggle,’ he eventually reached the top of his game, writing for such classic TV comedies as ‘All in the Family,’ ‘MASH,’ ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show,’ ‘The Bob Newhart Show,’ and ‘The Facts of Life’ over a period of 25 years. ”It was in the ’80s that Mayer turned his creative juices to playwriting. His first three plays, all comedies, are strongly autobiographical. ‘Almost Perfect’ dealt with the early days of the Mayers’ marriage and leaving the family building business; ‘Aspirins and Elephants’ turned a comedic eye to Mayer’s in-laws; and ‘A Love Affair’ looked at the comedy and drama of marriage. Other Mayer productions soon followed, including ‘Killjoy’ and two musicals, ‘Falling in Love Again,’ and ‘You Haven’t Changed a Bit & Other Lies.’ ”’I have picked things in my own life that ring a bell with everyone,’ Mayer says. While getting laughs is the main goal, Mayer also reaches for his audience’s heart. ‘I always go for some lumps in the throat, too.’ ”’2 Across,’ directed by Deborah Harmon, stars two alternating casts of actors: Susan Cash, Sandra Kerns, Kip Gilman and Steve Vinovich. ”The play will be performed at Santa Monica Playhouse, 1211 Fourth Street, on Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 6 and 8:30 p.m. and Sundays at 6 p.m. Previews take place October 22 through November 5. The play opens on November 6 and continues through December 9. For reservations, call (800) 863-7785.”
Santa Monica Beach: A Visual Century

When Ernest Marquez tells the story of Santa Monica Beach in his new book of the same name, he is casting events through his own family history. Marquez is a name familiar to Palisadians, as it was Francisco Marquez and Ysidro Reyes to whom the original Spanish land grant was given’6,656 acres stretching from just north of Topanga Canyon to just south of Entrada Drive. Ernest’s great-grandfather Francisco and Reyes grazed their cattle on the grassy headlands of the Rancho Boca de Santa Monica and built simple adobe homes in Santa Monica Canyon. ”Like his father and grandfather, Ernest, who was born 80 years ago, grew up in Santa Monica Canyon in a small home just behind Canyon School. ‘I used to play with all the kids at school even before I was old enough to go,’ Marquez says. ‘I walked out the door, around the fence and I was there.’ ”When Marquez was a boy, there were only 30 kids in the school and just four in his 6th grade graduating class. His teacher, the dedicated Miss Weber, lived across the road near the creek. She was a spinster married to her calling, and unforgettable, says Marquez. ‘She used to read us stories from Shakespeare and ‘Ivanhoe” while playing Wagner on the record player.’ ”Marquez’ father died when the young Ernest was only 4. His mother kept him and his sister Dolly clothed and fed by working in a candy factory in Venice, making chocolates. She perfected the art so well that she would ‘make tons of chocolates at home as gifts for Christmas,’ Marquez remembers. ”’Growing up I had no clue of our family’s involvement in California history,’ Marquez says. ‘I kept hearing stories, talked to some old aunts and uncles but each gave their own story; each said theirs was the truth.’ ”This confusion drove Marquez to search the records at the Library of Congress and the Board of Land Commissioners only to discover that historians had ignored their rancho. ‘I asked historian W. W. Robinson how come our rancho had been ignored? ”’He said, ‘If you don’t leave records, you don’t leave any history.” ” Determined to fill in the gaps in his own understanding of his forefathers, Ernest became the family historian, initially while he was still employed as a commercial artist in the aerospace industry. He searched newspaper articles from the period and minutes from meetings of the Santa Monica Trustees. Along the way, he began collecting old photographs of family members and memorabilia of scenes of early Santa Monica. ‘I soon realized that I had a visual record, encompassing more than a century of the development of the beach at Santa Monica. Many of the photographs, taken years apart, were of the same scene from the same location by different photographers.’ ”’Santa Monica Beach: A Collector’s Pictorial History’ (Angel City Press) is a collection of many of those photographs and an abbreviated history that highlights some of the dramatic changes that have occurred to the beach over the last 125 years. ”The history of Santa Monica beach falls into easy chapters’many of which will resonate with local readers because of the land-use decisions and landmarks that remain to this day. As early as the 1850s, Santa Monica Canyon attracted vacationers from Los Angeles, 21 miles away, who would travel all day over dirt trails to enjoy an opportunity to splash in the ocean. The Marquez and Reyes families welcomed these visitors and allowed them to set up their tents beneath the sycamores and close to the creek. ”Marquez offers a fascinating description of the development of Santa Monica as a beach resort, which was fully developed by the turn of the century. One of the first hotels was the Santa Monica Hotel, which was built in 1876 at the corner of Ocean and Railroad (Colorado). It offered a dining room, bar and baths on the first floor and sleeping rooms upstairs. ”The author points out that in the 1870s, some Victorian codes of decency lingered and few people were bold enough to appear in swimsuits in public view. ”’For the most part if people wanted to relax in the water, they visited a bathhouse on the beach to soak in a porcelain tub rather than take a dip in the ocean,’ Marquez writes. ‘Bathhouses had comforts that the ocean did not possess, such as rooms for rent with bathtubs filled with warm saltwater from the ocean or huge plunges (which we now call swimming pools). ”While the beach was recognized as a destination for visitors, businessmen were eyeing the bay for its commercial possibilities. In chapter two, Marquez tells the vivid story of wealthy Nevada senator and businessman John Jones, who was looking for a terminus for the railroad he intended to build from his Panamint silver mines in Independence, California. The railroad, known as the Los Angeles & Independence, was completed in 1875 and ran from downtown Los Angeles to Railroad Avenue (Colorado). Jones also built a wharf extending into the ocean that served as a warehouse and depot for unloading ships. ”Marquez describes the cutthroat competition among railroad owners over the official location of Los Angeles’ major port, a decision that was ultimately determined by Congress. While Jones lost out to railroad magnate Collis Huntington, whose Southern Pacific Railroad owned the only rail line from L.A. to the port at San Pedro, Huntington’s own greed eventually caught up with him. By 1890, Huntington faced mounting competition from the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, which was handling over 60 percent of the water traffic coming in and out of Los Angeles through its Redondo Beach wharf. He decided that the only way to ensure shipping for the Southern Pacific was to have his own harbor. So he pulled out of San Pedro and built the 4,720-ft. Long Wharf, which stretched out to sea from Potrero Canyon. From its completion in 1893, to 1896, a total of 759 ships from all over the world called at Port Los Angeles (Long Wharf). Alas, in 1897, Congress resolved the harbor controversy and ruled that San Pedro was the logical site for L.A’s deep water harbor. The loss of business and eventually Huntington’s death in 1900 spelled the end of his harbor. ”In subsequent chapters, Marquez follows the colorful diversions of beach visitors, who by the 1920s enjoyed the pleasure piers that stretched into the ocean from Santa Monica to Venice. He describes amusements from bathhouses to beach clubs, roller coasters to ballrooms. Many readers will be fascinated to learn that the La Monica Ballroom, at the end of the Santa Monica Pier, drew crowds from all over the world when it opened in 1924. There were fashion and automobile shows, weekly carnivals, masked balls, Mardi Gras and fireworks. At night the pier and all its attractions’the carousel, roller coaster, Aeroscope and the ballroom, were illuminated with thousands of small electric lights. The final chapters of the book are dedicated to the photographs and the photographers. The reader has to remember that before the Brownie mass-marketed camera, there were no snapshots. Picture-taking was a highly technical and difficult process that was the domain of professionals. ” ”In addition to professional photographers, souvenir postcards became popular, and around the turn of the century real photo postcards became the mode. These were printed on photographic paper and cut into postcards with space on the back for a message. ”When Marquez started collecting old photographs and memorabilia, he found images of Santa Monica Beach as far back as the 1880s for $2 or $3 apiece in junk shops and at garage sales. ”’I got to the point that I could spot a Santa Monica image from across the room. As years went on I accumulated several hundred. I would study them not so much for the image but to see whatever else was there. Each one holds mysteries I’ve never been able to solve.’ ”Marquez will talk about Santa Monica Beach and sign his book at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, October 26 at Village Books 1049 Swarthmore.
Palisades Pacesetters
Erin Ogilvie, a sophomore libero on the women’s volleyball team at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, had a team-high 28 digs to lead the Bantams’ five-game victory over Emmanuel last week. Ogilvie won back-to-back state championships as a defensive specialist at Marymount High in 2001-02. As a freshman last year, she had 217 digs in 25 matches (3.15 per game), including a season-best 26 digs against Connecticut. Senior Geoff McArthur had nine catches for 163 yards and two touchdowns in eighth-ranked California’s 45-28 football victory over UCLA last Saturday at Berkeley. McArthur, the nation’s second-leading receiver last year behind Larry Fitzgerald of Pittsburgh, scored on receptions of 20 and 80 yards. McArthur led the nation with 1,779 receiving yards, 91 catches and 28 touchdowns as a senior at Palisades High in 1999 and is the Dolphins’ career receptions leader.