PaliHi Band Marches On

The PaliHi Marching Band’s competition piece this year is “West Side Story.”                                               Photo: RICH SCHMITT

By CHAZ PLAGER

With the start of each new school year at Palisades Charter High School, there is also a new Pali Band season.

And when we say new, we really mean new. Peter Ye, the program director, is taking a fresh approach to this season’s band show after a rather lackluster performance last year. “We tried writing our own show last year, which took a lot of time and money and just didn’t have a result worth the cost,” Ye said.

The program As It Seems was an original composition by the members of the music department. The department has done original compositions before, but last year’s program was not a favorite with any of the judges, and the band took last place in most of the competitions it entered.

This year, the Pali Band will be performing a routine based on West Side Story, which the Band bought the rights to use. “I think this routine may be challenging, but West Side Story is extremely recognizable and popular, even among our students,” said Ye. “I’m confident in the talent we’ve gathered this year, and I think we have a good shot at making it to finals this year.”

Rights can cost anywhere from $200 to $3,000, depending on what pop songs are in the program or if it contains famous compositions, such as those found in Lord of the Rings.

This year’s band program has a total of 55 competing students, 45 from the marching band and, for the largest member pool it’s had in years, 10 students in the color guard. Baton twirlers Grace and Noelle Hardy are joining the competitive side of the band for the first time as color guard members and may prove the secret weapon they needed.

They often perform at half-time at football games, giving residents a preview of the program.

This year’s program is coached by familiar faces Michael Schlotter, Alison Avina-Wyant, and her husband Ceasar. The Pali Band will be competing at its first show at Downey High School on October 5th. The Band usually has only five shows, but should they make it to the finals this year, there will be six.

In addition to Downey, on October 19, PaliHi Band will be competing at the Moorpark Battle of the Bands at Moorpark; the Hart Rampage at College of the Canyons on October 26; at the MB Competition at SoFi Stadium on November 4; and the SCSBOA Prelims at West Covina High School on November 16 (Southern California School Band and Orchestra Association).

If they advance out of the prelims, they will participate in the Championships on November 23 (Location TBD).

Show up, cheer them on and wish them luck for the season. If a resident would like to donate to the band program, which receives most of its funding from parents, go to  https://givebutter.com/paliband.

The Palisades High School band performs at halftime of the football games.
Photo: RICH SCHMITT

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Getty Villa Revives Ancient Hero in Outdoor Theater Production

Eric Berryman as Memnon and Jesse Corbin as Achilles
in the foreground with Jesse J. Perez as Nestor and
Andrea Patterson as Helen in the background.
© Craig Schwartz Photography

By LIBBY MOTIKA

Circling the News Contributor

Over the 18 years that the Getty Villa has been presenting Greek and Roman drama, the Trojan War, its triumphant heroes and tragic outcomes have dominated thematically.

This is the greatest battle in Greek history, followed in the two great epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey.  “Agamemnon” described the return of the Greek hero after 10 years away. “The Trojan Women” reminds us of those at home who suffer while the men continue the endless war.

In the current outdoor theater production, “Memnon,” we are introduced to another player in the epic story, Memnon, the Ethiopian king who journeys to Troy to fight alongside the Trojans in their darkest hour.

Records of this story are long gone; it has been 2,000 years since the first recreation of the Ethiopian warrior.  But writer Will Power has written a script in iambic hexameter that conveys the drama with bold and vivid language.

“Memnon” is directed by Carl Cofield and produced by the Classical Theatre of Harlem in their first major West Coast theatrical production.

As with all Greek drama, alliances, revenge and hubris all come into play in “Memnon.”

The story begins with the death of Hector, Troy’s last hope, cut down by the Greek Achilles. Ten years this war has dragged on, and now Troy is destined to disappear as Achilles is prepared to sack the city.

Hector’s dear friend Polydamas (Daniel Molina) suggests beseeching Memnon, who rules over all of Africa and India, to bring his mighty army to fight for Troy.

There is resentment on both sides, however. The Trojan king Priam resists, while Polydamas pleads with him, reminding Priam that Memnon is family—Priam is his uncle. “Time washes all resentment away,” he insists. “The great Memnon must come.”

All that ensues is the imagination of the playwright as Memnon is only briefly mentioned in the “Odyssey.”

Memnon (Eric Berryman) arrives with his vast army but displays a decidedly compassionate strategy. “In Ethiopia, we sidestep war for the most part,” he says. “We capture to calm them, not kill.”

This enlightened philosophy is a foreign concept for Priam, who sees victory as the number of dead bodies.

Memnon agrees to fight for just two days, then he’ll return home to the East. It never felt like home in Troy, he says. “I was Troy, but not fully Trojan. Strangers treated me more kindly than any Trojan ever did.”

His dilemma is confounding: Whether to come to the defense of Troy in possibly a futile risk or to betray his family in desperate need.

Inevitably, the third actor in Greek tragedy is the capricious nature of the gods. The battle to follow is almost preordained. The noble Memnon will meet the victorious Greek warrior, Achilles (Jesse Corbin).

Power employs iambic hexameter to reflect the epic poems like Homer’s “Iliad” and “Odyssey” and Virgil’s “Aeneid.” All used this meter to tell grand stories of heroes, gods, and history

The excellent cast uses this steady cadence to convey the emotions and social order of the kings and warriors, and to propel the narrative forward.  We are reminded of the tragic history of this endless war and can’t help thinking about our modern world’s foolish bellicosity.

“Memnon” continues at the Getty Villa through September 28. Contact: 310-440-7300.

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Brentwood, UCLA Leases on VA Ruled Illegal

This is the north campus of the West L.A. VA.

U.S. District Judge David O. Carter, after a 16-day bench trial, ordered the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs on September 6, to build housing for low-income veterans on its West Los Angeles campus. In his 124-page decision that VA land leases to UCLA and Brentwood School on VA property are illegal because they don’t principally serve veterans.

His ruling could produce a massive headache for Brentwood, an ultra-exclusive private high school just west of the 405.The school’s athletic complex is on 22.06 acres of VA land and is 13 percent of the 300 acres of the West Los Angeles campus.

The area in blue, which contains Brentwood School’s athletic facilities is VA land.

In 2000, when Brentwood negotiated with the VA to build its athletic facility, American Legion Post 283, in Pacific Palisades, opposed it.

“This didn’t have anything to do with vets,” one Legion member remembered. “They didn’t listen to us.”

The construction was not only controversial with veterans, but also Brentwood store owners. A January 18, 2001, LA Times story (“Brentwood Shops Protest VA’s Parking Fee Hike”) because they felt the VA was favoring the school over merchants. At the time Brentwood School was paying VA $300,000 annually.

The story noted “. . .business leaders are questioning what they describe as a ‘sweetheart deal’ between the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the exclusive Brentwood School for rental of a much larger government parcel next to the parking lot at a much cheaper rate.”

The school spent more than $4.5 million in 2001 to build an athletic facility, that includes the football stadium and track, aquatics center, a Pavilion, tennis courts and a weight room and fitness center.

Then, under a 20-year contract, VA Contract Officer Ralph Tillman and Brentwood School Headmaster Hunter Temple said the “sharing agreement” between the VA and the school meant that veterans would have the use of the sports complex, when students were not using it.

The contract was renegotiated in 2016 for 10 years. Brentwood pays $850,000 annually and $918,000 in-kind consideration that includes four categories: upkeep of the site, capital improvement to the site, special programs and events for vets and families, athletic recreational and educational programs for vets.

In a 2017-2018 audit, $670,000 of the non-monetary consideration was spent on the upkeep, repair and replacement costs of the high school athletic facilities.

From September 29, 2021, through September 28, 2022, Brentwood’s total rent was $850,000, with $1,135,235 for in-kind consideration. In November 2021, the VA executed a revocable license with the school, for 20 tiny shelters (valued at $200,000).

According to a January 21, 2019, LA. Times Story (“UCLA and Brentwood School Accused of Shortchanging Veterans at West L.A. Facility”) VA Inspector General Michael Missal said the Brentwood School misused its lease “because the principal purpose of this lease is to provide the Brentwood School with continued use of the athletic facilities.”

So, Brentwood School changed the name of its athletic complex to Veterans Center for Recreation and Education (VCRE) and announced it would also partner with vets by allowing them to use athletic facilities, whenever students were not using them.

The Brentwood High School pool and stadium are located on VA Land.

Vets would be allowed to swim in the Caruso Aquatic Center Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 5:30 to 7:30 a.m. and on Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Unless there were practices, meets or matches, then high school students have priority.

Vets who want to use the Pavilion (basketball) or tennis courts could go between 5 and 11:30 a.m. and 8 to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday, Friday from 5 to 11:30 a.m. and Saturday from 2 to 7 p.m. and on Sunday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.  – unless there are games, practices or matches.

CTN asked two vets to apply to the program in March 2023 to see how easy it was to use the school facilities. The process involved several emails, telephone calls and a tour of the campus that stretched over several months. According to the vets, it was not an easy process. One vet said, why would any parents at a high school want ‘strange men,’ wondering around the campus?

This editor drove to VCRE Welcome Center in March, which is off the Japanese Garden on the VA and learned there were about 27 vets signed up so far that year, which must be done on the website (bwscampus.com/vcre).

The entrance for veterans to the Brentwood Athletic Complex is through the VA on the road by the Japanese Garden.

The late Colonel Dick Littlestone was upset about the leases because the Los Angeles National Cemetery was full, and he wanted the VA to build a columbarium, so when he passed, his family would not have to drive to Riverside cemetery. He was told there was no room for a columbarium because at the time the land proposed contained oil pipes for Breitburn Oil and Gas.

The VA had numerous leases with non-vet businesses, that included Sodexho Marriot Laundry Services, UC Regents, Twentieth Century Fox Television, Veterans Park Conservancy, Westside Breakers Soccer Club, Salvation Army, Westside Service (parking), Enterprise Rent-A-Car, Tumbleweed Transportation, a native plant garden, a parrot sanctuary, City of Los Angeles, UCLA, Brentwood School and Breitburn Oil and Gas.

A 2011 lawsuit brought by the ACLU against the VA, saw U.S. District Judge S. James Otero siding with veterans. He gave VA tenants six months to either appeal his decision or terminate their leases. It prohibited the VA from leasing land to private parties “totally divorced from the provision of healthcare.”

In 2011, Enterprise, Tumbleweed and Sodexo left.

Otero in 2013 struck down the leases, saying they were “totally divorced from the provision of healthcare.”

Ralph Tillman, who resigned in 2014, pled guilty to Federal Charges after taking bribes from West Services and received five months in prison. Richard Scott, who owned the company pled guilty to swindling the VA out of at least $12 million, was sentenced to six years in prison.

The Government Accountability Office said the West L.A. VA improperly diverted funds and underbilled leaseholders, potentially losing out on millions of dollars. The 2015 audit found that a private laundry service that missed $300,000 in payments was allowed to remain on the property.

Valentini v Shinseki was a class action lawsuit against Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki and the director of the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System on behalf of homeless veterans with severe disabilities. It also challenged the misuse of the 387-acre VA. In settling the lawsuit in 2015, a new master plan for the West L.A. VA was initiated.

In 2015, the federal government settled a lawsuit accusing the VA of misusing its property. By 2017, most of the tenants on the VA were gone, except for Brentwood, UCLA, L.A. City and oil drilling.

LEASES STILL REMAINING:

UCLA:

UCLA was allowed to construct an artificial turf baseball practice field on the VA, next to Jackie Robinson Stadium.

In addition to Brentwood School, the UCLA Jackie Robinson baseball stadium is on 10 acres leased from the VA. Their 10-year lease required them to pay $300K rent for the stadium; pay $500K for a VA-UCLA Family Resource and well-being center. They will spend $250K to sponsor a homeless mental health and addiction center and $400K for a UCLA Legal Clinic for Veterans.

OIL DRILLING:

WG Holdings SPV, LLC, which has replaced Breitburn and Maverick Resources on a 2.5-acre site by the freeway for oil drilling, is still in operation. Its lease required a monthly donation of 2.5 percent of its revenue to Disabled American Veterans for free transportation.

 LA CITY:

The City of LA was granted the use of the 12-acre park for three years (with the possibility of renewal or extension), which included the baseball diamonds, athletic fields, dog park and a parking lot. In exchange the park will be renamed Veteran Barrington Park. The financial commitment from the city includes 200K per year in Veteran employment, on and off campus; 50K per year in beautification efforts and 100K for design and build-out of Veterans memorial at the park.

The City also agreed to maintain the park, sponsor athletic, recreational, social and therapy programs and make them open to veterans and their families, and finally, the City will seek to relocate the dog park to a new location off campus and downsize the current one by 50 percent.

L.A. City is responsible for upkeep on Veterans Park, which is located on VA land.

 

 

 

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Free Concert Features “Peter and Mr. Wolf”

Noted musical expert and composer Alan Chapman has composed a musical piece Peter and Mr. Wolf, which will be played in concert on September 22.

Introduce your children to classical music with Composer Alan Chapman’s original piece Peter and Mr. Wolf at 3 p.m. on Sunday, September 22. The family-friendly event is Chamber Music Palisades’ first free matinee concert of the season.

Peter and Mr. Wolf is the musical story of an eighth-grader in search of a science project and his somewhat scary science teacher.

You don’t have to have children or teens, to come and enjoy the music in the beautiful sanctuary of the Palisades Community United Methodist Church. The concert is sponsored in part by the Pacific Palisades Woman’s Club and the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, is held in the Methodist Church, 801 Via de la Paz.

Composer and Narrator Alan Chapman will lead audience members through the story, as a woodwind quartet and piano play the music, that supplements and tells the story through instrumentation.

Chapman is heard weekdays on Classical KUSC (91.5 FM). He also produces and hosts “Modern Times” on Saturday nights and “A Musical Offering,” a program of Baroque music Sunday mornings.

He was a longtime Professor of Music at Occidental College and served as a Visiting Professor at UCLA and UC Santa Barbara. In recent years he has been a member of the music theory faculty of the Colburn Conservatory. Well known as a pre-concert lecturer, he has been a regular speaker on the Upbeat Live series since its inception in 1984. He also works closely with the Los Angeles Master Chorale and Pacific Symphony

Well-known musicians Susan Greenberg (flute), Zack Borrowiec (oboe), Michele Zukovsky (Clarinet), Alex Burns-Chay (Bassoon), Sarah Bach (French horn) and Pierre Long-Tao Tang (piano) will perform.

In addition to Peter and the Wolf, Quintet for Winds (Jacques Ibert), Ritual Fire Dance (Manual de Falla) and Trio for flute, clarinet and piano (Adrienne Albert) are on the program.

Donations are welcome in person or through the button below. We are very grateful for these contributions as they enable us to continue providing these wonderful family-friendly concerts click here.

Susan Greenberg, co-founder of Chamber Music Palisades, is also long-time flutist at Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and principal flute at Santa Monica Symphony.

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Emmys Were a Win-Win for Home Audience

 

Dan and Eugene Levy hosted the 76th Emmy awards.
Photo: Courtesy Television Academy.

The 76th Emmy Awards were held September 15, hosted by former Pacific Palisades Mayor Eugene Levy and son Dan.

Radio talk show host Tim Conway Jr. on his September 16 show the next day, described the Levys as funny and enjoyable and quipped that whoever produces these shows, should sign the father-son duo up to do more awards shows, including hosting the Oscars.

By contrast, Variety called the stars of Schitt’s Creek, which won nine Emmy Awards during its run, “affable, although not especially memorable, emcees.”

Sorry, Variety. Social media Tweets supported Conway’s view that the Levys were fabulous.

One wrote “I think Eugene Levy and Dan Levy should host every award show from now on.” A second tweeted “Put Dan and Eugene Levy to host everything.” Multiple X/Twitter users praised the natural chemistry the father and son brought to the show.

The evening’s top winner was Shogun with a record-breaking 18 Emmys. The Bear followed with 11 total wins.

The first presenters of the evening were Steve Martin, former Palisades Honorary Mayor Martin Short and Selena Gomez, whose show Only Murders in the Building received 21 nominations.

When presenting the trio, Eugene joked Martin and Short were The Golden Bachelor contestants.

But the three practically stole the show with amusing quips.

Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez presented at the 76th Emmys.
Photo: X.com

Short started the skirmish, “Steve, let me say what an honor it is to be working with someone who looks like he’s fallen and can’t get up.”

Martin responded, “And let me say what an honor it is for me to be working with someone who looks like a former women’s tennis champion.”

Gomez quipped “And let me say, what an honor it is to work with two men who are this far away from being childless cat ladies.”

The three were also nominated individually. Martin and Short lost to Jeremy Allen White of The Bear and Gomez saw Jean Smart receive the Emmy for Hacks.

Another former Palisades Honorary Mayor Billy Crystal presented the awards for Talk Series nominees/winner. Pretending to read from his diary, Crystal said that after appearing on the Daily Show, Jon Stewart told him they’d grab dinner after the program, but that he waited around and the host never showed up. Same with Seth Meyers. Crystal’s first impression of Stephen Colbert: “Brilliant guy but I wonder if he’s ever seen himself naked.” The award went to The Daily Show.

Reese Witherspoon was nominated for Lead Actress for The Morning Show.                                                                                          Photo: Courtesy Television Academy    

Reese Witherspoon, executive producer and star of The Morning Show, was nominated for Lead Actress, but lost to Anna Sawai (Shogun). Billy Crudup did receive a nod for outstanding supporting actor in The Morning Show.

Perennial Emmy nominee Larry David’s Curb Your Enthusiasm was up for Outstanding Comedy Series, but lost to Hacks. David was also nominated for Lead Actor in a Comedy Series but lost to Jeremy Allen White. Perhaps it’s time for David to consider a political career – and serve as the next Palisades Honorary Mayor.

The evening closed with the Levys on stage joined by their Schitt’s Creek costar Annie Murphy.

“They said the shining star of Schitt’s Creek is going to present the final award of the night, so…” Murphy noted to her onscreen dad and brother.

Eugene pointed out, there’s “a little confusion here.”

The actress responded, “You can stay onstage, but just kind of scootch back a bit.”

Dan clarified that they were about to announce the final presenter: their on-screen mother, Catherine O’Hara, who came on stage to present Outstanding Comedy Series, which was awarded to Hacks.

Two high-profile Palisadians are new Emmy winners.

Jamie Lee Curtis and Conan O’Brien both won Emmys at the Creative Arts Emmys, which were held September 7 and 8, at the Peacock Theater in L.A.

Curtis won Guest Actress in a Comedy for her role on The Bear. This is her first Emmy award.

O’Brien won as part of the writing team for his travel series, Conan O’Brien Must Go. This is his fifth Emmy award.

Posted in Film/Television, Reviews | 1 Comment

CARE Act Supposed to Help Mentally Ill

“Thousands of Californians are suffering from untreated schizophrenia spectrum and psychotic disorders, leading to risks to their health and safety and increased homelessness, incarceration, hospitalization, conservatorship and premature death,” the legislative counsel wrote about SB-1338, the Community Assistance, Recovery and Empowerment (CARE) Court Program.

The Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness have watched with dismay when they realize someone needs help, but if that person refuses it, there’s nothing that these volunteers can do. They’ve worked with at least three different parents of homeless. Parents watch in anguish, with no options, because they are not allowed to seek help for their young adult children.

CARE supposedly will allow loved ones to act sooner.

But like many well-intentioned programs, the most serious flaw of this one is it is voluntary. The person who is mentally ill has to agree to the program.

In a Zoom meeting on August 26, Andres Lizardo (Norwalk Court Operations Manager), Linda Boyd (Program manager III for the Department of Mental Health) and Caitlin McCann (CARE court Coordinator Attorney) described the process.

To be eligible to enter this program, one has to be 18 or older, be schizophrenic or have another psychotic disease. It has to be shown that the mental health of the person is substantially deteriorating, and the person is unlikely to survive without community support.

Before SB-1338, families, roommates, or even a first responder could not request an individual be seen by the court – no matter how outlandish that person’s actions might seem.

Now, a parent can file a CARE form and show evidence of a recent involuntary hold. It can be done electronically at lacourt.org or in person.

After filing, an assessment will be done of the individual. Then a determination will be made of possible treatment, and oversight and implementation hearings will be done. There will be ongoing monitoring and evaluation.

The person being brought to court has to agree to enter the one-year program, because it is voluntary.

The care provided to the individual is required to be least restrictive.

During the Zoom call, the panel said that 230 cases have been filed since the program began in December and they are working on 171 cases. Of those, 20 people have entered into an agreement.

When a case is accepted, the person is automatically given an attorney. There are 50 attorneys with mental health experience, waiting to help clients, according to McCann.

The panelists were asked, if a person says ‘no thank you’ to the CARE program, then what?

Then a judge could still order the CARE program if he/she feels the criteria have been met.

Or there’s always the possibility the person with psychosis could say “not today” and then come back in the future.

At the end of a year, those in the program “graduate,” or they can elect to stay in the program, or they can be asked to stay by a mental health worker.

There are no graduates yet, since the program began in December 2023.

There was initial funding with $26 million for the first counties that implemented the plan and $31 million for all other counties, such as LA. All counties are required to implement CARE by December 2024.

The panel, which has experience with patients with mental illness was asked if they could wave a magic wand to fix the problem, what they would do.

The answer was fast, “Involuntary drug treatment, so the person could see what life is like, again.  Or some mandatory medicine, to shut up the voices in their heads, so we could help them,” was the answer.

Elyn Saks eloquently wrote about her schizophrenia in the book “The Center Cannot Hold.”

At one point in her life, Saks, who is now an associate dean at the USC Gould School of Law convinced her doctor, Kaplan [a pseudonym], to lower her dosage of Zyprexa. But, she starts to experience a return of the disease.

“For some reason, I decided that Kaplan and Steve (her friend) were imposters. They looked the same, they sounded the same, they were identical in every way to the originals – but they’d been replaced by someone or something. Was it the work of alien beings? I had no way of knowing, but I was terrified.”

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Brentwood Beats Pali 33-30 in Double Overtime

Harrison Carter runs a 90-yard TD.
Photo: RICH SCHMITT

At the end of regulation play, Palisades High School Dolphins and the Brentwood Eagles were tied 21-21.

Another minute and the score might have been a Pali win. Brentwood punted to their own 44 with 11 seconds left in the game. Two quick passes from PaliHi quarterback Jack Thomas, took the ball to the 10-yard-line, and then time ran out

Overtime went into effect. After a coin toss to determine which team goes first, a team starts on the 25. Brentwood had first possession and scored; the PAT was not good. Pali had to score, and they did with Harrison Carter taking it in for a TD. The PAT was blocked, and the score remained tied 27 to 27.

Kicker Jack Malloy’s PAT is blocked that would have given PaliHi a win.
Photo: RICH SCHMITT

Pali was given the ball on the 25, Carter ran to the 14, but Brentwood’s defense kicked in. Jack Malloy kicked a 31-yard-field goal to put the Dolphins up 30-27.

The Dolphins needed to hold Brentwood for the win. But Eagles quarterback Ben Mikail was aided by a Dolphin personal foul, which placed the ball on the nine-yard-line. On third down Mikail looked to pass, and saw his receivers were covered. He found a hole in the line and scrambled through to score the winning touchdown, 33-30.

The two schools, Pali and Brentwood, one public, one private, are located about six miles apart off Sunset, and the annual challenge between the two football teams is dubbed “Sunset Showdown.”

PaliHi’s coach Dylen Smith was an assistant to Brentwood Coach Jake Ford for nine years before coming to Pali last year.

“This one hurt a little more,” Smith said after the game. “We missed tackles all night and we didn’t make plays on both sides.” His team is now 3-1.

Late in the first quarter, Brentwood had to punt. Pali fumbled it on their own nine-yard-line, and it was recovered by the Eagles. Several plays later Brentwood capitalized on Pali’s error, scoring a TD, the PAT good.

Palisades thought they were on the score board when quarterback Jack Thomas made a 35-run into the end zone, but holding against the Dolphins brought the ball back. A completed pass to Harrison Carter gave Pali its first TD, Malloy would make the first of three PATs.

The Eagles were up 21 to 7 six minutes in the third quarter. The packed stadium was subdued.  But Carter made a 90-yard return on the kickoff, scoring, and the crowd was on their feet.

Five minutes into the fourth, Thomas would complete a pass to Max Hejazi in the end zone and the game was tied.

Quarter Jack Thomas threw 283 yards and two touchdowns.
Photo: RICH SCMITT

Thomas threw for 283 yards and two touchdowns. He rushed for 76 yards on four carries. Carter gained 98 total yards and three touchdowns.

Defensively, Cash Allen led with eight tackles, five solo and three assists.

After the game, one of the coaches reminded players that “Winning is hard. But nothing his fine, unless it’s hard.”

Palisades will have their first away game at Harvard-Westlake at 7 p.m. on September 20. League starts on October 4 when the Dolphins travel to face Fairfax.

Max Hejazi makes the TD catch in the end zone.
Photo: RICH SCHMITT

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Varat Will Speak on Presidential Control and Immunity

Jonathan Varat

Jonathan Varat, a professor of law emeritus and dean emeritus of the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law will speak about “Presidential Control and Presidential Immunity.”

This important topic will be featured at the Palisades Optimist Club the, Tuesday, September 17 at Janes Hall, the Presbyterian Church, 15821 Sunset Boulevard.

Visitors and community members are welcome to join for food at 9:45 a.m. and the meeting and talk starts at 10.

Varat has taught Constitutional Law I & II, Federal Courts, and Separation of Powers at UCLA. He was awarded the School of Law’s Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1990. He served twice as associate dean of the law school and as its dean from 1998 to 2003.

He is the co-author of a major constitutional law casebook, Constitutional Law: Cases and Materials (with Vikram Amar, 2017), as well as a number of law review articles. He is an expert on federal courts.

Varat’s scholarship focuses particularly on constitutional federalism and freedom of speech. From 2016 to 2019, the school’s chancellor recalled him to serve as chief liaison between UCLA and the Greater Los Angeles Veterans Administration.

Between his second and third years of law school at the University of Pennsylvania, Varat spent more than two years in the U.S. Army including one year as an artillery officer in Vietnam.

After completing his law studies in 1972, he clerked successively for Judge Walter Mansfield of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York and Justice Byron White of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C.

He then practiced as a litigator for two years with O’Melveny & Myers in Los Angeles before joining the law faculty in 1976.

Before becoming a member of the Board of Directors of the Center for Civic Education, of which he is vice president, he was an active participant, teacher, and adviser in a number of the Center’s programs and activities over a few decades.  Varat is also Board Chair of the Los Angeles Waterkeeper.

He is also one of Pacific Palisades original Ridge Runners, who found the Will Rogers 5/10K Run in 1978.

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Baker, a Renowned Saxophonist, Opens Guild Season

 

Jan Barry Baker will open the St. Matthew’s Music Guild Season.

The St. Matthew’s Music Guild season opens on September 27 with renowned saxophonist Jan Berry Baker performing Jacque Ibert’s sparkling Concertino da Camera and William Grant Still’s Romance for alto saxophone and strings.

The concert, with the Chamber Orchestra at St. Matthew’s, under the direction of Dwayne S. Milburn, is at 8 p.m. on September 27 at St. Matthew’s Church, 1031 Bienveneda Avenue.

Baker is Professor of Saxophone and Head of Woodwinds at the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music and performs regularly with the LA Philharmonic, Chicago and Atlanta symphonies and a variety of new music ensembles throughout the U.S. and Europe.

The program will also features a new Music Guild commission, Celebration Triptych, by Dwayne Milburn, composed for the occasion.

Milburn promises a sonic spectacular that will fill every corner of St. Matthew’s stunning interior space as members of the brass and woodwind sections perform from various locations around the church. They will be joined by the church’s 2000-pipe C.B. Fisk pipe organ, also celebrating its 40th anniversary season. The program concludes with one of the most beloved symphonies in the repertoire, Felix Mendelssohn’s vivacious Italian Symphony.

The Chamber Orchestra and Music Guild began in 1985 when a group of professional musicians came together to play in the newly erected St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Pacific Palisades.

Realizing that the building, by famed architect Charles Moore, was both visually striking and acoustically ideal for music, concerts began to attract a larger audience and soon a subscription season was offered. The Music Guild boasts more than 135 subscribing households and is recognized as one of the premiere music organizations in Los Angeles.

Tickets for individual concerts are $45. A Music Guild Season pass for all eight concerts are available for as little as $285. For complete information, reserved tickets and season passes visit MusicGuildOnline.org or call (310) 573-7422.

 

 

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Come Pray with Us

 

“Pray for great things, expect great things, work for great things, but above all pray.” R.A. Torrey

 

In solidarity with Pacific Palisades local congregations, residents and people of all faiths – even those who question prayer – are invited to the fourth meeting of the Palisades Neighborhood Prayer Project.

Hosted by Revive LA, people are invited to the meeting at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, September 17, at the American Legion Hall, at 15247 La Cruz Drive.

“Add your voice along with musicians and vocalists to help lift us all in personal and corporate prayer during this often confusion time,” said organizer and resident Nina Kidd.

Pastors Cyndi and Joe Ramirez, (Revive LA Chapel), with support from Nina and Dave Kidd (from Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church) convene the prayer gatherings.

There will be refreshments and fellowship following the meeting. RSVP: Kidd ([email protected]) or Ramirez ([email protected]). For more information email Ramirez with subject line: “Prayer Project.”

 

“Three things necessary for a successful crusade. The first is prayer, the second is prayer, and the third is prayer.” Billy Graham

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