Officer Espin Does Double Duty as Junior Lifeguard Instructor

(Editor’s note: My three adult children participated in L.A. County Junior Life Guard program. When the YMCA pool was still in upper Temescal and my children were young, a wise mother told me about Guards. She said that her kids, who were teens, although not pleased about doing the program, were signed up. “I told them if they ever want to go to the beach without their mom, they needed to take Junior Lifeguards,” she said. “They learn how to be safe in the ocean.”)

“B” Instructor Brian Espin with his fellow teacher at Will Rogers Beach.

Many Pacific Palisades residents are using summer vacation time to go to far away destinations in Peru, Italy or Asia. Los Angeles Police Office, Brian Espin selected a closer vacation locale, Will Rogers Beach.

Espin, Pacific Palisades’ Senior Lead Officer, planned his vacation so he could work as an instructor for the L.A. County Junior Lifeguard program.

The first session of the Junior Guard program ran from June 19 to July 14.

Espin was on the sand by 8 a.m., where he welcomed his group, the B-group (ages 12-13).

When his two-week LAPD vacation time had been used, he did double shifts. He left the beach by 12:30 p.m., went to the West L.A. Police Station, and worked until 10-10:30 p.m. or worked weekends.

CTN met the police officer when he was on duty in the Palisades on July 12. He was asked why he wanted to give up his vacation to instruct 12-13-year olds. “I really enjoy doing this,” he said.

Espin became an L.A. County Lifeguard in 2001. He ran the Venice Junior Guard program in 2003 and 2004.

Then, he was hired by LAPD in 2005, and became a full-time police officer.

He continued to be a lifeguard at local beaches on his days off for the next 18 years.

“It’s satisfying,” he said, noting that he still works as lifeguard, between 10 to 20 days every summer, depending on his schedule.

During that time, he has also subbed as a teacher for Junior Guards. But this is his first full class since 2004.

For those who have never had children in the program, it is open for ages 9 through 17. The JG mission is to educate youth in ocean and beach safety, while working on physical conditioning, basic first aid and environmental awareness. And possibly, get kids interested in becoming lifeguards. There is a minimal cost for the four-week program.

Kids are divided into three groups the A’s (ages 14-15), the B’s (ages 12-13) and the C’s (ages 9-11).

To participate, kids need to be able to swim the 100-yard freestyle in a prescribed time.  Every day, kids generally do a buoy swim in the ocean, so it’s necessary to have swimming skills.

“Will Rogers is known to have good swimmers,” said Espin, who decided to be one of the instructors this year, because his son is in guards. Traffic/commuting-wise, it made more sense for Espin to stay on the beach rather than drive back and forth to his home in the valley.

His son, who is in the B-group “wanted me to be an instructor for either the A or C group,” Espin said, but unfortunately, neither father nor son had a choice.

“Instructors from prior years have priority,” he said. If there is an opening that’s where new instructors are slotted in. “Both instructors from the B group left after last year.”

Brian Espin leads his group in drills at the ocean.

On a typical day, after an ocean swim around a buoy, kids run races on the sand. They play “flags,” a game like musical chairs where they race to grab a stick in the sand, and most recently there’s “water flags.” Kids lie down on the sand, instructors send tennis balls into the water (less balls than kids) and the guards have to run to the edge of the water, dolphin through the waves, capture a ball and bring it back to shore.

Several competitions are held against fellow beaches, Will Rogers hosted Zuma and Santa Monica last week. “My group was first in swimming, second in the run and third in paddling,” Espin said.

The first session ends tomorrow July 14, with the granddaddy of all relays: the Taplin Relays. Held at Dockweiler Beach in Playa del Rey, participants from the Junior Guard programs in Avalon, Catalina, Cabrillo, Torrance, Redondo, Hermosa, Manhattan Beach, El Segundo, Venice, Santa Monica, Will Rogers and Zuma, compete.

Instructors select an 18-person team that consists of six runners, six paddlers and six swimmers. Teams from each beach race against each other in a relay format. All runners must finish and then tag off to the paddlers, who when they have finished, tag the swimmers. At the end of the race, all participants form a nearly 200-person “tunnel of love,” to welcome the last person back to the beach.

The progress of the race can be tracked by the color of the caps the youth wear during the relays. Each beach is given a specific color.

There are financial aid scholarships available, and the Los Angeles County Fire Department encourages participation of those with limited access or opportunity.

“It’s important kids learn to be safe at the beach and how to identify ocean conditions,” Espin said. “We teach them ‘smart swimming.’”

Basic first aid is also taught, and Espin spoke about two youth who were able to revive their father through CPR. When asked where they learned it, they said, “at guards.”

After meeting with CTN, Espin was headed to the Palisades Recreation Center. “There are seven locations that are problematic here and that is number one,” he said.

Kids get in top physical shape at the L.A. County Junior Lifeguard program. Instructor Brian Espin takes them through the paces.

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Lee Calvert, 98, Charms the Audience

Lee Calvert spoke to members of the Woman’s Club. She is next to sports writer Steve Galluzzo, who has covered her numerous championships.
Photo: Carole Taub

One of Pacific Palisades true treasures, Lee Calvert, 98, (she’ll be 99 in August) spoke to the Pacific Palisades Woman’s Club on July 11.

“Needless to say, finding Lee was like winning the lottery,” said Carole Taub, who organizes guest speakers for the club’s monthly dinner meeting.

Taub wrote about the event in the PPWC’s newsletter, “All decked out in her blue vintage suit, Lee Calvert was a smash hit.

“She filled the audience with details of her long life, from hopes of becoming a radio actress, to stage actress, and continuity guru with TV and film scripts,” Taub wrote.

Calvert moved to Tahitian Terrace with her children in the early 60s, so her daughter could attend the newly opened Palisades High School.

Once her children were out of high school, Calvert started her own business as a Hollywood continuity script transcriber. (A continuity transcript is a media script giving the complete action, scene descriptions, music, graphics in detail and in the order in which they are shown on the screen.)

She began her work with “The Lucy Show” for Desilu Productions in 1964. Calvert enjoyed her work for Lucille Ball who owned the production company Desilu with her then husband Desi Arnaz.

Despite being afraid of Lucille Ball, Calvert loved to watch her work. “She would try anything.”

Calvert even worked on the early Tom Hanks sitcom “Bosom Buddies.”

When Desilu sold to Paramount, Calvert said her heart sank. She feared the bigger studios had continuity departments and she was just a “little independent working out of the Palisades.” She learned that many did not, and her business thrived.

To stay relevant with the changing technology, Lee, a 1941 Santa Monica High School graduate, went back to college to learn computers.

For 40 years, Calvert had two women working for her as they provided continuity for “The Good Wife,” “NCIS” and “Rules of Engagement.” She retired when she was 89.

Lee said that she liked competition but was terrible in sports. “When I went to the gym to play on teams, I was the last one picked.”

And then she discovered badminton. Taub wrote, “She’s won hundreds of awards, and known throughout the world in her senior tournaments.

“In the late 80’s, as a result of a knee replacement, she had to give up badminton, and immediately took up table tennis,” Taub said. “And once again, the champaign, Lee Calvert, shined.”

Calvert was inducted in the Badminton Hall of Fame and won three gold medals at the Huntsman World Senior Games in paddle tennis. Calvert says she never thought of age as a handicap.

The nonagenarian told Woman’s Club members that her nightly routine is: push-ups, sit-ups and chest raises, 15 of each.

“A go-getter, this lady, indeed, is a true inspiration,” Taub said. “Give her a challenge, and you’ve got her full attention.”

When Taub, the evening’s moderator asked a final question, “Lee what do you want to do on your 100th birthday?”

Calvert responded, “I want to do pushups.”

Lee Calvert, 98, does pushups every day.
Photo: Alison Burmeister

Posted in Community | 2 Comments

Emmy Nominations 2023 Include Palisadians, of Course

Pacific Palisades’ Bill Hader has once again been nominated for an Emmy as lead actor in Barry.      Photo: Courtesy HBO Max

By BERNICE FOX

The Emmy race is on and as expected, there are Palisadians in it!

Over the course of Barry’s run, Bill Hader has revealed himself as a multi-talent. And he has past Emmy nominations and wins to prove it. Now for the show’s fourth and final season, Barry has 11 nominations.

And Palisadian Hader has three of them as an individual. He’s nominated as Lead Actor in a Comedy Series, and for Writing a Comedy Series and Directing a Comedy Series.

And Barry is up for Outstanding Comedy Series. It’s Hader’s production company, Hanarply, (named for his children Hannah, Harper and Hayley) that gets the nomination, along with a producing partner.

Two actors from Barry in supporting roles are nominated opposite each other this year: Anthony Carrigan and Henry Winkler. Brentwood resident Winkler reacted to his new Emmy nomination by tweeting “This is a wonderful thing!”

Henry Winkler was nominated for an Emmy.
Photo: Courtesy HBO Max

Winkler added “Thank you HBO and Bill Hader and fellow acting partners and crew members for getting me here. Without you I would home tweeting. OH, that’s what I’m doing.”

Despite being known for his wildly popular Fonzie character from Happy Days, Winkler won his first-ever Emmy years later for the initial season of Barry.

Only Murders in the Building is tied with Barry with 11 nominations. Former Palisades honorary mayor Martin Short has one of those nominations. It’s for Lead Actor in a Comedy Series. Short is the only one of the three lead performers from Only Murders in the Building to be nominated. Steve Martin and Selena Gomez were snubbed.

Reaction to the show’s nominations didn’t come from nominee Martin Short. It came from Steve Martin who tweeted “We love doing our show. Congrats to all.”

Former honorary Palisades Mayor Martin Short was nominated for an Emmy. He’s seen with his co-stars Steve Martin and Selena Gomez.
Photo: Courtesy Hulu

If there’s a reason to be emotional over hearing about an Emmy nomination, this is it.

The late Ray Liotta has been nominated for an Emmy for one of his final roles before his death in May 2022. The Highlands resident had a supporting role in the six-episode true-life prison series, Black Bird.

Liotta’s 24-year-old daughter, Karsen Liotta, issued this statement: “I am so grateful to the members of the Television Academy for honoring my dad with this nomination. He was so incredibly proud of his performance in Black Bird.”

Karsen Liotta added “it would mean the world to him to be nominated alongside (co-stars) Taron (Egerton) and Paul (Walter Hauser).”

The late Ray Liotta was nominated for an Emmy.
Photo: Courtesy: Apple TV+

Former Palisades resident Keri Russell has been nominated for her leading role in the drama series, The Diplomat.

Another former Palisades resident, singer Rihanna, is the center of a Live Variety Special that’s nominated for an Emmy. The lengthy title of this nominated special is The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna.

This year’s Primetime Emmy Awards will air Monday, September 18. Hosting duties for the Emmy Awards rotate among the four major broadcast networks – provided the actors and writers strikes are settled. This year it will be on Fox, which is Channel 11 in Los Angeles.

Posted in Film/Television | Leave a comment

Home Decorating Contest Results: And the Winner? The Mass Family on Alma

The Mass Family on Alma Real won the 4th of July home decorating contest this year.                               Photo: Morgan Genser

Ever since its inception in 2008, Palisades families have entered the Patriotic 4th of July Home Decorating Contest. This year, families from the Highlands to Santa Monica Canyon to the mobile homes by the ocean celebrated the holiday by adding flags and bunting to their homes.

The judges in the contest, sponsored by realtor Susan Montgomery, included the 4th of July Parade Marshal Denise Crosby and son Augie Sylk, who played PPBA and was signed by the Kansas City Royals in 2019.

“The toughest aspect of judging is not being able to award a prize to everyone who takes the time; who gives it some thought and then makes an effort to decorate,” Crosby said. “Since the 4th of July holiday is such a hometown treasure and has meant so much to our community, I encourage everyone to get in the spirit next year!”

 

GRAND PRIZE WINNER:

The Mass Family displays the banner that proclaims they are the winner.
Photo: Morgan Genser

The Grand Prize this year went to the Mass Family on Alma Real. In addition to a banner that proclaimed them the top winner, they also received restaurant certificates to Port Via and to Pearl Dragon. For their skin care, they received Aesop Vegan specialty items and a manicure/pedicure from Rosie’s Nails.

Judge Crosby said, “I loved the winner for their clever and artistic use of a balloon sculpture. Very modern.”

Winning was a bit of a surprise to the family, because they were unaware of the annual contest. “Truth be told,” Pamela Mass said, “we didn’t know there was a contest.”

One of the Palisadian Americanism Parade Associations advisors, Rob Weber, was biking around the neighborhood and happened to see Ron Mass outside of his home.

“I stopped to admire the decorations and asked Ron if he’d like to enter the contest,” Weber said. “He said, ‘Yes,’ so I took a photo and entered it in the contest.” Weber said he did that with several other homeowners, including the Grigsby home, who was one of this year’s runners-up.

For this Fourth, Pamela and Ron Mass, who have recently become empty-nesters, “decided to get festive and step up our usual home decorations, since all of our kids were going to be back in town, and we were having a holiday gathering.”

Pamela has a background in environmental design and architecture, and before staying home with the couple’s three boys, designed exhibitions for the Getty and LACMA

But, “the [home decorating] plan was spontaneous,” Pamela said. “We did embellish the usual design with balloons.”

Although the balloons were professionally installed, “our family put up all the other decorations,” Pamela said. “I am somewhat vertically challenged so it was nice to have our tall sons back to help with the installation.”

The boys attended Canyon School and then Windward and “participated in too many Palisades sports teams to count,” Pamela said and added that two have finished college, and the third is currently attending.

“The banner announcing that we won the contest was definitely a conversation piece for our guests and went on display just in time for the 4th of July 5/10K race, which goes by our house,” Pamela said.

“We actually loved all the prizes. They were good ones! Most were from places we know and love, so we look forward to using and enjoying them and discovering some new favorites,” she said. “We were very grateful to have this unexpected surprise and very much appreciate the generous donations and the judges and sponsors who took the time to make this happen.”

For people who have never entered the contest before Pamela recommends having fun with it, and decorating – if it brings you joy.

“We love arriving home and seeing decorations on our house, whether it’s for the winter holidays, Halloween or the Fourth,” she said.

Home decorating judges included (left to right) Kent Sather, Daphne Gronich, Aly Uytengsu, Augie Sylk, Denise Crosby, Susan Montgomery, Tamar and Rob Weber, and (kneeling) Matt Rodman.
Photo: Morgan Genser

 JOAN SATHER AWARD:

The Gold Family invited neighbors to tie a ribbon on their fence.

This year’s Joan Sather Memorial Sponsorship Award went to the Gold family on Las Casas. Although this is the first time they’ve won, Marge Gold said “I do decorate every year and it is very do-it-yourself.”

She said she has a box of miscellaneous July 4 paraphernalia and “I try to use everything along my front fence.”

This year was a little different because she put out ribbon in a basket and invited her neighbors to tie the red, white and blue streamers on her fence.

It was a popular idea and “I didn’t have enough ribbon, so I went to Michaels and spent $14.75 on more.” Gold said that neighbors of all ages stopped by to tie a ribbon.

The Golds feel that they won the Sather award because of the concept of involving neighbors to participate in the patriotic decorating.

“I was quite stunned and thrilled to win,” Gold said. “I would encourage other Palisadians to enter next year. It doesn’t take spending a lot on decorations or having it professionally done.”

She added, “The prizes were awesome.” The Golds received restaurant gift cards to Casa Nostra and Beech Street. They also received a gift certificate to Viktor Bene’s bakery at Gelsons, a certificate to Anawalt and another at Ogden’s Dry Cleaners.

SECOND PLACE AND RUNNERS UP:

The Grigsby Family received the second place award.
Photo: Morgan Genser

The second-place winner this year was the Grigsby Family at 805 Alma Real. They received vegan skincare products from Aesop, the new store in Caruso’s Palisades Village, a restaurant card from Café Vida and Viktor Benes. Certificates from Anawalt, Pali Barbershop and a manicure from Rosie’s Nail Salon.

There were two runners up this year, the Dekernion Family and the Almarez Family.

The Dkernions, located on Alma Real, received certificates to Delizioso Cinque, Viktor Benes, Ogden’s Dry cleaners, a Black Ink gift basket, Anawalt and Pali Barbershop.

The Dekernion Family received one of two runner-up awards.
Photo: Morgan Genser

The Almarez family, located on Sunset, received a restaurant certificate to Taj Palace, Matthew’s Garden Café, K Bakery and a gift card to Anawalt.

The Almarez Family was a runner-up this year.
Photo: Morgan Genser

Posted in Holidays | Leave a comment

Auschwitz Survivor Biniaz Will Be at Reagan Library

Auschwitz survivor Celina Karp Biniaz and author William Friedricks will discuss his book Saved by Schindler: The Life of Celina Karp Biniaz on Tuesday, July 25 at 6 p.m., with a book signing at 7 p.m.

This is part of the programming for the Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. exhibition, currently at the Ronald Reagan Museum through August 13.

Biniaz kept her Holocaust experience a secret because she said the years were too terrible to describe, and she did not believe anyone would understand.

That changed with Pacific Palisades director Steven Spielberg’s film Schindler’s List, which brought the Holocaust and the story of Oskar Schindler to millions around the world. The movie prompted Celina to confront her painful past and begin speaking publicly about it.

“Oskar Schindler gave me my life, but Steven Spielberg gave me my voice,” said Biniaz, who was only eight years old when the Germans invaded her homeland of Poland in 1939.

Over the next six years, the child from Krakow endured the Holocaust as the Nazis took away her schooling and civil rights, then herded her and her family into a ghetto.

When the ghetto was liquidated, and the family was sent to Plaszów, a slave labor/concentration camp, where they witnessed unspeakable horrors.

Ultimately, Celina and her parents landed on Schindler’s list, but before being sent to safety at Schindler’s factory, Celina spent several terrifying weeks at Auschwitz where she faced down the infamous Dr. Josef Mengele.

After the war, she and her family moved to the United States. Biniaz finished her education, including a master’s degree at Columbia Teachers College (New York) got married, had a family, and eventually had a career in teaching.

Celina Biniaz, who now lives in Camarillo, poses with Des Moines biographer William B. Fredricks.
Photo: Des Moines Register

This program is part of a programming series for the exhibition, Auschwitz. Not Long Ago. Not Far Away.

Tickets to this event do not include admission into the museum or Auschwitz exhibition and must be purchased separately at click here. This exhibition brings together more than 700 original objects and 400 photographs from over 20 institutions and museums around the world and has never traveled to the U.S. West Coast…until now.

The curator of the exhibit writes, “No book, no podcast, nor history lesson can prepare you for the impact and power this extraordinary collection of artifacts holds.” The exhibit is recommended for those 12 and older.

To register to hear Biniaz and Friedrick and/or to pre-purchase a book, please visit click here.

After WWII Celina Biniaz and her family moved to Des Moines, Iowa. She graduated from Grinnell College and spoke to the graduating class at that college in 2018.
Photo: Justin Hayworth, Grinnell College

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Additional Sales Tax Proposed to Aid Homeless

A higher sales tax is being proposed for L.A. County to help with the homeless.

If all it takes to end homelessness in Los Angeles County is to raise taxes, the California State Legislature is working on it.

ASSEMBLY BILL 1679

Assembly Bill 1679 would allow L.A. County to further exceed the cap on local sales taxes by a half-percent. The bill has passed the Assembly and is being heard today, July 12, in the Senate Governance and Finance Committee.

California State law limits sales tax to 2% over the state’s 7.25% sales tax. According to that law, sales tax in L.A. County should be 9.25%. Sales tax here is 10.25%, because prior special state laws allowed it. That included Measure H, a quarter-percent sales tax, which passed in 2017.

The proposed AB 1679 would add half percent sales tax, which would be used to fund homelessness services and housing. A half a percent added to the current figure, would be 10.75% sales tax.

Constituents are told that Measure H will expire in 2027 and that AB 1679 would replace it. It is unclear whether the new tax would stay at 10.75% until Measure H expired in four years, or if it would immediately be 10.50%.

The bill states that the “Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique circumstances facing the County of Los Angeles with regard to homelessness and affordable housing.”

Currently, the state of California has the highest sales tax (7.25%) in the country. Oregon, New Hampshire, Montana, Delaware and Alaska have no sales tax, according to a February 2023 story in Money (“Here’s Where People Pay the Highest and Lowest Sales Tax in America”).

Sales tax is known as a regressive tax, because it disproportionately burdens lower-income earners “Sales taxes are levied on what people buy, as opposed to what they earn,” according to an Economic Policy Institute report. “Since poor and middle-income families have to spend more of what they earn just to get by, they are paying a greater share of their income in sales taxes.”

According to Intuit Turbotax, some of the highest combined state and local taxes are found in: Chicago, Illinois, and Long Beach [and Los Angeles], California (10.25%), Birmingham and Montgomery, Alabama and Baton Rouge and New Orleans, Louisiana, (10 %) and Seattle and Tacoma, Washington (9.6 %).

ASSEMBLY BILL 1607

Also being heard today in the Senate Governance and Finance Committee is AB 1607, which would allow the Los Angeles County Affordable Housing Solutions Agency (LACAHSA) to place tax increases on the ballot to fund homelessness programs.

That agency, LACAHSA, was created in 2022 by Senate Bill 679 to put tax increases on the ballot for renter protections. At that time SB 679 was excluded from funding homeless programs.

AB 1607 would remove that restriction from SB 679 and the money could be used for homeless programs.

If AB 1679 and AB 1607 are passed, it means L.A. County voters would vote on tax increases in 2024.

The Daily News wrote on July 12 (“Throwing Good Money after a Lot of Bad”) that “instead of addressing the waste and failures of costly homelessness policies, Sacramento is asking for more tax increases. This would be a good time to call your representatives.”

Senator Ben Allen

Pacific Palisades is represented by Senator Ben Allen (SD24.senat.ca.gov) and Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin (a42.asmdc.org).

Posted in Homelessness | 2 Comments

Honorary Mayor Elections Needed

Palisades Honorary mayors Billy and Janice Crystal, Jake Steinfeld, Ray Leonard and Kevin Nealon all attended the comedy night in 2018.

 

The Palisades Honorary Mayor tradition is one that was started by the Palisades Chamber of Commerce in 1951 with the selection of Virginia Bruce.

Over the years mayors have included Jerry Lewis to Adam West to Anthony Hopkins. A complete list is at the bottom of this story.

The late Chamber of Council Executive Director Arnie Wishnick for decades helped find stars willing to help promote the town by assuming the honorary role.

One of the last major Mayor celebrations “Night of Comedy with Kevin Nealon and Friends” was held in 2018. No less than five honorary mayors were in attendance: Kevin Nealon, Billy and Janice Crystal, Jake Steinfeld and Ray Leonard.

In 2020, Eugene Levy agreed to be honorary mayor. But after a term and then a second, he seems to be moving towards infinity or perhaps marching to become the new honorary town dictator. He has gamely attended fundraisers, ridden in parades and served as a judge in the annual home decorating contest.

Honorary mayor Eugene Levy helped with the Home Decorating contest and holds the banner with PAPA President Matt Rodman. Winners Vicki and Jim Mercer are in the center surrounded by program sponsors Susan Montgomery (left) and Joan Sather.

One reader wrote to CTN in June: “By the way, is Eugene stuck in the office of honorary mayor? Or has he snuck out?

“As a Palisadian, I demand this be dealt with! Unless he wants to remain in office for another term or perhaps forever, we must select a new honorary mayor and give Eugene his freedom!”

CTN adores Levy and would happily make him the Palisades Tsar and keep him in office forever. But we understand. The man has served, he has a successful career and his loving family seeks his attention.

There is no longer a Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce, (1949-2021). That body has recently merged with Malibu.

There has been some disagreement about who should find/select/ask a new Mayor.

At one meeting of the Pacific Palisades Community Council, that group felt it should be responsible for the selection.

“Nay,” said the Pali-Mu Blue Chamber of Commerce, “it should be us.”

CTN thinks the selection should go to the Ho!Ho!Ho! committee, a dedicated group of residents, who worked hard to keep a 69-year Palisades Community Council holiday tradition alive, when the Chamber of Commerce discontinued the event in 2018.

That same year, the committee, which included Lou Kamer, Rosalie Huntington, Lisa Glantz, Heather Lyle, Barbara Edelman, Jim Kirtley, Buddy Chancellor, Tracey Price, Genevieve Bostic, Leslie Campbell, Chase Holiday and Rena Repetti, organized a successful event—and have kept it going the past four years.

I think if given the task, Ho!Ho!Ho! will find and help install a new honorary mayor. If anyone can do it, it’s this crew of volunteers.

 

PACIFIC PALISADES HONORARY MAYORS:

Former Honorary Mayor Ray Leonard was at the 4th of July race.
Photo: Rich Schmitt

Virginia Bruce (1951)

Jerry Lewis (1953)

Jack Owens (1955)

Vivian Vance (1957)

Mel Blanc (1959)

Doug McClure (1961)

Bob Rockwell (1963)

Jerry Paris (1965)

Nanette Fabray (1967)

Peter Graves (1969)

Bob Abernethy (1971)

Ed Andrews (1973)

Adam West (1975)

Walter Matthau (1977)

Bert Convy (1979)

Ted Knight (1981)

Dom DeLuise (1984)

Chevy Chase (1986)

Rita Moreno (1988)

John Raitt (1990)

Bob Saget (1995)

Eddie Albert (1997)

Martin Short (1998)

Anthony Hopkins (2000)

Steve Guttenberg (2002)

Former honorary Mayor Steve Guttenberg ran the 10K 2023 race.
Photo: Rich Schmitt

Gavin MacLeod (2006)

Sugar Ray Leonard (2011)

Jake Steinfeld (2014)

Kevin Nealon (2016)

Billy and Janice Crystal (2018)

Eugene Levy (2020)

Co-honorary Mayors Bill and Janice Crystal posed with members of the community, including Rosalie Huntington.

Posted in Community | 3 Comments

Top Floats Announced from the 4th of July Parade

The Will Rogers Ranch Foundation entry included horses, cars and people lassoing.

The American Legion Auxiliary has announced the top two floats from the Palisades 75th annual Fourth of July Parade.

The Will Rogers Ranch Foundation and Resilient Palisades were selected this year. Each winner will receive a $500 check that will be presented at the Auxiliary meeting on July 19.

Judging the floats this year were auxiliary members Nekeishia Lester Spinner, Stephanie Hubsch and Cameron Brown.

The Will Rogers “float” incorporated ropers, horses and a float complete with a paper cut out of Will Rogers.

Judges wrote, “One of the standout features of their presentation was the incorporation of numerous decorated cars, all adorned with 4th of July-themed decorations. This innovative idea not only added a visually captivating aspect to the display but also symbolized the American tradition of parades and processions that are often seen on this patriotic day.”

The judges noted that the horses from ranch not only enhanced the authenticity, but paid homage to the equestrian heritage of the Will Rogers Historic Park and Ranch House and reinforced the connection of horses in the history of the United States.

The judges also liked “the involvement of youth lassoers. This addition not only showcased the talent and skill of these young individuals but also emphasized the importance of passing down cultural traditions and skills to future generations.”

Judges concluded, “Through their impressive display of decorated cars, inclusion of ranch horses, and involvement of youth lassoers, they successfully crafted an engaging and immersive experience that celebrated the history, traditions and values associated with Independence Day leaving a lasting impression on parade goers.”

The auxiliary has been told that the Will Rogers Foundation plans to use its prize money to restore a player piano located in the historic ranch house.

 Judges felt that Resilient Palisades successfully integrated their mission of addressing the climate and ecological crisis into their float presentation along with this 4th of July theme, “Diamond Jubilee in 2023.”

“By highlighting their core values and engaging with onlookers through literature distribution and seeds, they effectively conveyed their commitment to building a resilient future for the community and the surrounding environment,” judges said. “Resilient Palisades’ recognition for the Most Creative Use of the Palisades 4th of July Theme is well-justified due to their innovative approach in integrating their mission of addressing the climate and ecological crisis into their float presentation.”


The “Vegan for Everything” float was the brainchild of the Resilient Palisades Vegan Solutions team led by Aleks Pavlovic. The 10-foot carton of soy/oat/almond/hemp milk was built by team members the day before the parade.

The paintings including the milk box and veggie burger box were done by Vegan Solutions team member Sara Marti.

On the float, there were five vegan models cooking veggie burgers, lifting weights, DJ-ing, dancing, and demonstrating the benefits of eating less meat.

“Around the base of the float, the team hung posters of movies that remind us eating less meat is good for our bodies and for the climate,” said RP co-founder Ryan Craig.

The prize money will be used to help fund the group’s Clean Air + Water team’s ongoing campaign to buy electric blowers for gardeners who work in the Palisades and are willing to give up gas blowers.

“So far, well over 50 gardeners have begun this journey with us and we hope to help them all in the coming months,” Craig said.

The first time the prize was given for the best decorated float was in 2022 and a check for $1,000 was given to the Palisades-Malibu YMCA. This year the auxiliary elected to give two $500 prizes to encourage greater float participation in the parade.

PAPA President Matt Rodman said, “The Palisades Americanism Parade Association hopes that the American Legion Auxiliary Award for the Best Community Organization Float will become an annual part of the 4th of July Parade. We thank the members of the Auxiliary for their sponsorship of this award.”

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Sunday on New York City’s Upper West Side

Central Park in New York City

(Longtime CTN columnist Bob Vickrey ushers in a fresh new voice to this site by way of introduction to his talented writer friend Ken Williams, who takes us on a cultural stroll along the Upper West Side of Manhattan.)

By KEN WILLIAMS

The Upper West Side is the

quintessential New York

neighborhood– a tree-lined

enclave bordered by Central

Park on the east and Riverside

Park on the west. Dense with

universities, schools of art,

music, theology museums,

houses of worship of all faiths,

Columbia University, Julliard

Jewish Theological Seminary

(largest in the world), Union

Theological Seminary (home

of the social gospel — the belief

that there is Christian communal

responsibility to provide for the

dispossessed. MLK studied

here, as did the Berrigan brothers,

Bonhoffer (the Lutheran pastor and

martyr who stood up to Hitler)

This, the intellectual heart

of NYC, and one of the world’s

most important centers of

learning and culture

Columbia University

To walk these streets is to

walk in the footsteps of countless

luminaries from every walk of life–

the Gershwins (George and Ira),

Lenny Bernstein, Bogie and Bacall

This is where the Roosevelts (both

FDR and Teddy) studied law at

Columbia. The list is endless.

 

All thìs is a prelude to what at

first may seem a rather pedestrian

occurrence — grabbing a cup of

coffee on Sunday morning.

But stick with me here. We are about

to enter a world of wonder–a

nirvana– for the inveterate reader

and writer.

 

Every Sunday in the cafes and

coffee houses on the Upper

West Side, a ritual is performed–

a secular ritual as solemn as

the religious services being

held in the churches, synagogues

and mosques that populate the

area.

To walk into any of these

establishments is to observe heads

lowered, fixed concentration,

while encountering muffled silence.

Although there are laptops

and cell phones aplenty, the single object

of this self-absorption is a newspaper–

The New York Times.

The primary sound heard is not

the clicking keyboard or

a cell phone conversation,

but instead, the rustling of paper being

folded, or a prized article being

torn from the paper to be kept

for future reference.

It seems a cross-section of

NYC citizenry is represented here.

The crossword enthusiast

suddenly shouts “…an eleven-

letter French word for nonchalant”

The crowd– almost on cue–

shouts “insouciance.” The 20 year-

old trust-fund baby–blue-haired with

piercings– is discussing abstract impressionism

art with a retired Jewish couple.

The cabbie is checking results

from the Aqueduct race track.

A drama student from Julliard

is reading the review of her

Off-Off Broadway play (her first)

with her fusion-rock guitarist

boyfriend, who that night will

have his first solo performance

in the Village

 

A young architect is passing

around a five-page spread

in the Times on the 100-year

birth date of the Chrysler building.

A quick conversation ensues–:

Pick your side: NY City’s greatest

building — Empire State or the

Chrysler? The discussion gets

lively. The will to power right brain–

Empire State. I am reminded

of the movie The Fountainhead

with Gary Cooper as Howard

Roark, whose inspiration was the

Empire State. OR, the poetry

of the Chrysler versus the prose

of the Empire State?

Whimsy of the Chrysler or the

cold logic of the Empire State?

 

Then the conversation evolves

into the Times best critic of

architecture — Paul Goldberger

or Ada Louise Huxtable. You’ll notice,

not one– but TWO– Times

critics covering the Architecture

beat. While I found this level

of sophistication stimulating, I

needed to come up for some

air. But I am not complaining,

having just escaped Greg Abbott’s

Gulag (once known as the great

state of Texas)– if only temporarily,

I gathered my wits and jumped

back into the fray.

 

Ah, the New York writer–the

coffee shops chock full of

writers– aspiring playwrights,

Ph.D. students polishing their

thesis, the professor proofreading

the rough draft of his textbook

proposal.

 

This neighborhood seems to

breed the novelist who is haunted

by the spires of the great publishing

houses of New York, which can

be seen over the treetops of Central

Park. So close–a twenty-minute

walk away, but the distance is

infinite to the unpublished.

 

Probably few places in the

world where “words”– spoken

and written– are so important.

Has the battle between print

and pixel been lost? Book

sales are strong, so I hear.

Glutton for punishment that I

am, I will be going to the Strand

Bookstore tomorrow (18 miles

of books). Alas, it is time we conclude

our pleasant little stroll as I reluctantly

make my preparations for return to the

dreaded Gulag that awaits me in Texas.

 

Ken Williams has also written travelogues about London, Paris and the Galapagos Islands. He is a graduate of Louisiana State University and has recently been accepted by the Rice University Masters of Liberal Studies program. He lives in Houston. 

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Obituary- Dr. Susan Love Worked to Eradicate Breast Cancer

Dr. Susan Love

For more than 10 years there was a Dr. Susan Love Foundation for Breast Cancer Research annual 5K walk/run, the “Walk with Love,” in Pacific Palisades.

The first was held in 2008, and nearly $40,000 was raised. Then Riviera resident Helen Dameris, who organized the event said, “After learning more about her work, it became clear to me that if anyone could eradicate breast cancer, it was Susan Love.”

Dr. Susan Love died on July 2 in Los Angeles of recurrent leukemia. She was 75.

Love was born February 9, 1948, in Little Silver, New Jersey. As a child she lived in Puerto Rico and then in in Mexico, where her father was an industrial salesman.

She attended the School Sisters of Notre Dame, who sent her to Fordham University in New York to continue her studies. She graduated and applied to medical school.

She was among the top graduates in the 1974 class of the State University of New York’s Downstate Medical School.

Love completed her surgical training at Boston’s Beth Israel, and in 1988, founded the Faulkner Breast Center at Faulkner Hospital in Boston.

Dr. Susan Love’s Breast Book, first published in 1990, and to be released in its updated 7th edition this year is considered the global “bible” for people with breast cancer by The New York Times. The book has been translated into German, Dutch, Chinese, Japanese, Spanish, and Hebrew.

Love was recruited by the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1992 to found what later became the Revlon UCLA Breast Center.

In 1996, she retired from active practice of surgery to dedicate her time to pursuing the cause of breast cancer and the goal of ending that cancer.

In 1998, Love earned a master’s degree in business at UCLA’s Anderson School. She was appointed by President Clinton to the National Cancer Advisory Board, a position she held from 1998-2004.

She launched the Love Research Army in 2008, which accelerated cancer research by partnering volunteers and scientists for clinical trials.

Love denounced a standard late-205h-century treatment protocol for breast cancer, which involved mastectomy, radiation and chemotherapy, instead advocating for lumpectomy followed by radiation whenever possible. “Wanting to keep your breast is not about vanity,” she said in a 1993 interview in Technology Review. “Its about being intact as a person.”

For 13 years Love convened the International Symposium of the Human Breast, a meeting she established to bring together world-class researchers, clinicians, and advocates from multiple disciplines in an intimate think-tank environment to stimulate ideas, collaboration, and seed-funding opportunities for breast cancer research.

Love’s foundation CEO Clinton Conway said on her passing, “The light that Susan shared with the world has touched so many, and the world will mourn her loss. As an advocate, a researcher, a doctor, a ssurgeon, a friend, an author, and so much more, her legacy will live on forever in the love she showed the world.”

Love is survived by her wife, Dr. Helen Cooksey, and their daughter Katie Patton-LoveCooksey and her wife, Diana Patton-LoveCooksey. She is also survived by two sisters, Christine Adcock and Elizabeth Love, and a brother Michael James Love.  Service plans are pending.

Dr. Susan Love’s Foundation hosted a 5K run/walk in Pacific Palisades to raise funds for breast cancer research.

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