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Oliveau Headed for Athens

Palisadian and local sports marketing attorney Maidie E. Oliveau has been named one of 12 attorneys worldwide’and one of two Americans’to serve on the Ad Hoc Division of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to settle disputes that arise during the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, covering such areas as drug testing results, athlete eligibility and judging issues. This marks the third time that Oliveau has been honored to serve on the Ad Hoc Division of CAS, having previously done so in Sydney and Salt Lake City. Out of nine attorneys who served in a similar position for the Salt Lake City 2002 Olympic Winter Games, she is one of four invited back to join the Tribunal for the Athens Olympics, and she is the only female on the Ad Hoc Division of CAS, which was established by the International Council of Arbitration for Sport as the final arbiter of all Olympic Games-related disputes. At the games in Salt Lake City, the Ad Hoc Division heard the case of the highly visible controversy involving the Russian/Canadian pairs skating. After the CAS issued an injunction regarding the judges and their records, the IOC gave the Canadian pair a second set of gold medals. Oliveau has represented sponsors, event organizers, television broadcasters, sports associations and other rights holders for more than 20 years. Oliveau established her firm in 1990 and has since negotiated and/or administered nearly 200 deals totaling over $500 million, including such high profile transactions as the sponsorship and negotiations for the L.A. 2002 U.S. Figure Skating Championships and Pacific Bell’s sponsorship of the San Francisco Giants and naming rights to their ballpark, Pacific Bell Park. Oliveau began her career in sports in 1979 at ProServ, Inc., where she represented professional athletes Arthur Ashe, Stan Smith, Tracy Austin, Mitch Kupchak and Tai Babilonia. She also produced a weekly, half-hour TV show, Sports Probe, that aired on USA Network.

Dolphins Sink Pirates’ Ship

Boys Volleyball Sweeps San Pedro in Playoff Opener; Uni Next

Brett Vegas (left) and Nash Petrovic (center) celebrate a kill with setter Rusty Barneson during Tuesday nightýs City playoff match.
Brett Vegas (left) and Nash Petrovic (center) celebrate a kill with setter Rusty Barneson during Tuesday nightýs City playoff match.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Two months and a day after playing the same team in its season opener, the Palisades High boys volleyball team found itself matched against San Pedro in the first round of the City playoffs. Fortunately for the Dolphins, the rematch yielded a similar result. Playing with the same confidence and execution it used to overpower the Pirates in three straight games back on March 3, Palisades dominated in all aspects of the game en route to a 25-10, 25-22, 25-19 victory Tuesday night. The win earned the seventh-seeded Dolphins (9-5) a third crack at Western League champion and No. 2 seed University, a 25-19, 25-11, 25-16 winner over 15th-seeded Huntington Park Tuesday. The Wildcats, who beat the Dolphins in both league meetings this season, host Palisades in the quarterfinals tonight at 7 p.m. It took Palisades less than 80 minutes to dispatch 10th-seeded San Pedro (9-5), the two-time defending Marine League champion. ‘Our passing was pretty good and our hitting was really good,’ said PaliHi setter Rusty Barneson, who had 33 assists. ‘Especially Zach [Rosenblatt]. He was really ripping it.’ Senior hitter Jason Schall led the Pali attack with 10 kills, three blocks and two jump serve aces, Rosenblatt had five kills and three blocks and Brett Vegas had 11 digs. Middle blocker Nash Petrovic, who had 12 kills and six blocks in the prior meeting between the schools, pitched in Tuesday with two blocks and five kills, one of which ended the second game. ‘I remember from the last time we played them that their blocking wasn’t too good,’ said Schall, one of the Dolphins’ emotional leaders. ‘I knew if I hit it hard they wouldn’t be able to control their blocks. That’s how we got a lot of points.’ With San Pedro out of the way, the Dolphins’ focus now shifts to league rival University, which beat Palisades in four games on March 24 and in five games on April 21. Schall provided a blueprint of what the Dolphins must do to turn the tables on Uni: ‘They have weaknesses. Their big strength is in the middle. We need to shut down their big middle blocker’he was powerful. We also need to play real sound defense. We can’t let easy balls drop like we did tonight. And we need to serve well. Last time, I got a lot of aces on my jump serve.’ Though University is seeded higher, PaliHi head coach Dave Smith said he prefers playing the Wildcats over Venice, which also beat the Dolphins twice in league matches. Venice, seeded fourth out of 16 teams, beat Kennedy 25-23, 25-13, 25-23 in the first round and would not meet Pali until the finals May 14 at Pierce College in Woodland Hills. ‘Uni is a good team but for some reason I think we match up better with them than we do against Venice. We almost beat them (Uni) on their home court the last time we played them, so if we do a few things differently I’m confident we can win. I like our chances.’

Birren Coaches ‘Autobiography 101’

Plato’s famous credo ‘The life which is unexamined is not worth living’ speaks directly to Dr. James Birren’s passion over the past 30 years. Birren, a longtime Palisadian, is in the business of guiding other people to write their life stories. He brings to the task a lifetime of distinguished teaching and writing as the former associate director of the UCLA Center on Aging and founding dean of the USC Andrus Center of Gerontology. ‘It’s addictive; there’s such power in hearing people’s life stories,’ says Birren, who has co-authored two books on the subject. He points out that the benefits of autobiography are broader and more far-reaching than simply recording one’s life for family and posterity. ‘Lots of good things come out of it,’ he says. The process often rekindles old interests and sparks optimism about the future, which makes thinking about goals and aspirations a natural conclusion to the experience. And the autobiographical journey is not an isolated affair, with sharing in a group being a basic tenet of the program. ‘Working with others helps to stimulate recall of events, feelings and details of settings that might be overlooked or forgotten by an individual writing alone,’ notes Birren, who has taught his popular course all over the world. Closer to home, Birren will teach two courses this month at UCLA Extension. For the mental health professional, ‘Use of Autobiography in Clinical Practice,’ a new one-day conference, will be offered on Saturday, May 15. The other class, designed for a general audience, is called ‘Guided Autobiography: Organizing Your Life Story’ and meets on six Saturdays beginning May 22. During the sessions, major themes of life’family, money, health, spirituality and values’ are explored through writing assignments and group discussion. ‘We don’t evaluate or give interpretations of another’s life,’ Birren says. ‘We want an individual to come to his or her own conclusions.’ Ultimately, the course comes around to mining the history of one’s hopes and dreams, concluding with the question: What do you want to do right now? The intimacy of the group follows a predictable pattern. ‘There’s an implicit cadence,’ says Birren. ‘People recoil if you share too much too soon. By the third session, though, things are quite open.’ Birren, who is a vital 86, has taught 20- and 90-year-olds in the same group. ‘The energy of the young and experience of the old do very well together,’ he says. Strong bonds often form among class members, with many groups continuing to meet for years. ‘Just as having coffee with a friend can be therapeutic, so can sharing one’s life story,’ says Birren. ‘We’re living in an impersonal age. I think that’s why there’s such a growing interest in this.’ Birren and his wife, Betty, moved to the Palisades in 1965. Internationally recognized for his work in gerontology, Birren has published extensively in the area of aging. To learn more about the UCLA course offerings, call 825-2301 or go online to www.uclaextension.edu.

Chavez Legacy Inspires PaliHi Service Projects

Eleven years after his death, labor leader and United Farm Workers founder Cesar Chavez still has a long-lasting influence. Palisades High School received a grant this school year to incorporate ideas about Chavez’s values and ideals into the curriculum and organize community service projects, inspired by Chavez’s grassroots activism. The $44,000 grant from the Governor’s Office on Service and Volunteerism (GOSERV), was called ‘From the Mountains to the Sea, Honoring the Legacy of Cesar Chavez.’ Last week, Gretchen Miller, the director of Pali’s community service program, several teachers, Cesar E. Chavez Foundation programs director Shaun Hirschl and LAUSD Service Learning Task Force chairs Bud Jacobs and Tim Johnston met to discuss the success of the program in which 400 PaliHi students participated in five different service projects. Chavez, who experienced the life of a migrant farm worker, characterized by low wages and inadequate health and safety conditions, started the United Farm Workers of America which brought about the 1975 California Agricultural Labor Relations Act to protect farm workers. He was also active in the civil rights movement and the use of nonviolent social change. Math teacher Angelica Pereyra and her students are completing a mural at the Access Center, a drop-in center of the Ocean Park Community Center, where homeless clients can check mail, take a shower or access food, clothing or other services. Students learned about the theories of Mexican muralist David Alfaro Siguerios, which uses a system of graphing and geography with proportions and ratios to create a mural. The students discussed the concept of dignity, one of Chavez’s ideals for all people, Pereyra said, ‘We asked where does it exist, how do you learn it? It can exist everywhere’in the spaces in-between.’ The mural design encompasses lettuce fields, a large tree with a young Cesar Chavez sitting beneath it, and an overlay of the UFW flag design, featuring an Aztec eagle. Quotes from Chavez’s speeches are written in between the lettuce fields. Spanish teacher Sandra Martin, who teaches a class to native Spanish speakers, asked her students to interview family or community members about their life histories and experiences coming to the United States. The students inquired about the significance of keeping heritage alive, to tie into the importance Chavez gave to family legacies. In addition, the students created illustrated children’s books, written in Spanish, about the life of Cesar Chavez and his affect on community members. The children’s books on Chavez will be donated to an elementary school. Shirin Ramzi’s American literature class wrote essays on Chavez, analyzing one of his quotes, focusing on his life and what led him to the United Farm Workers movement. Some students weren’t familiar with Chavez. Others, who had already studied Chavez, wrote about activists he had influenced such as lawyer and writer Oscar Acosta and co-founder of the UFW Dolores Huerta. Ramzi also wanted her students to get a little experience working on a farm. Although it didn’t work out to take them to actual farms in Oxnard, students participated in a short exercise, simulating the experience. They dropped sunflower seeds on the quad and wore heavy backpacks while picking them out of the grass. The exercise inspired a lot of complaints, Ramzi reports especially when she asked them, ‘What if I now brought the extra credit I promised for this exercise from 50 points to 0 points?’ In Libby Butler and Jeannie Saiza’s AVID class, a college preparatory class that provides academic and social enrichment, students went out into the community to help save an underutilized government-funded senior center. Students came into the inner city community where the center was located and talked to people and handed out fliers outlining the services available. Some of the students at first ‘wanted nothing to do with the elderly,’ said Saiza, but later warmed up to the project. Ray Millette took his marine biology students to Ballona Wetlands to help restore the saltwater marshes which are being reopened to the public after being privately owned. Millette believes this project ties into Chavez’s emphasis on access for all people. The students spent the day helping dig up non-native species. In the classroom they spent a month studying wetlands, specifically Ballona. ‘This wouldn’t have happened without Gretchen Miller,’ Millette said. ‘She spearheaded the program and made it a success.’ Miller was assisted with grantwriting by Melodye Kleinman of Wise Senior Services. The PaliHi Booster Club also assisted with funds until the grant money came in. The GOSERV grant will not be available next year due to budget cutbacks, but the PaliHi teachers hope to continue the projects.

Roberta Randall Channels Famous Women on Stage

Palisadian Roberta Randall has been entertaining audiences with her ‘one-woman theater’ for 20 years. The solo dramatist currently performs in four different shows she created based on the lives and accomplishments of famous women, such as Eleanor Roosevelt, Katharine Hepburn, and Marlene Dietrich. Next week, Randall will present ‘A Woman of Independent Means’ by Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey at the Woman’s Club on Tuesday, May 11, and ‘Beverly Sills’ at the Assistance League of Santa Monica on Wednesday, May 12. A Chicago native, Randall has dramatic experience that spans theater, television, radio and film, though she says, ‘I like a live audience.’ She especially enjoys playing famous women and developed the idea for her one-woman shows because ‘women are interested in accomplished women.’ Randall’s audiences range from women in their 20s to age 100, and she usually performs for women’s organizations, as well as retirement homes and temples. ‘I can perform for a small group in someone’s living room or in a huge theater,’ says Randall, who works with simple costumes and minimal props. Her first one-woman creation was ‘Beverly Sills,’ about the internationally acclaimed soprano who captured America’s heart with her glorious artistry, engaging personality and salty intelligence. ‘I read her book, ‘Bubbles,’ [an autobiography] and her life seemed fascinating,’ Randall says. ‘There was a lot in her life that was very emotional.’ Because Randall crafts her shows as interpretations of the women and their lives, she researches by reading books and watching videos in order to get to know her subjects. A graduate of Northwestern University, School of Speech, in Evanston, Illinois, Randall studied acting under Uta Hagen in New York before going to France and Italy to act in films such as ‘Reflections in a Golden Eye’ (John Huston), ‘Doctor Faustus’ (Richard Burton) and ‘Woman Times Seven’ (Vittorio De Sica) in the 1960s. When she moved to Los Angeles 30 years ago, her starring role in ‘Electra’ at the Cellar Theatre earned her an agent. A Palisades resident for 18 years, Randall also studied with Jack Garfein in Beverly Hills and taught acting, voice and diction at the Actors and Directors Lab for two years, and as a private coach. She and her husband, Irwin, currently travel every year to such places as China, Russia and England. In the free program of ‘A Woman of Independent Means,’ based on Elizabeth Hailey’s novel, at the Woman’s Club on May 11 at 11:45 a.m., Randall will portray the life of Bess Steed Garner from 1899 to 1977. To reserve a place for lunch ($10) after the program, call Evelyn Morrow at 459-2507 by 12 noon on May 8. The Clubhouse is located at 901 Haverford. The Night Lights Auxiliary of the Assistance League of Santa Monica will host the May 12 performance of ‘Beverly Sills’ as an evening of drama and dessert from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Assistance League Chapter House, 1439 15th St. Dessert and wine will be served following the program; a minimum donation of $10 will be accepted at the door. All proceeds go to providing scholarships for kids to attend camp and outfitting local children for summer camp.

Grandeur & Intimacy In the American West

Independence Monument seems aptly named on this morning in Colorado National Monument. Photo by J.C. Leacock
Independence Monument seems aptly named on this morning in Colorado National Monument. Photo by J.C. Leacock

Imagine trying to profile an entire state through photographs. Each one of the 50 manifests its own personality shaped by climate, natural resources and history, and even if you took 1,000 or 10,000 images, the task would remain elusive. Jonathan Charles (J. C.) Leacock, through skill, patience, luck and extraordinary understanding of the West, has accomplished a photographic composite of two Western states, Colorado and South Dakota. More than an Aaron Copland hymn, Leacock’s West is a breathtaking panorama, populated by birds and mammals, but also by men and women. In his visual journey through Colorado (‘Our Colorado’), for example, we meet National Park employee Bob Kisthart, dressed in the buckskins of a deerhunter to recreate life at Bent’s Old Fort, the only trading post along the Santa Fe Trail. We see Crested Butte resident Elizabeth Becker riding her bicycle rigged with a ski rack on her way to the slopes. In ‘South Dakota, Simply Beautiful,’ we observe cowboys herding cattle at the Krogman Ranch in Mellette County and Miss Rodeo 2003 posing with her horse in Wessington Springs. It’s interesting that Leacock, a local boy who grew up in Pacific Palisades, graduated from Palisades High School (1978), then went off to UC Santa Barbara, would fall in love with the mountains and grasslands of the western plateau. Maybe the clue is that he refers to this part of America as cowboy country. His late father, Philip, a director and producer of films and television, had a lot to do with his passion for the American West. ‘He enhanced my interest through his work with the classic Westerns of the day, ‘Gunsmoke’ and ‘Bonanza,” Leacock says. ‘Horses, gunfights and Marshall Dillon not only inspired my imagination but were also, in a sense, real.’ Not only did these memories fuel J.C.’s visual expansiveness, but the lifestyle was seductive. He really is a cowboy, having learned to ride when he was a boy, and here affirms the visual metaphor of cowboy and West over and over in his work. ‘When I was growing up we lived in Australia for three months while my dad was making a movie, ‘Adams Woman’ with Beau Bridges,’ Leacock says. ‘I rode every day.’ These days, he lives on a ranch near Crested Butte in southwest Colorado with his wife Kriste (a high school math teacher), horses and cow dogs. Leacock, 44, was interested in taking pictures from the time he was a little boy. ‘My dad was a great influence, but also my grandmother Enid Slater.’ He used to visit Slater, his maternal grandmother, in London every other summer. ‘She had her own darkroom and gave me my first camera, a Kodak Instamatic.’ His mother, Carol, an inveterate hiker and environmentalist who started the Temescal Canyon Association in the early 1970s, has been a great inspiration to J. C. ‘I used to go on hikes with my parents,’ Leacock says. ‘When I was younger before [developer Earl] Lachman destroyed it all, we hiked in Las Pulgas. I know all the species of plants and all the flowers; it’s where I learned about nature.’ Like an artist who carries a sketch pad wherever he goes, Leacock took his camera wherever he wandered. After graduating from Santa Barbara’with a major in environmental science and geography’and Brooks Institute, he assisted a professor doing soils research on the Channel Islands, and naturally was taking photos the whole time. ‘I scammed every way I could to get out to the islands,’ he says. ‘And then I thought, ‘If I could make this [taking photographs] a living, that would be very cool.’ Things worked out for him: his work is widely published and has appeared in Backpacker, National Geographic Adventure, Sunset and American Cowboy as well as in Sierra Club, Audubon and Western Horseman calendars. ‘I’m a Colorado photographer,’ Leacock says, while admitting that to record the whole state was a tough assignment. ‘My contract for the Colorado book was for three years, but it was hard to put a time line on it. It’s such a diverse state, you have to try and capture that and plan accordingly. ‘To shoot the wildflowers you just have to go the best spot in the mountains in July and wait. It just so happens that because of its elevation and rainfall, Crested Butte is the wildflower capital of the Rockies.’ In fact, Leacock’s signature shot is that of the Colorado columbine, the state’s official flower. In the photo, Leacock photographed the snow-white blossom with the rose-tinted streamers emerging gracefully from the leaves of the false hellebore, in a terrific shot as magical as a watercolor. Leacock has been accused at times of enhancing his photographs with Photoshop to explain the dramatic lighting and rich colors. ‘Some people have looked at my Web site and say the photos are too saturated. I say if you take advantage of the right kind of light and the right kind of film, you get this rich saturation.’ My landscapes to this day, and even the stuff that is published, have never been manipulated by Photoshop.’ To the uninitiated, Leacock’s books seem most comprehensive, but there are inevitably the ‘shots’ that got away. In the Colorado book, he would have loved to include the Denver skyline, the Denver Broncos and the Denver International Airport’which turned into an impossibility following September 11. His most difficult shot, he says, was the skier jumping off a cornice at Monarch Ski Resort in Colorado, a curious statement from a guy who captured a fearless cowgirl competing in a South Dakota goat-tying event at the most dust-swirling moment. ‘I’m not generally a sports photographer, and I never did a guy flying off a cornice; I didn’t know what to do. Luckily, it worked out well.’ Leacock, who uses a 6 x 7 cm Pentax for medium format landscapes and a 35-mm for action and people, takes slide film, explaining that his clientele’mostly magazines and calendar companies’are not ‘quite ready to look at a computer screen.’ He has over 50,000 transparencies in inventory. For ‘Our Colorado’ he sent the publisher over 500 images to choose from, including the extraordinary cover shot of Red Mountain No. 1 reflected in a lake near Red Mountain Pass. This photo was the result of his search for reflections. ‘I saw this body of water as I was driving along and thought, What the heck, there might be a good reflection.’ Like many who make a living as an artist, Leacock says that 90 percent of his time is dedicated to office work. ‘It seems that I am making endless phone calls, submitting images to clients, mounting, labeling, captioning and doing some writing.’ He wrote all the captions for the ‘Our Colorado’ and ‘South Dakota, Simply Beautiful,’ and for the October 2003 issue of Cowboys & Indians contributed an article on cowboys and girls. ‘I love cowgirls. They’re strong and independent and rope and ride. And half of them can do it better than anyone else.’ Leacock’s photographs are registered with four stock agencies, and he is looking forward to his next assignment with the state of Colorado, which has contracted with several photographers to document the entire state. ‘They hired me to document the south-central region, which includes Salida, Canyon City, Pueblo, Del Norte and Monarch Sky.’ For a guy who has a sizable inventory on his adopted state already, Leacock is challenged. ‘This is still a pretty big chunk of the state.’ The hardcover books ($24.95) are available through Village Books on Swarthmore.

Leo King, 96; Built His Home on Chautauqua

Leo King, a longtime Palisadian, passed away on May 4. He was 96. King was born in Colorado Springs on January 21, 1908, one of two sons to Frank and Mary Ellen King. His cousin Lois Anthony, who was 20 years younger, remembers him to be ‘the coolest, most good-looking man around, especially when he wore his military uniform.’ King joined the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in the mid-1930s. Similar to the Army in discipline and regimen, the CCC required recruits to wear uniforms, eat in a mess hall and sleep at a base camp, although they did not carry weapons. Serving a two-year term with the CCC, King was stationed outside Golden, Colorado, about 15 miles west of Denver, so was able to go home to north Denver about once a month. During this period, he met and married Mary, who was described as ‘beautiful, kind and kept herself impeccable, never a hair out of place.’ The couple were unable to have children. King joined the U. S. Army at the onset of World War II and served in the Army Ordinance Division, stationed in Maryland. In the 1950s, King continued his military service until his career was interrupted by a near fatal accident. A bomb he was inspecting blew up in his face, which impaired his eyesight and hearing for the rest of his life. Eventually the Kings moved to Pacific Palisades, where they built the fourth house on Chautauqua with their own hands. Planning for all eventualities, King even built a bomb shelter under the driveway of the house, fully stocked with food and water, ‘in case the Russians came over,’ he said. He also built a tree house in the backyard where he spent many hours observing animals and birds in Rustic Canyon. He also converted the back portion of the house into a hair salon for Mary’s hair beauty shop, where she cut and snipped hair for many clients. King was extraordinarily creative with his hands. He designed and carved beautiful wood objects such as fruit and nut bowls with lids. He was also an expert car mechanic, and made his own still for turning wine into brandy. He was thrifty, sometimes a penny pincher, cousin Lois said, explaining, ‘This is common among people reared during the Depression.’ On one trip to Denver to visit relatives in the 1980s, King visited Lois and her husband’s used furniture store. ‘We had purchased a chandelier with hundreds of prisms, and it needed to be assembled in order to be sold. Leo spent at least eight hours accomplishing the task.’ On Leo’s 90th birthday, Lois and her sister came to California to help him celebrate. ‘Though he was nearly blind and deaf, he laughed, joked and reminisced with us,’ Lois said. ‘This brought joy to our hearts. He will be missed in the family, but we know he is enjoying and treasuring the new life with his dear Mary,’ who died in 1996. There are no immediate survivors.

Lu Haas, 86, Political Speechwriter And Passionate Environmentalist

Lucien Haas, Democratic speech writer and political advisor, whose passion fueled his love for the natural world and insistence on peace, died in his sleep on April 27. He was 86 years old. Throughout his long career as a writer and political aide, Haas served as spokesman for Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) for 13 years, associate press secretary to Gov. Pat Brown and a speech writer for his son, Gov. Jerry Brown. He was also an early advisor to then Los Angeles Councilman Tom Bradley, whom he helped in his campaign to defeat incumbent Mayor Sam Yorty in 1973. Haas was born in Buffalo, New York, on July 15, 1917, the son of German immigrants. He was drafted into the Army during World War II, serving in France in intelligence. After the war, he went to work for the Los Angeles Daily News as a copy boy. He became a reporter and worked on the rewrite desk, and was a leader in the Los Angeles Newspaper Guild, defending colleagues accused of disloyalty during the anti-communist McCarthy era. It was at the Daily News where he met his future wife, Jan, an artist at the paper. The couple married in 1955 and eventually had five children. When the paper ceased publication in 1954, Haas took a job in public relations for a beet sugar group in Denver before returning to California, where he began his association with Gov. Pat Brown. When Brown was defeated by Ronald Reagan in 1967, Haas became Cranston’s press secretary. In 1981, he joined Gov. Jerry Brown’s staff, and when Brown ran for the U.S. Senate a year later, Haas wrote most of his speeches calling for a bilateral nuclear arms freeze. Haas loved to entertain in the family home on Swarthmore, often inviting friends from Sacramento to enjoy homemade chili and participate in political skits. ‘Dad loved to dance,’ says his daughter Maxx, who recalls listening to the music and laughter emanating from downstairs when she was a little girl upstairs in her bedroom. ‘I thought, Wow, if this is what adults do, I can’t wait. He’d put on his Herb Alpert records and dance all night.’ After his retirement in 1984, Haas was active in many peace and environmental causes. His longtime friend and fellow Palisadian Harold Waterhouse was introduced to Lu while on a hike in Will Rogers State Park. ‘He and I were such good friends,’ Waterhouse told the Palisadian-Post. ‘We had two subjects that we liked to discuss: the elimination of nuclear weapons all over the world, and the need to improve the environment.’ Haas knew the local canyons intimately and often led nature walks. He understood the botany and made a pretty good guess on unknown plants, having conquered the general principles of shape, color and bloom. Haas was a familiar site around town with his riot of white hair, whiskers and eyebrows framing intense eyes and ruddy cheeks. He was also an unquenchable reader and loved to spend afternoons at the Palisades branch library. On an afternoon hike with Waterhouse a couple of years ago, the two stopped at a clearing under an oak tree. Lu pulled out a book from his backpack. ‘You’ll like this book,’ he said to Harold, ‘knowing that you like all things about life beyond.’ The book, which took up the science underlying ‘Jurassic Park,’ appealed to Lu, who was comfortable with the rational. In retirement, Lu did not draw the curtains and close the door. Instead, he embraced the community, contributed long hours toward maintaining the quality of life and shouted to newcomers about the eternal verities. In a series of letters, called ‘Dear Friends,’ that he wrote to his friends from 1995 to 1999 Haas was able to vent on issues. ‘He sent them to various people he knew and they were hysterical,’ said longtime friend Mimi Adams. ‘They would include his thoughts on nuclear weapons, politics, the world and even movie reviews. Some were full of hope, some pessimistic, but all reflected this man who was so well-read and brilliant.’ In addition to his wife, Haas is survived by daughter Maxx Haas of Santa Monica; sons Lu of Missoula, Montana; Dirk of Truckee; Vernon of Santa Monica and Jack of Malibu; and four grandchildren. Services are pending. Contributions may be made to any peace or environmental group. Haas belonged to Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, P. O. Box 121, 1187 Coast Village Rd, Suite 1, Santa Barbara, CA 93108-2794.

Palisades Beautiful Celebrates 30 Years and 1,500 Street Trees

Palisades Beautiful, the hearty little organization that was predicted to have a short life, celebrated 30 productive years of tree-planting in the Palisades at a champagne and cake party at the Palisades branch library Friday evening. Two of the original founders, Dorothy Bissell and Hilda Sauer, sat outside in the patio of the library and recalled their na’ve, yet tenacious plan to start the nonprofit organization. ‘In 1973, the Palisades was pretty bare,’ Bissell said. ‘Really, there were very few trees in the neighborhoods, and the air was so awful.’ Bissell had read an article extolling the virtues of trees, beyond their curb appeal. ‘I learned that trees are nature’s air conditioner, they give off oxygen and they absorb pollutants.’ Bissell contacted the supervisor of the city’s street tree division to enlist his help in planting trees. Well-intentioned, yet practical, the supervisor was skeptical. ‘Little groups of ladies like to start something and then two years down the line they decide they don’t want to do it,’ he told her. It was then that Bissell’s gentle persistence and determination took root. She asked the supervisor to help her and her cohorts’Sauer, Carole Kenney, and the late Betty Thrower and Carole Horn’decide what trees they should plant. ‘We drove around the streets and looked and decided on a few of this kind here and a few of that kind there.’ The group’s first street was Northfield, where they planted jacarandas, which over the years have been a consistent favorite choice for residents. The group started planting five-gallon trees until the city made them graduate to 15-gallon trees. ‘When we first began, if we had just a few requests and we didn’t want to hire anybody for that little bit of work, Betty and I would go down and plant them ourselves,’ Bissell recalled. Saurer remembered the time she and Dorothy went out in a rain storm to tie up the recently planted magnolias on Via de la Paz, mere saplings at the time. In the early days, it cost $35 to plant a tree. Today, it’s $200 per tree, money the group has received from individuals and local organizations, including the Junior Women’s Club and the Lions Club. Over 50 Palisadians came to celebrate the anniversary, including serious horticulturalists and respectful admirers alike. In bestowing a city commendation to Palisades Beautiful, Monique Ford, Cindy Miscikowksi’s field deputy, underscored the organization’s remarkable work and continued success on having planted 1,500 over the last 30 years. ‘This group has a unique blend of persistence and decorum,’ Ford said, directing her comments to Bissell. ‘She called me, and then called me again.’ Guest speaker Stephanie Landregan, chief landscape architect for the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority, capped the spirit of the evening with a salute to trees, and a story. ‘John ‘Appleseed’ Chapman planted apple trees 150 years ago around the United States, so when our ancestors came west, their otherwise boring, bland diet was made made more interesting by the addition of the apple. Chapman sold saplings for 6′ to homesteaders or traded a tree for clothing or feed. Some of those original apple trees are still around today,’ she said. ‘You are following his legacy. Trees feed us in a very different way. They’ll feed you today and tomorrow and they will be your legacy.’

Original Canyon Beachwear Suits Locals

Clear skies. Temps in the high 90s. A breeze along the coast. Bathing suit season is in the air. The question is: Are you ready to join the crowd of summer shoppers perusing racks of colorful nylon suits, searching for the perfect pattern, size and style? Not to mention trying on your suit of choice in front of life’s unforgiving critic, the dressing room mirror. Canyon Beachwear owner Kathleen Mudd says there is a lot more involved in running a swimwear business than stocking and selling suits. ‘We have to overcome all the psychological aspects of buying a bathing suit,’ says Mudd, who purchased the original Canyon Beachwear store on Entrada in 1988. ‘A well-trained staff is important’the customer should get something that looks good after trying on four to five suits.’ Mudd certainly knows the business. She started working at Canyon in 1979, when she was only 14, and worked there through high school on the weekends and during summers. Then a Brentwood resident, Mudd attended Marymount. She met her husband, William, at the University of San Diego, where she earned her bachelor’s degree in English (1987) and he earned a bachelor’s in business administration (1985). While in college, Mudd managed a San Diego swimwear store but continued to work at Canyon during the summers. The Mudds married in May 1988, and by October they had purchased the small, 400-sq.-ft. Canyon Beachwear space (across from Will Rogers State Beach) from Palisadian Susan Thomas and her daughter, Amy. In 16 years, the Mudds have opened 10 other Canyon swimsuit stores, the first one in 1989 in Pasadena because ‘we had a lot of customers who lived in that area,’ Mudd says. ‘Old Town grew up around us.’ Other Southern California locations include the Westside Pavilion, Studio City, and the Oaks Mall in Thousand Oaks. ‘We see generations of people who grew up in Palisades, moved away and have come back here [to buy suits],’ says Mudd, whose son, Liam, is 3. The Mudds live in Malibu and are expecting a second child in three months. While the popularity of Web-based discount retailers has made the swimwear market extremely competitive in recent years, Mudd says, ‘If somebody wants a designer swimsuit, is hard to fit or wants good customer service, they come to Canyon. We carry higher-end, more European-style suits and we have selection’you’re not going to see yourself walking up and down the beach.’ Refering to an analogy she heard, Mudd compares buying a swimsuit at Canyon to buying flowers at a florist, as opposed to a supermarket. ‘What we have is special, unique.’ The owners have also worked hard to maintain their business. ‘Everything we had we put back into the stores,’ says Mudd, who admits that one of their secrets is ‘working long hours together, being each other’s partner in marriage and business.’ While the Entrada store is the smallest, Mudd says, ‘there’s no room to expand, but the space is irrelevant because it’s a seasonal business and what’s important is customer service.’ The three buying seasons bring different collections, for the November/December cruise season, the February /March spring season and the June summer season. ‘Spring break is usually when business starts to pick up,’ says Mudd, who does the buying and merchandising while William handles the financial end of the business. Named the ‘Best Bikini Store in L.A.’ by Los Angeles magazine, Mudd says another reason they’ve remained successful is because ‘we’ve stayed focused on swimwear.’ Canyon carries 100 different brands with sizes ranging from 2 to 24 and a lot of separates, including D- and DD-size tops. However, Mudd does not see Canyon as ‘a ‘bikini’ store,’ because it caters to ‘the contemporary market instead of the junior market.’ The clientele is mainly women age 16 to 50, and suit prices range from $62 to $250, with an average price of $98 to $120. ‘Like all businesses, we were affected by the economy after September 11,’ says Mudd, who had to close one store in New York. ‘Even though Canyon is the more luxury end of the economy, people weren’t going on vacation as much. We also cut back store hours and we didn’t stay open seven days of the week.’ They currently have a store in Boston on Newbury St. and one on Third Avenue in New York City, in addition to three stores in northern California. Current swimwear trends include mix-matched polka dot- and stripe-patterned suits, often with floral designs. Reversible suits, halter tops and hipster bottoms are also in. Pink and orange are the hot colors this season. ‘There’s a lot of color out there,’ says Mudd, whose staff works with several celebrity stylists. They welcome private appointments if customers cannot come during store hours, and on occasion send suits to customers on vacation. Canyon also carries a limited selection of basic swim trunks for men, as well as sarongs, shirt throw-overs, sandals and straw bags. Located at 106 Entrada, between Marix Tex-Mex Restaurant and Patrick’s Roadhouse, Canyon Beachwear has the following store hours: Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Parking is located behind the store. Contact: 459-5070.