Zev Yaroslavsky to Sign Book on Sunday in Palisades

Former L.A. County Supervisor and City Councilmember Zev Yaroslavsky will share stories and sign his new book Zev’s Los Angeles at 2 p.m. on Sunday, October 22. The event will be held at a private home in the Palisades Alphabet Streets and an address will be provided when one RSVPs to www.palidems.org.

Zev’s Los Angeles: From Boyle Heights to the Halls of Power. A Political Memoir was released on May 30 and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called the book “A compelling history of our city’s last half century, as conveyed through the life of one of our most impactful leaders.”

Yaroslavsky, the child of Jewish immigrants from Russia, attended Melrose Avenue Elementary, Bancroft Junior High School and Fairfax High School. He earned his bachelor’s degree in history and economics from UCLA in 1971 and a year later his master’s degree in history. He then taught Hebrew in Pasadena and Bel Air temples.

He was elected to the City Council’s 5th District in 1975 when he was 26, and then Mayor Bradley said, “Congratulations. Now you’re part of the establishment.”

“Yes,” Yaroslavsky said, “but the establishment is not part of me.”

In 1986, he and Councilman Marvin Braude authored Proposition U, a ballot initiative that would cut in half the size of new buildings allowed on more than 70 percent of the city’s commercial and industrial property. The measure passed by a margin of more than 2-to-1 and was hailed by supporters as representing the “dawn of a new era” in managing Los Angeles’ growth.

The following year, Yaroslavsky and Braude teamed up again to gather signatures for a ballot initiative that would block Occidental Petroleum Corporation’s effort to drill for oil in the shoreline off Pacific Palisades.

Opponents called the effort “an elitist cause” that would deprive the city of between $100 million and $200 million in taxes, royalties and license fees. Mayor Tom Bradley said the measure was unnecessary given safety precautions Occidental had proposed to prevent an accident.

In November 1988, voters narrowly approved Proposition O, which stopped oil rigs off the shores of the Palisades.

Zev was a councilmember until 1994, when he ran and was elected L.A. County Supervisor. He was elected to five terms, and left the board when he was termed out in December 2014.

While on the Board of Supervisors he obtained ordinances that reduced neighborhood building heights and imposed severe restrictions on hillside development.

Yaroslavsky was credited with orchestrating negotiations concerning the use of potential traffic congestion measurements in determining the scope of a project.

In 2018, Yaroslavsky expressed opposition to SB 827, which allowed dense housing construction near major public transit stations, saying this “will destroy neighborhoods, destroy the sense of place that many of our neighborhoods and our villages represent.”

A year later, he expressed opposition to SB 50, which permitted the construction of duplexes, triplexes and fourplexes on much of the residential land that had previously been zoned exclusively for single-family homes.

“When people around the world think of L.A., one of the things they think of is a home with a backyard. I think much of it should be preserved,” Yaroslavsky said.

He and late wife Barbara (Edelston) Yaroslavsky had two children, David and Mina. David, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge is married to Katy Young Yaroslasky, who was elected to the Los Angeles City Council in 2022.

 

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University of Florida President Ben Sasse’s Letter About Attack on Israel

Dr. Ben Sasse, a former Nebraska Senator, was appointed President of the University of Florida in November 2022.
Photo: University of Florida

(Editor’s note: University of Florida President  Dr. Ben Sasse sent a letter (below) to students and graduates following a vigil held on campus on October 9. The letter was reprinted in the Wall Street Journal on October 13. WSJ said that some U.S. college administrators said, “little or issued equivocating mush” after Hamas’s atrocities, but that Sasse’s letter deserved to be quoted at length.)

Dear Jewish Gator Alums,

I will not tiptoe around this simple fact: What Hamas did is evil and there is no defense for terrorism. This shouldn’t be hard. Sadly, too many people in elite academia have been so weakened by their moral confusion that, when they see videos of raped women, hear of a beheaded baby, or learn of a grandmother murdered in her home, the first reaction of some is to “provide context” and try to blame the raped women, beheaded baby, or the murdered grandmother. In other grotesque cases, they express simple support for the terrorists.

This thinking isn’t just wrong, it’s sickening. It’s dehumanizing. It is beneath people called to educate our next generation of Americans. I am thankful to say I haven’t seen examples of that here at UF, either from our faculty or our student body.

As for us, our educational mission here begins with the recognition and explicit acknowledgment of human dignity – the same human dignity that Hamas’ terrorists openly scorn. Every single human life matters. We are committed to that truth. We will tell that truth.

In the coming days, it is possible that anti-Israel protests will come to UF’s campus. I have told our police chief and administration that this university always has two foundational commitments: We will protect our students and we will protect speech. This is always true: Our Constitution protects the rights of people to make abject idiots of themselves.

But I also want to be clear about this: We will protect our Jewish students from violence. If anti-Israel protests come, we will absolutely be ready to act if anyone dares to escalate beyond peaceful protest. Speech is protected – violence and vandalism are not.

I’m grateful to have heard from so many of you. Like I said at the vigil last night: When evil raises its head, as it has in recent days, it is up to men and women of conscience and courage to draw strength from truth and commit ourselves to the work of building something better – to the work of pursuing justice and pursuing peace. That is what we aim to do through education, compassion, and truth here at the University of Florida.

Sincerely, Ben

Posted in News | 3 Comments

The Tragedy of Dr. Mark Sawusch

Dr. Mark Sawusch (center) was befriended by two grifters, Anthony Flores and Anna Moore.

Many people in Pacific Palisades were patients of ophthalmologist Dr. Mark Sawusch.

One day in 2016, without warning, he seemed to disappear from his offices in the medical building across from Gelson’s, at Via de la Paz and Antioch.

It was only when an April 2023 story came out in the Los Angeles Times (“The Actor, the hairstylist and the Eye Surgeon: Drugs and Death in a Malibu Beach House”), did people learn what had happed to their doctor.

Sawusch, who grew up in Florida, followed in his father’s footsteps, studying medicine at the University of Chicago and doing his residency at Johns Hopkins, before opening a practice in Pacific Palisades.

Twice divorced, he lived in a home, just west of Topanga Canyon, on Pacific Coast Highway.

He was also described as a skilled investor, who turned his success into a vast fortune worth tens of millions of dollars, prosecutors have said.

Sawusch also started having mental issues. Court papers show he was admitted to psychiatric facilities at least eight times between 2016 and 2017. He also had run-ins with law enforcement for petty crime.

A suicide attempt in 2017 led to his admission at the Del Amo psychiatric hospital in Torrance.

Then, two weeks later his life would take another tragedy: he would meet Anthony Flores and Anna Moore at a Venice ice cream parlor.

Moore, an actress with a bachelor’s degree in theater and politics from New York University, who studied at the London Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, met her partner Flores in 2012 at a potluck in Santa Monica. He had started a window-washing business when he graduated from Clovis High School, and the two became partners.

Flores also got a cosmetology license, working on Melrose, and adopted Anton David as his artistic name.

Within weeks of meeting Sawusch, the two had moved into his home, rent-free. They pretended to be his friend.

When Sawusch suffered a severe mental breakdown in September 2107, which led to his arrest and jailing, Flores convinced the doctor to give him powers of attorney.

The L.A. Times reported that “Flores called Patsy Sawusch, 83, and told her that her son had disappeared. Flores offered to search for him if she would pay him. Patsy, who lives in Florida, agreed to send Flores $1,000.

“Flores wrote Patsy a letter asking for $4,688 more, saying he and Moore had bought her son food, got his piano fixed, cleaned his house and visited him at the Torrance hospital. Patsy mailed the check to Flores.

“But she told her son in an email that Flores was just pretending to be his friend and only helping because she was paying him. ‘Stop the money and he will be gone,’ she wrote.

For the next six months, Flores and Moore diverted the doctor’s funds to their own bank account. The two were accused of intentionally isolated him from his family—his mother and sister Carole.

Flores and Moore are said to have given Sawusch LSD.

According to City News Services October 12 story (“Couple Pleads Guilty in $2.7 Million Fraud Scheme Targeting Malibu Ophthalmologist’s Estate”),  “While Sawusch was under the influence of LSD, Flores changed the two- step authentication feature on the doctor’s $60 million online brokerage account after previously changing the phone number listed on the account from Sawusch’s phone number to his own.

“Four days before Sawusch’s death and while he was still under the influence of the LSD, Flores allegedly initiated two $1 million wires from the physician’s brokerage account to accounts that Flores controlled, including Flores’ personal bank account, according to the DOJ.”

Sawusch, 57, died in May 2018. The LA County coroner found it was an accidental death caused by ketamine and alcohol intoxication. The pathologist who did an autopsy found that ketamine and alcohol ‘did not significantly contribute to the immediate cause of death’ and that Sawusch died as a result of two heart conditions: dilated cardiomyopathy and a congenitally narrow coronary artery.

It was only later that his family learned of his wealth. His mom and sister Carole thought he might have been bankrupt because of his mental issues. “Three months after he died, Patsy was stunned to receive a letter from his investment brokerage revealing the doctor had more than $60 million,” according to CNS.

In November 2018, Patsy and Carole got a court order freezing Flores and Moore’s assets and appointing a receiver to track down any of Sawusch’s money the couple had taken.

A federal grand jury in Los Angeles indicted the couple in February 2023, on charges of wire and mail fraud, money laundering, conspiracy and aggravated identity theft.

Flores, 47, who accused of defrauding Sawusch of more than $2.7 million before the doctor’s death, then attempting to siphon an additional amount exceeding $20 million from the estate, initially pled not guilty.

Fores is now expected to enter an October 19 plea to nine charges including conspiracy to commit mail fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy to engage in money laundering, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Flores’ co-defendant Moore, 39, previously pleaded guilty to seven of the indictment’s 12 charges. The yoga instructor/actress, who last lived in Monterrey, Mexico, is scheduled to be sentenced in January.

The couple have broken up.

(Editor’s note: Dr. Sawusch was my ophthalmologist. He was professional and went out of his way to figure out, why this editor’s insurance could only have either glasses or contacts, but not both. He was a nice man and I’m sorry these grifters took advantage of him and his mental illness was never dealt with.)

Posted in Crime/Police | 8 Comments

Ciela Pushes Back Opening to Late November

A new independent living center, Ciela, in the Highlands offers a breakfast nook, with beautiful views.

Ciela, a high-end elder care facility located at 17310 West Vereda de la Montura in the Palisades Highlands, has now pushed back its opening until the end of November.

Initially, the resort-style facility, which will offer independent living, assisted living and memory care, was supposed to open the beginning of October.

Then, at the Palibu Chamber of Commerce ribbon cutting on October 3, people were told the opening had been pushed back to the end of October.

CTN spoke to L.A. City Building and Safety on October 16 and learned that the City had issued a temporary certificate of occupancy to the building.

According to the California Department of Social Services website, the facility capacity is 100, the facility is considered residential care elderly and the status “to open” is pending.

CTN reached out for an update to Ciela General Manager Kevan Sidney on October 16, who responded by email.

“We actually have our provisional license, but the final license (which allows us to move in residents) requires a final certificate of occupancy,” Sidney said. “We are just waiting for some paperwork to be processed in order for the final C of O to be issued. We expect this to be resolved in the next couple of weeks and are targeting an opening date in late November.”

The inside of the ground floor of the building has spectacular views of Los Angeles Park and the Santa Monica Mountains. There is a small café, a bistro, that will be open to the public, daily, per the lawsuit that was brought before Ciela opened.

There is a membership fee, which was initially $25,000. With independent living, rents are paid monthly. A studio apartment starts at $8,395 a month,  a one-bedroom at $12,985, and a two bedroom is $18,845. Everything is month-to-month and if you want to add a second person to any of the rooms, it is an additional $1,500.

Included in the fee are three gourmet meals a day, housekeeping and laundry services, life alert monitoring, Wi-Fi and basic cable, transportation within a 10-mile radius, security and 24-hour emergency call response, 24-hour concierge service and a dynamic calendar of events click here.

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CRIME: Senior Lead Officer Release Report of October 1 through 7

 

Palisades Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin.

Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin wrote in his weekly crime report that “There has been an increase in vehicle license plate thefts and E- bike thefts throughout West L.A.”

He acknowledged that it is difficult to prevent someone from stealing your license plate but recommended the following preventative measures:  1.) Try to park your vehicle in a well-lit area. 2.) You can also use locking fasteners that use specific screws or tools to take on and off. 3.) If you have an E-bike, remove the battery pack when parking or storing it. 4.)  Use a good lock that is extremely durable that might take longer to cut or break.

 

Another homeless man has taken up residence on the sidewalk near Ralphs grocery store. He has been engaged by the Palisades Task Force on Homelessness but has refused services. Los Angeles Police Department spoke to him on Saturday, and he initially left, but now he’s back in town.

PALISADES CRIME UPDATE

AGGRAVATED ASSAULT:

October 5, 8:10 a.m., at Pacific Coast Highway and Channel Road. From a distance, the suspect displayed a pair of scissors in a threatening manner and shouted “Get away or I’ll get you. I’m the devil.” The suspect was placed on a 5150 hold.

BURGLARY:

October 5, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the 14000 block of Camarosa Drive. The suspect shattered the rear glass door, ransacked the location and possibly fled with victim’s property. There was a house sitter, and that person did not know what property was taken at the time the report was filed.

BURGLARY THEFT FROM VEHICLE:

October 5 to 6, 10:30 to 2:45 p.m., in the 200 block of Entrada Drive. The license plate was taken off the vehicle.

October 5, 9 a.m., in the 300 block of Entrada Drive. The license plate was taken off the vehicle.

October 6, 3:35 p.m., at Temescal Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highway. A suspect entered the victim’s vehicle, removed property and fled the location.

October 6, 9:45 to 10:30 a.m., at Temescal Canyon Road and Sunset Boulevard. The suspect entered the victim’s vehicle, removed property and fled location.

October 7, 4:15 a.m. in the 17000 block of Avenida de Santa Ynez. The suspect was seen on security camera, entered victim’s vehicle by unknown means (no forced entry), removed victim’s property and fled the location.

GRAND THEFT AUTO:

October 1, 3:10 to 4:24 p.m., in the 100 block of Entrada Drive. An E-bike was taken from the driveway/garage. (Note: e-bike theft reports are taken on CHP 180 vehicle report forms, which is why they are classified as grand theft auto.)

Posted in Crime/Police | 1 Comment

Potrero Pedestrian Bridge Satisfies California Coastal Commission Requirements

The trail from Friends Street provides a nice view of the Pacific Ocean but the California Coastal Commission requires coastal access from the George Wolfberg Park.

The California Coastal Commission (CCC) has required that there be coastal access for George Wolfberg Park at Potrero.

The CCC also had two other requirements for the new park: parking spaces and a restroom. Initially it was proposed that a parking lot be placed at the base of the Canyon, off Pacific Coast Highway, with a restroom in that same location.

As late as July 2022, in California Coastal Commission report wrote: “The City shall work with Caltrans to prepare revised park plans that shall provide for public parking of not fewer than 10 and no more than 30 spaces on City or Caltrans property at the southern end of the canyon to serve the park. Restroom facilities shall be provided accessible to recreation areas and located on park or adjacent public property. The parking lot and restrooms shall be constructed as part of the final park improvements. Future concessions development may relocate or incorporate such parking and other facilities, but the parking and bathroom facilities shall be provided free of charge, shall be identifiable as public facilities, and their identifying signs shall remain visible from Pacific Coast Highway and the park. If access for parking and construction of a restroom at the south (PCH) end of the canyon is not feasible, the City will submit plans for these facilities at an alternate location for the review and approval of the Commission.”

A pedestrian bridge, which provides coastal access, also provides parking in Will Rogers State Beach parking lot and those beach restrooms satisfies the CCC requirement.

A pedestrian bridge, which can be locked at sunset, limiting night access, would prevent the need to build a parking lot and restroom below the Via de las Olas bluffs.

A special Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, after its regular meeting was called by President Maryam Zar with less than 24 hours’ notice to discuss going forth with the pedestrian bridge, which has now been funded with $11 million by the state.

During the meeting some residents said they had never been consulted about a bridge, and still others said was never discussed.

There are other residents who don’t want a bridge because they feel it will encourage the homeless crossing into George Wolfberg Park at Potrero.

Area 8 Representative Reza Akef, has built three properties on the rim. He has cameras at the construction site. He said there have been no homeless in Potrero, rather his cameras have caught youth smoking and setting off fireworks.

Another person complained that residents were letting dogs run off-leash in the park that was opened in December 2022. This editor reported in April 2006 (“Potrero Parking Plans Draw Fire”) there were complaints about residents walking dogs off-leash and kids setting off fireworks.

Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin also said at the special PPCC meeting that the LAPD Beach Task Force have not found homeless in Potrero. The same cannot be said for Temescal Canyon Park, which is not fenced. There have been numerous citations for camping in the very high fire severity zone and numerous encampment cleanups.

For people who have not followed the development of the park, the California Coastal Commission has been instrumental in the completion of the George Wolfberg Park at Potrero.

Properties around the rim of the Potrero started slipping into the Canyon in the 1960s and the City acquired them. There was no money to stabilize the canyon, and it looked like houses would continue to “fall in.”  Through former Councilmember Cindy Miscikowski, a deal was made with the Coastal Commission. The city could sell the properties and use the money to stabilize the canyon, with the idea it would be turned into a park.

This was Friends Street before the infill and stabilizing of Potrero Canyon.

This editor started reporting on Potrero in 2006 and most of those pieces can be found in the Palisadian-Post archives. (My name has been taken off the stories replaced with the name dev.)

An October 2007 story (“Rec and Parks: Frontera Drive Will Stay Open), reported that “The Coastal Commission permit for Potrero, granted in 1996, mandated certain requirements, which include no fewer than 10 and no more than 30 parking spaces, as well as restroom facilities. Rec and Parks West Region Superintendent Debby Rolland is hopeful that if additional parking is found near the Rec Center, the condition will be met and there will be no need to provide for parking at PCH.

“If that is not the case, two PCH parking options were presented. The first was parking and a restroom at the old Occidental site adjacent to Potrero Canyon. Rolland nixed that option because of public safety and the maintenance cost of the required restroom. Rolland approved the option of using existing Will Rogers State Beach parking and restrooms if a bridge could be built across PCH.

Then Rolland said. ‘ . . .we have to look at the bigger picture. The park is for all the residents, not just the residents who live next to it, but also for those that live a half-mile away, a mile away or further. ‘

A Palisadian-Post January 2008 story (“Committee to Vote on Key Potrero Park Issues”) quoted the current area At-large PPCC representative Chris Spitz, who lives on the West Rim, “I have concerns about cost, funding, security, maintenance, environmental impact, feasibility of alternatives, and extent of public support. Current community opinion about the bridge should be ascertained to the extent possible. I also note that Pam Emerson of the Coastal Commission recently indicated that the Commission has no position on the bridge at this time and is not opposed to alternatives as long as its goal of beach access is achieved.”

According to a July 14, 2022 report, the CC does have a position  click here.

In 2022, it was guessed that at least $50 million has now been spent on the George Wolfberg park with infill, stabilizing, grading and landscaping. The only real question that needs to be answered is: why did the PPCC spend two and a half hours when all the information exists about how and why a pedestrian bridge is required.

This was the motion that the Pacific Palisades Community Council passed on October 12 with 13 ayes, 3 opposed and one abstaining: “The PPCC should…allow the contractor hired by BOE to conduct meaningful outreach in order to garner the community’s feedback through the process of the predesign phase, and implement the results of the feedback in a substantive way that will address the items of common concern and incorporate community sentiment into the final bridge design, including its public safety elements. These may include, but will not be limited to, hours of operation/open to the public, fences, gates, lock mechanisms, monitoring, law enforcement resources, patrolling, cameras etc…”

The Sunspot Hotel was located at the base of Potrero Canyon. This would be the proposed site for parking and for restrooms for George Wolfberg Park,  unless a alternative such as the pedestrian bridge was found.

Posted in News, Pacific Palisades Community Council | 3 Comments

LM LA Chapter Faces Backlash Over Support for Hamas Attacks on Israel

(This story was printed in the Westside Current on October 13 and is reprinted with permission.)

Supporters of Black Lives Matter (BLM) spoke out against the organization this week, expressing their discomfort after various BLM chapters including Southern California issued statements celebrating Hamas attacks on Israel.

BLM Los Angeles, on Monday, reposted a statement on Instagram in support of Palestine: “As the world grapples with fundamental questions about self-determination and the collective longing for a peaceful world, we must firmly stand in solidarity with the oppressed. In the face of decades of apartheid and unimaginable violence, we should not condemn their resistance but view it as a desperate act of self-defense.”

The post continued:

“Black Lives Matter Grassroots stands united with our Palestinian brothers and sisters who are currently confronting 57 years of settler colonialism and apartheid. Just as Black communities continue the battle against militarization and mass incarceration, let us perceive the struggle in Palestine as an attempt to dismantle the barriers of the world’s largest open-air prison. As a radical Black organization rooted in abolitionist principles, we draw clear parallels between the struggles of Black and Palestinian people.”

In response, user Miyuki Miyagi (@mkmiyagi) posted:

“This is incredibly disturbing. As someone who stands firmly with Black Life Mattering, I condemn your statement in the strongest terms. It is a great shame that you are marring an essential US civil rights movement by condoning terrorism and antisemitism. I defended this movement in my circles against accusations of virulent antisemitism and today I guess I stand corrected. SHAME.”

Another comment on the BLM post stated:

“This is out of touch and disturbing. You’re really championing HAMAS? Really??? What happened this weekend wasn’t ‘freedom fighting’ or ‘a resistance’. It was an attack on civilians, children held hostage, women raped. Honestly this page needs to really reflect and watch some of the videos where naked bodies are being paraded around in the streets while people cheer. Seriously out of touch.”

Carrie Topiel (@ctopes) wrote:

“This is very disappointing. As a Jewish, queer American, I am disturbed by these posts. You have no solidarity or empathy for the Israelis who are also being murdered in this horrific conflict? When Black people and Jewish people have been allies for centuries in a world of hate? To not understand that Jewish people are also indigenous to this conflict-ridden land and not use your platform to spread educated messaging is so very disappointing. Hamas is a terrorist organization whose interest is in wiping Jews off the planet. They do not care about the Palestinian people. The current Israeli government is extremist and horrific. To know that you have no care to show support for the Palestinian lives AND Israeli lives lost in this horrific situation is really upsetting.”

Despite the backlash on social media, BLM Los Angeles Founder Melina Abdulla tweeted in support of Palestine saying, “Los Angeles is with you, Palestine.”

Social media users also strongly reacted to a post from BLM Chicago, celebrating the para-sails used to attack Israel and proclaiming, “I stand with Palestine.”

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Private and Rich Public High Schools Under Pay Soccer Referees

High school referees for the Southern Section make significantly less that City Section schools

Some of the most expensive high schools in the United States, which charge up of $50,000 a year for tuition are now being told by the CIF – Southern Section Commissioner Chris West that they should start looking for soccer referees for their athletes for the upcoming season.

In a statement published September 27, West suggested that private schools such as Brentwood, Crossroads, Windward, Wildwood, Harvard Westlake, Loyola, Archer and Marymount and public schools such as Santa Monica, Culver City and Redondo Union and El Segundo, should use assistant coaches or reach out to local universities for students who might want to be referees.

West wrote in a September 27 newsletter, “When an assigned official fails to appear, the contest should be played, and it will be the responsibility of the host school to provide either an alternate CIF Southern Section official or a mutually agreed upon qualified person to officiate the contest at all levels of competition.

Four options were listed, including using an assistant coach, rescheduling, contacting qualified individuals outside the area or contacting a local university to see if a National Intramural-Recreational Sports Association official group is interested.

The Southern Section doesn’t want to raise officiating fees to match the L.A. City Section (LAUSD), which pays JV referees $75 and varsity referees $88. By contrast referees at private schools via the Southern Section pay JV referees $61 for a 70-minute game and varsity officials make $75 for an 80-minute game.

Even as gas prices have risen to nearly $7 a gallon, JV soccer officials in the Southern Section have not had a raise since 2020. JV fees will not rise at all during the current three-year period (2022-2025). Varsity refs received $68 in 2021 and the next year received $72.

Circling the News contacted CIF Southern Section’s West and asked why some of the richest schools in the country would pay referees less than public schools.

Southern Section spokesperson Thom Simmons initially asked this editor if I had read the September 12 commissioner’s message that explained that pay for referees/umpires for different sports was calculated to be more equitable based on the time spent on the campus.

I had, but sports are so different that it is impossible to compare a wrestling official, who is overseeing two people with limited time periods to a soccer official with 22 athletes on the field with 40 minute halves and no timeouts. It’s like comparing an obstetrician to a dermatologist.

After an email exchange, Simmons wrote October 6, “We are going to respectfully pass on commenting on your story.”

Members of different soccer associations started negotiating in January with the Southern  Section. During negotiation, it was found that soccer officials have historically been unpaid compared to other sports.

When asked, some officials thought that it might be because many soccer refs are immigrants. One person pointed out that often immigrants are economically exploited.

Maybe not only immigrants, but women officials, too. In investigating this story, CTN learned lacrosse officials for boys’ varsity in the Southern Section make $96, girls’ varsity officials make $78.

(Editor’s note: In full disclosure, this editor referees AYSO, club, middle and high school soccer. Officials are required to be fingerprinted and to annually take numerous safety and health courses, such as Safe Sport, concussion, and atrial defibrillation, which are also offered in Spanish. Refs are also required to take courses on the laws and annually must meet to discuss law changes. In order to ref, an official has to pass 100-question test, with a 90 percent or better and to have specific insurance. This editor has worked with numerous officials—and often English is not the first language, but we communicate using the language of “soccer.”)  

Posted in Schools, Sports | Leave a comment

Local Men Return to Israel to Fight

Israeli airlines added flights on foreign routes to bring people back, while the military dispatched transport planes to some European cities to collect soldiers.
Photo: X, formerly Twitter

On October 10, the Israel Defense Forces said it called up more than 360,000 of its reserves in the wake of Hamas’ surprise attack.

One of those returning to Israel was Daniel Kalmanovich, who has a dual citizenship. He had just returned three months ago to the United States after serving three years in the army.

Residents may remember his mom, Julie Kalmanovich, now Hersch, who was a fourth-grade teacher at Palisades Village School. She was featured on October 10, on ABC Channel 7.

When she learned her son was going back, she said, “I’m devastated. I’m so proud of him, but terrified at the same time. He felt like it was his mission, his calling, his duty to help protect.”

Kalmanovich, 25, who was studying at Pierce College, flew back to Israel on Sunday.

Military service is compulsory for the majority of Israelis when they turn 18. Men must serve 32 months and women 24. After this, most of them can be called up to reserve units until the age of 40.

Many reservists who were interviewed in a CNN story(“I Don’t Really Have Any Other Choice”), said they could not sit watching the news, knowing of friends and relatives who had died or were missing.

The number of the beautiful, young people on this transport plane is heartbreaking. All are willing to fight to prevent the destruction of a community because of the evil that exists.

Interestingly in Pearl Buck’s story “The Christmas Child,” (“Once Upon a Christmas,” 1972) she wrote about a mother giving birth. The doctor admonishes her not to cry.

“I’ll cry if I want to, and I can’t keep from thinking that—that he won’t stay a baby,” she sobbed. “He’ll grow up and be a man and he’ll go off too, to some Vietnam or other and be blown to pieces and all this will be of no use. My life will be wasted—all the trouble—

“The love won’t be wasted,” the doctor said. “Love can’t be wasted. It always counts, throughout life—yours and your husbands and the baby’s.”

 

Posted in News | 1 Comment

Taylor Swift Tour Film at the Bay Theater

You did not have tickets for any of the six concerts when Taylor Swift was at SoFi Stadium. You were disappointed when they did not do enough closeups of Swift while she was watching her boyfriend Chief’s NFL player Travis Kelce.

Time to stop despairing and go to see the Taylor Swift Eras Tour concert film, which had previews tonight October 12 at the Bay Theater on Swarthmore. The official release date is October 13.

Yesterday afternoon the Bay staff got the word the Taylor Swift film will be showing at the Bay. The Bay had to rework their schedule and their website overnight to accommodate the screenings.

Rick Caruso hosted Taylor, her fans, friends, and VIP guests at The Grove for the premiere October 11, and the famous shopping center was closed down all day for the event.  It appears the movie will be showing at all Caruso theaters.  Netflix’s other theater, the Paris in New York, does not list any showtimes for the movie.

The Bay will also be premiering the new Netflix film Old Dads this weekend. One person wrote, “I think that’s kind of amusing, because when I took my daughter and her friends to Taylor Swift concerts in the past, I noticed that there were always a lot of us old dads there.”

For tickets: click here.

Posted in Film/Television | 1 Comment