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Swimmers Look to Sweep City Finals

The Palisades High boys and girls varsity swim teams both put themselves in position to repeat as City Section champions with strong performances in the City preliminary meet last Wednesday at Los Angeles Memorial Pool. The finals were Wednesday at the same site. Senior Cara Davidoff, a three-time winner in the 50 freestyle and two-time City champion in the 100 freestyle, has her sights set on winning new events this season. She qualified with the top times by wide margins in both the 200 freestyle (1:55.35) and 100 butterfly (1:59.40) and hopes to lead the Dolphin girls to a fourth consecutive City title. ‘Cara is a team player,’ Dolphins coach Maggie Nance said. ‘It was better for the team to switch her events and of course she was fine with that. It’s great having her because we know she’s pretty much going to win whatever she swims.’ The Dolphin girls won the 200 freestyle relay, third in the 400 freestyle relay and fourth in the 200 medley relay. In the 200 individual medley, Sheri Dunner was sixth. Julie Wynn was fifth in the 50 freestyle, Patrice Dodd was second and Ashley Jacobs fourth in the 100 freestyle, Dodd was sixth in the 100 backstroke while Chelsea Davidoff was fifth and Dunner sixth in the 100 breaststroke. Former Pali coach Merle Duckett was one of the coordinators of the meet and liked what he saw in his old team. ‘Pali should be right there next week’ he said. ‘But it could be pretty close.’ Pali’s boys, seeking a third straight championship, were second in both the 200 medley relay (1:49.75) and 200 freestyle relay (1:34.99) and third in the 400 freestyle relay (3:32.13). Peter Fishler was fourth in the 200 freestyle, Brian Johnson was fourth in the 200 Individual Medley, David Nonberg and Paris Hays were third and fourth in the 50 freestyle, Daniel Fox was fifth in the 100 butterfly, Nonberg was second and Hays third in the 100 freestyle, Johnson was third and Gavin Jones fifth in the 100 backstroke, Randy Lee was fifth in the 100 breaststroke.

Dolphins Host Tigers In City Playoff Opener

Winning the Western League championship was more than just rewarding for the Palisades High varsity baseball team. It also meant that co-coach Tom Seyler could represent his team and the league at the City Section playoff seeding meeting Monday night at Hamilton High. And Seyler did his job at the negotiating table as well as he and co-coach Kelly Loftus did on the field this season, securing the Dolphins the No. 6 seed in the 16-team City Division and a first-round home game against 11th-seeded San Fernando Friday at 3 p.m. Equally satisfying to Seyler was that three other Western League teams made the playoffs’Venice gaining the 14th seed in the City while Westchester (No. 9) and Fairfax (No. 14) made the Invitational Division. ‘Our league was rated the fifth strongest this year as opposed to seventh last year. That speaks a lot to the competition in our league,’ Seyler said. ‘It’s been a long time since our league had two teams in the upper bracket and I don’t think we’ve ever had more than three teams in the playoffs. Usually it’s one in the upper and two in the lower. This year we have two in each division.’ An interesting footnote to Pali’s game against San Fernando tomorrow is that Seyler knows Tigers coach Armando Gomez well. ‘We’ve been friends for 15 years and we play in a league together on Sundays,’ Seyler said. ‘I have a lot of respect for him and his program. San Fernando plays in a good league and they beat No. 3-seeded El Camino Real in a nonleague game so we aren’t taking them lightly.’ After finishing 14-1 in league play, Palisades wrapped up the regular season last Thursday with a 5-3 victory over Franklin. David Bromberg pitched six and 1/3 innings, allowing two runs on three hits with four strikeouts while going two for two at the plate, including a two-run home run. Steve Nirenberg added two hits and two RBIs for Palisades (20-5), whose only losses were to Newbury Park, Santa Monica, L.A. Marshall, Sun Valley Poly and Venice. ‘We were one pitch away from going undefeated in league, but I’m glad we bounced right back against Franklin,’ Seyler said. San Fernando (13-16-1) tied for third in the Valley Mission League behind fourth-seeded Kennedy and eighth-seeded Sylmar. Palisades did not play San Fernando, but the Dolphins beat Monroe, which tied for third place with San Fernando, lost a coin flip and wound up the No. 4 seed in the Invitational bracket. ‘San Fernando is a tough opponent. You can;’t go by their record. They have one of the best pitchers in the City in right-hander, Matt Navarez, who throws about 93 miles an hour. We faced him this winter and he’s the real deal.’ Should Palisades win Friday it would advance to the quarterfinals, where it would either host Venice or travel to El Camino Real next Wednesday at 3 p.m. The semifinals are Friday, June 4 and the City championship game will be June 8 at Dodger Stadium. Defending champion Chatsworth (31-0) was unanimously voted the No. 1 seed in the City Division, followed by San Pedro (28-3), El Camino Real (22-8) and Kennedy (21-10).

Fencing Is Levitt’s Forte

Palisadian Makes His Mark in National Competitions and at Harvard-Westlake

When his mask is on, Teddy Levitt is all business. Once it's off, however, he's grinning ear to ear.
When his mask is on, Teddy Levitt is all business. Once it’s off, however, he’s grinning ear to ear.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

When he was eight years old, Palisadian Teddy Levitt decided to attend a small summer boys’ camp in Maine. Scanning a list of activities to sign up for, his father suggested Teddy try fencing. At first he thought it referred to the art of building a fence, but when he found out “fencing” is actually a sport, he decided to give it a chance. Nine years later, Levitt is not yet a master at his craft but he’s definitely a work in progress. No, fencing doesn’t require a hammer and nails, but the tools of his trade can be every bit as dangerous. “Yes, you do have to be very careful,” Levitt admits. “There’s etiquette involved and you learn what you need to do to protect yourself.” Levitt is ranked 31st nationally in the junior division (under 19)–that after attaining a No. 6 United States ranking in the cadet (under 17) category. His weapon of choice is the sabre and he wields it with the skill of a samurai warrior. Whereas most novices start out wielding a foil, Levitt soon took a liking to the sabre because it is unique from the two other types of swords–the foil and epee. “I like the sabre because the sparring is much faster moving and you can slash with the side of the blade as opposed to just the tip,” Levitt says. “There are a lot more ways to score than just by poking the guy. There is a lot of explosive muscle movement, forward and back, and by the end of a tournament you can get pretty tired.” Levitt is used to being around at the end of tournaments. He won all of his bouts this season as captain of the Harvard-Westlake High fencing team, which captured the Mission League championship. He also placed sixth in his division at the Junior Olympics February 17 in Cleveland, Ohio. His schedule is booked for the rest of the year, too. He is slated to compete in the summer nationals in Charlotte, North Carolina, in June and then it’s on to Prague to fence with the Hungarian National team in July. “I played a lot of sports growing up,” says Levitt, who lives up the street from Riviera Country Club. “I played PPBA, I played AYSO, I played school volleyball. But when I was 12 I started really committing myself to fencing. The thing I like most about it is that no matter how bad the day went I can put on my stuff and release all my energy.” Three days a week, Levitt trains under the tutelage of his coach for five years, Daniel Costin, at the Los Angeles International Fencing Center (located at Olympic and Barrington) in West L.A. There he has benefited from sparring sessions with Jason Rogers, a standout high school fencer from Brentwood. Now a senior at Ohio State University, Rogers recently qualified for the 2004 U.S. Olympic team. On occasion, Levitt even crosses swords with world class Daniel Grigori, a member of Romania’s 2002 Olympic team. “The mindset I’ve learned from my coach [Costin] is that if you’re facing someone you know you can beat, you shouldn’t be nervous,” Levitt says. “If it’s someone who you know is better, you have nothing to lose so again you don’t have any reason to be nervous.” Though fencing occupies much of Levitt’s time, it is by no means his only interest. He plays two instruments, the flute and saxophone, in Harvard-Westlake’s jazz band and he counsels underprivileged kids at Camp Harmony in Malibu. On days he is not fencing, Levitt cross trains by running, swimming and playing tennis. At 5 feet, 10 inches tall, Levitt is neither too small to be at a reach disadvantage nor too tall to be “hit in preparation” when he is in close. Success, he says, is all about balance. “You can’t be one-sided,” he explains. “You have to have a healthy balance between defense and attack. If I had to define my style, I’d say I’m a little more defensive. I like to make my opponents miss so I can hit them.” Levitt isn’t thinking too far ahead, but he definitely sees fencing in his immediate future. He is considering East Coast schools with strong fencing teams like Yale, Princeton and Duke but has far from made up his mind. “I don’t know where I’ll end up, right now I’m just working as hard as I can,” he said. “No one comes out of the womb with a sword in hand. It’s a sport you really have to work at and that’s one of the reasons I enjoy it.”

Alana Hoskin and Cameron Smith to Wed

Palisadians Richard and Deborah Hoskin announced the engagement of their daughter, Alana Michelle Hoskin, to Cameron Keith Smith of Seattle. The bride-to-be attended Palisades Elementary, Marlborough School and Villanova University. She and Cameron met at Villanova, where they both graduated in June 2000. Alana is presently a senior consultant for Deloitte Consulting in Seattle. The bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Neale Smith of Everett, Washington. He graduated with honors from the University of Washington’s School of Law in June 2003. He is currently completing a degree in taxation and will take the bar exam in July. The couple plan a September wedding at the Bel-Air Bay Club.

Jennifer Kelley and Greg Young Exchange Wedding Vows May 1

By ALYSON SENA Palisadian-Post Staff Writer There’s no place like home, for humans and animals alike. Yet, would you expect your lost bichon fris’ to trek along miles of roadway in danger of being hit by a car or eaten by a coyote in the middle of the night to return home? The O’Neil family thinks their dog, Fluffy, did just that. According to Merriam-Webster’s online dictionary, ‘bichon fris’ translates as ‘curly-haired lapdog’ and is described as ‘any of a breed of small sturdy dogs of Mediterranean origin having a thick wavy white coat.’ Clearly, 4-year-old Fluffy is a survivor. On April 6, the O’Neils’who live in the El Medio bluffs neighborhood’took Fluffy to a ‘play date’ at Scott O’Neil’s parents’ house in Santa Monica. Bill and Fay, who have four dogs of their own, live on Euclid and Alta, just south of San Vicente. When Bill returned home that day, he was unaware that Fluffy was visiting and she bolted out the door. He went looking for her all the way down to Montana Ave. without success, at which point he called the family for help. Scott searched futilely for three hours, from San Vicente to Wilshire and from 11th to 18th streets. His wife, Shala, called the police and three animal shelters. ‘They told us not to get our hopes too high,’ she recalls. ‘I was shocked. I was crying all night.’ When Scott returned home around 10 p.m., his wife and daughters, Lauren, 10, and Brittany, 15, were printing 1,000 flyers with Fluffy’s picture. ‘There were a lot of tears in the house,’ he says. ‘One flyer read something like: ’10-year-old desperate to find her dog.” Scott and Shala originally bought Fluffy as a puppy for their daughters, who named her. ‘When she’s clean she looks like a cotton ball,’ he says. The next morning, at about 7:30 a.m., Scott opened the front door to take his daughters to school’and there was Fluffy. ‘She was smelling the plants to see if it was her house,’ he recalls. ‘She was pretty nerved and frazzled. Her face was caked with mud and her body had thorns sticking out. I had to hose her off a fair bit and check her tag to see if it was her.’ The O’Neils believe that Fluffy made her way to 7th Street, down the hill into Santa Monica Canyon to PCH, then west to Temescal Canyon and up Bowdoin and the El Medio area, where they have lived for 13 years. But how could she have known the way home? ‘The only link we can figure is that my wife used to jog along the beach with Fluffy two summers ago,’ says Scott, who’s amazed that Fluffy survived the dangerous trip at night. Shala used to run down Temescal, along the beach and up the spiral stairs by the California Incline to her mother’s house on 6th St. ‘Everybody was amazed with Fluffy’s speed and strength as a puppy,’ Shala says. ‘She was a smart dog from the beginning.’ Lauren says she knew Fluffy would find her way home. Scott thinks that Fluffy is ‘a little wiser’ having survived the ordeal. ‘Several days later, I had the gate open and she didn’t even walk near it.’ Lauren O’Neil, who attends Marquez Elementary, recently starred as Fern in the Theatre Palisades Kids production of ‘Charlotte’s Web The Musical.’ Brittany O’Neil, a Palisades High sophomore, was a Miss Palisades runner-up in this year’s Youth Jennifer Kelley and Greg Young were married on May 1 on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. The ceremony took place in St. Gregory the Great Church with a reception following at Sea Pines Plantation. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Kelley of Bluffton, South Carolina. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Young, currently of Danville, California, and former residents of the area. The bridegroom was born in Santa Monica, graduated from St. Matthew’s, Harvard-Westlake and Vanderbilt University. He is currently employed with Booz-Allen Hamilton in Washington, D.C. The bride grew up in Overland Park, Kansas, and graduated from Notre Dame University. She is employed by Fleishman Hilliard and works in its Washington, D.C. office. The bridesmaids included the bridegroom’s sister, Traci Young, a Palisades resident. Other attendants included childhood friend Rebecca Taylor Hinds as maid of honor, Karen Damaso, Nina Griswold, Kate Nagel and Angela Cooper. The bridegroom was attended by Brian Daily Given, a high school and college friend, as best man and his cousin Michael McNitt, Blair Bright, Charles Summers III, Everette Stubbs and Brian Kelley. The couple honeymooned in the Caribbean and will make their home in Arlington, Virginia.

Paging Young Readers

Art History For Kids

By JANET ZAREM Children’s Literature Columnist Rarely has art history been so child-friendly as in Christine Bjork’s 1987 book, ‘Linnea in Monet’s Garden.’ ‘Linnea’ marries the story of a fictional girl to historical and artistic information about Monet and other Impressionists. Still in print, it remains as fresh as the flowers at Giverny themselves. ‘Linnea’ aims its text at readers 8 through 12, though it also boasts numerous adult fans. Fortunately for the picture-book crowd, books which feature younger children and great artists are becoming increasingly popular. Two authors, James Mayhew and Laurence Anholt, have created series in which children take center stage to introduce renowned names in the European artistic canon. Their books include illustrations of famous paintings and sculptures. (Concerned parents, take note: these books are heavily edited for 3- to 7-year-olds’no ear slashing, nervous breakdowns or naked ladies). In James Mayhew’s ‘Katie’ books, a young girl, powered by her imagination, enters one painting after another, enjoying adventures with its subjects, when she and her grandmother tour a museum. In ‘Katie Meets the Impressionists,’ she transports herself into paintings by Monet, Renoir and Degas. In ‘Katie and the Sunflowers,’ she visits Expressionist works by Van Gogh, Gauguin and Cezanne. In ‘Katie and the Mona Lisa,’ she romps through Renaissance paintings by da Vinci, Botticelli, Carpaccio and Raphael. Brief artist biographies follow each story. In his five books, Laurence Anholt takes another approach. The children in these books are historical figures who encountered the artists Anholt presents. Short biographies explain the relationships between the children and the artists. In ‘Leonardo and the Flying Boy,’ one of da Vinci’s apprentice pupils, the boy Zoro, discovers his master is both a brilliant artist and a visionary scientist. Zoro’s flight in Leonardo’s proto-airplane forms the core of the story. In ‘The Magical Garden of Claude Monet,’ the girl Julie longs to visit the country. Her mother accompanies her and her naughty dog, Louey, to Giverny. In real life, Julie Manet was the daughter of Impressionist artist Berthe Morisot. In ‘Camille and the Sunflowers,’ the lad Camille introduces Van Gogh and his famous yellow house through portraits the artist painted of Camille and his family. Brightly colored illustrations leaven the story of Van Gogh’s tragic life, told simply, without unnecessary detail or drama. In ‘Degas and the Little Dancer,’ Anhold frames the story of Marie van Goethen, the young dancer who posed for Degas’ famous sculpture, in a series of flashbacks from the present to Marie’s own time and story. In ‘Picasso and the Girl With a Ponytail,’ Sylvette David meets the still vigorous 73-year-old Picasso and becomes his (platonic) muse and model. Through his changing portraits of Sylvette, children learn about Cubism. Sylvette still lives. Born in 1934, she herself became an artist, now named Lydia Corbett. All these books make viewing art a vital, personal experience for children living in a time dominated by television and computer screens. Look at them and see for yourself.

Renowned Inner City Teacher Rafe Esquith Always Answers the Ring of the School Bell

An open air stairway leads to Room 56 at Hobart Elementary, one in a row of matched doors extending down a outdoor corridor, all marked with a sign ‘Fire Extinguisher Inside’ in red letters. But behind this door a fire bursts with the flashing energy of 30 fifth graders inspired and supported by their teacher Rafe Esquith, who over a 20-year career has recast the way we educate children. The author of ‘There Are No Shortcuts,’ he will share his philosophy and introduce several of his students on Tuesday, May 25, 7:30 p.m. at Village Books. The walls, decorated with university banners from Harvard, Stanford, UCSD and Santa Monica College, speak of goals and triumphs of graduates, who were once in this fifth-grade classroom. The blackboard is crowned with a banner announcing a bold, brave philosophy: ‘There Are No Shortcuts,’ quite a challenge in this era when rigor and stick-to-itiveness have become orphaned words. On this afternoon, a small rock band is rehearsing ‘Hamlet.’ The vocalists quietly sing ‘Paint It Black,’ the Rolling Stones’ 1996 song of disillusionment (‘I see a red door and I want it painted black. No colors any more I want them to turn black.’) while 10-year-old ‘Hamlet’ recites his own despair (‘How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable seem to me all the uses of this world.’) This group of Latino and Asian children are not geniuses, just kids, many from below the poverty line, who are learning to think in a school environment based on responsibility and trust instead of fear. ‘The kids at this school are hungry and angry that they don’t get the same opportunities as other kids,’ says Esquith, who despite being a winner of the Disney National Outstanding Teacher of the Year award and a recipient of constant invitations to teach at more prestigious schools, says his style is perfectly matched to these students. ‘I mine for these unpolished jewels, and I like showing them the way out,’ he says. Hobart is a year-round school with an enrollment of 2,300 students, the majority of whom speak English as their second language. And yet, Esquith’s fifth graders understand and compute mathematics, read Mark Twain and ‘Bury Me at Wounded Knee’ and score in the country’s top 10 percent on standardized tests. Esquith’s technique? No magic, no cash rewards, just a couple of basic tenets. ‘I stick with it, just by being stubborn you get good at stuff,’ says Esquith, 49, who has been at Hobart for 20 years. ‘You stay focused on the task and be the best you can be.’ His students work hard. Many are in the classroom at 6:30 a.m. for math team, stay in at lunch to learn guitar and stay after school, voluntarily. Each year, the Hobart Shakespeareans, as his students are known, perform one of Shakespeare’s plays, which they chose at the beginning of the school year. They have performed for such classical actors and patrons as Sir Ian McKellen and Hal Holbrook. On the day I visited, the students in his class were ‘off track’ but showed up in Esquith’s classroom, some practicing ‘Hamlet’ for an upcoming performance at the Mark Taper Forum, promoting the NEA’s mission to perform Shakespeare in schools throughout the country. Other students were designing their own Mondrian-like paintings; some were working on their own short story, and still others were running laps and climbing stairs to shape up for the upcoming class trip to the Southwest. In reading Esquith’s book ‘There are No Shortcuts,’ you might dismiss this teacher as extraordinary and that’s wonderful, but what about the average person who may not have10 hours a day to dedicate, including Saturdays, or finds Shakespeare daunting? Esquith’s advice is both philosophical and specific. He says that even a teacher who cares about children and learning may find his priorities buried under the exigencies of a large bureaucracy such as LAUSD. ‘The district is so overwhelming that it can crush the human spirit,’ says Esquith, who has had his fair share of tangles with the district and administrators, but learned to pick his battles, and more importantly learned to take short vacations away from the job. ‘Don’t forget who you are. You are talented and you have passions. Don’t ignore the district, but find a passion and do something you passionately love in the classroom, whether you’re a great cook, great gardener. It doesn’t have to be Shakespeare, Shakespeare’s my guy. I have a friend, another teacher, who asked me if he could rewire my classroom, He loves all things electric. That’s his passion.’ (Room 56 is custom-equipped with theatrical track lighting, computer hookups and electronic music outlets.) On the practical side, Esquith advises teachers to manage their classroom from the beginning. ‘If you don’t, nothing will happen.’ But, he adds there are two emotions that can dominate the teacher-student relationship: fear’fear of the teacher, fear of parents, fear of one another’or trust. ‘I give them my trust. I tell them you can screw up on your homework, you can even hit each other, these things are fixable, but break my trust, it’s over.’ Esquith grew up in Los Angeles; his father was a social worker, his mother was the activist in the family. He’s a product of Los Angeles public schools and UCLA but credits his wife Barbara with the good manners, kindness and respect the children show for one another, for him and for visitors. ‘Everything you saw here today was Barbara. She says, the kids don’t have to go to Stanford; what difference does it make if they score 100 percent on a test if they’re not good people?’ Rafe and Barbara raised four adult children, who are launched, albeit not in education. Esquith thought he’d teach math, but happily landed in fifth grade, which he considers, along with first grade, the most important in elementary school. ‘Fifth graders are old enough to do extraordinary things, but because their hormones haven’t kicked in they are really very sweet. The important thing is that this is their first view of the future; they are about to start the toughest years of their life, when American culture bombards them with bad messages constantly. I am trying to give them armor to shield them against what they’re up against.’ According to Esquith the biggest challenge is making sure that his students are not just ordinary, particularly in an educational climate that doesn’t demand very much. ‘Our standards in public schools are incredibly low,’ he says. ‘Successful classrooms are run by teachers who have an unshakable belief that the students can accomplish amazing things and who create the expectation that they will.’

The Light and The Sea

” ‘My brilliant sunrises,’ I remember thinking, ‘Should I wake up my family to see this?’ But I was just frozen still with the unfolding of colors above and just stood there taking it all in. The color of the bay turned from brilliant orange to a velvety rich purple and then to a gorgeous lavender and a soft pink.” Photo by Maral Nigolian-Kirschenmann

Like a diver at the Great Barrier Reef, amateur photographer Maral Nigolian couldn’t miss when she visited St. Paul de Vence, the irrrestible 16th century village on the French Riviera that has inspired many an artist. ‘Light is everything in photography,’ says Nigolian, who became obsessed with photography in the last two years. ‘I couldn’t take a bad picture that day.’ Nigolian’s own ‘backyard’ provides enough drama and light to fascinate her literally day by day. From her home on Resolano in Paseo Miramar, she observes the sweep of the coast from downtown Los Angeles to Point Dume, which she has photographed from dawn till dusk. She has chronicled the clear chill of fall when the light illuminates every detail from east to west uncluttered by haze. She has seen fog hovering like an unwelcomed guest at the foot of Santa Monica. She’s seen burning sunsets and the Queen’s Necklace, so named for the string of lights that mark the gentle curve of Santa Monica Bay from Point Dume to Palos Verdes. She’s even seen a purple sea’an ephemera that lasts for just a second as the sun dives into the sea. But the only thing she has not captured is snow on the San Gabriel mountains. ‘I just haven’t seen it when the light is right and when I’ve had my zoom. All the different variables have to be just right,’ Nigolian says. For most of her work, Nigolian uses a Pentax S digital, which she bought so she could use her old Pentax lenses. But, for still lifes, she has found that her little Canon Power Shot S 400, which she’s never without, ‘does very well.’ Nigolian and her husband Lon Kirschenmann and 7-year-old daughter Aran live on the hill in a house that Maral first saw in 1987 when she was living in West L. A. and looking to buy. ‘I looked for six months and saw this home with its wonderful view on the first day I looked, but at the time I thought I wanted a penthouse or condo. But with association dues I realized that I was looking in the million dollar range anyway so I went back to buy the first house.’ Nigolian grew up in Pasadena and graduated from USC with a B. S degree in real estate and marketing. She started her business Astor Wood Financial in 1987, which specializes in municipal bond financing. Some of her Los Angeles projects include the Alameda Corridor and current development plans on Bunker Hill. When not fascinated by the magnet of the sea, Nigolian loves to takes pictures of her garden or the drama that unfolds on walks with her daughter on the beach below.

Mara Breech, 76; An Active Citizen

Mara Wood Breech died at her home in Pacific Palisades on April 28, following a short hospital stay. She was 76. ”Born in Manchester, Connecticut, on June 25, 1927, to Leland and Thea (Lynch) Wood, Mara was the youngest of their three children. In 1949, she graduated from Northwestern University and went to work as a flight attendant for United Airlines. She married E. Robert Breech in 1951 and they settled in the Palisades that same year. ”Mara was active in several Los Angeles charities, but her favorite was the John Tracy Clinic (Auxiliary), a foundation for the deaf. In 1994 she established the Mara W. Breech Foundation to promote and encourage innovative and creative methods of teaching. ”She is survived by her brother Frank of Manchester, Connecticut; former husband Bob of Pacific Palisades; two sons, Andy (wife Debbie) of Pacific Palisades and Bill of Newport Beach; stepson Bob of Santa Monica; stepdaughter Marji (Woody) of Sun Valley, Idaho; and grandchildren Sarah, Adam, Patty and James of Pacific Palisades. ”In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the John Tracy Clinic, 806 W. Adams Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90007 or to the City of Hope, 1500 East Duarte Rd., Duarte, CA 91010. A small memorial celebration of her life will be held at her home on Saturday, May 22.

Calvary Christian Wins League Volleyball Title

Going undefeated was the last thing on the mind of Karen Renner’s mind when the season began. Head coach of Calvary Christian School’s eighth-grade boys volleyball team, Renner knew her squad had talent, but never envisioned it would come together quick enough to finish 14-0 and win the Junior Delphic League championship’the first Delphic League title won by a Calvary team. ‘This is the most talented middle school team I have ever seen or had the honor to coach,’ Renner said. ‘Even though we didn’t have a squad full of club players, I knew these boys had the talent to learn how to handle the ball with control in order to run plays. We have yet to find a team that can beat us.’ In a nonleague match against Corpus Christi, the top-rated Catholic Youth Organization team, Calvary was provided its toughest test of the season but prevailed in a hotly-contested match. In the playoffs, Calvary swept both Brentwood and St. Paul two games to zero. Though less experienced than most of the teams in its league, Calvary won with the skilled hands of setter Derek Eitel and the attack of outside hitter Paul Peterson. Because its passing was so fundamentally sound, Calvary was able to execute plays that often caught the opposition off guard. The Cougars ran plays that included ‘one sets’ to middle hitters Dustin Rosenberg and John Helmy. They also executed an ‘X’ play with powerful kills from Blake Fol and Dalton Gerlach. The defense was anchored by the blocking, digging and spiking of outside hitter Henry Elder. ‘At the beginning of the season, most of our team didn’t even know you could run plays in volleyball and the boy were very excited about the idea of being able to execute them,’ Renner said. ‘They worked hard and I’m very proud of them.’ Waiting in the wings at Calvary is a group of talented seventh graders eager to move up next year and fight to repeat as league champions.