Armed Robbery in the Huntington Palisades

 

Keys were taken from a Postal worker at gun-point, that would allow a criminal to open the blue United States Postal Service boxes.

A United States Postal carrier was robbed at gunpoint in the Huntington Palisades on August 21.

Gates Security Founder Scott Wagenseller alerted Circling the News to the crime on August 24.

“My staff were informed by the Postal Police that an armed robbery had occurred near Drummond and Ocampo and that the only thing the suspect demanded were postal keys,” Waggenseller said, and noted he wanted to get his information out to the community. “Our concern is that the keys could access apartment and condo lobbies and their mailboxes, and the curbside blue boxes in 90272.”

Circling the News contacted Palisades Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin, who confirmed, “Yes, there was a US Postal carrier that was held up at gun point this past Monday afternoon in the 700 block of Ocampo.”

Espin said that the U.S. Postal investigators are handling the investigation. He said that LAPD did not initially get a call about the robbery.

He said the police have learned that the suspect was described as light-skinned male, possibly Caucasian wearing a black mask, who fled in a gray Tesla.

At the Post Office today, CTN spoke to a clerk who said the mail carrier was okay but shaken up about having a gun pulled on him. The suspect was also described as light-skinned possibly Caucasian or Persian, and that there was a second person in the car.

She said that Postal Investigators had probably already changed the locks so that the stolen keys would not work on the mailboxes.

The clerk also said that postal thieves will take checks and “wash them,” which allows them to write in a different amount.

If residents have put checks in any of the blue U.S. Postal boxes, over this time period, they might want to confirm that checks have been cashed by the correct entity and for the correct amount.

The clerk said that people at the office were nervous and scared. She said last week, a worker’s car had also been broken into.

Posted in Crime/Police | 1 Comment

Celebrate the Village Green’s 50th Birthday

Village Green park under construction. A gas station that had been located at the site and its tanks were removed.

The Palisades Village Green is turning 50 years old and the board of directors of this triangular private park are asking the community to join in the festivities from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, August 27.

“We want to celebrate the amazing community that helped bring the Village Green Park to life when it was converted from a gas station to the beautiful little park we all enjoy in the heart of the village,” said Village Green co-president Cindy Kirven.

Antioch Street, next to the Village Green, will be closed and a food truck will be available. Additionally, the Palisades Farmers Market will hold its regular Sunday market, allowing residents to participate in both events.

UCLA student Mia Ruhman, who grew up here and regularly sings with the United Methodist Church on Via de la Paz, will sing the National Anthem to start the program. Rich Wilken will emcee. Look for Randy Young to share information and long-time barbershop owner Joe Almarez to speak.

CD 11 Councilmember’s office will be on hand to make special presentations.

Palisades High School AP Photography teacher Rick Steil will announce the winner(s) of the photo contest. All residents were invited to submit their favorite photos of the Village Green.

There will be several community groups with tables at the park. Activities will include a kids’ art table aided by professional artist Katie O’Neill.

Two bands will perform. The Shambles will began playing after the opening ceremony.

The Westside Jazz Ensemble will play in the early afternoon to help close out the 50th birthday celebration.

That triangular park started as a Standard Service station in 1945, leading one resident to call it “A toilet seat in the middle of the town.”

In 1972, Standard Oil decided not to renew its lease. The newly organized Pacific Palisades Community Council established a five-member Village Green Committee and signed a lease giving the committee an option to buy the land — if it could raise the necessary funds. Starting in October that year, nearly $70,000 was raised. About $46,000 was used to purchase the land and the rest of the money went to park development.

The Palisades Village Green was certified as a California nonprofit and formally dedicated on August 17, 1973.

Several Optimists were integral to the park’s founding, including Wally Miller and Tom McKiernan.

Annually, the board must raise money to pay the DWP, gardeners, fountain upkeep, tree, trash removal, hardscaping and yard maintenance. Unexpected costs such as vandalism and graffiti removal also is factored into the budget.

Residents who would like to donate to the park’s upkeep or to become board members, can go to the website for information. Visit: palisadesvillagegreen.org.

Electrician Tom Doran has repaired the electrical boxes on the Village Green. He has done it pro bono for the nonprofit.

Posted in Parks | Leave a comment

Health Fair this Saturday Sponsored by PALIBU and the YMCA

Simon Meadow will be the site of a Health Fair this Saturday.

A Community Health and Wellness Fair will be held Saturday, August 26, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Simon Meadow, 15551 Sunset Boulevard.

This free fair is co-hosted by the Malibu Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce and the Palisades-Malibu YMCA.

More than 35 exhibitors will be on hand and include the Presenting Sponsor IPS (international Protective Services), and Gold Sponsors: Just Food for Dogs, Skin Five, Mathnasium, Groza Learning Center, the Palisades Dentists and Ciela (senior center).

There will be arts and crafts and face painting for the kids.  Games and races are planned.

Gerry Blanck’s martial arts students will provide demonstrations. New Vibe Gymnastics students will perform. The Palisades Performing Arts and Fitness Studio will also be available to families.

Organizers say that “yummy healthy food” will be available.

Posted in Community, Health | Leave a comment

Readers Disagree about the Combined Malibu/Palisades Chamber of Commerce

A glossy magazine “PALIBU” Guide, proclaimed “Where Pacific Palisades Meets Malibu” and noted that it was Malibu Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce. It appeared in mailboxes this week.

The magazine showed a half-page photo of the Bay Theater on Swarthmore in Pacific Palisades and a half-page photo of the Malibu Pier.

The board of directors of the “new” PALIBU are predominantly from Malibu, including the new chair, attorney Ian Rovan. Of the 16 people listed on the board of directors, three are from the Palisades and include Bob Benton (former CEO of the Palisades Chamber), Agency Realtor Sarah Knauer and Ceila owner Rony Schram.

This editor asked why two communities that don’t have police, fire or school districts in common and are geographically separated would push joint retail businesses and then asked why not combine with another Los Angeles area, such as Brentwood?”

Arnie Wishnick

This editor, who used to love to spend time in the Chamber office that was located on Antioch, chatting with former Chamber Executive Director Arnie Wishnick, concluded, “Oh, Arnie you are missed.”

One person disagreed with CTN and wrote, “PALIBU resonates for folks who live in Sunset Mesa and I’m guessing Castellammare too. I got the magazine yesterday and enjoyed reading it, especially the mix of restaurants.”

Another disagreed and eloquently wrote: “When I first got the PALIBU magazine, I was confused, then angry and then sad.

Confused because PaliBu sounds like a kid’s daycare Halloween plushy.

Angry because the decision and mission to destroy the former Palisades Chamber of Commerce was made by self-benefiting, current and former business owners under supervision from Caruso ‘Community Relations’ executives whose sole job is to dismantle local competition and drive more traffic to their properties.

Sad because many of the great local institutions and community leaders that made Pacific Palisades special have been gutted, silenced and disenfranchised by this new partnership’s marketing campaign to make Caruso’s Palisades Village and ‘friendly’ corporate outlets part of what PALIBU calls a luxury shopping journey through the Palisades to Malibu.

“How does this lumping of limited, corporate Palisades businesses under a shared plushy name make Pacific Palisades unique?

“What business does Malibu or other self-interested organizations have in defining the character and makeup of our town?

“What do the people of Palisades get in return for turning their town into a tourist shopping destination and a new silly, shared name? Tax revenue for infrastructure improvement? Increased funds for community enhancing programs like teen or senior centers, trees and play structures for parks, smooth sidewalks, traffic improvements, benefits for locals?

“No, none of these, just a pay-to-play collection of interests whose sole purpose is to increase profits at the expense of the people who call this place home,” the reader concluded.

Another reader said, “Thank you for your comments on PALIBU. It just came today, and our family was very confused by the combo. I am with your viewpoint…one is not like the other.”

A resident wrote, “the article about the Chamber is right on target.  I am copying some of my friends who are interested in this issue. The Malibu Chamber just does not get it.”

That resident noted that he and some locals had met about the Chamber, and had visited a Malibu Chamber Office. “We have very little in common which I think was your point.  A suggestion has been put forward by the Palisades group that the PP Chamber explore the possibility of joint chamber with Brentwood, which to me makes a lot of sense.”

Another reader agreed with this editor about Wisnick. “Arnie sure was the glue that held the Chamber together. As far as Malibu goes, to make it even more complicated for many, Malibu’s Police, Fire & Animal Control departments are handled by LA County. I agree it would have made sense for Palisades to partner with the Brentwood chamber. I guess there must be some underlying reasons why Palisades joined with Malibu, like $$$.”

CTN gives the final word to a person who wrote “I’d much rather have the Palisades Malibu Chamber as opposed to one with Brentwood. I’ve been to a couple of their mixers and they are great. Malibu to me means sand, surf and mountains. All Brentwood makes me think of is traffic.”

In 2019, Marilyn Crawford was exhausted after packing up the Chamber Office on Antioch. People were told it would be remodeled and then reopened. Her boss Arnie Wishnick is in the back chatting with people who stopped by.  Although it was remodeled, it was then closed.

Posted in General | 1 Comment

Palisades Library to Be Closed Three Weeks

The floor in the foyer and by the reservation desk in the Palisades Library will be replaced.

The Palisades Branch Library, located at 861 Alma Real, will be closed for three weeks for facility maintenance, which includes painting and hardwood flooring replacement. The closure begins August 28, and the library will reopen on Monday, September 18.

The wood flooring has never been replaced since the new library building opened in 2003.

Adult Librarian Barbara Birenbaum wrote that “All holds will be held for patrons until we return. However, you will not be able to place new holds for delivery to our branch until we reopen.”

She said during the library closure, the closest branches for library services will be Brentwood (11820 San Vicente Boulevard) and Venice (501 S. Venice Boulevard).

This library had planned a pop-up Noir Film Festival through 2023, but “We are canceling The Long Goodbye on Saturday, August 26, because we will be moving furniture into the community room that day. It will be rescheduled for when we come back,” Birenbaum said.

This was the first library in Pacific Palisades.

The town’s library was opened in 1922 by the Pacific Palisades Association in a building in Temescal Canyon, north of Sunset. Seven years later, the Los Angeles Public Library established a deposit station on Antioch Street. In 1948, the library was moved to 868 Swarthmore Avenue, where it remained until a library sub-branch was opened at 864 ½ Via de la Paz in 1952.

The library opened at its current location on January 28, 1963.

In 2003 a City of Los Angeles bond issue was passed by voters specifically to build new libraries in the city and to renovate others, including the aging Palisades facility.

The late Mitzi Blahd, who was president of the Friends of the Palisades Library at that time, felt that the town should have an entirely new building on Alma Real, but would require grassroots fundraising to supplement funding by the City. Joined by fellow Friends board members, she spearheaded a multi-year campaign that yielded $850,000 towards the state-of-the-art library that opened in 2003.

The building was designed by KFA Architecture, which had a history of design in Los Angeles. Its first library was built in 1983, first school in 1985, first affordable housing project in 1988, and first mixed-use residential project in 1990. The firm has now designed and built 11 libraries, including the gem in Pacific Palisades.

During the Covid pandemic, a ceiling fire on October 8, 2020, forced the library to close for many months.

Then Circling the News reported, “According to Battalion 9 Chief Joseph Everett, the fire was caused by an electrical light that was arcing (sparking). He said, ‘The fire probably started last night,’ but the smoke was only apparent this morning.’”

When firefighters arrived, they went to the roof to make cuts, not only to ventilate the fire, but to pinpoint the fire and stop it from spreading through the space between the metal roof and the wood roof throughout the building.

The sprinklers, which are in sections of the library, were going off in the area where there was smoke — in the children’s section.

Firefighters covered the books with plastic sheeting and shut off the sprinkler system in order to minimize damage.

Thanks to the quick work by firefighters quick, the wood flooring by the reference desk and in the foyer by checkout was unscathed. Now, the 20-year-old flooring will be replaced.

Posted in General | 2 Comments

Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness Continues to Patrol

This abandoned camp was found by Temescal Canyon Road and PCH. The brush in that area needs to be cleared by Rec and Parks.

The volunteer response team of the Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness spent a busy morning along Temescal Canyon Road on August 23. There is no camping in that area, which is a very high fire severity zone, and signs are posted noting that fact.

Carmen Kallberg and Cindi Young, who have worked on the volunteer response team, and who have stepped in as the organization’s new co-chairs, joined Sharon Kilbride in cleaning up an abandoned encampment in that area.

Located just above the Rotary Club corner, volunteers, which also included Tom Pryor, bagged up the garbage and dragged it to the curb to be taken away. A transient started going through the bags while the volunteer team waited for volunteer Bruce Schwartz to take them away.

Kilbride stopped the transient from pilfering the garbage.

The transient, who appeared to be “off,” then ran around the pump station at the base of PCH and Temescal. PPTFH volunteers, after looking for more abandoned sites, came back to the corner and saw the man had started a fire.

This man set a fire by PCH, if you see him, let Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin know.

They called 911 and LAFD responded, and the fire was put out. The man then ran away and is being sought. If you see him, please call Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin at (310)444-0737 or by email [email protected].

Sharon Kilbride showed photos of the man who started the fire to LAFD personnel.

More than three inches of rain from Tropical Storm Hilary fell along the coast, which has alleviated some of the fire danger, for now.

The brush, at the location the man started the fire, has not been cleared by Rec and Parks. To prevent future fires, that area should be targeted with a brush clean up by the City. CTN has reported the area to LAFD Brush Clearance inspectors.

Another man begging at the base of PCH and Temescal Canyon, was once again offered help and refused it. He seems to move between Malibu and Pacific Palisades. A reminder that “spare change” does not help these people make a real change.

A man was seen coming out of the brush underneath residences in Tahitian Terraces, pulling a suitcase. Kilbride asked LAPD to look further in that area.

Another transient came across PCH from the beach and then went through the fence that is intended to stop people from accessing the Via de la Olas Bluffs.  When asked if he wanted services, he screamed back “no” and when he was told that area was not open to the public, he ignored the volunteers and continued walking.

LAPD searched the area to see if they could find the man that had trespassed or the person who had started the fire.

It was suggested that a drone might be a good way to look for excessive brush and fire dangers in this high fire risk area below the Via de las Olas bluffs. At one time, American Legion 283 Commander Jim Cragg thought his group might be able to sponsor a drone but will have to take the idea to membership.

To see current PPTFH activity, check its facebook page or go to https://palisadeshomeless.org/.

This transient ignored warnings that the area was closed to the public and went through the fence.

Posted in Homelessness | 1 Comment

Legacy of Will Rogers Lives on at Historic Park

This young participant managed to amaze roping expert Will Roberts during Family Day at the State Park.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

More than 300 visitors stopped by Will Rogers State Historic Park on August 13 for Family Day.

The five hour event started with a polo match and then  included tours of the historic ranch house, a scavenger hunt, button making and mechanical horse races.

After watching Brad Langenberg give horse demonstrations, about 65 visitors tried their hands at roping.

Will Rogers State Historic Park Interpreter Archivist Bill Hall said that many Palisades families attended and included one of his favorite cashiers from Vons, Mary, who came for the day with her daughter.

“They participated in all of the events, and her daughter even won a prize during the sack races,” Hamm said. “When they left, Mary said, ‘thank you for the perfect end to the summer break.’” LAUSD started school the next day.

Even though public school has started, there are still numerous activities available in the park, including hiking, picnicking and touring Will’s famous ranch house..

Those attending Will Rogers Family Day saw horse demonstrations by Brandon Langenberg and were allowed to get close to the equines.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

HELP NEEDED TO REPLACE 22 LEGACY TREES:

Hamm said the park is fundraising to replace 22 legacy trees that were felled between January and March. First, several years of drought and then heavy rains this past winter, caused them to topple.

Most of the historic trees were planted by Will Rogers and his crew prior to 1929, meaning that many of them will be turning 100 years old, shortly.

“The family recalled planting 5-gallon specimens along the roads and fence lines. Will used the trees (eucalyptus and pepper) to organize space at the ranch, defining paths of circulation and helping to separate spaces,” Hamm said. He’s asking for Palisadians to help donate to replace the trees.

 

WILL ROGERS RANCH FOUNDATION:

The park allows the public to experience nature firsthand. The ranch is nestled up against the Santa Monica Mountains.

Hamm said, “The park offers the best recreational value I know of. Just pay for parking ($3/hour) and you can picnic, hike the one hour Inspiration Point loop, take a docent guided tour of the historic house (Thursday through Sunday), watch polo matches Saturdays at 2 p.m. and Sunday at 11 a.m., make advance reservations to ride horses (click here) and experience the park just as Will Rogers and his family did in the 1920’s and 30’s.”

Residents are invited to join the Will Rogers Ranch Foundation, which is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to honoring the legacy of Will Rogers. It is an all-volunteer organization, supported by the Rogers family, the Will Rogers Cooperative Association, long-time ranch advocates, the local community and Will Roger fans click here.

Everyone tried their hand at roping during Family Day at Will Rogers Historic Park.                      Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

DOCENTS NEEDED:

New docent volunteers are being sought to lead ranch house tours that are given free to the general public Thursday through Sunday. Docent training begins in September and will offer a chance for people to learn about Will Rogers. “An amazing man that too few people remember or know about,” Hamm said.

Sign up or get more information at [email protected] or call (310) 230-2017.

Docents are needed to give tours of the ranch.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

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Viewpoint—Tell Assemblymember Irwin “No” on ACA 1 and ACA 13

California Speaker of the Assembly Robert Rivas has coauthored ACA13, which would require a constitutional change, requiring initiatives to pass by two-thirds as a way to get around Prop. 13.

The California State Assembly is trying to undermine Prop. 13, with a new Assembly Constitutional Amendment, ACA 1.

In 1978, California voters passed Proposition 13, an initiative which created a constitutional amendment limiting property taxes to the value upon acquisition and tax increases of no more than 2% per year.

Property taxes, from rapidly appreciating property, outstripped incomes in the late 1970s. The passage of Prop. 13, which voters overwhelmingly approved, allowed many to stay in their homes. Voters have continued to support two-thirds vote protection, which has been in the California Constitution since 1879, with the passage of pro-taxpayer initiatives in 1986, 1996 and 2010.

ACA 1 is a direct attack on Proposition 13 because it would cut the vote threshold needed to pass local special taxes, dropping it from the current two-thirds vote required by Proposition 13 to only 55 percent. That change would make it easier for local governments to raise taxes for state and municipal taxes and bonds.

The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association (HJTA) feels that defeating this bill is so important that they will withhold endorsement from any current legislator who fails to vote “no” on ACA 1.

Assembly member Cecilia Aguiar-Curry said, the money is needed to build price-controlled affordable and subsidized supportive housing, water infrastructure, parks, and other projects deemed as “public infrastructure.”

The Jarvis Taxpayers Association notes that California already has among the highest income, sales and gas taxes in the nation despite Prop. 13 tax protections.

In addition to ACA 1, California Speaker of the Assembly Robert Rivas and Assemblymember Chris Ward have also proposed ACA13 to combat a tax-reform push by business groups with its “Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act” initiative, which has qualified for the 2024 ballot.

Some of the Accountability provisions include:

  • Require all new taxes passed by the Legislature to be approved by voters
  • Restore two-thirds voter approval for all new local special tax increases
  • Clearly define what is a tax or fee
  • Require truthful descriptions of new tax proposals
  • Hold politicians accountable by requiring them to clearly identify how revenue will be spent before any tax or fee is enacted

Ward and Rivas, don’t want this to pass, so they have co-authored ACA 13, which would change the constitution, making it more difficult to limit tax increases.

Interestingly enough, Rivas and Ward called it “Amendment 13”—perhaps to confuse voters thinking it has something to do with Prop. 13.

Jacqui Irwin

The Los Angeles Daily News in an August 22 opinion piece (“ACA 13 Is an Attack on You, the Taxpayer”) wrote, “It’s unseemly to try to manipulate the state constitution in order to defeat the taxpayer protections enshrined by Proposition 13.”

If readers agree with that sentiment, contact assemblymember Jacqui Irwin and tell her to vote ‘no’ on ACA 1 and tell her not to support ACA 13.

Email: [email protected] or call (916) 319-2044.

 

Posted in News | 4 Comments

Classes Are Underway at Palisades High School

 

Nearly 3,000 students began Palisades Charter High School on August 16.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

By CHAZ PLAGER

Nearly 3,000 students returned to classes at Palisades Charter High School on August 16 for an 8:30 a.m. start.

Most students returned to school with no small measure of unhappiness, naturally because summer vacation was over.

Some students seemed generally happy to be starting a new school year.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

However, Pali High also introduced two new aspects to school life that have pushed students from unhappiness to straight anger.

Students had been using Chromebooks since 2016. That purchase had originally cost the school $914,000, with the option for students to use personal devices.

But the days of personal devices and Chromebooks are over.

Chromebooks have been replaced by a lineup of Lenovo laptops, using state and federal Covid relief funding that was about to expire. The school spent $814,100 for Lenovo (and in 2025-2026, there will be an additional cost of $455,000).

Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

Students are now required to use these laptops provided by the school, meaning no more personal device use.

With Lenovo laptops comes a program called GoGuardian. This program transmits a live feed of the device’s screen to teachers, meaning they can monitor anytime the students are logged in.

To students’ horror, this monitoring also extends to phones and other devices logged into PCHS Wi-Fi, provided students are logged into their Pali email on that device.

Whether this constitutes a breach of privacy is not yet known, but students are fuming regardless.

Murmurs of “This is bulls**t” and other expletives could be heard emanating from the line where students picked up devices.

Even parent volunteers and staff were baffled by the choice. One staff member was overheard saying “First Chromebooks, now this. Why do they choose to waste their money when they could, I don’t know, fix the bathrooms?”

“This is an honestly excessive overreach into our privacy,” senior Jesse O’Shea said. “I don’t know what this is supposed to accomplish – it’s just increasing animosity between students and teachers, while not really doing much to increase engagement.”

Second, students must now also use E-Pass, an app installed on mobile devices that acts as a pass to use the restroom. The E-Pass tracks and transmits a student’s location to teachers at all times, notifying them should the student go “out of bounds” or off school grounds.

This year also marks the end of students who were at Pali during Covid-19, meaning that none of next year’s students will have missed a year of high school. I can only wish them the best, and hope that theirs will be a better four years than our three. (The class of 2024 missed a year because of Covid and were on Zoom for 2020).

In the meantime, another school year has begun.

Students ran to be in their seats when classes started at 8:30 a.m.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

(Editor’s note: To see more of professional photographer Rich Schmitt’s first day at Palisades Charter High School photos, visit:http://richschmittphotography.com/palihighlow/)

Posted in Schools | 3 Comments

Palisades Symphony Will Perform Opera Favorites

The Palisades Symphony performs under conductor Joel Lish.

A special show for opera lovers, Opera Favorites Concert, will be performed by the Palisades Symphony and guest artists, this Sunday, August 27, at 7:30 p.m. at Palisades Lutheran Church, 15905 Sunset Boulevard. The show is free to the public.

Under Symphony director Joel B. Lish and guest conductor Alan Medak, soprano Christa Stevens, mezzo-soprano Jessica Mamey, tenor Marco Antoino Lozano and baritone Eric Castro will perform a variety of selections from different operas.

Songs from The Marriage of Figaro, Carmen, Pearl Fishers, Faust, Lakme and Tosca will be performed before the intermission.

The second half of the program starts with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s’ Overture to Cosi fan Tutte (Women are like that), followed by two selections from Carmen, a song from La Wally and closing with Giuseppe Verdi’s quartet from Rigoletto).

Joel Lish

The Palisades Symphony was founded by Lish as an evening adult-school class at Palisades High and became incorporated as a nonprofit in 1972.

After adult schools were discontinued by the LAUSD, the Symphony became an independent organization. It also adopted the Brentwood Palisades Chorale, saving it from extinction and providing it with rehearsal space, insurance, sheet music, an accompanist and a choir director. The Chorale performs twice a year.

Seven symphony concerts are offered annually and are free of charge to residents. Most people in the symphony and chorale are volunteers, although a small stipend goes to soloists, choir director, accompanists and the music director.

Checks of any amount can be made out to the Palisades Symphony Orchestra and mailed to P.O. Box 214, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, to support the programming. Visit: click here.

Posted in Arts, Film/Television | Leave a comment