Jake Meyer may show up Hughes Stadium in Sacramento for Friday’s CIF State Track and Field Championships as a relative unknown in his events, but you can bet he knows all about the competition. Since qualifying for the state meet in both the discus and shot put last Thursday at the City Section finals, making a name for himself at his last high school meet is all the Palisades High senior has been able to think about. ‘I’ve been dreaming about throwing 57 feet [in the shot put] every day,’ Meyer admitted. ‘I want to finish in the top nine and I’m rated 25th now. Realistically, the odds of me improving 16 places are slim, but you have to have confidence to compete.’ Meyer is the Dolphins’ lone representative in Sacramento and is eager to give a good account of himself. He threw the shot 51 feet, 8 inches to finish second at the City finals behind Jasper Henry of Dorsey (53-5). The state leader is Mark Lewis of Arroyo Grande whose personal best throw is 65-11. At 6-3 and 225 pounds, Meyer routinely gives up 70 to 100 pounds and three to four inches in height to his competitors. ‘I’ve put a lot of effort into the shot put the last three years,’ said Meyer, who also basketball all four years at PaliHi, the last two on varsity. ‘I get to school at seven in the morning and throw. I’m not big compared to these other guys, so I have to have better mechanics. I bench press around 320 pounds and squat about 450. Other guys are benching 415 and squatting over 600 so mathematically I’m not supposed to be able to compete. But I do because of my technique. I work harder than anyone at it.’ Weight training six days a week and practicing his form with a private coach five days a week, Meyer first threw the shot as a sophomore, maxing out at 41 feet and qualifying for the City finals. He improved to 50 feet and finished fourth in the City as a junior. Training with a 16-pound ball (which is used by the NCAA) instead of a 12-pounder, Meyer achieved his personal-best of 53-0 at a Western League meet this season. ‘What I like about the shot put is that it’s pure will power,’ Meyer said. ‘I like the team-concept associated with playing basketball, but I hate running up and down the court. The shot put is something I’m good at and more than anything else I love winning. When I step in the ring, I expect to win.’ While he has worked to become proficient at the shot put, Meyer’s success in the discus was instantaneous. He had never thrown the discus in competition prior to the City finals, but he incorporated the same spin he used in the shot put to his new event and won with a throw of a 129-5. Though he will try both at Bucknell University next fall, Meyer believes the discus will eventually be his stronger event. ‘I’m lower rated in the discus because I haven’t had enough meets but I think my body type is better suited for it because it’s more about technique and quickness as opposed to just sheer strength.’
Loyola Volleyball Repeats CIF Title
Led by seven Palisadians, the Loyola High boys varsity volleyball team won its second consecutive CIF Southern Section Division I championship Saturday night at Cypress College, continuing a tradition of excellence unrivaled by any boys program in Southern California. The victory gave Loyola eight section titles, moving the Cubs ahead of Santa Ynez for the most Southern Section titles by one school. Even without All-CIF setter Brian Beckwith, who graduated last spring, the fourth-seeded Cubs picked up where they left off a year ago by beating perennial power Mira Costa in a nonleague match, repeating as Mission League champions and culminating their season with a 25-18, 22-25, 25-22, 25-22 victory over second-seeded Westlake in the CIF finals. On Saturday, Loyola (22-2) was led by the jump serving of 6-7 junior opposite hitter C.J. Schellenberg. The Palisadian ripped off three consecutive aces to give the Cubs a two-point lead in the pivotal third game, then fellow local Jeff Sause, a 6-3 senior outside hitter, blocked Westlake’s Joey Zuziak on game point. Schellenberg ended the match with his 14th kill after teammate Andy McGuire’s ace and back-to-back errors by the Warriors (25-2) gave Loyola a 24-21 lead in game four. Contributing to the Cubs’ success throughout the playoffs were Palisadians Patrick Garrison, Jason Holdych, Jake Rosetti and Brad Iino. Brentwood Loses in Finals Making its third consecutive appearance in a Section final, Brentwood School built an early lead before falling to Mayfair 25-17, 21-25, 20-25, 25-19, 15-11 in the Division IV championship match Saturday at Cypress College. The second-seeded Eagles (16-2), led by Palisadian Ilan Goldstein, came within a game of winning their second CIF title in three seasons. Brentwood rebounded from a slow start to take control of the match in game two, but the top-seeded Monsoons (25-3) dominated the last two games to claim their first title. Matt Ceran, a 6-7 senior outside hitter, finished with 21 kills and six aces for Brentwood.
Baseball Out of Playoffs
Disappointing might be the word to best describe the Palisades High baseball team’s first-round City championship division playoff game last Friday at George Robert Field. On head coach Tom Seyler’s birthday, the sixth-seeded Dolphins battled hard throughout and had their chances, but came up short in a 5-3 loss to 11th-seeded San Fernando that ended Palisades’ season. ‘I thought both teams played pretty well,’ said PaliHi senior catcher Adam Franks, who was voted most valuable player in the Western League this season. ‘Maybe we looked past them a little, but honestly I think we were ready to play.’ Things began well for Pali when short stop Dylan Cohen hit a home run in the first inning, but by the time the Dolphins scored again they were behind 4-1 and strictly in comeback mode. ‘The [playoff] seedings are really misleading,’ Pali second baseman Matt Skolnik said. ‘We aren’t seven spots better than them, but because we won our league that’s the way the draw played out. I think if it was a three-game series we’d probably beat them but they played better today.’ Franks singled and scored on a triple by Alex Thompson in the fourth inning and Turhan Folse hit a solo home run in the sixth inning for Palisades (20-6). Geoff Schwartz pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the first inning and scattered eight hits over 6 1/3 innings, but gave up a two-run home run to Chad Lewis that gave the Tigers (14-16-1) a three-run lead in the third inning. Pali was unable to solve junior left-hander Steven Pujol, who allowed four hits with six strikeouts in six innings for San Fernando (14-16-1). When Pujol tired, the Tigers brought in flame-throwing right-hander Matt Nevarez, who struck out the side in the bottom of the seventh inning. ‘This is a tough loss to take because we thought we would win and it turned out to be my last game,’ said Schwartz, who will play football at Oregon in the fall. ‘But this program is on the rise and the future looks good. Not only did varsity do well, but the JV went undefeated too, so the guys should have a great chance to win league again next year.’ Kevin Seto led the team with a .460 batting average, 29 hits and 24 runs scored while Cohen and David Bromberg each hit five home runs. Franks and Cohen led the club with 18 RBIs each. Bromberg was 6-0 with a 2.10 earned run average, Andrew Strassner was 6-0 with a 3.02 ERA and Schwartz finished 5-3 and led the squad with 51 strikeouts in 57 innings. ‘We accomplished all of our goals this season,’ Seyler said. ‘We won our league and we earned a spot in the upper bracket. The goal next year will be to do the same thing and to get further in the playoffs than we did this year. That’s what we’ll need to do to earn some respect for our league.’ Palisades last made the City’s upper division playoffs in 1998, when the Dolphins lost 3-2 to Sylmar in the first round.
Trifecta!
PaliHi Boys Win 3rd Straight Swim Title; Girls Finish Second

At the conclusion of the City Section swim finals last Wednesday, the Palisades High team had a surprise in store for its coaches. Rather than settle for the customary gatorade shower, Dolphin swimmers dragged first-year pilot Maggie Nance and assistant Adam Blakis into the Los Angeles Memorial pool to celebrate with them after a dominating performance in which the boys’varsity won its third consecutive City championship and the girls finished second in their pursuit of a fourth straight title. With everyone contributing, the boys accumulated 227 1/2 points to outdistance San Pedro (218) and capture their 10th Section title. Granada Hills (179) was a distant third. The Dolphin girls finished with 230 points, 19 behind first-place Cleveland. ‘Everyone stepped up and got it done,’ said PaliHi junior David Nonberg. ‘We scored in every event and that’s what won it for us.’ Paris Hays (50.96), Nonberg (52.02) and Gavin Jones (52.61) finished second, third and fourth, respectively, in the 100 freestyle while sophomore Randy Lee won the 100 breastroke in 59.22, one second off the City record. Brian Johnson, Lee, Daniel Fox and Hays were second in the 200 medley relay and Gavin Jones, Peter Fishler, Hays and Nonberg swam second in the 200 freestyle relay (1:34.14). The foursome of Jones, Fishler, Johnson and Nonberg clinched Pali’s victory with a third-place finish (3:26.92) in the last event, the 400 freestyle relay. Nonberg was third in the 50 freestyle (21.74), Johnson was second in the 200 individual medley (2:07.22) and Fishler was fourth in the 200 freestyle (1:45.30). ‘We were really motivated to do it because the girls did it,’ Jones said. ‘We gave it our all as a team.’ While the boys were winning on depth, the varsity girls stayed in contention for their fourth consecutive team title because of strong individual performances by Cara Davidoff and the strength of its relay teams. Davidoff, a three-time City champion in the 50 freestyle and two-time City champion in the 100 freestyle, volunteered to compete in different events this season to help the team’s chances. She clocked 1:54.54 in winning the 200 freestyle, then won the 100 butterfly in 58.71’44 hundreths of a second off the City record set by Amy Jones of Cleveland in 2000. ‘I’m happy with both swims,’ said Davidoff, who will swim at Tulane next year. ‘In the first race, I swam close to my best time and in the butterfly I swam my fastest time. The record would’ve been nice but it’s hard to complain when you swim your best. I’m really proud of the whole team.’ Pali’s 200 freestyle relay, consisting of Julie Wynn, Chelsea Davidoff, Sheri Dunner and Cara Davidoff, won in 1:46.26, the 400 freestyle relay of Patrice Dodd, Chelsea Davidoff, Ashley Jacobs and Cara Davidoff was first in 3:53.80 and the Dolphins’ 200 medley relay team was fourth. Dodd was second and Jacobs fourth in the 100 freestyle, Chelsea Davidoff was fourth in the 100 breaststroke and Kharazi was fourth in the 500 freestyle. ‘We worked so hard all year to reach this point,’ said Blakis, dripping wet from head to toe. ‘I couldn’t be more proud of both teams. Alex [Kharazi] and Ashley [Jacobs] had phenomenal meets for the girls and of course Cara [Davidoff] dominated. The boys push each other to succeed. Brian Johnson is ready to break out. David [Nonberg] and Paris [Hays] were terrific today. It was a total team effort and we should be even better next year.’
Fitness Training for Kids & Teens
Pacific Palisades does not seem to be a town short of personal trainers. Whether it is yourself, a mother, sister, father-in-law or mere acquaintance, somebody you know has one. So, what makes Palisadian trainer Angela Parker different from all the rest? Parker’s specialty is children, and they make up the majority of her clients. ”’I have been working with children for years,’ Parker said. ‘I have been a dance instructor, lifeguard, camp counselor, swim coach, nanny, after-school help line operator and big sister to six siblings. ”’I motivate children to try harder, push farther and believe they can achieve their goals.’ ”The Los Angeles native has been training kids for a year now, not only to help them become fitter, but as a way for them to gain confidence and a good attitude about life. ”’Kids can be very hard on themselves. I like to encourage them that they can do anything if they put their mind to it. Using the body to do this is one of the most powerful tools,’ Parker said. ”’Children who strive to add exercise to their lives often find themselves doing better in school, sleeping better at night, maintaining more effective relationships with peers and teachers, and feeling better about themselves and their environment,’ she added. ”Parker has lived in the Palisades since November, but her job training the 20 children she has accumulated takes her farther afield. ”’I have clients all over’from Malibu to Beverly Hills’and I travel to their houses and train the kids in their own homes. During the training session the parents are home, but I do not encourage them to watch. I want the time to be about the kids, and if they are performing for a stranger, they will normally be likely to step it up. The exercising is also a time for them to feel an independence from their parents.’ ”Parker said she does encourage sessions with the whole family so she can teach them how to work out together as a unit. ”Asked about her young clientele, Parker said: ‘About half of my students are overweight and the other half range from kids that are underweight and need to be more active, to kids that are having emotional problems’for example, if their parents are getting divorced. I use fitness as a way to make them feel better. To the kids, I want to be their friend, and to the parents, I want to be a great example to their children. If that can happen, then I am doing my job. I want the kids to feel as if they can do absolutely everything; that is what I want them to come away with.’ ”She said her sessions can be filled with just about any form of exercise. ‘I grew up dancing, and so I incorporate that into my sessions with some of the little girls. They’ll even bring their own CDs along. I have one little boy who loves basketball, so we do that. From the jump rope and trampoline to pogo sticks and running, I will incorporate whatever is fun for them.’ ”When asked about nutrition and diet, Parker said: ‘I encourage healthy eating, but nothing drastic. I just say eat when you’re hungry and stop when you’re full. I simply encourage balance and moderation.’ ”Besides working out in people’s homes, Parker does like to train outdoors. ‘That is what is so great about the Palisades; there are so many places you can go. I’ll sometimes meet clients in the park or at a trail and begin our workouts there.’ ”The training sessions are an hour long, and Parker encourages two to three sessions a week. She also can train more than one child a session. ‘Sometimes they like to come with buddies, or I’ll get a brother and sister teaming up. I can have three to four girls at a time, but that depends on the age group.’ ”Although Parker has acquired some adult clients through her younger clientele, her main focus is children. She gives the first one-hour session for free, and charges $65 a session thereafter. Parker also has packages: 8 sessions for $480, or 16 sessions for $800. ”Palisadian and Marquez student Louis Kane 11, has been training with Parker for a year. His father David is very pleased with the results. ”’I knew Angela from around the neighborhood and thought she could benefit Louis with his self-esteem and confidence; which she has done,’ Kane said. ”When asked if his son had improved on a physical level, he said: ‘Oh, definitely. He is not limiting himself by his physicality anymore. He plays baseball on the Bronco Dodgers at the Rec Center, and is doing quite well in the playoffs this year.””’ ”Contact: 454-0596.
Palisadian Cancer Survivor’s Warning: Take Charge of Your Own Health!
By TAMMI JACOB Special to the Palisadian-Post Nobody is ever prepared to hear the words ‘you have cancer,’ but women should know the risks and what they can do to get early detection of the disease. I look at myself in the mirror now and don’t even know who I am looking at. I am bald. It is not me. I am sick three weeks out of the month from the chemotherapy. I have to keep telling myself that I am alive and all this will be over soon. ”I suffered from years of endometriosis (a condition in which the tissue that lines the inside of the uterus grows outside the uterus and attaches to other organs) and because of this, was told by my doctor that I should get tested for the BRCA gene, known as the genetic cancer for Eastern and Central European (Ashkenazi) Jewish ancestry. I was told that UCLA had a study and was given their number. I phoned and became part of their study in 2002. The genetic testing consisted of a questionnaire and a blood test. Two weeks after the blood test I went in for the results. I was told that I was BRCA 1 positive, which meant that I had a 50 to 85 percent chance of developing breast and ovarian cancer in my lifetime. I wasn’t shocked by the outcome of the test, for my mother was a breast cancer survivor and every other woman in her family had lost their fight against the disease. I knew my risks. I had been getting mammograms and ultrasounds every six months since I was 25 years old. ”I took the information and contemplated getting a prophylactic mastectomy to prevent the breast cancer from occurring. My insurance company had authorized the procedure and I had met with a surgeon, but I just couldn’t do it. I kept thinking that I might not get the disease. I figured if I kept up with my semi-annual mammograms and ultrasounds, anything that would come up would be diagnosed early. I took the information and did nothing with it. ”About six months after the genetic testing, my endometriosis began acting up again and I was told that the best thing for me to do was to have a complete hysterectomy. By doing so, I would not only take care of the endometriosis, but also the high risk of ovarian cancer associated with the BRCA gene mutation. I was advised that by the time ovarian cancer is diagnosed it has spread and is hard to beat, and that this would be the best option for me. Being 32 years old, this was a very hard decision for me. I was divorced and had two children, but knew that one day I would marry again and might want to have more children. I made the decision that I needed to be content with what I had and that my life was most important. I had the complete hysterectomy, ”Six months after the hysterectomy, I went in for my routine ultrasound and learned that they found two lumps on my left side and a mass against my chest wall on my right side. The doctor was taking longer than usual and so I asked her what they see when they find something. She handed me a tissue box and showed me. The tears could not stop flowing. She told me that they wanted to do a mammogram to take a better look. The mammogram confirmed the two lumps on the left side, but the mass on the right side was too deep against my chest wall to be detected by the mammogram. The doctor told me that I needed to see a surgeon right away to have a biopsy of the masses. ”By the time I got home, my primary care physician had been phoned by the radiologist and had put in the request for me to see a surgeon. Within two weeks I was having a surgical biopsy. One week later I was given the news that I had breast cancer. One month later I had a double mastectomy and began chemotherapy. All the doctors could say to me was that the hysterectomy should have prevented the breast cancer and that they didn’t know where to put me on the charts because, based upon the numbers, I should not have gotten breast cancer. Well, I did and I should be more than a statistic. ”Time has gone by so fast, it doesn’t seem real. I sit and listen to other women and their stories during my chemo sessions and realize that I am lucky. I knew that I had a family history of cancer and therefore got mammograms and ultrasounds every six months. Because the mass on my right side was so deep, a mammogram alone would not have detected it. Insurance fought me every step of the way because I am so young and they don’t think young women need mammograms. Many a time I paid out of pocket for the screenings. Women should know their risks and take every precaution. I used to think that divorce and single parenting were hardships, but they are nothing compared to the reality of cancer. ”My mother asked me to write this for the women in our community, for my aunt and cousins, to get the message out that you need to be aware and fight for quality screening. You can’t adhere to insurance protocols; they don’t care about you. You need to stay on top of your exams and know about the new screenings available to you. There are studies at UCLA that provide up-to-date information. (Editor’s Note: Palisadian Tammi Jacob, 33, who wrote this essay three months ago, has finished her chemotherapy regimen and is moving forward positively. The daughter of Lynda and Daryl Stolper, Tammi attended Palisades Elementary, Paul Revere Middle School and St. Monica’s High School. Her twins, son Kyle and daughter Remi, are kindergartners at Palisades Elementary.)
Jiva Retreat Combines Yoga and Concert
Jiva Yoga Studio in connection with music ensemble Acoustica and Temescal Canyon State Park will be hosting a celebration of the Palisades community on Sunday, June 13 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. The half-day retreat, led by Jiva head yoga teacher William Asad, will include a morning yoga class geared to all levels, a scenic Temescal Canyon hike to the waterfall, a catered vegetarian lunch and an outdoor concert of classical and world music by local artists. ”A Palisades resident, Asad developed the idea for the retreat based on his belief that ‘you don’t always have to search for something, you can stay right where you are and realize what’s here for you’a yoga studio, music and nature.’ He approached his musician friends and yoga students Jahna and Michael Perricone, also Palisadians, who agreed to perform with their band, Acoustica, at the event. ”'[The retreat] is about creating a place of consciousness and bringing it to our community,’ says Jahna, a singer whose recently recorded album, ‘In The Balance,’ is a collection of classical melodies intertwined with world and urban rhythms. She is also the vocalist on her husband, Michael’s own CD, ‘Journey of Seven Bowls,’ (available at Jiva and Village Books) in which Perricone combines his affinity for yoga with his eclectic musical abilities, using Tibetan singing bowls to create a new, ‘yogi-crossover’ genre. ”The retreat will begin at 8:30 a.m., when participants will meet at Jiva (15327 Sunset) for a gentle, wake-up yoga class; Asad will teach the adult class and fellow yoga instructor Ben O’dell will teach the children’s class. (Participants should bring their own yoga mats if they have them.) Health bars and juice will be provided after the yoga class. ”The group will then walk over to Temescal for a 2-1/2- to 3-mile hike that will end in the canyon meadow (near the general store), where participants will enjoy a vegetarian lunch and Acoustica’s musical performance. ”Acoustica specializes in world music, blending classical melodies with global cultural influences, and the concert will also feature music from Sting, the Beatles and classical composers such as Orff, Pergolesi and Delibes. The band members performing include Perricone on acoustic guitar and Tibetan bowls, world-renowned Lebanese ethnic woodwind player A.J. Racy (performer with Sting), Southern India native Abhiman Kaushal on tabla, and Jahna on vocals, along with guest singer Christine Katzenmaier. ”While space is limited for the yoga class, everyone is welcome to the musical performance, which starts at 1 p.m. Parking is free in Temescal Canyon Gateway Park; follow the signs. Prices are $45 for the retreat, including lunch (half-price for kids), or $10 for the concert only. Contact: 454-7000 or go to www.jivayoga.com. For more information on local artists Jahna and Michael Perricone, visit www.airetight.com
Tradition, Tradition Keeps ‘Fiddler’ on the Boards
The first thing you ask yourself when thinking about high school actors doing ‘Fiddler on the Roof,’ is can a teenager transform himself into the play’s central character Tevye, who has the gravity that comes from having suffered and survived and yet the sense of humor of one who has learned a thing or two about life? ”The answer is yes. The moment we meet Tevye (Adam McCrory), a poor dairyman trying to eke out a life in an impoverished Jewish village in Russia on the eve of the Revolution, we are convinced that this Palisades High School production hits the mark. ”’Every one of us is a fiddler on the roof, trying to scratch a pleasant little tune,’ Tevye says in his quietly paced and thoughtful prologue speech. ‘Why do we stay? We stay because Anatevka is our home and tradition’ Everyone of us knows who he is and what God expects.’ ”PaliHi junior McCrory, who in real life is a ‘wee Irish Catholic boy,’ dissolves under his whiskers and hopsack into the much-nuanced character the musical demands. McCrory entered PaliHi as a freshman after emigrating with his family from Belfast. He appeared in his first ever musical two years ago in the lead role in ‘Crazy For You.’ ” ”His task in ‘Fiddler’ is to keep the momentum buoyant’after all, this is not ‘Les Miserables,’ yet to be able to convey his fear and confusion as his world’kept together because of tradition’is disappearing. ”As Tevye explains in the prologue, God’s law provides balance in the villager’s lives under the pressure from outsiders, including the constable, the priest and countless other authority figures. ”’We don’t bother them and so far, they don’t bother us,’ he says. He ends by insisting that without their traditions, he and other villagers would find their lives ‘as shaky as a fiddler on the roof.’ The book by Joseph Stein, based on a short story by Sholom Aleichem, is imbued with the humor and folk wisdom that one would expect to find in a rural Russian village at the turn of the century. The action is concerned primarily with the efforts of Tevye and his wife Golde (Amy Gumenick) and their five daughters to cope with harsh existence under Tsarist rule. ”Change is inevitably thrust upon Tevye as his daughters, one by one, test the iron grip of tradition by wanting to marry for love, instead of by preordained agreement. In contemplating the announcement that the young revolutionary Perchik (Brian Koteen) and his daughter Hodel (Gilli Messer) have announced their engagement, Tevye muses ‘He loves her. Love, it’s a new style. On the other hand our old ways were once new, weren’t they?’ ”Whether you’ve seen ‘Fiddler’ ‘which opened on Broadway in 1965 followed by a movie in 1971’ or not, most everybody knows the music, and what a rich score it is. From ‘Tradition’ to Matchmaker,’ the music by Jerry Bock and lyrics by Sheldon Harnick are forever hummable and have become a tradition! ”The cast and orchestra, under the direction of Terry Henderson, are confident and strong. Each of the leading ladies’including Tevye’s oldest daughters Tzeitel (Taylor Fisher) Model (Gilli Messer) and Chava (Kia Kurestski)’and his wife Golde (Amy Gumenick) have beautiful soprano voices, that whether in a solo or in chorus enrich the musical numbers’especially ‘Matchmaker,’ ‘Sunrise, Sunset’ and ‘Anatevka.’ ”This production, directed by Victoria Francis, has taken a couple of challenging risks, and because of them delivered a rich, dramatic theatrical piece. Of note are the Russians, particularly Terrel Briggs, whose daring, aerial lifts and jumps are stupendous, overseen by choreographer Monique Smith. And who will ever forget the terrifying specters Fruma Sarah (Melissa Lerner) and Grandma Tzeitel (Tia Lebherz) conjured up in Tevye’s dream? ”The orchestra, particularly the clarinets, brings such life (l’ chaim) to the Klezmer feel of this Chagall-like village. ”One cannot discount the look of the show; both the sets and costumes are of a piece. From babushkas to shoes, the hues of brown and gray play counterpoint against the wonderful, sprightly optimism of the fiddler on the roof (Brittany O’Neil), dancing and fiddling in her Kelly green duster and red cap. ”’Fiddler on the Roof’ plays Thursday, Friday and Saturday, June 3, 4 and 5 at 7:30 p.m. in Mercer Hall at Palisades High School, 15777 Bowdoin. Tickets are $10; reserved seats for $20. Contact: 454-0611.
An Architectural Pioneer

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
When Norma Sklarek was studying to be an architect in the late 1940s, she didn’t have any role models. In fact, there were no African American women licensed as architects in the United States when Sklarek decided to pursue that career. The Palisades resident made history in 1954 when she passed her licensing exam and earned certification in New York State. ”’Women have a rough time in architecture and you have to be willing to stick with it,’ says Sklarek, who grew up in Harlem during the Depression, the only child of West Indian parents. ”Today, out of about 120,000 licensed architects in the United States, 1,443 of those are African Americans and only 160 are African American women. ” ”’My parents wanted me to have some sort of profession,’ says Sklarek, whose warm and modest demeanor does not quickly reveal the obstacles she had to overcome in her field of choice. ”She pursued architecture because ‘it seemed to embody math and art,’ and not only did she have a knack for those subjects but ‘my mother would always remind me that the first time I ever saved money to buy something for myself, I bought an art book.’ Sklarek’s mother worked in a factory to support her husband through his education at Howard University, where he earned his medical degree. ”Sklarek attended Catholic elementary school before transferring to public junior high school (originally called PS93), where she was one of few black students. She learned early on how hard she had to work to achieve her goals when she missed her first algebra lessons due to appendicitis, and had to put in extra effort to learn the material so she would pass her final exam. ”’If you keep trying and don’t give up, you can achieve,’ says Sklarek, who went on earn a high math score on an admission test for Hunter High School, an all-girls magnet in Brooklyn that she says was ‘the best school in New York at the time.’ ”Columbia University’s School of Architecture accepted Sklarek in 1945 with minimum requirements’one year of liberal arts at Barnard College’whereas most students accepted were war vets with several years of college, some with B.A.s and M.A.s. ”A ‘subway student,’ Sklarek would do her schoolwork on the subway commute between Columbia and her home in Brooklyn. She was one of 20 students and two women to earn a bachelor of architecture degree from Columbia in 1950. ”Yet the biggest challenge for Sklarek was still ahead: getting a job in a white, male-dominated profession. ‘I applied to 19 different offices in New York and couldn’t find a job,’ says Sklarek, who had given birth to her first son, Gregory, before graduating from Columbia. ‘They weren’t hiring women or African Americans, and I didn’t know which it was [working against me].’ ”Sklarek went to work for the City of New York in a civil service job while she was studying for her licensing exam. She shocked her colleagues when she passed all seven parts of the four-day architect’s licensing exam the first time she took it, which resulted in an offer from Skidmore, Owings and Merrill (SOM), one of the leading architectural and engineering firms in the United States. ”As a trailblazer in a white, male-dominated profession, Sklarek always felt highly visible. ‘If a man [employee] came in late, it wasn’t noticed, but if I came in late it was noticed. I was always punctual and discouraged any social talk. I would come in early and start working right away instead of reading the newspaper.’ ”While she worked at SOM, Sklarek also taught an architecture course two evenings a week to students at New York City Community College. ‘I had to get over my shyness,’ Sklarek says. ” When she moved to California in 1960 with her two young sons, Gregory and David, Sklarek again found that several of the firms she contacted had never hired a woman, though they didn’t object to it. She joined Gruen Associates in Los Angeles, where she became the first African American woman director of architecture, responsible for the technical and functioning aspects of commercial projects such as the San Bernardino City Hall (1973), the Pacific Design Center (1976) and the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo (1976). ”Sklarek stayed with Gruen for 20 years, and during that time, she met and married fellow Gruen architect Rolf Sklarek, a German Jew and graduate of the Bauhaus who had been imprisoned under Hitler. ‘We traveled all around the world together looking at architecture,’ says Sklarek, who accompanied Rolf on his return trip to Germany in 1970. ”Rolf designed the modern-style Rustic Canyon home they lived in together for 20 years until his death in 1985. Sklarek lives there today with her husband of 19 years, Cornelius Welch, M.D. ”The first African American woman to be licensed as an architect in California, Sklarek was admitted to the American Institute of Architects (AIA) in 1966 and became a Fellow in 1980, the first black woman to be honored by her peers with a fellowship in AIA. ”Among Sklarek’s larger projects was Terminal One of the Los Angeles International Airport, built just in time for the 1984 Olympics. Then vice president of Welton Becket Associates, Sklarek served as project director for Terminal One, which accommodates 10 million passengers, annually. ”’At first, the architects working on the airport were skeptical because a female was in charge of the project,’ Sklarek says. ‘But a number of projects were going on there at the time and mine was the only one on schedule.’ ”Now, L.A. Mayor James Hahn has proposed a $9-billion plan to modernize LAX, which has not been remodeled since 1984. Hahn’s plan involves demolishing Terminals 1, 2 and 3. However, City Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski has launched an alternative that postpones some of the more controversial elements of Hahn’s proposal, such as the destruction of the terminals, until further examination. Sklarek’s other projects include many shopping centers throughout the United States, including the Santa Monica Place Mall, the Oakdale Shopping Center in Minneapolis, Park Center Commercial Complex in San Jose and Fox Plaza in San Francisco, which is half commercial and half residential. ”In the 1980s, Sklarek became the first African American woman to form her own architectural firm, Siegel-Sklarek-Diamond in Los Angeles, which was the largest woman-owned and mostly woman-staffed architectural firm in the United States. However, the firm was short lived since ‘it’s tough for women to get the projects, and clients are used to working with men. ”’I’m proud to be an example for women and African Americans,’ says Sklarek, who was a principal at The Jerde Partnership (who designed Horton Plaza in San Diego) from 1989 to 1996, in charge of project management and review of the functional and technological aspects of projects. ”Last September, Governor Gray Davis appointed Sklarek to California Architects Board (CAB). She has also served as a supplemental examination commissioner for the board and as a master juror for the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB), grading the design and site planning licensing papers. She currently serves on the CAB’s Professional Qualifications Committee and Regulatory and Enforcement Committee. ”A member and chair of AIA’s National Ethics Council (NEC) from 1993 to 1996, Sklarek taught for a number of years at UCLA on the graduate architecture staff, and has been a guest lecturer at several universities, such as Columbia, Hampton in Virginia, Iowa State and Howard University in Washington, D.C. In her honor, Howard University offers the Norma Merrick Sklarek Architectural Scholarship Award.
Nelda Lockwood, 92, Will Rogers Expert and Longtime Park Aide

Longtime Will Rogers State Historic Park aide and Rogers raconteur Nelda Lockwood passed away on April 17 at the age of 93. ”During her 27 year-career at the park, which began when she was 65, Nelda acted as the voice of Will Rogers, gathering original stories from those who knew him well and sharing those stories with the public. She retired from the park at age 92. ”Born on October 11, 1911, Nelda moved with her family to Oregon when she was 4. Later, she and her husband Bill made their home in Washington until they hit the road with their three children in a travel trailer and visited every state in the union. They finally built their home and settled in Encino.” ”Over her lifetime, Nelda raised three generations of families and friends of her children. She was a Girl Scout leader, Cub Scout den mother, active in Boy Scouting with her sons, and a Sunday school teacher.” ”Nelda always thought children were important and when she lost her husband in 1963 she directed her energies and employment toward child-centered activities: day care in her home, complete with a horse, chickens, rabbits and ducks; and later, work in a private school as the ‘resident mom’ and office manager. ”One of her ‘adopted’ children was former Will Rogers Park ranger DebiRuth Stadnik, who lived in the Lockwood home in junior and senior high. She was working at Will Rogers when Nelda, 65 at the time, was looking for a new job. DebiRuth recruited Nelda as a park aide and the story went on from there. ” ”Nelda became a self-taught expert on the life and stories of Will Rogers, reading every book, story, account and article about him; driving her camper (in her 70s) alone, from California to Will Rogers’ birthplace in Oklahoma; spending one vacation in Barrow, Alaska, where Rogers’ plane went down; and sharing Will’s stories with the public. She received an award of recognition for dedication at the park. Although she didn’t run the July 4th 10K runs through the park, she attended them all, even if she wasn’t working on the day of the event. ” ”Will Rogers said, ‘I never met a man I didn’t like.’ Nelda never met a child she didn’t like nor one she wasn’t willing to welcome into her heart or home. Nelda’s friends and co-workers at the park were like a second family to her. She used to say, ‘It doesn’t feel like work. Just think, they pay me for this.’ ” ”Known to many as ‘Mom,’ she is survived by a large extended family that includes children Bill (wife Shirley), Bruce (Sue) and Sioux Radkovic (Mark); grandchildren Buddy and Tina; great grandchildren Tyler, Alyssa and Nicholas; god-daughters Tanya, Lisa and Monique; foster son Randy Thomson (Patti); and her dog Harty. ”A Celebration of Life potluck picnic at Will Rogers State Historic Park will be held at the picnic grounds starting at 11 on June 26. Bring your stories, photos and memories.