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Surviving D-Day and the Battle of the Bulge

Born in New York City, Joe Klein enlisted in the Army’s First Infantry Division as a private in 1940. “Note the World War I uniform and Enfield rifle,” says Klein, who traveled on a troopship to the North African campaign in 1942.

(Editor’s note: On May 29, the new World War II Memorial on the Mall in Washington, D.C., will be dedicated. American Legion Post 283 will host a corresponding event on that Saturday to honor Westside veterans and to observe the memorial dedication. The festivities will begin at 11 a.m. with a satellite broadcast of the dedication ceremony, followed at noon by a patriotic program and luncheon. Veterans who wish to attend or would like a Certificate of Appreciation should write to the American Legion at 15247 La Cruz Dr., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 and provide their name, address, phone number, branch and years of service, and whether or not they can attend. The following story is the second of three articles revisiting WWII through the experiences of three Palisades veterans. Next week: Navy war photographer Loran Smith.) By JOSEPH M. KLEIN Special to the Palisadian-Post My memories of June 6, 1944’D-Day’include the problems we had disembarking from the troopship that carried us close to the Normandy beach area called ‘Omaha Red.’ I was the platoon leader. We used cargo nets to climb into the landing craft, and this was almost as scary as being under fire. The sea was rough and it took great timing and skill to reach the craft. Fortunately, many in my platoon were well prepared for this after our training and experience of landings in North Africa and Sicily. I also recall my feelings of responsibility and how I felt that all eyes of my men were on me, obviously hoping for good leadership and an example of how to act. I was 22 years old and a fairly new officer. We landed on the beach as the third wave, but enemy fire was still reaching the beach and we could see many casualties. Although my platoon suffered a few casualties, we reached the beach and continued moving to reach our initial objective, which was a small town up some hills and a few miles inland. Shortly after reaching the beach, an enemy artillery or mortar shell exploded close to me, injuring my radio operator, and I felt an impact in my lower right side. I felt liquid running down my right leg and thought that I was hit in my rear end. My first reaction was this might be a ‘million-dollar wound,’ as we described it in the infantry. Not life-threatening, but serious enough to be evacuated and get out danger. When I reached down to feel where the injury was, the liquid was not blood, as I thought, but water. A shell fragment had struck my canteen, which was on my hip. I had to continue to lead my men forward. The rest of the Normandy battle was tough, fighting in hedgerows that gave cover to the resisting Germans, who fought bravely. As we know, the campaign was successful. o o o Our unit was fighting along the Siegfried Line in Germany in late December 1944, when the Germans counterattacked the Allies in Belgium and Luxembourg. On December 24, our division was ordered to proceed north and west to attack the Germans on their left flank. We were transported on trucks and tanks to a heavily wooded area near a town called Schuttrange in eastern Luxembourg. We had no detailed maps of the area, but were given the objective of contacting the Germans and killing or capturing as many as possible. Our company commander had become quite ill and was evacuated, and I, although a first lieutenant at that time, was appointed acting company commander. I remember it was a clear and sunny morning when we reached our embarking position. The weather had been quite stormy and snowing, hindering our air support and reconnaissance. My lead platoon leader was disoriented owing to lack of detailed maps. I proceeded to contact him at the very front to help out. The area was heavily wooded and the ground was covered with snow. I happened to looked ahead and saw some fresh dirt at the base of a tree up the hill and about 50 yards away. I was just about to warn those with me of the position when I saw a flash and felt an impact, which knocked me down. My abdomen hurt and my leg went numb, but I did not think I was seriously hurt. I hit the ground and started firing into the enemy position. A hand came up and I ceased firing and a German soldier emerged with his hands up. I waved to him to come toward me. When he was about 10 yards away, he lowered a hand toward his pistol and I shot and killed him. My radio operator then called for medics to help me. I also called for my second-in-command and briefed him about our position and objectives and effectively turned over command of our company. When the medics arrived, I was informed that my injuries were serious and they would get me to the aid station as soon as possible. In order to carry me down to the nearest road, about a quarter of a mile away, they used the German’s overcoat as a litter and then placed me on the jeep ambulance litter to carry me to the aid station. They placed the litter on the ground along with several litters carrying wounded. Although I was covered with a GI blanket, the German coat remained outside, covering me from head to below the knees. By that time I was barely conscious, having lost much blood (although I was later told the cold weather helped reduce the bleeding). I heard one medic, pointing to me, say to another, ‘That guy looks pretty bad; we better get him in to the doctors.’ The other replied, ‘To hell with that Kraut bastard, let’s take care of our own guys first.’ I was able to call out and say ‘Look at my dog tags, I’m one of you.’ They then rushed me in. After I was operated on and treated, I woke up the next day, Christmas Day, and had tubes in my arms and abdomen, and I thought ‘Christmas dinner!’ When the surgeon came in to see me, after the exam, he said, ‘Lieutenant, you were badly wounded, but I am sure you will live to be 45.’ I was quite happy with that comment, since I had just turned 23 at that time. I proceeded to spend 18 months in hospitals, receiving various treatments, until I was honorably discharged from the Army as a captain in 1946. I am still rated 60 percent disabled by the Army but have been, thankfully, able to live a productive life. (A note from Managing Editor Bill Bruns: After I met with Joe Klein, 82, and encouraged him to write about his personal memories of D-Day and the Battle of the Bulge, he sent his article with the following message: ‘This is the first time I have done anything like this; I hope it’s what you wanted. As I told you, although I have received combat decorations, I don’t consider myself to be superior to any of the thousands of other combat veterans, and never boast about it. I am also grateful for my military experiences, good and bad, as it certainly helped in life in every respect.’ Joe started his business career as a sales representative for Clary Corporation, a business machines manufacturer, and later was recruited to become president of NBC International in New York City. From 1966 until his retirement in 1990, he served as an executive with Cyprus Mines Corporation and Pluess-Staufer Industries, a multinational mining company. Joe married Betty Northington in 1948 and they have lived in Pacific Palisades since 1966. They have four children.)

Miller Named New Honorary Fire Chief

Honorary Fire Chief Wally Miller, second from left, is sworn in along with Honorary Sheriff Rich Wilken, third from left, by Honorary Mayor Steve Guttenberg, right, at Palisades Law Enforcement Day. The event was sponsored by Scott Wagenseller, far left, of Palisades Patrol/Gates Security.
Honorary Fire Chief Wally Miller, second from left, is sworn in along with Honorary Sheriff Rich Wilken, third from left, by Honorary Mayor Steve Guttenberg, right, at Palisades Law Enforcement Day. The event was sponsored by Scott Wagenseller, far left, of Palisades Patrol/Gates Security.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

The town’s new Honorary Fire Chief, Wally Miller, has a long record of community service in Pacific Palisades. At the town’s Law Enforcement Day last Sunday, he was sworn in and presented with a plaque by Honorary Mayor Steve Guttenberg. Station 69 chose Miller because of his community leadership. ‘I felt honored,’ says Miller, 77. ‘I didn’t realize I was getting so old that these are the kinds of things people think of me doing.’ He will ride on Station 69’s fire engine at the Fourth of July parade. Previous honorary fire chiefs have been Theresa Stewart, the late Mort Farberow, Arnie Wishnick and Dr. Mike Martini. Miller has been active in numerous organizations and was a founder of PAPA People, Graffiti Busters and PRIDE. He also came up with the idea for the Village Green, which he says came from idle conversation. ‘Bob Abernethy was honorary mayor at the time [1972] and he was interviewing different people to see what he could accomplish for the town,’ Miller recalls. ‘We were in a coffee shop where the Mobil station is now. He asked, ‘What could I do to improve the Palisades?’ Pointing across the street, I said: ‘Why don’t we get rid of that Standard station and build a park there?’ And that’s what we did. Bob Abernethy was the power behind it.’ The owner of Denton Jewelers from 1960 to 1996, Miller helped with fundraising, design and day-to-day watching over the Green as it was being built. Miller, now retired, spent nearly 50 years in the jewelry business, starting with a store in South Gate and then Denton in the Palisades, as well as another Denton in Brentwood which he owned for nine years. He and his wife of 53 years, Bonnie, have lived in the Palisades since 1961. They have three children’Lisa, a veterinarian in Cambria; Jeffrey, a commercial photographer in Seattle; and Michelle Scheiperpeter, a physical therapist in Ventura, plus six grandchildren and one great-grandchild. A native of Grafton, North Dakota, near the Canadian border, Miller moved to Los Angeles after his military service. He was in the Army Ordnance Corps just after World War II. He studied watchmaking and gemology and then opened his jewelry store in South Gate, where he belonged to the Optimist Club, the Chamber and other organizations. ‘When I came to Pacific Palisades, I decided I was going to mind my own business and not get involved because I didn’t have much time,’ says Miller. His decision didn’t last long. ‘I realized I needed to get involved because there was so much that needed to get done.’ Miller was Citizen of the Year in 1980 and Citizen of the Decade in 1990. He is past president of the Chamber of Commerce, PAPA (the parade organizing committee), the Village Green Committee and the Optimist Club. Also, he was chairman of the Design Review Board, the Palisades commercial-area Specific Plan and the Sign Standardization Committee (overhead sign removal and control), and was a member of the Palisades-Brentwood Community Plan committee, the Civic League board, while also serving on the founding committee of the Community Council. Miller is grateful he was able to improve the environment of Palisades. ‘Living in the Palisades has been a learning experience and I don’t regret any of the time I’ve been here,’ he says. ‘I wish I had gotten more involved in L.A. as a whole because they are the people that need the help. People here should be willing to contribute to the overall quality of life in the city of L.A. and a lot of them do.’ His philosophy is ‘If we can’t do it, nobody can; if we don’t do it, who will?’ A good example of that is Graffiti Busters, which he started after attending a Chamber of Commerce meeting in which people were complaining about the graffiti problem. Another part of his volunteer philosophy is having fun. After the Rotary Club and Optimist Club members helped at the Palisades parade for many years, Miller went to the Rose Parade and noticed all the volunteers dressed in white. He founded PAPA People, whose members take this pledge: ‘I promise to help with the parade and have fun doing it and if I can’t have fun doing it I will resign.’ Miller enjoys golf and traveling, and keeps involved in volunteer work as an advisor for PRIDE, the community beautification group. He set up the PRIDE board of directors with six-year term limits. ‘I’m a firm believer in turnover of people doing community service, so they don’t get too self-centered or too important to themselves. There are many people who would like to do community service but they don’t know what to do or how to get started. All they need to be is asked.’

Legion Presents Plan for JROTC at PaliHi

The American Legion Post 283 briefed the Palisades Charter High School Board of Governors Tuesday night on its proposal to institute a Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC) program at the school. The agenda item drew more than 20 audience members who were anxious to weigh in on the controversial issue. Bill Branch, 1st Vice Commander of Post 283, and Lt. Col. Ted McDonald, officer in charge of the JROTC program, described the program’s objectives and the benefits for the school in a presentation that was intended to test the waters on the philosophical question, rather than provide specific details. JROTC was established 88 years ago to ‘instill in students in secondary education institutions the values of citizenship, personal responsibility and a sense of accomplishment,’ according to its Mission Statement. A graduate of the program some 60 years ago, Branch said that he credits the JROTC for the self-confidence and professionalism he gained in helping him earn a master’s degree in electrical engineering, followed by a 40-year career in management at McDonnell-Douglas. ‘The Junior ROTC emphasis on motivation, dedication and leadership convinced the Legion that the program is worthy of consideration as an addition to the Charter high school curriculum,’ Branch said. The school would select the Army, Air Force, Marines or Navy to sponsor the program, which in turn would provide the necessary curriculum materials, equipment, uniforms and transportation. The Legion, which has a history of supporting PaliHi in the form of grants to the Booster Club as well as college scholarships, would provide resources for any JROTC unit at the school, including scholarships, award dinners and other extra-curricular activities. The sponsoring corps would provide partial reimbursement to the school for salaries of JROTC instructors. The Legion requested that parents offer input on the decision, and towards that end prepared a questionnaire that asks if they support such a program, which military corps they would prefer to be the sponsor and if they would like to attend an information briefing. Following the presentation, members of the audience spoke in both support and opposition to the proposal. Former Legion Commander Dr. Mike Martini advocated the program, and PaliHi parents Loree Fahy and Jack Sutton outlined their objections and presented the board with a petition signed by 250 members of the community. The petition restated many of the objections that were included in a letter written by Marcy Winograd, a PaliHi English teacher and Palisadians for Peace member and sent to Principal Linda Hosford in March. That letter, signed by 27 teachers, parents and community members, decried the militarization of the student body and called for a full debate on whether the school should allow and provide financial support for a JROTC program. At the conclusion of Tuesday’s meeting, the Board of Governors voted to refer the question to the school’s educational program committee, which is made up of stake holders including teachers, administration, parents and students.

City Details New Strategy For Potrero

After spending at least $13 million to acquire 33 landslide-impaired lots and another $17 million to reconstruct Potrero Canyon into an upscale neighborhood, L.A. Recreation and Parks officials explained last week why the end result is far from resolved. Appearing before the Palisades Community Council, the three officials gave a PowerPoint presentation which outlined the project’s three-sided nightmare: bureaucratic demands, fiscal constraints and lack of consensus on what should ultimately constitute the landscaping and public amenities in Potrero. The immediate challenge, said Kevin Regan, the new area manager for Rec and Parks, is to find about $1.2 million to complete the final phase of construction (Phase II). The city owes $300,000 to the contractor for work already done and $850,000-$900,000 to repair two landslides in the canyon, one off De Pauw, the other off Alma Real. Then there’s the estimated cost of $7 million to $12 million to complete Phase III in Potrero, with suggested plans calling for 7.9 acres of riparian habitat and 22 acres planted in coastal sage, along with a system of trails and picnic areas leading from the Recreation Center down to PCH. This final package is also currently unfunded. Although the City of L.A. now owns 33 residential properties along the edge of Potrero that are ready to be certified for sale at auction, the California Coastal Commission ruled many years ago that none of these lots could be sold until after the entire park project was completed. Since the city’s real estate investment could now easily pay for Phase III, ‘we want to remove that special condition,’ project director Jane Adrian said in her presentation to the Community Council. ‘[But] Coastal Commission staff has advised us that they will not consider an amendment to do so until a designated account is set up to safeguard the proceeds from lot sales. This will ensure that the proceeds go first to complete all phases of the project, before the [city’s] general fund gets reimbursed.’ Adrian said her department has to take the following steps in this process: ”Rec and Parks has already drafted a City Council motion asking to set up the designated account. ”The Council has forwarded it to the City Attorney for review as to form. ”Council District 11 (Cindy Miscikowski) takes the motion before Council. ”Council must approve. ”The City’s General Services Department sets up designated account for lot sales proceeds. ”Rec and Parks submits amendment to Coastal Commission to remove special condition. ”General Services sells lots and deposits proceeds to the designated account for use to finish project. ‘I think Coastal will approve our request, though they’re kind of whimsical at times,’ Adrian said. When asked about a time frame for getting the lots finally sold, her predecessor, Kathleen Chan, said: ‘We’re looking at over a year.’ Meanwhile, as the financial process bumps along, Rec and Parks plans to submit two more amendment requests to the Coastal Commission. One is to remove the proposed re-circulating stream from the plan originally mandated by the commission and instead ‘depend on seasonal water and irrigation to maintain riparian habitat’ (as it originally existed when Potrero was a deep, wild canyon before the bulldozers and dump trucks arrived). The cost was estimated at $13 million a year ago. The second request by Rec and Parks will be to ‘remove the condition of constructing a parking lot and restrooms at the bottom of the canyon, unless a bridge can be funded and constructed across PCH.’ Audience member Judith Collas asked, ‘Will there be any public input into the final plan?’ Chan responded, ‘This plan will be done through community meetings and workshops. We’re just not there yet.’ Determined to have the Community Council retain an influential voice in creating the final overall plans for Potrero Park, Highlands representative Norm Kulla made a motion urging Rec & Parks to return to the council for input before submitting any amendment requests to the Coastal Commission. The motion passed, and Potrero Canyon will once again be on the council’s agenda next Thursday evening, May 27, at the branch library.

St. Matthew’s Town Fair

Fairgoers like these girls enjoyed flying down the big slide, among other rides, carnival games, tasty food and entertainment on the St. Matthew’s campus at this year’s fair.

Palisadian Jim Blumel Saves A Life in Fiery Big-Rig Crash

For Palisadian businessman Jim Blumel, Tuesday, April 27 started off as another busy day. By 12:30 p.m., he was on his way from the Santa Clarita Valley office of his business, Sunset Landscaping, to an appointment in Calabasas. Heading southbound on the I-5, Blumel was going about 60 to 70 miles per hour when he saw a big-rig truck on fire, coming at him from the northbound lanes. ”’There was no way off the freeway,’ Blumel said in an interview with the Palisadian-Post. ‘When the truck stopped [in the right southbound lane], I was 100 ft. away.’ ”The big-rig’s driver, Jos’ Sanchez, was transporting 24 tons of municipal waste when his truck crashed through a guardrail and hit a parked truck full of hazardous materials. ”’We think [Jos’s truck] blew a front tire,’ said Sanchez’s manager at Ecology Autoparts, Saul Gracian, who arrived at the scene 30 to 45 minutes after the accident. ‘When the truck came to a stop, it was hanging off a 45-ft. embankment, with flames coming out of the sides of the truck.’ ”The truck’s compartment separated from the trailer and Sanchez could see the fire inside the cab. ‘I thought I wasn’t going to live,’ he said, recalling that he tried unsuccessfully to open both doors but couldn’t get out. ”Blumel automatically started running towards the big-rig. ‘I saw [Sanchez] trying to get out and the adrenaline kicked in. I could hear people saying, ‘Don’t go near it, it’s gonna blow!’ but once I’d committed to running, I couldn’t stop.”’ ”Sanchez later told Gracian that when he heard Blumel’s voice, he went toward the sound, though he felt disoriented. Blumel, 6’2” and 195 lbs., had to stand on the passenger side step to reach Sanchez, who is 5’9” and 230 lbs., and help him out of the window. ‘He pushed and I pulled,’ Blumel says. ‘I was telling him to jump and I’d catch him.’ ”When Sanchez made it through the window, Blumel took him over to his car, where he gave him water and waited with him until the police and firemen arrived at the scene. ‘He was in shock,’ Blumel said. ‘I gave him my card in case he had any questions about the accident later.’ Blumel also gave his name and contact information directly to the police. ”While no other drivers stopped to help, a few came up to Blumel afterwards. ‘They said, ‘I can’t believe you did that.” ”Blumel, age 39, says, ‘You always wonder how you’ll react in situations like that. When it counted, I stood up’I was the right person at the right time in the right place.’ ”According to Gracian, Sanchez, who has been with Ecology Autoparts for two years, returned to work on Monday, May 3. ‘What Jim did was really extraordinary,’ Gracian said. ‘He’s kind of like an unsung hero.’ Blumel and his wife, Jill, have three young daughters. ”Sanchez, 52, has four children, ages 11 to 33. Daughters Carmen Raman and Roxanna Sanchez have written thank-you notes to Blumel. Raman wrote: ‘My family and I would like to thank you sincerely for everything you did to help (encourage) my dad to get out of the burning truck. We honestly believe that if it wasn’t for you, my dad would have panicked and might not have made it out.’ Sanchez wrote: ‘Most people would have kept on driving…I don’t know what I would do without my Dad and without your help.’ ”(Additional reporting by LIBBY MOTIKA)

Theater’s Back at Revere With a Full Scale ‘Grease’

By SUE PASCOE Palisadian-Post Contributor Pure male energy dominated the stage in the ‘Greased Lightning’ scene at a recent rehearsal of ‘Grease’ in the Paul Revere Auditorium. After 14 years of a dark stage at Revere, this is the second year the drama department has mounted a full-scale musical production. Last year the students did an original musical by Jeff Lantos, entitled ‘Carry On,’ about the historic struggle to desegregate public schools. Jaime Wolffe, a former New York literary agent, and current PRIDE music and drama liaison’who last year recognized Lantos’ talent and wanted to see theater back at the middle school’has once again taken the lead in producing this year’s production. Wolffe said that when she saw the kids who participated last year and they asked her what they were doing this year, she felt she couldn’t disappoint them. She added, ‘The momentum was there; the kids really wanted to perform.’ Forty-five seventh and eighth grade students auditioned by singing one song a capella. In order to let as many students as possible participate, the girls’ roles were double cast. Winning the role of Sandy are Heather Mitchell and Lorin Doctor, Rizzo is Amanda Bernard and Christie Pryor. Playing Danny is Tyler DuBovy, and Kenicke is Leo Ritz-Barr. With students in place, and the royalties for the play paid for by PRIDE, a director, choreographer, set crew, and music director were needed. Vanessa Ling, the first-year chorus teacher, stepped up to the production with enthusiasm and expertise. Three instrumental students are adding guitar, bass, and drums and the percussionist is a crossing guard from Marquez. Robert Grossman, who has taught at Revere longer than any other faculty member, is building sets with a crew of sixth grade kids who take stage craft as an after school class. Kristy Rosta, whom many residents might remember from Fancy Feet and who is currently teaching tap at the Santa Monica Dance Studio, is the choreographer and assistant director. The director, Melanie Beck, will graduate from USC with a theater B.A. and musical theater minor the same day the production opens. As she organized the large cast into different scenes, giving notes as she went, she commented ‘Their raw talent, enthusiasm, and capability are inspiring.’ Beck’s own energy has single-handedly pulled the production together, rehearsing with the students for three hours a week for 10 weeks. The general public is invited to this crowd pleaser. Even if you’ve seen ‘Grease’ before, Beck has added a few clever touches like a Nerdette chorus, and actual students acting out the movie behind the drive-in screen. Performances for ‘Grease’ are Friday and Saturday night, May 14 and 15 at 7:30 at the Paul Revere Auditorium at 1450 Allenford Ave. Suggested ticket donations are $10 for general admission and $7 for students, children, and seniors.

Mazursky Headlines Reading of ‘Last Two Jews of Kabul’

Longtime friends Josh Greenfeld and Paul Mazursky, who together wrote the Academy award-nominated screenplay for the film ‘Harry and Tonto,’ will come together for a Theatre Palisades benefit. Actor/director/ writer Mazursky will appear in a staged reading of Greenfeld’s two-character play ‘The Last Two Jews of Kabul’ on Saturday, May 15 at 7:30 p.m. at Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal. Actor Saul Rubinek (‘And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself’) will also perform. ‘I read the play, liked it, and told Josh I’d do it,’ Mazursky told the Palisadian-Post during a telephone interview. Mazursky, one of Hollywood’s most respected filmmakers, has extensive directing credits, including ‘Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice,’ ‘Blume in Love,’ Unmarried Woman’ and ‘Down and Out in Beverly Hills.’ He was a regular on the television series ‘Once and Again’ and continues to appear on ‘The Sopranos’ and ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm.’ Palisadian Greenfeld recently returned to theater as a writer after a career as a journalist, critic, novelist and screenwriter. ‘Last Two Jews’ premiered at the La MaMa Theatre in New York last year. His latest play is ‘Generations.’ ‘The Last Two Jews of Kabul’ is based on a true story. After the fall of Kabul in the fall of 2001, two Jewish men were discovered in a city that was once home to 40,000 Jews. These alleged ‘last two Jews’ were sharing as their living quarters the ruins of a synagogue’but not speaking to each other. This and other news accounts inspired Greenfeld’s both comic and dramatic play which fictionalizes the situation into a tale in which the two men’s personalities are in constant conflict and neither seems to be quite truthful about his identity or background. The suggested donation of $10 will benefit the Theatre Palisades Building Fund. Contact: 454-1970. ‘NANCY SMITH

Audiologist Helps Clients Hear the Ocean

Santa Monica Canyon resident Tom Ballantyne knew he had a hearing problem since his 20s. It was triggered by an incident when he was a sergeant in the Army. He observed a gunnery practice for his division’s tanks in Grafenw’hr, Germany, in the ’60s. There was supposed to be a ceasefire and he was standing without his earplugs right next to a tank when its cannon went off. The problem started with tinnitus (ringing in the ears) and led to a high-frequency hearing loss in his left ear, which progressed over time. ”’About two or three years ago, it was creating problems because I wasn’t hearing my wife,’ says Ballantyne, 61. ‘She was tired of me asking ‘What did you say?” After having some mixed results at a hearing aid store, Ballantyne’s doctor referred him to audiologist Stephen Kirsch at Ocean Hearing Care in Santa Monica. He underwent diagnostic testing and was fitted with an appropriate hearing aid and today, although his hearing is not perfect, he says it’s much improved. Kirsch says his motivation is largely to educate people about hearing loss and what can be done about it,’ says Kirsch. ‘When hearing aid fittings are successful, I can see the improvement in the lives of the people wearing hearing aids and the improvement in the lives of spouses and kids.’ In addition to in-depth diagnostic testing, Kirsch spends a lot of his time getting to know his patients so the hearing aid can fit their individual needs and counseling them so they can have appropriate expectations from a hearing aid. For example, some people are more concerned with cosmetic issues and want an inconspicuous hearing aid. Tiny in-the-ear hearing aids are available, although not everyone is a good candidate for them. Also, lifestyle dictates the type of hearing aid, such as how often someone is in a noisy environment and other variables. ‘People are very resistant to coming here,’ Kirsch says. ‘They don’t want the stigma that’s attached to a hearing aid. A lot of times it’s the spouse who is tired of repeating themselves, or the person’s occupation requires it.’ Reasons for hearing loss vary and include noise exposure, genetic predisposition and aging. Those with an inner-ear hearing loss are usually good candidates for hearing aids. ”The price range for one hearing aid is from $800 to $3,000, with an average cost of $1,500, Kirsch says. Although certain insurance plans offer some coverage, most don’t, and clients usually pay privately. A substantial part of the price is for the expertise of the audiologist in fitting the hearing aid, which comes with a three-year warranty on service (cleaning, fine-tuning, counseling), manufacturer’s repairs and loss. When it comes to hearing aids, one size doesn’t fit all. Clients are allowed two-month trials to evaluate their new hearing aids, and are able to exchange or return them if they’re not satisfactory, Kirsch says. Also, it can take time to adjust to a hearing aid; they often have to be fine-tuned several times at first. The more sophisticated hearing aids can be adjusted for different noise environments’such as noisy restaurants or talking on the phone. Ballantyne tried a tiny hearing aid that caused some problems, including a feeling of congestion in his ear, and exchanged it for one which has several settings to block various amounts of background noise. He was impressed with Kirsch’s patience and professionalism. ‘He’s a nice person; he really likes what he’s doing and he really cares,’ Ballantyne says. Music is an inspiration for Kirsch, who also works with musicians, fitting them with special earplugs that suppress sound evenly across pitch, thereby maintaining sound quality. Ocean Hearing Care was opened in 1999 by the ear, nose and throat doctors of Southern California Head and Neck Surgery Center in Santa Monica, to help their patients in need of hearing instruments. Kirsch, a certified audiologist, received his master of communication disorders at the LSU Medical Center in New Orleans (home of the Kresge Institute of Hearing) in 2000. He has been at Ocean Hearing Care, located at 7th and Wilshire, since November 2002 and has been growing the practice since then. Services include comprehensive diagnostic hearing exams, hearing instrument consultations, hearing aid fittings, musician earplug fittings, programming of digital hearing aids and repairs. ‘I’m very content with being here, and I’m grateful for the opportunity I have,’ says Kirsch. ‘The quality of the clientele is excellent. I take seriously meeting their needs and trying to improve their lives.’ Contact: 899-6229

Falcon Softball Is Simply Perfect

Crowell’s Clutch Hits Propel St. Matthew’s to First League Championship

St. Matthew's players celebrate the first softball league championship in school history.
St. Matthew’s players celebrate the first softball league championship in school history.

When Nora Crowell called time out and didn’t get one with two outs in the bottom of the sixth inning, the stage was set for the most dramatic hit of the season. She took her frustrations out on the next pitched ball and belted it to left centerfield, way over the outfielders heads, for a two-run home run that gave the St. Matthew’s 6-8th grade girls softball team a 5-3 lead over Crossroads in the championship game of the Pacific Basin League playoffs. Aided by key defensive plays from Katie Zacuto at first base and Sara McMahon in right field, St. Matthew’s pitcher Codie Dicus retired the Roadrunners in order in the seventh inning to apply the finishing touches to an undefeated season and the program’s first league championship in school history. ‘When I go up to bat, I usually take the first pitch,’ said Crowell, an eighth-grader and the Falcons’ starting center fielder. ‘The umpire called it a strike, so I stepped out of the box for a second, then put my hand up to let him know I needed time but he didn’t realize it, the pitcher threw the ball and he called it a strike. Now, instead of one strike on me I had two. I was really annoyed so I told myself I was going to hit the next ball no matter what.’ In addition to her game-winning inside-the-park homer, Crowell also hit a lead-off triple to right field in the fifth inning that gave the Falcons hope of a comeback. ‘We were behind 3-1, none of us were hitting and Haley [Greenberg] and I were scared we might lose,’ said eighth-grader Katie Zacuto, who pitched the first four innings, allowing three hits and striking out five batters. ‘But Codie [Dicus] got mad at us. She kept saying we were going to win and finally we did.’ Ironically, Dicus pitched against Zacuto in the championship game last year when Culver City defeated St. Matthew’s 7-6. But Dicus transferred to St. Matthew’s the following semester, giving the Falcons the most formidable pitching combination in the league. Zacuto allowed just 11 hits and struck out 35 batters in 12 regular season games while Dicus had 53 strikeouts and allowed only 12 hits. After Crowell’s triple, Greenberg drew a walk and Zacuto executed a squeeze bunt single to score Crowell and pull St. Matthew’s (14-0) within a run. Dicus laid down another squeeze bunt to score Greenberg and tie the game 3-3. After Dicus retired second-seeded Crossroads in order in the sixth, Rylee Ebsen was hit by a pitch to lead off the bottom of the inning and was on third base with one out.’Fellow seventh-grader Anne Turner bunted, but Crossroads threw Ebsen out at the plate. Crowell, who led the team in batting average (.813), stolen bases (20) and on base percentage (.912), then delivered her game-winning homer. ‘All season long our coach [Brad Zacuto] would point up to the wall and ask ‘Do you see any banners up there?”, said Greenberg, the Falcons’ catcher and short stop. ‘He made it pretty serious. After awhile we were like ‘Yeah, right.’ But he pushed us and in the end it was worth it.’ Greenberg, who will attend Windward School next fall, played in the Pinto and Mustang Divisons of PPBA. She led the team with 18 hits and was third in RBIs (20) this season. ‘Katie, Nora and I are sort of the veterans because we’ve been on the team since we were sixth-graders,’ Greenberg said. ‘We’re pretty good friends because we’re in the same grade. But we have a lot of good players this year. Everyone contributed and that’s why we won.’ Stellar defensive plays were made by Greenberg, who threw out a Crossroads base runner trying to steal, Anne Turner, who threw out a runner at first base from right field, and Audrey Turner, who made a running catch in left field. ‘I was pitching from behind most of the game which I’m not used to,’ said Zacuto, who plays with Crowell on the Del Rey Dragons travel team and will play with Crowell at Marymount High next year. ‘I wasn’t hitting good, but I focused on pitching well enough to keep us in the game. It seemed like they were ahead by more runs than they really were.’ St. Matthew’s defeated Crossroads 10-3 during the regular season, but the final game was much tougher because Crossroads, despite being seeded lower, was playing at home. ‘I was concerned before I hit my triple because their pitcher was throwing a decent game,’ Crowell said. ‘When I hit my home run, I knew she was going to throw a strike and it was right down the middle. They don’t have fences so the ball kept rolling and I kept running.’ The top-seeded Falcons defeated Brentwood 7-5 in the semifinals.’Crowell went three for three and scored two runs, McMahon hit a two-run triple in the first inning and Lizzy Porter added an RBI hit.’Zacuto and Dicus allowed the Eagles only three hits and struck out nine batters over five innings to move the Falcons into the Pacific Basin League championship game for the second consecutive year.