NEWS - Crescenta Valley Weekly
Transcription
NEWS - Crescenta Valley Weekly
Crescenta Valley Weekly TH E F OOTHILLS COMMUNITY NEW S PA P E R SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 w w w . c v w ee k l y . c o mVOL . 5 , N O . 4 Sagebrush Transfer May Be Sooner Than Later Council Approves Transfer of Stengel Field Maintenance By Ted AYALA After decades of waiting, a territory transfer may come as quickly as next month. Supporters of Stengel Field scored a victory on Tuesday when the Glendale City Council approved a motion authorizing the transfer of maintenance, operation and management responsibilities from the city to the Glendale Unified School District (GUSD). The field has been a cornerstone of local baseball since its construction in 1949. It was subsequently named after Casey Stengel, who as manager for the New York Yankees led the team to an unprecedented five consecutive World Series wins between 1949 and 1953. “The Old Professor,” as he was affectionately known by his teammates, was a Glendale resident. Stengel Field currently serves as the home field for the Crescenta Valley High School (CVHS) Falcons, as well as the Glendale Community College (GCC) Vaqueros. They share the venue with the Glendale Little League and Babe Ruth League, as well as the Glendale Angelenos, a California Collegiate Summer League baseball team founded in 2011. Concerns were raised last spring by members of the community over the city’s ability to maintain the venue and its overuse during the summer months. see GCC on page 8 By Mary O’KEEFE T he Sagebrush area of La Cañada Flintridge has two identities: One as a member of the city of La Cañada Flintridge and the other as a member of Glendale Unified School District. Some La Cañada Flintridge residents, backed by the La Cañada Unified School District and the city, want to bring everyone home into one school district. The area known as Sagebrush is located within the city of La Cañada Flintridge along Rosebank Drive at the east end and Ocean View Boulevard to the west, both north and just south of Foothill Boulevard. Children living in the Sagebrush area attend GUSD. La Cañada residents and officials have attempted a “territory transfer” in the past including one in the 1970s and another in the 1990s. The last attempt put both districts in a long legal battle; however, this time the atmosphere appears to be more compromising and congenial than battle-ready. “We are currently meeting with LCUSD administration and Photo by Charly SHELTON Among the schools affected by a territory transfer is Mountain Avenue Elementary School where many Sagebrush students attend. have asked an outside entity, School Services of California, to [work with the two districts],” said Eva Lueck, chief business and financial officer for GUSD. Lueck said LCUSD and GUSD officials met with outside sources that both districts trusted. Both districts are looking at the ramifications of the possible transfer including how it will affect students and budgets. “We are looking at what would be a transition plan,” Lueck said. In past LCUSD governing board meetings, residents spoke during public communications on the matter of the transfer. Tom Smith is a Sagebrush resident and leader of the citizens’ group petitioning the city of La Cañada Flintridge. “There have been so many onoff discussions between neighbors [about a potential] territory transfer during the [past eight years in Sagebrush],” he said, during a LCUSD board meeting and reported earlier in CVW. “Why slice off a part of our community?” Those in favor of the transfer pointed out their children attend a school in GUSD area but are in soccer or other sports activities that are determined by location. They are part of a team with kids they don’t go to school with, which creates conflict to community consistency. The students from Sagebrush attend Mountain Avenue Elementary, then Rosemont Middle School and Crescenta Valley or Clark Magnet high schools. What the future holds for Mountain Avenue Elementary School and its students was a topic of conversation by some as well as other stipulations; however, Judge Stephen Marcus of the Los Angeles Superior Court rejected that agreement. The case is now scheduled to go to trial with the next court appearance scheduled for Nov. 4 and the trial ordered to start within the following 16 days. In court on Friday, Deputy District Attorney Susan Schwartz stated the agreedupon requirements for the plea agreement, which included Drayman admitting his guilt of embezzlement of funds from the MSPA, tax fraud and perjury. He would also be restricted from running for any future public office and would be required to serve 300 hours of community service. There was no jail time in the agreement, which was a fact the judge did not feel was fair. Judge Marcus referred to a probation report that stated Drayman was not eligible for probation. He asked Schwartz the feeling of those who made the charges, the 2011 MSPA board. Schwartz presented a recent letter from former board members and current MSPA executive director Dale Dawson. In it, they Drayman is on the Docket By Mary O’KEEFE File photo John Drayman, seen here when he was on the Glendale City Council, is due to begin trial in November. On Friday, John Drayman, former Glendale city councilmember and former Montrose Shopping Park Association board member, was in court as lawyers proposed a plea agreement, but it was rejected by the judge. In 2011, the MSPA accused Drayman of embezzling from its harvest market. The plea agreement, which had been accepted by both the district attorney and Drayman’s attorney, would have required Drayman to plead guilty to three felonies » NEWS » SPORTS Red Carpet Event to Benefit Autism Organization Still Banged Up, Still Winning Pa g e 3 Pa g e 1 3 see SAGEBRUSH on page 8 see DRAYMAN on page 8 » BETWEEN FRIENDS Nordstrom Welcomed with Gala Pa g e 1 5 Page 2 www.cvweekly.com from the desk of the publisher Getting to Know … Your Local Chambers This is the time of the year when our local chambers of commerce – Crescenta Valley, Montrose-Verdugo City, Sunland-Tujunga, La Cañada Flintridge and Glendale – start ramping up. Just last week, the CV, MV and LCF chambers hosted a tri-city business expo up at USC Verdugo Hills Hospital. This well-attended event hosted over 60 businesses that had the opportunity to present information (and sometimes samples) of their business to over 500 people. Those who attended learned of local goods and services and tasted some wonderful food. On Saturday, the CVCOC is holding its annual 5K run/walk at Two Strike Park. This is a fundraiser that benefits the chamber and its scholarship fund. Runners, walkers and their pets are welcome to show up at 7 a.m., ready to take on the hills of the Crescenta Valley. Don’t be frightened, though – the 5K isn’t too demanding. I know, I did it last year! The cost is $20 prepay or $25 at the park (5107 Rosemont Ave.). Next month, the MVCOC is organizing what is arguably the biggest party in the foothills – Oktoberfest! On Oct. 5, crowds numbering 30,000 are expected along Honolulu Avenue to get their annual dose of all things German. We’re talking brats and beer, games and music. There’s no cost to attend and you have plenty of time to take part. Oktoberfest is from noon until 11 p.m. (CV Weekly will be there, too, manning a wine booth.) The LCF chamber ushers in the holiday season with the annual Festival of Lights. Festivities include caroling, snow, the announcement of the Miss La Cañada Flintridge finalists and the lighting of the gazebo and Foothill Boulevard. The Festival of Lights takes place the first Friday in December at Memorial Park on the corner of Foothill and La Cañada boulevards from 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Some of my favorite events are part of the LCF Robin Goldsworthy is the publisher of the Crescenta Valley Weekly. She can be reached at robin@cvweekly.com or (818) 248-2740. chamber’s Fiesta Days celebration. This threeday extravaganza takes place over Memorial Day weekend and includes a parade, a barbecue complete with fireworks and the kick-off to the annual summer Music in the Park series at Memorial Park. If you can’t wait until Fiesta Days, you can still get a “taste” of the chamber by visiting its weekly farmers’ market every Saturday morning from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 1300 Foothill Blvd., across the street from Memorial Park. The Glendale chamber is a busy one. It has an active ambassador program and holds regular workshops geared for local businesses. On Oct. 16, for example, it is hosting a tabletop expo and mixer. Exhibitors can showcase their products and services from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Hilton in Glendale. And, like the other chambers, they have monthly networking mixers for business owners. The Sunland-Tujunga chamber hosts the popular Food in the Foothills on Wednesday nights. San Fernando Valley’s gourmet food trucks park along Foothill Boulevard at 5 p.m. between McVine and Oro Vista avenues. Locals and outof-towners can enjoy a treat every week! Artist displays, music, choice foods offered by local shops, cafes and restaurants as well as a host of gourmet trucks to choose from. I sit on the board of the CVCOC and there are times that I really treasure. Each year, the chamber (like most) hosts a recognition luncheon or dinner (we hold a dinner). The recognition banquet spotlights local people and businesses that make the Crescenta Valley so special. We are preparing for our November dinner and are winding up notifying those special people and businesses. I had the pleasure of telling Sue Present of CV Tow that their business was named as Business of the Year and was at the CVTC meeting when President Cheryl Davis was informed that she was named Woman of the Year. On Tuesday night I had the privilege of telling Julie Dowse, in front of 50-plus teenagers and friends at the Fire House, that she was chosen as the Volunteer of the Year. They were all very surprised! Next week we’ll include pictures of the awardees when they received the news. CRESCENTA VALLEY WEEKLY Small Business of the Year 2010 Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce 2013 State of California - 43rd Assembly INSIDE NewS���������������������������������������3 SPORTS�������������������������������� 12 JUST FOR FUN����������������� 18 RELIGION�������������������������� 20 Viewpoints�����������������������9 BETWEEN FRIENDS���� 14 BUSINESS������������������������������ 21 Local Youth���������������� 11 LEISURE������������������������������ 16 CLASSIFIEDS����������������������23 KIM KELLY KRIS KLINE 2341 Honolulu Ave., Montrose (818) 249-1743 Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 September 26, 2013 Weather in The Foothills “Winter is an etching, Spring a watercolor, Summer an oil painting, And Autumn is a mosaic of them all.” ~ Stanley Horowitz Autumn arrived in classic beauty. On Sunday, its first day, a cool breeze swept the skies clear, revealing a blue only seen at this time of year. Foliage, although dry from summer, is just beginning to change color and scatter the yard. Nighttime temperatures dropped to the 50s – more spring-like than winter. Changes are underway, not quite here or there, but certainly everywhere. A “mosaic” …. a good description. Excitement over the change of seasons was quickly squelched as this week progressed. Once again thermometers climbed to summerlike highs with readings well over 90 degrees, but the nights remained cool – typical conditions for September and October. Moving ahead, but not too far … what is predicted for the fall and winter months? After two unusually dry years, we eagerly await the rainy season. It seems the meteorologists are doing the same. The following is a summarization from two sources, the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center and climatologist Bill Patzert of NASA’s JPL. “Without an El Nino or La Nina [condition] present, other, less predictable, climatic factors will govern fall, winter and spring conditions,” according to Patzert. “Long-range forecasts are most successful during (these) episodes.” A determining factor is ocean temperatures off South America that are in a neutral state or “La Nada.” Patzert added, “The ‘in-between” ocean state, La Nada, is the dominate condition and is frustrating for long-range forecasters. It’s like driving without a decent road map – it makes forecasting difficult.” So, now what? In the past, our wettest and driest winters have been during these so-called “neutral periods.” The term doesn’t quite fit with its often devastating, volatile nature of droughts and floods. To keep informed of ongoing changes, visit http://sealevel.jpl. nasa.gov/science/elninopdo/latestdata/. Back to the day-to-day weather of The Foothills: cool and gusty, with a very slight possibility of drizzle are currently in the forecast. Come the weekend and likely next week, the offshore flow returns with above normal temperatures. Predicted highs not to exceed 90 and lows in the 50s, it would be safe to say, “Abby, I have a feeling we’re not in summer (or Kansas) anymore…” Sue Kilpatrick is a Crescenta Valley resident and Official Skywarn Spotter for the National Weather Service. Reach her at suelkilpatrick@gmail.com. September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com Page 3 NEWS IN Brief Chamber 5K on Two Strike MemoriSaturday al Wall Dedication The community is invited Runners and walkers are on Sunday, Sept. 29 to the invited to lace up this Saturdedication of the Two Strike day, Sept. 28 for the Crescenta Park Memorial Wall taking Valley Chamber of Commerce place at noon at the park. 5K run/walk at Two Strike The Veterans of Foreign Park. The event begins at 7 Wars and American Legion a.m. Online registration is still extends a special invitation available at www.crescentato any family members of valleychamber.org/5k or visit those who are named on the chamber office at 3131 the memorial wall. Family Foothill Blvd. in La Crescenta. members are invited as speThe fee is $20 for pre-entry cial guests to the dedication and $25 on Saturday. Each event. Contact Mike Baldwin person will receive a race Tat (818) 326-9856 or email shirt with each paid entry fee. post288@aol.com for more Two Strike Park is located information. at 5107 Rosemont Ave. in La Along with the unveiling Crescenta. of the wall, there will be performances by the CV High Group Show Opens School band, food and more. Fall Exhibitions Two Strike Park is located At Gallery at 5107 Rosemont Ave. in La “Lazy Susan 3: Go Figure,” Crescenta. the third in an ongoing series of art exhibitions continues Audubon Bird Walk in the Glendale Community at Preserve College Art Gallery on through The public is invited on Oct. 17. Saturday, Sept. 28 from 8 The group exhibition a.m. to 10 a.m. to learn about includes the work of Judie birdlife abundant on the Bamber, F. Scott Hess, Gegam preserve. Mark Osokow from Kacherian, Jim Morphesis, the Audubon Society will be curator Mahara T. Sinclaire guiding the walk. He is the and Eloy Torrez. The series of founder of the San Fernando exhibitions highlights figuraValley Bird Observatory, tive artists and their relationwhich is currently monitorship to the art historical fabric ing birds in local hillside of Los Angeles. communities using bird An opening reception will be banding and other methods. held today, Thursday, Sept. 26 Binoculars, sturdy shoes from noon to 1p.m. The artists’ and long pants are recomreception will be Saturday, mended. Sept. 28 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The preserve is located at The gallery is located in the north end of Rosemont the Library Building. Call for Avenue, just past the chain hours at (818) 240-1000, ext. link fence. Due to the 5K 5663 or send a message to run at Rosemont, attendees stama@glendale.edu. Admisare asked to park at the pre- sion is free. serve. The college is located at This event is free to the 1500 N. Verdugo Road in Glenpublic, all ages, no reservadale. tions required. Also on Sept. 28 is the Sea- Relay for Life – son of the Earth, a Rosemont Foothills Holds Preserve tour followed by Event a reception at the La CresAnyone who knows somecenta Library. one who has been affected by La Crescenta resident any type of cancer, whether as Frank Colcord is co-chair of a caregiver or patient, is invitthe Friends of Rosemont Pre- ed to attend the Relay for Life serve. He will lead a leisure- – Foothills kick off event on on ly, educational walk through Saturday evening Oct. 26 to the preserve introducing learn how to “fight back” in La participants to the origins, Crescenta/La Cañada/Moncurrent programs and future trose. The foothills team and plans of the preserve, as well supporters will be gathering at as provide an overview of the the northwest corner of Ocean flora and fauna that grace View Boulevard and Honolulu the site. The walk will begin Avenue at 5:15 p.m. to hear at 10 a.m. at the preserve, inspirational stories and share followed by the reception. experiences. After, candles will Participants should wear be distributed and lit, then a sturdy shoes and long pants. brief procession will take place This event is free to the in the 2100 and 2200 blocks public, all ages welcome; no of Honolulu Avenue to kick off reservations required. plans for the spring Foothills Attendees are asked to Relay for Life event. park for this event at Two Relay For Life - Foothills Strike Park, 5107 Rosemont invites everyone in the comAve. munity to get involved. The library is located at On Oct. 26, FROYO is do2809 Foothill Blvd. in La nating 10% of its sales during Crescenta. this time to Relay for Life. Red Carpet Event to Benefit Autism Organization Courtesy of Actors for Autism LEFT: Supporters of Actors for Autism, a Glendalebased organization, turned out recently for a walk to raise awareness and funds for the organization. ABOVE: Actor Joe Mantegna, shown with president Charlene Tilton, will be honored at the Oct. 2 event. By Michael YEGHIAYAN A tistic spectrum have skills that make them well-suited for a successful career in filmmaking. “A lot of the things in production are repetitive, and people on the autistic spectrum like routine. So it’s a matter of teaching them the steps and once they learn those steps, whether it’s with a camera or editing or lighting, it’s just repeating those steps in different settings,” she explained. “It seems to be a really good match for them. Once they find a passion for something, teaching them the steps is the easy part.” Funding for the program is made possible through a contract with the State of California through the Regional Center system, which provides funding for the developmentally disabled who qualify through an assessment and diagnosis. “If a student tours the program and decides that it’s really something they want to pursue, the state agency can approve it and provide the funding to us directly,” said Wolf. “It prevents parents from having to pay out of pocket, which is really nice.” A number of the students are from outside the area, and Wolf wanted to encourage potential local participants to look into the program if they have interest in the film industry. “We are getting some people from nearby, but a majority of the people are from outside the Glendale, Pasadena, or Burbank area that either have had a connection to us before or maybe attended one or more of our programs,” she said. “[Though] we know that autism is prevalent in the surrounding areas, we feel it is about the parents not really knowing about our program.” For more information about Actors for Autism or to purchase tickets to “Reach for the Stars,” visit www.actorsforautism.org. ctors for Autism, a Glendale-based organization dedicated to training and supporting students with autism who are interested in film and television production, is holding an event honoring actor Joe Mantegna. The event, titled “Reach for the Stars,” will be held on Oct. 2 at Rockwell Table & Stage in Los Feliz. The evening will include a red carpet, silent auction, dinner and program produced by the organization and will feature a range of people involved in Actors for Autism. “The show will offer a feeling of inclusion within our entire community,” said Actors for Autism founder and director Alisa Wolf. “There will be people with and without disabilities, some people who are physically challenged, some with autism, some celebrities, and entertainment from the venue itself.” The evening will also present Mantegna, perhaps best known for his role on CBS’s drama “Criminal Minds,” with the Humanitarian of the Year award. He was one of the first celebrities to work with the organization, which was originally founded in 2004. He is also a member of its advisory board. “He knows what our vision is, and shares in that vision. We felt that because not only has he helped us, and a number of other charities as well, he was our choice for this award,” explained Wolf. “I can’t remember a time [when] we called him asking for help and had him turn us down.” The actor, who has a daughter with autism, was praised for his selflessness and charity. “Having him and having his support really opened a door for us to other professionals in the industry who respect him and felt compelled to come on board with us,” she continued. President Charlene Tilton, best known for her work on the television show “Dallas,” joined the organization in January. She wanted to hold an event to help raise awareness of the program and to help raise funds to supplement the cost of the equipment, particularly in the film and television division. The curriculum is designed by Actors for Autism staff to mirror many of the other professional film schools while dividing individual aspects of the industry into smallRefreshments will be served er steps that are more easily understood. The program, which currently enrolls 10 LATISSE SPECIAL students, is designed to fully prepare its Buy one box (5 ml, new size) $179, receive eye repair cream free students to contribute to the film industry ($95 regular price), also receive a $20 coupon from Brilliant Distinction with minimal compromise. for your next box of Latisse, while supplies last The school also designates goals and objectives for the program in each individual JUVEDERM SPECIAL Instant $50 off one syringe of Juvederm ($375 regular price), instant $75 off area of education to ensure long-term suctwo syringes of Juvederm when used the same day ($750 regular price) cess. “Because of our connections, we have BOTOX SPECIAL the ability to secure internships for them Get 20 units of Botox and receive an instant $50 off (Botox is $9/unit) in the community as well as develop a resume which helps set them above some of Dr. Scott W. Beeve, MD, FACS & Dr. Jerold Beeve, MD, the other people that may be applying. We FACS are proud to be part of this community! know what those types of companies are looking for.” Through an individualized approach, Wolf said that students who fall on the au- Beeve Vision Care Center COME IN FOR A MID-DAY COSMETIC PARTY October 2, 2013 from 2-5pm 818.790.8001 1809 Verdugo Blvd., Suite 150 • Glendale, CA 91208 NEWS Page 4 • September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com Council Looks For County Support to Resolve Big Rig Issue By Jason KUROSU After the CV Town Council covered the latest local developments at its Thursday night meeting, including the ceremony for the war memorial wall at Two Strike Park this Sunday, the upcoming town council election (applications for candidacy available until Oct. 9) and various community fundraisers, the council saw to an emerging issue within La Crescenta: parking restrictions for big rig trucks throughout the community, particularly near freeway overpasses and underpasses. The council ultimately voted to present a proposal for a parking ordinance to the L.A. County board of supervisors for its Nov. 26 meeting. Past council meetings have touched upon concerns of big rig trucks parked for long periods of time around the community, with particular emphasis on the effects on parking availability and driving safety. “It’s not only an eyesore, it’s a hazard waiting to happen,” said CV council member Harry Leon, speaking to the potential danger of big rigs parked next to parking lot entrances and exits, particularly on busy Foothill Boulevard. The council explored avenues for establishing a more restrictive parking ban for trucks parked for long periods of time, similar to the ordinances currently enforced in Altadena, among other cities. David E. Oboza of L.A. County’s Dept. of Public Works visited the meeting to apprise the council of its options and present Altadena’s 2008 ordinance as a possible framework for a local parking ban. Altadena’s parking restrictions do not allow for commercial vehicles exceeding 10,000 pounds to be parked between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. unless the driver can prove he was involved in a local busi- Photo by Jason KUROSO The 210 underpass on Pennsylvania Avenue is a popular spot where big rigs park. ness activity (necessary loading and unloading, local construction, maintenance, etc.). Oboza recommended a 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. restriction, which would only allow truckers to park at night and sleep without disrupting the community during business hours. Ultimately, Altadena’s ordinance became an overnight ban, though the increased restrictions were introduced more in response to RVs than big rig trucks. California Highway Patrol Officer Thomas Miller said the penalty for violating the Altadena ordinance was a daily $63 ticket. Currently, signs exist prohibiting parking in designated areas from 2 a.m. to 4 a.m. for no more than 30 minutes at a time. These signs have been posted since Sept. 11, although council members complained that the signs were doing little to deter trucks from parking overnight. “They park right underneath the signs,” said Leon. “And they leave the truck for a couple of days, too.” Oboza said the current signs are a “temporary solution” until the council can bring its concerns to the board of supervisors. The council was adamant on designing an ordinance in line with strict ordinances in place in surrounding cities. “Everyone has this tight enforcement except for us,” said Corresponding Secretary Robbyn Battles. “That’s why we’re seeing this happening all of a sudden in our community.” The council unanimously voted to recommend a ban at the Nov. 26 board of supervisors meeting. They will propose two versions of a potential ordinance. The first proposal would be for a 24-hour ban. Should the county not agree with the recommendation, the council’s second proposal would be for restrictions between 1 p.m. to 10 a.m., leaving a three-hour window in which trucks could park. The hours were chosen with respect to parking availability for Crescenta Valley High School students and the nearby overpass on Ramsdell Avenue, a frequent site of parked big rigs. “We’ve got to preserve Crescenta Valley High,” said Battles. “They need the parking.” CV Weekly Subscribers! Don’t forget to show your card and receive your reward This week’s featured business: GET 10% OFF ANY SERVICE OR REPAIR* (*Diagonstics excluded. $50 maximum) 2735 Honolulu Ave., Montrose • 818-541-9288 Offer Expires Oct. 12, 2013 SERVICES (may include, but not limited to): • Companion Care • Respite Care • Personal Care/Hygiene (Activities of Daily Living) • Exercise • Casework Management • Driving Service • Errand Services • Laundry • Housekeeping Services • Meal Planning/Preparation • Childcare Services • 24 Hour Care MISSING YOUR CV WEEKLY? Subscriptions are only $1 a week ($52 a year) to get the foothill community newspaper every week in your driveway. Copies can also be found at local businesses that support this publication Albertsons Wine & Kabob Vendome Liquor Berolina Bakery Glendale Unified School District NEWS September 26, 2013 • Page 5 ‘Good Neighbor’ Welcomes Community for Wine-Tasting By Ted AYALA When Rachelle Bowers, newly hired at Kobeissi Properties’ new Montrose office, took one look at her new workplace’s sumptuous surroundings, a single thought seized her mind: People need to know about this place. “In my former life,” Bowers recalled, “I was an events coordinator.” That was before she joined the Kobeissi Properties team. Now the one-time events coordinator saw her gilded office space and in it an opportunity to put her experience to work for her new employer – and for the community. She was also struck by Montrose’s small town atmosphere, its tightly knit group of residents and businesses. That’s when the epiphany struck her that would bring Montrose residents to Kobeissi. “Wouldn’t it be great to make this office a kind of neighborhood hub?” she thought. “I would love to bring the neighborhood together in here.” Her ambition was to turn her office into a nexus for locals to gather and meet, where families feel welcome, a place where, Bowers said, Kobeissi wouldn’t be merely another business in the area, but a “good neighbor.” And the first step to realizing Bowers’ dream? A nice cup of tea. “It’s a great way for people to network,” she said. “People get warmed up, animated. Set up tea for your guests and you’ll get them to talk.” In the last few weeks, Bowers has organized a variety of free community events at the office with another coming around this weekend. A complimentary wine tasting, presented by pourwineandbites. com and sponsored by Shea Case of Skyline Home Loans, is scheduled for Sunday beginning at 1 p.m. Wines – six different brands in all – are provided courtesy of the Boisset Wine Group. Featured wines will include offerings from California wineries Buena Vista, Raymond, Deloach, and JCB, as well as French winemaker Louis Bouillot. Live acoustic guitar music performed by Mario Monico promise to fill out the ambiance. Future events penciled in at Kobeissi Montrose include yoga classes, classes teaching healthy eating habits to children, and “mommy classes.” “Classes that will help new mommies get back in shape and lose that baby weight,” she added. “It’s a privilege to be a part of a community, to be part of people’s special day, and to help the community network. I hope in the future to somehow able to make turn this hub into a local charity.” But until then, wine awaits. The Kobeissi Montrose office is located on 2429 Honolulu Ave. To make a free reservations for Sunday’s wine tasting, call (818) 839-0935. For more information on the events at the Kobeissi Montrose office, go online to www.rachelleiskey.com. Join us for our 2nd Speed Networking Event Thursday, September 26 • 7:00 pm ELEGANTE BANQUET HALL 10519 Victory Blvd • North Hollywood • Create a powerful and well connected professional community • Meet new people and expand your business • Be a part of a friendly environment where each member’s voice counts $15 entry includes appetizers and beverages No host bar RSVP strongly recommended at armenianexperts.eventbrite.com For more information, visit Armenianexperts.com New Name, Same Goals for CVDAPC By Jason KUROSU The Crescenta Valley Drug and Alcohol Prevention Coalition (CVDAPC) held a strategic partners meeting at USC Verdugo Hills Hospital Friday morning, a meeting meant to attract both current coalition members and possible future members to the cause, as the coalition tries to heighten awareness of youth drug and alcohol abuse. Of the most direct impacts to the coalition itself was an announcement by Matt Zakarian, president of the CVDAPC and a Glendale police officer. Zakarian said that CVDAPC would be changing its name to one considerably more concise: The Crescenta Valley Alliance. But for that morning, the meeting still belonged to CVDAPC, allowing local politicians, business and community leaders to hear from those in the thick of enforcement and ask questions about current drug and alcohol laws. Captain Bill Song of the Crescenta Valley Sheriff’s Station introduced himself to the audience. Song brought 22 years of experience with the L.A. County Sheriff’s Dept. to La Crescenta when he was given command of the station in May. Song said he was encouraged by the lack of crime in the area. “Crime here is really low around here, including narcotics crimes,” he said. Sgt. Tom Lorenz of the Glendale Police Dept. spoke on new legislation relating to drug and alcohol issues, including a bill which would put California medical marijuana dispensaries under the oversight of the California Dept. of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) (the bill failed and Lorenz called Call for Specials! Dr. Tom Black Dr. Keri Franco Voted Best Veterinarian for 13 Years 818-249-0022 • www.cvvet.com 3254 Foothill Blvd., La Crescenta, CA 91214 Photo by Jason KUROSU Sgt. Tom Lorenz of the Glendale Police Dept. gave details to the CVDAPC strategic partners meeting on proposed legislation. the decision “a victory.”). The bill also would have made the sale, or even the furnishing or giving away, of alcohol to minors a felony (currently a misdemeanor). Another failed bill proposed extending alcohol sales from its current cutoff time of 2 a.m. to 4 a.m. The audience was also introduced to Victoria Wood, a supervising ABC agent. Wood spoke about the different strategies and programs the ABC utilizes to enforce restrictions on alcohol sales and availability, particularly when alcohol may be sold or made available to minors. Among these is the minor decoy/shoulder tap program. Underage individuals will stand near or outside stores that sell alcohol and either attempt to purchase alcohol or ask nearby adults to purchase the alcohol for them. Those seen aiding the minor in obtaining alcohol are arrested. Wood explained that it’s a three strikes program when it comes to violators, with license suspensions and fines increasing with each strike. “If you have three strikes in three years, you lose your ABC license,” said Wood. Once licenses are taken, they cannot be used in that same location for at least a year, barring protests by residents and/or law enforcement. Wood said the program has been effective and that the frequent use of the program has let alcohol vendors know that they are being watched for any deviations. Wood also spoke about the TRACE (Targeted Responsibility for Alcohol Connected Emergencies) program, which punishes not only drunk drivers but the vendors who sold the alcohol to the offending driver, when an accident involves a person under 21. If alcohol was sold to a minor who was later involved in a drunk driving accident, that vendor can have its ABC license suspended or revoked. Wood praised the coalition’s efforts in preventing alcohol sales to minors, with signs posted near establishments reminding and warning of the legal implications of selling alcohol to minors. “We really rely on law enforcement and the community to let us know of any problems that they are noticing and we are not able to see,” said Wood. “We’re very thankful for this coalition.” Join us for this special Growing Families event. Through the use of great storytelling, Troy Murphy, chaplain to the Green Bay Packers, will help us learn how to shape our family priorities and schedules in a way that fosters and inspires the spiritual growth of our children and family. SATURDAY SATURDAY September 28 September 28 7:00-9:00 7:00-9:00 PM PM Cañada Presbyterian La CañadaLaPresbyterian Church Church Demarest Demarest Family LifeFamily CenterLife Center Hall FellowshipFellowship Hall Troy Murphy serves as Lead Pastor of Green Bay Community Church, Chaplain to the Green Bay Packers and the Brown County Sheriffs Department. Troy has been in a role as youth pastor or lead pastor for over 30 years. He has also served as an adjunct Professor at Azusa Pacific’s Haggard School of Theology. Troy is married to Tricia and has four beautiful daughters. NEWS Page 6 • September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com No Buyers Yet for Twelve Oaks By Mary O’KEEFE Twelve Oaks assisted living residents continue to move out of their homes while the owners continue to look for a buyer for the property. In August, residents were told Twelve Oaks was being shut down and sold. Thus began a firestorm of community concern, disbelief and, in some cases, anger. For about 80 years, Twelve Oaks has been a quiet refuge for seniors; however, owners the be.group decided to sell citing financial reasons and concern for their aging senior community. Twelve Oaks is located on a property that is surrounded by oak trees. Little cabins pepper the area making it look more like a small mountain resort than an assisted living facility. This is one of the reasons the residents of the Twelve Oaks community are finding it difficult to leave. Twelve Oaks is a special place. In the 1970s, the National Charity League of Glendale managed the facility through the Verdugo Hills Sunshine Society, whose name was later changed to Twelve Oaks Foundation. The charity league helped manage the facility until about 10 years ago when they brought in Southern California Presbyterian Homes. SCPH managed it for the NCL of Glendale. The facility was still under the Twelve Oaks Foundation. Then, 10 years ago, the facility was transferred to SCPH. “All but four of the [members of the NCL] stepped down from the [Twelve Oaks] Foundation, then [SCPH] stepped in and had majority control,” said Rose Chan, president of NCL of Glendale. By conducting the matter in this manner, the facility was transferred and no money changed hands in the transition. In 2011, SCPH changed its name to the be.group and a rebranding campaign began. Chan said when the transfer happened the expectation of the NCL board was it would remain an assisted living facility. “[NCL] wanted to keep it going, but didn’t feel past members had the knowledge to run [the facility] the way it should be run,” Chan said. The news of the closure and sale of the facility came as a surprise to NCL – and a disappointment. “We were never advised there were financial issues; the only thing we knew was there was a deficit allocation from the rebranding campaign,” Chan said. She added some of the cost of rebranding appeared to be absorbed by Twelve Oaks. Chan also said the closure and sale was a surprise because the facility was accepting residents “five to seven weeks before we heard [of the closure].” be.group spokesman Dan Hutson has said the facility was not up to the standards of the company’s other assisted living properties. Years ago, those who came to a nursing or assisted living home were in their late 60s and early 70s and were more mobile. Now seniors are in their 90s before coming to a facility like Twelve Oaks and the facility is not suited for those elderly seniors who are less ambulatory, Hutson said. “Everything is ramped. You can get around in a wheel chair and a walker,” Chan argued. She added people who come to Twelve Oaks know the facility and chose to live in the unique setting. Hutson has said the sale will continue and the residents are moving out. New Urban West Inc. was interested in buying the property but has since backed out of the deal. The be.group continues to look for a buyer. The be.group has helped residents find other facilities and helped with the costs of moving, Hutson said. “We are not focused on the sale of the property now,” he said. “We are [concentrating on] a safe transfer of residents. Hutson is well aware of the community’s feelings and admitted the company may have made some mistakes in handling the sharing of the information of the sale and closure. “We should have kept the whole issue of the closing of [Twelve Oaks] separate from the sale of the property,” he said. Neighbors have voiced concerns about what will happen once November arrives and the property is vacant. If there is not a buyer by that time, the property will be left vacant. Hutson said he is not certain of the details but assured that the be.group would secure the property from vandalism. In the meantime, Chan, who is also aware of the community concerns, is going to be at the Crescenta Valley Community Association meeting tonight, Thursday at 7 p.m. at the La Crescenta Library, 2809 Foothill Blvd. Twelve Oaks will be discussed. “I think the community needs to have its feelings known,” Chan said. Another Successful Minibike Reunion By Brandon HENSLEY It’s a numbers game for Joe Sebergandio, and he’s doing well at the moment as far as he’s concerned. His event, the second annual Joe’s Minibike Reunion Tour, brought out many bike enthusiasts to Crescenta Valley Park last Saturday. In fact, it brought out way more than Sebergandio expected. Over 150 bikes were registered and about 1,000 people showed up, said Sebergandio. “That was way, way, way beyond what we expected,” he said. “I would have been happy with 500.” For comparison, last year’s event had 70 bikes registered and around 300 people attending. Sebergandio credited the change in scheduling. Last year the reunion took place on a hot day in August, and this year, on the first day of fall and with shorter hours, it proved to be beneficial. “That was a great decision [to change] because we had a record crowd,” he said. The reunion tour is based in nostalgia for minibikes and the grownups who used to, and still do, play with them. The tour gives people a way to celebrate their hobby and show off the bikes they either bought or built themselves. The event held awards for several different categories, including “People’s Choice,” won by Chris Schneider for his Honda CT70. New to this year were two hall of fame inductees: Dave Miller, a Formula 125 minibike racing champion and renowned minibike builder, and Richard “Mac” McGill, a legendary minibike historian, collector and parts expert. Widespread media attention was there last week as well. “DUB Magazine,” “Hot Rob Magazine” and hotrod.com all covered the show. Also there were members from BCII, Brentwood Communications International, Inc., to record a sizzle, which is very short film defining the mood/ tone of a potential bigger project. Could a reality TV show be in Sebergandio’s future? “It would be a wild dream if something like that were to happen but that’s the type of attention and excitement we’re capturing,” he said. “Maybe there is the potential to capture some exposure on TV. Who knows?” What could also be in the future for the tour is a way to connect with the community in a larger role. “We do want to find a charitable outreach to associate with the event and I’m open to any ideas that folks may have about something that’s worthwhile for the community,” Sebergandio said. In the end, putting on the show is a labor of love for him. Sebergandio had a larger sponsorship this year, including Campbell’s Automotive, but these last two years have not made him money – and he’s not expecting to make a profit anytime soon, which is not a deterrent for him to continue holding more shows in the years to come. “This is far from a profitable venture for us,” he said. “I know from my previous experience promoting car shows that it takes anywhere three to five years [until] you even think about breaking even.” He added, “There’s something so unique about these minibikes that all I have to do is get people there on a consistent basis for a few years … I know I’ll see an increase in sponsors and minibike participation at the show.” NEWS September 26, 2013 • Page 7 www.cvweekly.com CVTC Hosts Pancake Breakfast Photos by Mary OKEEFE The Crescenta Valley High School campus was a busy place on Saturday as people lined up for the CV Town Council Pancake Breakfast. The traditional breakfast was a fundraiser for the CVTC, supporting its various outreaches including the high school scholarship program. Tickets were $5 prior to the event and CVTC offered community non-profit organizations a share in the fundraising. For each ticket CRIME BLOTTER Sept. 20 2900 block of Community Avenue in La Crescenta, a cellphone and gym shorts were stolen from a locked gymnasium locker at Crescenta Valley High School between 11:20 a.m. and 12:20 p.m. Sept. 19 500 block of Foothill Boulevard in La Cañada Flintridge, a resident reported that he had been notified by his bank that money from his account had been transferred into 10 different accounts without his permission between Aug. 5 and Sept. 4. 2400 block of Berkshire Avenue in La Cañada, a purse was stolen from an unlocked vehicle overnight. Angeles County Supervisor Michael Antonovich’s office and Nayiri Nahabedian, president of the Glendale Unified School District board of education. CVTC also recognized Prom Plus on its 20th anniversary. The grassroots organization offers an after prom party for CVHS seniors and their guests. There are several activities including climbing a rock wall, riding mechanical bull and ziplining and a full casino at the event. sold, the non-profit received 50%. This year there was an additional outreach by the Lions Club with its Eye Mobile that was parked in the school’s quad. The club had an optometrist present, offering free eye examines including glaucoma screenings. Several officials joined the event to flip pancakes and help out including Anthony Portantino, Rita Hadjimanoukian from Los on his self. He also appeared to have difficulty standing and was not certain where he was. He was arrested for public intoxication at 2:09 p.m. Sept. 11 Big Tujunga Canyon Road and Mt. Gleason Avenue in Tujunga, a deputy saw two people parked in a BMW in an isolated area. The deputy discovered the driver, a 63-year-old Tujunga man, was on probation for possession of a controlled substance. After an investigation, the deputy found a baggie with what appeared to be methamphetamine in the pocket of a jacket that appeared to belong to the man. He was arrested on suspicion of possession of a controlled substance. Sept. 18 2900 block of Community Avenue in La Crescenta, someone stole an iPod and headphones from a locked gymnasium locker at Crescenta Valley High School between 11:25 a.m. and 12:15 p.m. Sept. 16 1900 block of Verdugo Boulevard in La Cañada, deputies responded to the United Artist movie theater regarding a disturbance. A 28-year-old La Crescenta man had been removed from the movie theater because he was “extremely intoxicated.” The police found him near the theater; there was a strong smell of alcohol on his breath and he had apparently gotten sick Hosted by the Glendale Fire Department and the Glendale Sunrise Rotary SPONSORSHIP LEVELS 1st Alarm: $250 2 tickets 2nd Alarm: $500 4 tickets 3rd Alarm: $900 10 tickets CERT: $1500 10 tickets + CERT Training for 20 individuals CHECKS PAYABLE TO: Glendale Sunrise Rotary Foundation c/o Glendale Fire Dept. 421 Oak Street Glendale, CA 91204 TICKET PRICE: Guests - $75.00 Firefighters - FREE (sponsored by the GFFA) NEWS Page 8 • September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com DRAYMAN from cover agreed to the plea agreement stating it would be better for Montrose businesses not to have the publicity of a trial. The letter, though, was not written by the present MSPA board. “[The letter] was not authorized by the MSPA,” said Ken Grayson, board president. “No one on the current board knew anything about it.” In 2012, Drayman was charged formally with 28 counts including embezzlement, filing false tax returns and money laundering. He is accused of embezzling an amount ranging from $304,000 to over $800,000 from the MSPA primarily from the harvest market. The 2011 MSPA board members first levied the accusations. Alyce Russell was the board president at the time. According to Drayman, the plea agreement was not something that was actively sought by him. “I got a call from my lawyer asking if anyone had ever approached [me] with a settlement offer,” Drayman said in an interview with CVW after Friday’s court appearance. SAGEBRUSH from cover Sean McDonald is the second public defender and third lawyer Drayman has had since the charges were brought. Drayman said none of his attorneys had approached him with a plea agreement. He told McDonald he was open to the possibility and after conferring with the district attorney his lawyer returned with an agreement. “The [District Attorney’s Office] proposed of the 28 they will drop 25 counts,” he said. “I didn’t accept it right away. I had to think about it and talk to family and friends.” In the end, he decided to take the plea agreement, which included admitting to guilt. “I spoke to a lot of family and friends [about the plea]. I knew what the fall-out would be,” he said of the agreement. “But [a friend said] those who think you are the devil now will continue to think that, those who know you are innocent will continue to think you are and those who are on the fence may stay on the fence.” The agreement had been discussed in court earlier in the week, on Tuesday, Sept. 24. According to Drayman, at that time Judge Marcus voiced his opinion that some jail time should be part of the agreement. “No one had mentioned jail time in any agreement proposed to me,” Drayman said. “It was not part of the negotiation.” Drayman said his lawyer later told him that the authors of the letter agreed with the plea agreement. Drayman said he was then told that on Friday it would be presented again to the judge. It was then that Judge Marcus rejected the agreement. All will be back in court on Nov. 4. The one thing Drayman and his accusers have in common is they have voiced concern for what the publicity of the trial will do to Montrose. Although the judge was sensitive to the MSPA’s position of avoiding more unwanted publicity for fear it would hurt business, he did not see any way a plea agreement could be accepted without jail time. “This is my principle position,” Marcus said. “I cannot give him no jail time.” parents at the recent CV Town Council pancake breakfast. One concern was that the transfer seemed to be happening very quickly. “I just feel that things might happen soon,” said Melinda Karl Forster, a Mountain Avenue parent. And she is right. The discussion, which began in La Cañada in mid-summer of this year, may be decided as early as the end of October. There are several items that need to be decided upon like Measure K and Measure S bonds that are being paid by GUSD residents and the partial tax that is being funded by LCUSD residents. That does bring up another aspect of the territory transfer – money. Districts receive money for each student who attends class. The transfer will have GUSD losing students; estimates of the number of students affected have ranged from 150 to 300. that makes sense for so many different stakeholders as we do tonight,” he said before presenting the item to council. Under the prior arrangement, the city assumed the full financial responsibility of the field’s upkeep. “However,” noted Jess Duran of Community Parks and Recreation, “[GUSD and GCC did] provide services in helping the city maintain the field with donations of labor, materials, and sometimes sharing in the costs of special upgrades or repairs, such as laser-leveling the field on an annual basis.” The new arrangement would transfer those duties to GUSD, which Duran noted “already [has] the capacity” to assume the mantle of responsibility. Though GUSD would become the venue’s primary caretaker, the district guaranteed its continued use by GCC for its baseball team’s games and practices. Similar conditions were guaranteed for the Glendale Little League and Babe Ruth League. GUSD would also agree to pay for the field’s electricity and water costs. GUSD and GCC have their own advertising programs and would continue to be the sole recipients of those revenue streams. The city, however, would continue to reserve all rights on filming requests with the revenue from potential filming going solely to the city. The initial term for the memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the city and the GUSD is two years, beginning on Oct. 1 and ending Sept. 30, 2015, with optional two one-year renewals. City staff estimated the savings from transferring Stengel Field’s operations to GUSD would be $200,000. Those funds could be allocated to maintain and service the city’s other public spaces. “The savings in staff time alone is something that is a major driver for our recommendation in this matter,” added Ochoa. Still up in the air is the ultimate fate of the stadium structure on Stengel Field, which Duran noted “cannot be ignored.” That structure consists of two underground locker rooms, a ground level concession stand, restrooms, equipment storage rooms and built-in bleachers. Those bleachers have served as the roofing for the stadium structure. Worn down by weather over the past six decades, water leakage from the bleachers into the interior of the stadium put the integrity of the structure into Another issue of concern for Mountain Avenue parents is how the loss of students will affect the school. “Will they make it into a magnet school?” asked Jackie Bodnar, a Mountain Avenue parent. Other issues include those of students who are in both districts via out-of-district transfers and future transfers. Forster wants GUSD parents to be aware of what is going on. She feels that because in the past the territory transfer did not succeed, people feel it will not this time or, at the very least, take years to complete. “I just think we have to be as strong [about this] as La Cañada,” she said. GUSD board members will discuss this at the Oct. 15 board meeting at the district office, 223 N. Jackson St., Glendale beginning at 5 p.m. There is a section for public comment at the meeting. GCC from cover “It is being overused right now,” CVHS coach Phil Torres said in July regarding Stengel Field. “The grass is being destroyed.” Meetings had been held between city and GUSD staff over the summer attempting to reach an agreement that would allow the school district to take primary responsibility of the venue. Talks were stalled initially, but a breakthrough was finally reached in recent weeks. Calling Stengel Field “a tremendous asset to the community,” City Manager Scott Ochoa was glowing in his recommendation to transfer primary responsibilities of the venue to GUSD. “Rarely do we have the opportunity to bring you an item question. Concerns over its safety led to its closure in 2011, with only the first two rows of bleachers safe enough for use – enough room for approximately 300 spectators. The limited available space makes it difficult for CVHS and GCC to host big rivalry games at the venue. Such CVHS games can attract over 1,000 fans, said city staff. City staff is set to return to council on Oct. 8 to discuss various options that would deal with the structure’s future. Possibilities include preservation and rehabilitation of the existing structure, demolition of the old structure in favor of a modern replacement, and eliminating the structure altogether with only the bleachers being replaced. Under the options at hand, existing bleachers would be temporarily replaced with aluminum ones. Ochoa said that the MoU was ideal in that it gives the city and GUSD ample time to commit to a future solution. “There is a great deal of excitement with GUSD about the challenge and opportunity of raising the funds to replicate the structure that’s there,” he said. “Because it’s a historic venue, has a lot of history, and just a lot of atmosphere that goes along with that venue.” Former CVHS Falcon and Toronto Blue Jay minor league player Bryan Longpre spoke to the council in favor of the MoU, making a passionate plea in support of the venue’s importance. “My family played on that field, coached on that field long before I was born,” he said. “I know there are many other residents who share that same story. It is a historic ballpark and, like the Alex Theatre, something that is very valuable to many people in Glendale. “To me and many other residents, [Stengel Field] is more than just a field – it’s a home. It’s a point of pride in this community.” September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com Page 9 VIEWPOINTS My Thoughts, Exactly » Jim Chase Treasures of the Valley » Mike lawler Slovakian Henry Biescar Moves to La Crescenta Those who know CV’s history are familiar with the various ethnic and international groups that have made up our history. Starting with the Indians, then the Spanish and Mexicans and, into the ’20s and ’30s, the Italians and Germans. The Germans established Hindenburg Park which attracted German-Americans from all over California. Today we have the Koreans with their many churches, and Armenians, also with churches and cultural centers. But few know that in the ’30s, La Crescenta became the hub for the vibrant Czechoslovakian population of Los Angeles with the building of the Czechoslovakian Hall and Park by the Slovakian patriot Henry Biescar. Slovakian immigration to the U.S. began in the 1870s after many years of unhappy Hungarian domination of the Slovaks. Whereas most of the immigrants settled in the coal mining regions of Pennsylvania, many came to Los Angeles including brothers Henry and George Biescar in 1883. Quite a few of the immigrating Slovaks, including the Biescars, were “drotari” or wire workers from northern Slovakia, highly skilled in producing metal wire and wire products. Henry Biescar opened a wire-works operation in downtown Los Angeles and quickly prospered, as did other Slovakian drotari, producing wire baskets for fishing and industry, birdcages, furniture and industrial products. Henry Biescar prospered in business and real estate, and retired in 1915 after many years of bad health. His doctors advised a move to higher elevation in the foothills of the San Gabriels as a cure. He purchased 11 acres in La Crescenta above Foothill on the east side of La Crescenta Avenue, between what is now Orange and Henrietta streets (Henrietta is named for one of Biescar’s daughters). After spending three years clearing the sagebrush, planting a variety of fruit and nut trees and building a home, the Biescar family with four kids moved into their new abode. The land above Foothill was almost entirely wild land then with only a few homes scattered about. La Crescenta Avenue was a narrow dirt road that also served as the driveway to the Bissell family’s Hi-up Ranch, what is now the Pinecrest neighborhood. The unbridged dry wash that drained Goss, Eagle and Shields canyons would erupt into a torrent at every rainstorm. It crossed La Crescenta Avenue at El Caminito, occasionally making the road impassible. The four Biescar kids, Charles (known as “Amo”), Marion, Mildred and Henrietta had the idyllic, healthy childhood described by so many old-timers who grew up in La Crescenta during that era. They walked each day down to La Crescenta Elementary School, passing by the La Crescenta General Store and Post Office. The wooden store on the southeast corner of La Crescenta and Foothill had a frontier look, shaded by giant pepper trees, and the kids would stop and pick up the newspaper each day for their As our fiscal year ends, let’s take a look back. Here’s a quick list of things we’ve accomplished – largely with your help and support. I’m going to give you a preview of what’s to come in our Year 4 that begins on Oct. 1. • Welcomed Brian Landisi and Harry Leon to the board • Community & Family Forum on 40 Developmental Assets, featuring Clay Roberts (256 attended) • Trained 60 people to bring assets to local groups • Presented Assets at five of seven elementary school PTAs; partnered with Glendale PTA Council extensively • Parent Education Workshops at Mike Lawler is the former president of the Historical Society of the Crescenta Valley and loves local history. Reach him at lawlerdad@yahoo.com. the YMCA (2012 – 13 school year stats: 296 participants; 82 families, average participation 13; funded by grant from Supervisor Antonovich) • Lunchtime (anti) Drug Club at Rosemont (35 students attend five of six sessions) • GPD Officer Joe Allen (Elks’ Narcotic Officer of the Year) spoke at Fremont Elementary for Red Ribbon Week • April Rx Drug Take Backs (350 lbs. of unwanted medicine collected) • 4 Strategic Partners meetings (average: 66 per meeting) • Hired company to rebrand, create new website, and get a new DBA • Community Outreach: Hometown Country Fair Sponsor, Foothill Business Expo, VHH Health Expo, Howdy Day, Tri-Chamber Legislative Committee, CV Town Council • 501(c)(3) designation • CV Youth Alliance formed • Formed partnerships with CV CVDAPC NEWS » Suzy Jacobs Greetings from CVDAPC! dad. Summer days were spent picking, canning and drying the variety of fruit and nuts growing on their trees, and swimming in their reservoir. The many Biescar relatives would come to visit Henry and his family “out in the country” and be sent home with boxes of whatever fruit was ripe at that time. The Biescars were leaders in the community of old La Crescenta. They helped found Holy Redeemer Church. Mrs. Biescar was a president of the La Crescenta Woman’s Club, and the Biescar daughters were members of the La Crescenta Woman’s Club Juniors with Henrietta serving as president of that group. Mr. Biescar, ever the Slovakian patriot, was involved with the Czechoslovak Patronat, a conglomeration of various Czech and Slovakian cultural groups in Southern California. When, in the early ’30s, it was determined that they would build a cultural center, Biescar donated land that he owned near his home in La Crescenta. Not only would that give a boost to the Czechoslovak Patronat to establish a home base, but it would also benefit La Crescenta. Local labor would be used to build it and the influx of people to the cultural center would bring in outside dollars to local businesses. Next week I’ll cover the history of the Czechoslovakian Hall of La Crescenta. More Petting of the Peeves Hey kids, it’s been almost a year since we last visited my kennel of pet peeves and frankly, they’re getting a little lonely. So let’s go visit, shall we? Pet Peeve #11: Running out of salsa when there are still plenty of chips left in the bag. Or vice versa. This common condition virtually guarantees that if you open a new bag of chips, there will be too many left when you finally run out of salsa. And if you open a new container of salsa or dip, you’ll have too much of it left when all the chips are gone. There has to be some way of eliminating such a vicious (but tasty) circle. Then again, I never have understood why they sell hotdogs in packages of eight, but hot dog buns come by the dozen. Such are the many mysteries of life in the food chain. Pet Peeve #12: Young retail clerks who mumble. Especially when “helping” an older customer (And no, I’m not talking about myself. I’ve raised four kids – I’m fluent in teenage.) It’s painful to stand in line behind an elderly person who is being mumbled at by the “sales associate.” It makes me want to interrupt their texting and yell, “Slow down. Enunciate. Look this customer in the eyes when you’re talking and try to help them, please! Pet Peeve #13: The nearly obscene, inappropriate-atany-hour, anti-smoking propaganda TV commercial Town Council, City of La Cañada to put up alcohol warning signs • GUSD committees: Healthy Start Collaborative, Safe & Drug Free Schools Coming Up: New name, new board members, new officers, new website USC VHH Community Health Fair on Sept. 28 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Armenian Korean Cultural Festival on Oct. 13 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Crescenta Valley High School ID checks at Oktoberfest on Oct. 5 from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Rx Drug Take Back on Oct. 26 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Community forums headed by Mary O’Keefe and Cheryl Davis Resource Guide Speakers Bureau established – invite us to speak to your group! Red Ribbon Week with Council PTA Board meetings open for public comment. The next one is on Oct. 21 at 6:30 p.m. at First Baptist Church, 4441 La Crescenta Ave. in La Crescenta. from LAQuits.com featuring the disgusting audio track of a wretched man afflicted with emphysema gasping for air. I understand that smoking can result in all sorts of dangerous medical conditions – death being one – but is it appropriate to broadcast the deeply disturbing sound of a human literally dying for oxygen? I’ve seen the spot in the middle of dinner, in the morning before most kids have left for school and other times when kids would almost certainly be watching. I realize that the health zealots who have a white-hot hate for smokers want to scare our children into never picking up a cigarette. (How’s that working, by the way?) But I’d also like to have our youth grow up to never have abortions. Would anyone want to see a similarly gross and inappropriate TV campaign against that horrific practice that kills every time? Didn’t think so. Pet Peeve #14: When the customized, targeted advertising space on the side of my Facebook home page automatically fills in with ads for AARP, prostate health supplements and Assisted Living options. Stop rushing things! Pet Peeve #15: Advertisers who take a smart, funny, memorable and buzz-worthy TV commercial – oh, say like the current spot for Sprint that features a wellmannered zombie asking CA Healthy Kids Survey with GUSD 4 Strategic Partners meetings: first Fridays in December, March, June and September from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. at USC VHH. Adventures in Parenting @ the Y, Tuesdays from 7:15 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.; sponsored by First Baptist Church LC Advocacy: Putting up alcohol signs, National Medicine Abuse Month in October Fundraising Committee work Data Summit More inroads in building community collaborations to prevent, and reduce, youth substance use Many thanks to my board, all of our partners and supporters, Julia Rabago, and to Robin Goldsworthy! Suzy Jacobs is the executive director of the Crescenta Valley Drug & Alcohol Prevention Coalition. You can reach her at suzy@cvdapc.org. about their “value for life” plan. It’s a brilliant concept, perfectly cast and executed. The first few times I saw it, I loved it and laughed every time. Now, after having seen it a dozen times a day for months, not so much. They’ve ruined an effective commercial in the name of reach and frequency. Pet Peeve #16: Restaurant servers who ask if you want lemon with your iced tea, and no matter how nicely I reply, “No, thank you!” they ignore my request. At Jack in the Box drive through off the 210 Freeway at Arroyo, I recently told the voice coming out of the speaker that I definitely did not want lemon in my iced tea, thank you very much. Lo and behold, as I drove on the freeway onramp towards La Cañada and took a big sip from the straw, I got a mouthful of ultra-lemony tea. Opening up the top of the cup, I saw not one, not two, but three big, bitter, yellow wedges inside. Maybe I should have mumbled. And with that, I’ll open up a bag of Purina Peeve Chow to coax the remaining critters back behind the chain link fence until another day. I’ll see you ’round town. © 2013 WordChaser, Inc. Jim Chase is an award- winning advertising copywriter and native of Southern California. Readers are invited to “friend” his My Thoughts Exactly page on Facebook. Also visit Jim’s new blog with past columns and additional thoughts at: http://jchasemythoughtsexactly.blogspot.com LETTERS WANTED! (All letters must be 350 words or less) Send CV WEEKLY your thoughts and comments on any of our articles or happenings in our community and we’ll share them with the rest of our readers! Mail letters to: Crescenta Valley Weekly; P.O. Box 543; Verdugo City, CA 91046 or via email at robin@ cvweekly.com. VIEW POINTS Page 10 • September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com » AND ALONG CAME ASTER... Did you know that according to the U.S. Administration on Aging in 2000, approximately 605 million people were 60 years or older. In 2050, that number is expected to be close to 2 billion. At that time, seniors will outnumber children 14 and under for the first time in history! And along came ASTER –Assisting Seniors Through Enhanced Resources. ASTER is a non-profit whose mission is to serve as a resource for older adults and their families in the Foothill communities. ASTER is a support organization not just for seniors but for anyone interested in learning how to handle life challenges as they age. In recognizing the growing need within the senior population, our goal is to arm our seniors and their caregivers with great resources. ASTER sees itself as the conduit in bringing together community services, groups and organizations in one convenient spot – TheASTER.org. No matter what the need – health, wellness, housing, classes, safety, fun or education – ASTER brings them to one central place. While right now many can be found on our website, ASTER in the near future will provide a printed directory and ultimately a Wellness Style & place where seniors can call and get crucial information. ASTER’s goal is to be the first and best resource for seniors and their caregivers in the foothill communities. Where is ASTER right now? Information is currently available on our website TheASTER.org. There you can find a list of resources, a senior community calendar as well as a list of local senior discounts. If you have been to an ASTER event in the past, you will be happy to know the ASTER Speaker Series will be returning in November (date and topic to be announced). Our series will always be focused around community, safety, security, and empowerment for seniors Where is ASTER going? In our next article, we will discuss some of the plans for 2014 – renewing our focus on the critical issues facing seniors today, and sharing with you some of the fun plans which include a senior prom and senior ditch day! I would encourage you to visit our site and learn more about TheASTER.org. You can email us at contact@theaster.org or give us a call (818) 306-5224. Don’t hesitate to ask ASTER!! Robbyn Battles is the president of ASTER. TheASTER.org LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Encourages PP Participation Everything you need to look and feel your best. To advertise in our Wellness & Style section, call 818.248.2740 Helping People Travel, One At a Time. Since 1956 – with unsurpassed personal service and value. 818.550.6677 CV Weekly www.MontroseTravel.com Promo Code: PCNP29 2012 CV Weekly As a past Prom Plus Tour of Homes host, I would like to encourage Crescenta Valley residents to join the fun. Being on the tour was a wonderful experience. It prompted the completion of a great many “honey do” items on my list. More importantly, it gave us an opportunity to reconnect with so many friends from our Little League, AYSO and PTA days. It was a delight to catch up and hear their news and find out where their kids were in life. Two things which I think prospective hosts need to know: First, you don’t have to open all the rooms in your home. My office displayed a sign borrowed from the Wizard of Oz: “Nobody gets in to see the wizard. Not nobody. Not no-how.” Because believe me, nobody was getting in to see that disaster area! The other is this: while we have opened our home for many events over the years, we have never experienced a single negative outcome. We have instead experienced the joy of seeing old friends, meeting new ones and finding ourselves more connected to our amazing community. Robin [Goldsworthy] is right; “Prom Plus Needs You” [see ‘Notations on the Calendar,’ the Sept. 12 article From the Desk of the Publisher], but Prom Plus will not be the only beneficiary! Mary W. Boger Vice President GUSD Board of Education Disappointed in Article Regular contributor Mike Lawler (Treasures of the Valley) is the former president of the Historical Society of the Crescenta Valley. I am a long-time member of 1996-2012 the Glendale Historical Society and a former Cst#1018299-10 president of Royal Canyon Homeowners Association and Summit Mortgage Bankers, Inc. the Homeowners Coordinating Council. It would appear we have community and neighborhood preservation in common. I am disappointed and unable to understand Mr. Lawler’s motivation behind his misleading and inflammatory comments in his recent • Priority Purchase Closing Within 2 Weeks piece, “Twelve Oaks – • $0 Lender Fee for Purchase Loan Over Built by Charity, Sold for Profit” (Crescenta 200K Applied by Oct. 2013 Valley Weekly, Sept. 5, • 24hr Conditional Approval 2013). His words – “in • $0 Cost for Any Cashout Refinance secret,” “suspicious,” “lie to the rumor,” “changed • Special Loan Program for Insuffecient corporate moniker to Income Borrower the ridiculous be.group,” “ugly,” “avoid any Summit Mortgage Bankers, Inc. uncomfortable ‘What would Jesus do?’” – are all patently unfair. 388 E. Valley Blvd., Suite 121 • Alhambra, CA 91801 For the past three Tel (626) 688-1070 Fax (626) 270-4378 sherry.cui@smb-mortgage.com years I have lived in a DRE LIC #01892199 NMLS #358676 be.group senior living 2012 The Direct Lender You Can Count On Sherry Cui “Bring me your scenario, and I’ll get the best solution for your loan!” SMARTER FASTER BOLDER community and, in fairness, with thanks to Paul Harvey – here’s the other side of the story. “In secret,” “suspicious” – I know senior living communities are highly regulated to provide protection for residents at every level of service. be.group is helping residents who wish to relocate to another be.group community by maintaining their Twelve Oaks rate even if they move to a more expensive community. They do this not because it’s mandated, but because it’s the right thing to do. Additionally, I know be.group is attempting to transfer staff to another community if they wish to relocate. “Corporate moniker” – I know the name change occurred to more clearly identify the organization as inclusive and forward-looking, rather than to imply a community restricted to Presbyterians. I know the legal name is Southern California Presbyterian Homes DBA be.group. I think it’s okay with Jesus. Mary Ann Prelock Bradbury, Calif. CV Town Council Wants You The Crescenta Valley Town Council has applications on their website – thecvcouncil. com – for concerned citizens to run for the council that represents the unincorporated areas of La Crescenta and Montrose. We really want all voters who have lived here for at least one year to ask if they can give the third Thursday of the month to get involved with their town. There are three regular seats for three-year terms and three alternates seats for just a one-year term. At this time we do not have enough [candidates] running to fill these six seats, so do consider if this is the year you can get involved. The Town Council gets involved in everything from big rig trucks to senior and school issues. It has been your town council that secured the dog park and the new county library. Your town council gets involved with land use issues as well. Why leave someone else speak for you? Give a year and you might find you really enjoy getting to know your first responders, your county planning, your utility representatives and the list goes on and on. This is your town as well as ours, so please don’t hesitate. We are not a clique, but want everyone to run and then let the community have choices who will represent them on the council. Applications are on our website as well as so much more useful information; do check it out – thecvcouncil.com. Danette Erickson La Crescenta Danette Erickson is a current member of the Crescenta Valley Town Council. A Brief Note of Thanks This letter is a thank you for your kindness to the family of three and child that paid for my dinner at the Magic Wok on Wednesday, Aug. 28. Thank you again. Doris Dash Glendale September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com YOUTH Page 11 Golf Tournament Benefits Local Schools F riday the 13th was a lucky day for St. James and Holy Redeemer schools when parents, alumni, and other supporters teed off in the schools’ inaugural golf tournament at Angeles National Golf Club in Sunland. Approximately 65 golfers participated in what will become an annual event for the two schools as they raise funds for campus improvements. Proceeds from this year’s tournament will upgrade the grass playing field on the Holy Redeemer Middle School campus and develop new play areas and structures at St. James Elementary School. “Father Ed and I are both thrilled with the results of this inaugural golf contest,” said Susan Romero, principal of the two schools. “Our parent volunteers put on a very professional event that brought people together from both of these schools in a fun way.” A highlight of the day was the “golf balls from heaven” ball drop on the 18th green with SunlandTujunga fire station No. 74 lending its ladder truck for the event. St. James Elementary parents Scott and Julie Acosta were the winners of the ball drop with their ball getting the closest to the hole. Romero thanked the sponsors of the tournament that included Eva Jeffers, Dr. Santo and Joanne Polito, LMG Group LLC, Innovative Consulting, and Printefex. Contributed by Lisa TUSH ABOVE: Susan Romero, principal, and Fr. Ed Dover, pastor, of Holy Redeemer-St. James with members of Fire Station 74 (from left) Adam Chitiea, Bill Levengood, George Baxter and Julian Singelakis. TOP RIGHT: Golfers participating in the putting contest RIGHT: Dan and Ken Rendler. Military Service Academy Tonight By Michael YEGHIAYAN Congressmen Adam Schiff and Tony Cardenas are scheduled to host an event today, Thursday, Sept. 26, for area high school students interested in applying for admission to one of the country’s military service academies. The event will take place at the Sunland-Tujunga Municipal Building from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Attendees will have the opportunity to learn about the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, the Naval Academy at Annapolis, the Coast Guard Academy at New London, and the Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point. Joining the congressmen will be representatives from the respective schools who will provide information and answer questions from interested students and parents. “Each year, I nominate highly qualified students to these academies, and I encourage students to apply for prestigious appointments to our nation’s fine service academies,” stated Schiff. “I hope that this informational session will be beneficial to students who are considering applying to the service academies, and I would encourage students and their parents to attend and learn more about the benefits of a military education.” Students interested in applying to a service academy must meet a series of rigorous standards and be nominated by a member of Congress or the Office of the Vice President in order to be considered for admission, with the exception of the Coast Guard Academy. Those selected will receive free college tuition and will be trained to become officers in the United States military. “We have nominated some of the most extraordinary young people from our communities to the academies,” explained Schiff. “We look for applicants who are well-rounded, patriotic and willing YOUTH NOTES JROTC Rummage Sale A rummage sale is being held on Saturday, Sept. 28 from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Crescenta Valley High School cafeteria (Falcon Café) located behind the school on Glenwood & Prospect avenues. CV High School is at 2900 Community Ave. in La Crescenta. All proceeds from the rummage sale will support CVHS AF JROTC events and activities. This is a multi-family fundraising event. Please stop by to purchase “gently used” merchandise and support the ROTC cadets! Pancakes at Rosemont, Fremont, CV Fremont Elementary, at 3320 Las Palmas Ave. in Glendale, is hosting its annual pancake breakfast on Saturday, Sept. 28 from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. For only $5 ticketholders will get pancakes, sausages, juice, coffee, and a performance by the Rosemont Middle School orchestra. All proceeds will help fund education activities for Fremont’s sixth graders. Then on Oct. 5, it’s the annual Rosemont pancake breakfast concert from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m., rain or shine, at Rosemont Middle to serve, academically superior, athletic, and participating in a wide range of leadership and extracurricular activities.” Although the standards required for consideration to a service academy are considerably high, Schiff encouraged all interested students to attend the informational session. “But there’s no ‘mold,’ and each student brings something different,” continued Schiff. “All will go on to become the leaders not only in our armed forces, but in every field of endeavor because of that diversity of abilities and talents.” Students interested in being nominated must apply to their representative’s office by Nov. 1 in order to be considered for the class of 2018. For more information about Service Academy Night, contact the office of Rep. Adam Schiff at (818) 450-2900. The Sunland-Tujunga Municipal Building is located at 7747 Foothill Blvd. in Tujunga. School at 4747 Rosemont Ave. in La Crescenta. The cost is $5 and offers all you can eat pancakes with one serving of sausages and drink. The Rosemont string section, concert band, advance strings, chorus and jazz band will also be playing under the direction of Rod Yonkers, Rosemont Middle School music director. All proceeds benefit the Rosemont Middle School music department. Page 12 www.cvweekly.com September 26, 2013 SPORTS Still Banged Up, Still Winning Quarterback Brian Gadsby is dealing with last week’s mouth injury and receiver Weston Walker is out this week with a knee injury. But CV has a chance to go 4-0. By Brandon HENSLEY I t couldn’t all be sunshine and roses for Brian Gadsby, and he knew it. After two monster games to start the season for the Crescenta Valley Falcons in which he passed for six touchdowns in both games, things got tougher for the junior quarterback last week against the La Cañada Spartans. In the second quarter, he took off running and when he was tackled his helmet lifted up a bit and his chin strap went into his upper mouth, cutting his frenum, the string that attaches the gum to the lip, while also taking out a chunk of his upper gum. He finished the half a pedestrian 7 for 16 passing for 92 yards and two touchdowns (one of them rushing), and his coaches had him sit out the rest of the game for concern over tearing his mouth completely open. “Just one of those games,” said Gadsby, who actually spent time in the ER after the win. “Can’t throw six touchdown passes every game.” Fair enough, and it’s not as if the Falcons sorely missed him. CV led 28-0 at the half and went on to beat the Spartans 42-14 to improve to 3-0 for the first time in over a decade. On Friday, the Falcons head to Pasadena High School for their Pacific League game to take on the Bulldogs, who are 0-3. Pasadena finished last season 1-9. This year they have a new coach, Doug Bledsoe, but the results haven’t been good. Bledsoe’s team has scored a total of 15 points. Just don’t tell the Falcons they should come in and roll the Bulldogs. “Our first league game is coming up, we don’t want to come out flat, so we’re trying to be mentally prepared,” said defensive back and running back Kevin Hello. Gadsby, who said he was good to go for Friday, and Hello said this week the team’s preparation for the Bulldogs is similar to what it was for the Spartans. Pasadena likes to run the ball, which bodes well for CV’s defense, which definitively had its best game last week. It held La Cañada to 3.5 yards per carry and both times the Spartans scored were because of CV miscues that gave them the ball deep in their territory. “To me, we have a pretty great run defense, so we should do well and we’re excited that we’re 3-0,” Gadsby said. “We want to keep it coming.” “There’s definitely room for improvement,” Hello said. “We’re happy we got the win [last week]. It wasn’t a pretty win. We shouldn’t have let them score those 14 points. We made some critical errors but thankfully we were able to compensate for that with the points we scored.” Hello said the coaches are telling guys to watch for broken plays, such as when the Bulldogs have things go awry and they use their athleticism to compensate and catch the Falcons off-guard. “If we give up those long plays, that could kill us,” Hello said. “We have to be mentally ready.” Gadsby said Pasadena’s defense plays manto-man, like the Spartans do, so there should be enough opportunities for the passing attack to get back on track if the receivers can break away from coverage. There were multiple times last week when guys were open but Gadsby’s passes went off the fingers of his receivers. “I felt like every throw was just missing,” Gadsby said. “I don’t think I had a completion until the second quarter.” Gadsby will most likely be without receiver Weston Walker, who injured his knee against La Cañada. That makes yet another receiver to go down this year: Walker, Connor Van Ginkel (injured in Week 2, out for a few more weeks) and Kyle Tavizon, who hasn’t played a game yet with a broken arm. Gadsby said junior Robbie Benson and freshman Tyler Hill will now get plays in at receiver. “They’re going to step up just like everyone else is doing,” he said. “Everyone’s a little sore, but that’s football.” Torres Stepping Up Backup quarterback Joe Torres came in for Gadsby in the second half last week. It wasn’t pretty at first. He fumbled the hand-off to a running back which resulted in a turnover, and another series was chalk full of penalties, like false starts and illegal motions. This led to the sizable CV student section to chant, “We Want Brian.” Eventually, he got it together and led the team on two scoring drives, one a long throw to Jordan LoBianco and another on a quarterback sneak at the goal line. “He did have a rough start, but I think he did well,” Hello said. “It’s hard for a quarterback to not play offense for the first two weeks of the season and then be thrown into a game that’s pretty important for us.” “Joe did great,” Gadsby said. “The first series or two, he had to get used to the offense, and the offense had to get used to him. But after that it was normal.” Another Hello Sighting Hello blocked a punt and recovered the ball for a touchdown in Week 2 against San Marino. Last week on defense he grabbed a deflected pass for an interception and ran in it in for another score. It was the third straight game CV has scored a non-offensive touchdown. “There is some luck to it, but overall that is what we’re trying to do; get the offense the ball,” he said. Standings CV and Burbank are the only 3-0 teams in league. Of course, no one in league has played each other until now. Pasadena is the only winless team in league. After Friday at Pasadena, the Falcons play five of the last six games on their home field at Glendale High. They travel to Burroughs next week, but after that it’s all at Glendale. CV will be the designated road team against Hoover later this season, but psychologically the only difference is CV’s team and fans will be on the other side of the field. Master’s TaeKwonDo (818) 236-3777 Confidence • Self-Discipline Friendships 2274 Honolulu Ave, Montrose www.masterstkdclub.com Photos by Jason BALLARD Kevin Hello intercepts the ball in the first quarter, running it in for a touchdown. MTC Taekwondo FREE TRIAL OFFER UP NEXT vs Who: Pasadena Bulldogs When: Tonight, 7 p.m. Where: Pasadena H.S. SPORTS NOTES Cycling Team Sign Ups The high school cycling season is just around the corner and open enrollment for potential new team members at Crescenta Valley High School is approaching. The co-ed team is open to any CVHS student. Those interested in joining the award-winning CV cycling team can contact teacher Jan Babington at CVHS or Coach Jim Rowton at coachjimrowton@ gmail.com. The first official team function is a parent meeting scheduled for Tuesday evening Oct. 1 in Jan Babington’s classroom at 6:30 p.m. Golf Tournament Coming Up CVHS boys basketball is hosting the 2013 James Jenkins Memorial Falcon Golf Tournament on Oct. 21 at La Cañada Country Club. Registration is at 11:30 a.m. followed by a putting contest, lunch and then the shotgun start at 1 p.m. Sponsorship packages available. Plenty of prizes! For more information, contact Patti Currie at currieboys@aol.com. Deadline to register is Oct. 11. SPORTS September 26, 2013 • Page 13 www.cvweekly.com Strong CV Showing at Woodbridge By Leonard COUTIN The 33rd Annual Woodbridge Invitational Cross-Country Classic was held on Saturday at Estancia High School in Coast Mesa, rather than its predecessor Woodbridge High School in Irvine, and produced some impressive three-mile times, especially this early of the season. The Crescenta Valley High School Falcon boys endured a long wait Saturday night racing in the last race of the day, the Sweepstakes, at 9:54 p.m. against rival state champions, the Arcadia Apaches. For the Falcons, Nick Beatty took the lead in the first mile while teammate Gabe Collison managed to work his way up through the crowd, taking over lead in the second mile. But Collison couldn’t maintain the pace and Stockdale’s Blake Haney forged ahead to win (13:55) with Estevan De La Rosa from Arcadia taking second (13:56). Collison, who ran 15:07 last year on the same course, placed 12th running 14:29. Beatty sprinted at the finish, moving past other competitors capture 22nd (14:48). “I am very pleased with how we competed,” said Head Coach Mark Evans. “Everyone ran well. We got out a little slow but moved up well in the race.” Arcadia boys placed first with the CV Falcons capturing sixth place. The Falcon girls saw a successful night at the Woodbridge-Estancia – Costa Mesa Classic as well. Running in the varsity B women threemile race, Falcon Megan Melnyk took charge by sprinting ahead at the start, securing a position with the lead runners. Over the course, Melnyk picked off one competitor at a time, making Photos by Leonard COUTIN her presence known as she came into the stadium bolting to the finish line and winning her race in a time of 17:43. Teammate Rebecca Mencia, a sophomore, had one of her best and smartest The 2013 Gladiator football season began on Saturday, Sept. 21 at La Cañada High School. All Gladiators teams played the Huntington Park Spartans. It was a banner day. All Gladiator tackle teams won lopsided victories. The following parents contributed articles that can be found on www.cvweekly. com/SPORTS: Sara Ortiz, Chris Faulkner, Jeremy Cicneros, Greg Kekahuna, Chara and Gary Campanella, Amy Lydon Seite, and Ken Putnam. races of the year, capturing seventh (18:27) with junior Haley Witzeman taking eighth (18:31). The Falcon girls scored sixth place. GREMLINS La Cañada 46, Huntington Park 0 JR. PEE WEE La Cañada 40, Huntington Park 0 PEE WEE La Cañada 34, Huntington Park 7 Jr. Midgets La Cañada 48, Huntington Park 6 MIDGET La Cañada 20, Huntington Park 6 JR. GREMLIN FLAG La Cañada Gladiators vs. Huntington Park Spartans Teams do not keep score For full stories, visit www.cvweekly.com/sports Dunn-Edwards is now open in Crescenta Valley Come visit us at the new Dunn-Edwards store located in La Cañada Flintridge. We have a complete line of paint and painting supplies, including low odor, Zero VOC and other eco-friendly paints. And, we have expert advice to help you get the job done right. 161 OS E HO NO LU LU 210 AV AV LA E ES CR OCEAN VIEW BL MO NT R A NT AV guess who’s back? HILLARD AV FO OT HIL LB L VE R D U GO BL 2 2220 Foothill Blvd., Unit B La Cañada Flintridge, CA 91011 (818) 248-0017 On September 28/29 support our children by attending a dinner (or two) at 5 more locations. The cost is $100 and covers everything—food, drink, entertainment, and fun. Please go to the GHK website www.glendalehealthykids.org for further information, or call (818) 548-7931. www.glendalehealthykids.org guess who’s coming to dinner? SEPTEMBER 28 & 29 For nearly 20 years, Glendale Healthy Kids has connected children to healthcare and provided health education classes in our schools. More than 15,000 local children have benefited from the Glendale Healthy Kids program which includes over 250 volunteer professionals ranging from hospitals to prescriptions, dental care to eye care, surgery, school physicals, ortho and more. More than 50,000 students have learned about healthy living from our educational programs. 5 OFF 1-Gallon, $20 OFF 5-Gallon $ Bring this coupon into the Dunn-Edwards La Cañada Flintridge store and get $5 OFF 1-gallon and $20 OFF 5-gallons of Interior and Exterior Ultra Premium and Premium Paints.* *Receive $5 off one 1-gallon can and $20 off one 5-gallon pail of Dunn-Edwards labeled Interior and Exterior Ultra Premium (EVEREST, ARISTOWALL, SUPREMA, EVERSHIELD) and Premium (SPARTAWALL, SPARTASHIELD) Paints. Offer valid on store price only now through 10/31/2013 at the Dunn-Edwards La Cañada Flintridge store only and may not be combined with any other offers or discounts. ©2013 Dunn-Edwards Corporation. All rights reserved. Page 14 www.cvweekly.com September 26, 2013 BETWEEN FRIENDS Nordstrom Welcomed with Gala by Lillian BOODAGHIANS A little over two years after the announcement that Nordstrom would relocate from the Glendale Galleria to The Americana at Brand, the move is finally complete! And what better way to celebrate than a house warming party with a cause. On Tuesday, Sept. 17, Nordstrom hosted an opening gala that served as both a store preview for guests and a charity event with proceeds benefitting two local charities: Ascencia, a foundation based in Glendale that provides permanent housing for the city’s homeless, and Hillsides, a Pasadena-based charity that works to help atrisk youth through their various programs that build emotional health and aid in education. Live models sporting the store’s fashions stood aboard The Americana trolley and greeted guests as they entered the store. The lobby, with its shining chandelierstyle light fixture, was packed with attendees chit-chatting, sipping cocktails and snapping pictures of the new location while DJs pumped music throughout the three-story building. Nordstrom was abuzz with over a thousand guests exploring the offerings of the new location, all the while making their donation to the community charities. Nancy Garni, director of Development at Hillsides and an attendee at the night’s festivities, described the process of becoming involved with Nordstrom for the event. “Nordstrom came to us with the idea of having the event be linked with charity. We were selected alongside Ascencia from about five charities after having undergone a very fine vetting process [by Nordstrom],” said Garni. Preparation for the charity event, the development of which was spearheaded by Nordstrom itself, Garni added, had taken about six to nine months and had culminated in a gala with over one thousand guests including celebrities such as Nicole Richie, members of the Nordstrom family Blake, Erik, Pete, and Jamie Nordstrom, as well as members of the community and the charities. Attendees were treated to dinner and dessert bites while they shopped the new store. Filled to the brim with designer clothing, shoes, and beauty products, the store did not fall short of expectations and was as luxurious as the event itself. Models substituting for mannequins stood at mini displays on the shop floor while store employees helped guests with their shopping needs. The new Nordstrom at The Americana is a departure both in style and in merchandise from the original store in the Glendale Galleria. A crisp, clean white theme brightens the store, giving it a fresher, more sophisticated vibe comparable to other Nordstrom stores like that at Santa Monica Place or The Grove. The youthfulness of the store gives it an energy the original store lacked. Featuring Ebar, the store’s own coffee bar, and Bar Verde, a new restaurant, the Nordstrom in Glendale has been given a much needed and long overdue update, renewing its appeal not only to veteran shoppers but also to newcomers of the retailer. Photos by Dan HOLM Photos by Dan HOLM Among the dignitaries were (above left) Jamie, Erik and Blake Nordstrom with Nicole Richie. Center is Rick Caruso. Veterans Corner 2200, 2300 & 2400 BLOCKS OF HONOLULU AVENUE ©2013 ENIGMA. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ENIGMALA.COM ENIGMASCREEN.COM Many of us take out insurance to protect our loved ones after death. Be informed that the VA provides memorial and burial benefits for all veterans other than those who were dishonorably discharged. If the cause of death was service connected, the VA will pay $2,000 for burial expenses. If the cause of death was not service connected, the VA will pay $700 towards burial expenses. To obtain reimbursement, retain all your receipts for burial expenses, submit them with VA Form 21-530 “Application For Burial Benefits.” The form may be obtained from Scott F. McKee, American Legion DSO, 11000 Wilshire Blvd., RM 5201 Los Angeles, CA 90024; phone (310) 473-6534, fax (310) 479-4641 or email: scott.mckee1@va.gov. Submitted by Andy GERO Andy Gero is a life member of the VFW, Post 1614 and the American Legion Post 288 in La Crescenta. He may be reached through the CV Weekly, (818) 248-2740, or writing the Crescenta Valley Weekly at 3800 La Crescenta Ave., Suite 101, La Crescenta, CA 91214. GAMC Donates Furniture to Local High School La Cañada High School recently was the recipient of a furniture donation by Glendale Adventist Medical Center. The donated furniture included desks and chairs valued at $2,500. The hospital was in need of the storage space and the items were not being used anymore. The desks will be used by teachers and the chairs will be used in school waiting room areas. When Hilda Bogossian, manager of Auxiliary Relations at GAMC heard that the hospital was going to get rid of some furniture, she contacted Claudia Alquist at the high school and asked if they could use the furniture. “They were so excited and grateful,” said Hilda Bogossian, a former teacher and current parent. “They have been wanting to set up new working areas for teachers and other staff members but were unable to because they did not have the furniture. It was a perfect match and [perfect] timing.” BETW EEN FRIENDS September 26, 2013 • Page 15 www.cvweekly.com Kiwanis to Hold 11th Annual Wine KCET Wins Broadcast Engineering and Gourmet Food Tasting Event The Kiwanis Club of La Cañada is holding its popular annual Wine and Gourmet Food Tasting event on Sunday, Oct. 6 in Memorial Park on Foothill Boulevard in La Cañada Flintridge. Over the past 10 years, this event has become part of the fabric of La Canada’s traditional soirees. On Sunday afternoon visitors from the San Gabriel and San Fernando valleys will come together to enjoy food and wine provided by local merchants. The tastings begin at 3 p.m. and are followed by the La Cañada Flintridge Educational Foundation’s (LCFEF) premium wine auction from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Mary Gant, past club president, and Clyde Hemphill serve as co-directors. The event, as mandated by law, is for adults only due to the presence of alcoholic beverages. Tickets are $50 and available The monies raised are used to fund the ongoing work of Kiwanis Club Foundation; sponsor youth organizations including two Key Clubs at La Cañada High School and Flintridge Prep High School, a Builders Club at LCHS Middle School, and a Terrific Kids Program at two elementary schools. The club also provides annual scholarships to six high school graduates and donation of dictionaries and books to Union Avenue Elementary School in downtown Los Angeles as well as read with second grade students weekly. The club also provides financial support to a variety of organizations and causes. Excellence Award Paul CHAMBERLAIN Planning for this year’s event are (seated at table from left) Lynn Tran, Mary Gant, Clyde Hemphill and Kelly Chamberlain. Standing in the back row from left are Linda Taix-Paccone, Kyle Hara, Vanessa Mapula, Pat Luangeaktrakul, Carl Christinsen, Patty Prang, Deborah Weirick and Heather Ehrhart. LCFEF’s premium wine auction will feature more than 50 live and silent lots of premium and collector wines. All proceeds from the wine auction benefit the Foundation’s Endowment Fund. Le Petit Vendome will furnish all of the wines and beers at the tasting as it has in the past years. Usually 80-plus wines are poured and about 20 beers. Twenty-five local restaurants, caterers and food purveyors will be offering tastes of their foods. Entertainment will be provided by the Blue Like Jazz, featuring Rita Chen. Remedy Liquor in LCF will provide & Wellness six bottles of premium wine to six lucky attendees who submit names and addresses (no purchase of raffle tickets required). A commemorative wine glass and a buffet tray are given to each attendee as well as a program booklet with a listing of all beverages poured and food purveyors. The presenters and partners for the event are The Kiwanis Club of La Cañada, LCF Educational Foundation Endowment Fund, LCF Chamber of Commerce and Le Petit Vendome. It is expected that more than 800 will attend the event. Style Everything you need to look and feel your best. • Personal Training • Gym Memberships • Fitness Classes 1424 Foothill Blvd. • La Canada CA 91011 Andrew H Kim DDS Cosmetic, Implant and General Dentistry 818 • 790 • 1844 AHKimDDS@gmail.com AndrewHKimDDS.com 1809 Verdugo Blvd, Suite 220 Glendale CA 91208 818.790.7727 www.TaixWorkoutStudio.com Why I love Standing Tall You know what I love about our company? Every single one of us comes to work every day to do what we love. We get to inspire people to be their best and we get to save lives. It’s the most wonderful thing in the world. In fact, the fun part is seeing our Practice Members transform and do the things they love to do in life again. It’s really amazing. It’s also good for business. We do really well. We have a beautiful office, we use the most advanced techniques, and our Practice Members always tell us that coming to our office is the best part of their day. You should stop by some time to see. We work with many of your friends and neighbors. I’m sure you’ve seen our ads or our booth at the Montrose Farmers Market. Check us out. Maybe we’ll be the best part of your day, too. Standing Tall Chiropractic Dr. Dale Ellwein 3436 N. Verdugo Rd., Suite 250 Glendale, CA 91208 818-249-9355 www.thedoctorofthefuture.com Get Your Life Back at Standing Tall Chiropractic “I thought I would have to give up being a hair stylist because of my wrist problem.” April Ray April Ray Salon Dr. Dale Ellwein Standing Tall Chiropractic 3436 N. Verdugo Rd, Suite 250 Glendale, CA 91208 818-249-9355 Call Today for Our $27 New Patient Special and Get Your Life Back! KCET, the nation’s largest independent television station serving Southern and Central California, won the 2012 Broadcast Engineering Excellence Award for the station’s new state of the art broadcast facility. In April 2012, KCET relocated from its historic Sunset Boulevard lot to The Pointe in Burbank, a new LEED GOLD certified building in the city’s famed media district. KCET’s studios are equipped with the latest technologies, all new equipment and resources for optimal broadcast transmission and production efficiency. One of its two production studios is equipped with three robotic cameras and a green screen virtual reality set. “This was a fantastic opportunity to conceive, design and build a media facility from the ground up,” said Gordon Bell, KCET’s senior vice president of Engineering and Operations. “It was a privilege to head up a team of so many talented individuals and work with some of the most respected companies in the broadcast technology industry.” Now in its 13th year, the Excellence Awards honor new broadcast engineering facilities for innovation, high-quality design and construction. This year’s contest opened last December when 31 entries were presented in the Broadcast Engineering Digital Reference Guide. Readers then cast their ballots online and votes were tallied. Questions About Today’s Real Estate? Ask Phyllis! Selling Your Home During The Holidays Dear Phyllis, We were hoping to get our home on the market before Labor Day, but it took longer to get it ready than we planned. I am curious if you think it is too close to the holidays to get it on the market; should we wait until next spring? Procrastinator Dear Procrastinator, Inventory is low! Homes are selling in multiple offers and often over asking price. I think you should get your home on the market now and here’s why: 1) Buyers looking at this time of year are highly motivated; there are fewer “lookiloos” to disrupt your family. 2) Less inventory – you are competing with fewer properties. You will have more competition in the spring when most sellers put their home on the market. During the peak spring buying season, scheduling movers is more difficult – during the holidays their prices and schedules are more flexible. 3) Most homes and neighborhoods look especially pretty this time of year. 4) Many buyers are highly motivated to close escrow prior to year end to take advantage of tax benefits. 5) Many people get additional time off during the holidays allowing additional time to focus on buying. Keep your holiday decorations to a minimum; “less is more”: * Purchase a smaller tree. The colors on the tree shouldn’t clash with your home’s décor. Simplify by color coordinating the ornaments on the tree or just tying simple monochromatic bows on the branches. Simplifying will give the tree and your home a less cluttered look. * Don’t crowd too many gifts under the tree; keep the small boxes hidden; I would not suggest leaving a Tiffany’s box under the tree. I also recommend additional safety precautions during open houses. The holidays are an ideal opportunity for you to showcase some of your home’s features and benefits: *A large formal dining room might be set for an elegant sit down dinner. *A beautiful wood burning fireplace could be staged with your children’s stockings waiting for Santa. *A center island kitchen might be enhanced with a cookbook opened to a Christmas cookie recipe. *A computer nook could be staged with a few holiday catalogs. Phyllis Harb is a Realtor® with Prudential California Realty. She may be contacted at (818) 790-7325 or by email AskPhyllis@RealtorHarb.com. Page 16 www.cvweekly.com September 26, 2013 LEISURE Celebrating the Red Bull Flugtag A Whale of an Undertaking Photos by Charly SHELTON Photo by Gary Leonard, courtesy of the LFLA Actor and comedian Patton Oswalt kept the audience smiling while encouraging them to (at least) attempt to read Melville’s classic. By Charly SHELTON I f you’ve ever had a Red Bull energy drink, then you know the familiar feeling of wanting to do something reckless right now! Like skydive from a space ship. Or drive 100 miles an hour. Or build a dragon and fly away with it. That is the spirit of Red Bull – adventure and excitement to go along with the massive pounding in your eyeballs! The drink company has become synonymous with pushing the limits of world records and extreme sports in general. The highest freefall (from the edge of space) was in fact sponsored and organized by Red Bull. The Red Bull Moto GP is taking place this weekend in Spain, pushing motorcycles to the limits. And the world-renowned Red Bull Flugtag has been going strong since 1992 in over 35 cities around the world. What is the flugtag? It means “air show” in German. The competition consists of several teams who have built their own man-powered flying machines that are pushed off a ledge. Then they try to fly as far as they can before hitting the water below. The world record stood at 229 feet, set last year by a German team from a flugtag in Mainz, Germany. That is until last Saturday. The first annual National Flugtag Day was held Sept. 21 in five cities around the country simultaneously – Washington DC, Miami, Chicago, Dallas/Fort Worth and Long Beach. And of all the Flugtags in America, a Long Beach team walked away with the new world record – 258 feet. Team Chicken Whisperers of Palo Alto, Calif. flew their 85-pound craft comprised of foam, aluminum tubing and balsa wood into the record books by shattering the previous distance by 29 feet. Some crafts weren’t meant to fly such as the buffalo shaped craft that made a beeline for the water right off the launch platform, courtesy of UC Santa Barbara. Or the dragon shaped craft dubbed “Game of Throwns” which flew more like a potato than a dragon. Some crafts, such as the flying saucer shaped craft made of balsa wood and fabric covering, were so lightweight that they flew off the platform with the offshore wind before the pilot could even get in. But there was more than flight that wooed the crowd. An honorable mention was earned by Team Uppers who flew the house from the Disney/Pixar animated film “Up.” The team members, who were dressed as the characters from the film, built a small replica of the house, tied balloons to the fireplace and set off down the launch platform with a cry of “Adventure is out there!” Granted, the house dropped like a rock, but it was the showmanship that wowed crowds. By far the best craft, in this reporter’s opinion, was Team Oakley Factory Pilots with their angler fish craft. One of the most beautiful pieces of art ever pushed off a pier, the Oakley Factory Pilots created a metal angler fish with gaping jaws and riveted side panels. It didn’t fly far at all, but I don’t think that was the point. After its daring drop, the craft was largely intact unlike most of the others that broke apart on the surface of the water, and some that even broke before that. This was best in show, in my opinion, but they took third overall. Chicken Whisperers took first for their record-breaking flight and The Legendary Flying Machine (a small, light version of the famous H-4 Hercules “Spruce Goose”) took second. Scan the QR code to see some of the failed attempts and some of the not-so-failed attempts at a flight over the water. Then & Now | Verdugo City Then » In this photo from the ‘40s the town center of Verdugo City is a thriving business district. The beautiful brick Roger’s Pharmacy building takes center stage, and there are dentist and doctors’ offices above. Located here as well are a grocery store, gas station, auto repair and post office. This is the view looking west on Honolulu Avenue towards its intersection with La Crescenta Avenue.for women mental patients. The lush grounds were part of the charm of the sanitarium, which boasted 3½ acres of oak-shaded walkways, quiet alcoves and secret gardens, designed to have a soothing, calming effect on the patients. By Michael YEGHIAYAN As part of its ongoing tribute to the Melville classic, “What Ever Happened to Moby Dick?” the Los Angeles Public Library and the Library Foundation of Los Angeles teamed up with actor and comedian Patton Oswalt on Saturday in an effort to introduce the novel to 21st century audiences. Oswalt, an avid reader who admitted to never being able to complete the lengthy American classic after 10 attempts to do so, read a selection from the novel at each of the three libraries he visited to a diverse crowd that ranged from dedicated Melville enthusiasts to interested on-looking spectators. He then proceeded to discuss the book with the audience, peppering literary analysis with a sharp comic wit that makes Oswalt one of the most respected comedians working today. Beginning at the Will & Ariel Durant Branch Library, Oswalt mobilized a following, many of whom were in costume, who joined him for a second reading in Silver Lake before concluding the tour at the Echo Park Branch Library. After each reading, Oswalt encouraged the audience to pick up a copy of the book and commit themselves to reading it, even if doing so required multiple attempts – or the help of a 12-step program. “If you take a run at it and fail, don’t judge yourself. Just take a run at it again,” he said to the crowd in Echo Park. “We will be having meetings in church basements every week; come by and keep working the program, folks.” Oswalt also received some help choosing his passages along the way, particularly from an onlooker who felt the bleak message that is typically associated with the novel failed to do it justice. “This nice old woman named Libby asked me to read the passage where Queequeg gives half of his money to Ishmael, which is a really sweet part of the book,” explained Oswalt. “She told me, ‘I don’t want people to think that Ishmael is so sad, so read the one where he and Queequeg become friends,’ and I told her I’d do that.” In addition to the readings, Oswalt participated in the library’s “summarizing Moby Dick competition” on Twitter, which looked to further connect modern audiences by using social media. “They started off telling people to summarize the book in a 140 characters, and when I started seeing the tweets I started going Continued on next page Courtesy of the Historical Society of CV Now » It’s still a business district with a gas station, post office and several offices, but it would be hard to find anyone today who would call this intersection “Verdugo City.” The City of Glendale has taken steps to remedy that, and have placed signs identifying neighborhoods all over the city, including one for Verdugo City. This intersection’s current claim to fame is that it is the home of the offices of the CV Weekly newspaper, circled in the above photo. LEISUR E September 26, 2013 • Page 17 www.cvweekly.com Continued from previous page off and sort of picking up on it,” he explained. The competition received a fair share of entries, but among the best submissions were “Crazy captain spearheads a doomed voyage for vengeance; doesn’t get it that there are bigger fish to fry in life,” “You’ve Got Whale,” and “For sale: whale harpoon. Used twice.” “What Ever Happened to Moby Dick?” is scheduled to continue How frequently do you ask the question, “What’s for dinner?” Welcome to Dream Dinners where we provide all the ingredients for you to create meals for your family and take the guesswork out of it! You select different meals every month and then customize them to your family’s tastes. What is better than providing homemade dinners to your family quickly and without much labor or thought? Simply pre-assemble your dinners for the month in our store, and then cook at home using our simple instructions. No more stressing about creating a wholesome meal for your family and worrying about the variety, time and thought that needs to go into it. No more relying on premade meals from the grocery store that may be high in undesirable ingredients. Try Dream Dinners – great recipes where we allow you to deliver a homemade meal easily. We are the dinner-time solution you will learn you cannot live without! Call Lissa at Dream Dinners in La Crescenta at (818) 957-1499 or visit crescentavalleyca@ dreamdinners. com to schedule your session today. Dream Dinners is located at 4121 Pennsylvania Ave. Got Good Food? Call 818.248.2740 for advertising info. into early October with programs planned throughout the city. City librarian John F. Szabo hoped the scope of the whale-inspired activities would help reach a broad audience. “As the cultural hub of our city, the Los Angeles Public Library is the ideal place to pose this question and explore its answers,” said Szabo in a statement. “We are excited to discover and investigate Moby Dick together as a community in our libraries, from film screenings in Hollywood to nautical rope knots in San Pedro, sea shanties in Hancock Park to navigating by the stars in Studio City.” The campaign also aims to bring the area youth into their local libraries by piquing their interest and introducing them to the range of programs that are available. Wendy McPherson, Young Adult Librarian of the Echo Park Branch, was on hand answering questions about the library’s after school college prep offerings and SAT writing program. Oswalt also reminisced about spending some of his high school days in the comfort of a library. “My school library was great, they had this room off the main area with blue curtains that I would sit in for lunches and read a book, and it was amazing,” he explained. “I loved having a bit of time away from everybody. I’m not introverted, I’m just relaxing.” For more information about the programs offered by the Los Angeles Library system, visit the library’s website at www.lapl.org. To learn more about “What Ever Happened To Moby Dick?” or The Library Foundation, visit www.lfla.org. Dining Delights September 26th SPECIALS!! ATWATER VILLAGE Located in the Costco Shopping Center 2921 Los Feliz Blvd (323) 284-6312 Come and experience our newly remodeled interior and our delicious updated menus www.dreamdinners.com On Pennsylvania, just south of the 210 fwy. Open House WEDNESDAY October 2nd, 2013 5:00-7:00pm TAKE-AWA Y DAILY SPECIALS DINNERS Breakfast Is Now Served Saturday and Sunday starting at 8am Community Connections program to help benefit non-profit and community organizations within our community. Come help us celebrate this event! Famous Catering for the Holidays Or any Special Event! Call us for details! Rita’s Grand Opening Mon-Thurs Friday, September 27th DAILY SPECIALS** FREE Ice ALL Day* from 10am-10pm Monday $3 Drinks “Come Celebrate with US!” Specials *Limit 1 per person Tuesday Taco Tuesday $1.50 tacos Wednesday $3 Margaritas Thursday Special Menu for $5.55 ** Restrictions apply for specials. See restaurant for details Rita’s of La Cañada Flintridge 468 Foothill Blvd. • 818-790-0406 2272 Honolulu Ave., Montrose (818) 248-6622 • pepesmontrose.com Page 18 www.cvweekly.com September 26, 2013 JUST FOR FUN Weekly Horoscopes Provided by horoscope.com September 23, 2013 - September 29, 2013 by John Deering and John Newcombe Whistle a happy tune when the Moon sextiles Jupiter on Monday. Good energy will surround all of your efforts. Communication will be easy on Tuesday. Call a friend and have a long chat. You won’t want to live in the real world on Wednesday. Daydreaming will be your favorite pastime. Emotions could run high on Friday. Don’t overreact to life’s little annoyances. Trust your gut instincts when Mercury enters Scorpio on Sunday. Your ESP should kick up a few notches. A ARIES March 21 - April 19 Look over your financial paperwork on Monday. You might be overdrawn at the bank! A partner will send you mixed signals on Wednesday. Decoding this individual’s true desires will be very difficult. You might be extremely impulsive when the Moon squares Uranus in Aries on Friday. It’s important to think first and take action later. Search for spiritual enlightenment on Sunday. Read a book by a religious leader, learn how to meditate, or walk a labyrinth. G LIBRA Sept. 23 - Oct. 22 Stick to your budget on Tuesday. If you have the urge to splurge, ask a friend to hold on to your wallet. An associate may try to deceive you when the Libra Sun is quincunx Neptune on Wednesday. Be on your guard when interacting with others. Family matters could interfere with your work schedule on Friday. Finding the right balance between home and career will be a struggle. An admirer may try to impress you on Saturday. This person values your good opinion! B TAURUS April 20 - May 20 You may experience mental confusion when the Moon in Taurus is quincunx Mercury on Monday. Separating fact from fiction won’t be easy. A health matter may spring up on Wednesday. It might be wise to schedule a regular medical checkup. You’ll be in a very upbeat mood on Thursday. Get ready to smile at everyone you meet! A family member may ask for your advice on Saturday. Say so if you don’t feel competent to counsel your loved one. H SCORPIO Oct. 23 - Nov. 21 C GEMINI May 21 - June 20 I SAGITTARIUS Nov. 22 - Dec. 21 You will be at the top of your game on Tuesday. Get ready to defeat any and all competitors! Your creative juices will flow on Wednesday. It’s a great time to dance, draw, make music or write. A financial enterprise could lose money on Friday. Think about pulling your capital out of the endeavor. Don’t reveal your secrets to anyone when Mercury enters your zone of hidden matters on Sunday. Your private information could become public knowledge this weekend. You’ll shine with a special glow when the Moon enters your sector of self on Tuesday. It’s a great time to mix and mingle. Harmony will flow on the job on Thursday. A co-worker might invite you out to lunch! A friend may ask for a large monetary loan on Friday. Check that you have the funds necessary before agreeing to it. Put your brain to good use on Sunday. Think up ways to bring joy into your life. CANCER June 21 - July 22 You could face a setback on Monday. A certain situation won’t work out as planned. It’s time to start over! Your intuition will be spot on target on Tuesday. Follow your sixth sense in all life circumstances. A loved one may try to control your actions when the Moon in Cancer opposes Pluto on Friday. Explain that you have the right to live your own life. Avoid gambling on Sunday. It’s possible that you could lose big time. E LEO July 23 - August 22 Demonstrate your leadership skills while at work on Monday. A higher-up will take notice! You’ll waver between two options on Wednesday. Wait until you’re sure of what you really want before making a decision. A lover could be in a quarrelsome mood when Venus squares Mars in Leo on Saturday. Give this person plenty of personal space. Unfinished business might need to be dealt with on Sunday. Take steps to bring the matter to final closure. F VIRGO August 23 - Sept. 22 A new acquaintance will enter your life on Monday. This person will expand your mental horizons. It’s possible that you’ll travel to a foreign country together. Play by the rules on Tuesday. If you run a red light, you will get caught! Be true to your beliefs on Thursday. It isn’t wise to blindly follow the opinions of others. New vibrations will surround you when your ruler Mercury enters Scorpio on Sunday. Your heart will lead your head this weekend. Surround yourself with nature on Monday. Putting plants in your living space will restore your spirits. Check your insurance policies on Tuesday. You could be paying for unnecessary services. Love will be lovely when Venus in Scorpio trines Jupiter on Thursday. If you’re single, you could meet a soul mate. Say what you mean and mean what you say on Saturday. If you don’t clearly state your intentions, you’ll be misunderstood. A lost object will finally be found on Sunday. J CAPRICORN Dec. 22 - Jan. 19 A colleague may renege on a promise on Monday. Don’t hold a grudge. Just remember that this person doesn’t keep his or her word. Unexpected good fortune will come your way on Thursday. Say thank you to the cosmos. You will have a date with destiny when the Moon trines your ruler Saturn on Friday. A fated experience could change the course of your life. Get moving on Saturday. Lots of activities will keep your mind and body occupied this weekend. K AQUARIUS Jan. 20 - Feb. 18 Be your own best friend on Monday. You’re good to others, so now show the same kindness to yourself. Think before you speak on Tuesday. You may inadvertently offend a loved one if you’re too blunt. Reach for the stars when the Moon sextiles your ruler Uranus on Wednesday. You have oodles of untapped potential. Organize your house from top to bottom on Saturday. It’s time to put the sock drawer in order. . PISCES Feb. 19 - March 20 Your agenda could be upended on Monday. Try to go with the flow as much as possible. Sparks may fly with a lover on Tuesday. Have a fire extinguisher handy! Good news will reach your ears when the Moon trines Neptune in Pisces on Thursday. Call a friend and celebrate. You’ll learn a life lesson on Friday. This experience will help you grow as a person. Have a good time on Sunday. Forget your cares and worries this weekend. CALENDAR this POP UP! CONCERTS CONTINUE IN GLENDALE Tonight is the final Glendale Arts POP UP! concert, a free outdoor concert in downtown Glendale. It takes place in the Glendale City Center Plaza (101 N. Brand Blvd.) from 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 26. More information on Pop Up! Is at www.glendalearts.org or facebook. com/GlendaleArtsCA. Beginning on Oct. 6, POP UP! concerts will move to the Glendale Galleria. This month-long music concert series takes place every Sunday in October from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Macy’s Court, lower level at the shopping center. Throughout the series, artists will perform a variety of music ranging from rock, smooth and classic jazz and techno music. On Sunday, Oct. 6 Sean Wiggins & Lone Goat will provide rock, blues and country music. HEALTH SCREENING, INFO AND FINANCIAL TIPS Free health screenings, heart-health information and financial planning tips will be available at the San Gabriel Health and Wellness Expo on Sept. 28. The American Heart Association and Union Bank will host this Health and Wellness Expo at Union Bank’s San Gabriel Branch on Saturday, Sept. 28 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Participants will receive complimentary blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol screenings, have the opportunity to consult oneon-one with a cardiologist or registered nurse and learn about cardiovascular disease and the seven simple steps to a longer, healthier life. Participants will also walk away with tips on financial planning, including budgeting and saving. Union Bank San Gabriel Branch is located at 401 E. Valley Blvd. in San Gabriel. ARMENIAN EXPERTS HOSTING SPEED NETWORKING EVENT Armenian Experts, a newly formed networking group, will host its second speed networking event on Sept. 26 at 7 p.m. at Elegante Banquet Hall on 10519 Victory Blvd. in North Hollywood. The event will be a chance to meet and connect with local experts, who are eager to expand their personal and professional networks. In addition to speed networking, the evening will also include fun games and unstructured time for socializing. Membership is free. For more information, visit Armenian Experts’ Facebook page or LinkedIn group. Admission is $15, which includes refreshments and appetizers. Alcohol will be available at the bar. Tickets available on armenianexperts. eventbrite.com. REPUBLICAN CLUB TO HOST SONJA EDDINGS BROWN The Republican Club of the Foothills is hosting a dinner at the La Cañada Thursday Club on Thursday, Sept. 26 featuring guest speaker Sonja Eddings Brown and former White House aide Kathy Rust. Brown will give Foothill Republicans a peek into the backroom of the Obama 2012 campaign, and the landmark shift in technology and strategy that will change U.S. elections forever. Brown is a former newswoman with ABC, a Los Angeles media strategist, and the president of “The Kitchen Cabinet,” the largest coalition of economically conservative women in the country. Doors open at 6:30 p.m.; dinner is at 7 p.m. Tickets are $20/person, pre-paid; $25/person at the door. BOTTLES OF WINE REQUESTED A fundraiser benefitting the Pasadena Ronald McDonald House is being held on Nov. 2. Donations of bottles of wine (minimum value of $30) are being requested for the Annual Shine Gala. To make a donation or to arrange a pick up of a donation, contact Phyllis Harb at (818) 7907325. SQUARE DANCE CLUB NEW SEASON The Sets in Step Square Dance Club is sponsoring a new beginners’ class for beginners or those who want to refresh their dancing. It is from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the Community Center of La Cañada Flintridge. The first class is free. John Hyde is caller. Refreshments are provided. The cost is $6 each week. This is a fun way to get some exercise and make some new friends. All are welcome – singles and couples. The address is 4469 Chevy Chase, La Cañada. For more information, call Betty at (818) 7906175 or Vance at (818) 248-6546. RSVP: Joanie at (818) 790-0014 or Mary at (818) 952-7040. The La Cañada Thursday Club, 4440 Woodleigh Lane, La Cañada SONS OF NORWAY The Sons of Norway Edvard Grieg Lodge is hosting a Scandinavian cultural evening at Lutheran Church of the Foothills on Saturday, Sept. 28. Social is at 6 p.m., potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. with program to follow. This is a free event. Questions can be directed to P. Hamilton at (818) 247-9042. Lutheran Church of the Foothills, 1700 Foothill Blvd. in La Cañada. GUESS WHO’S BACK? For nearly 20 years, Glendale Healthy Kids has connected children to healthcare and provided preventative healthcare education classes in the schools. Children without insurance, and those that are underinsured have been helped by Glendale Healthy Kids and more than 250 volunteer healthcare professionals. On Sept. 28 and Sept. 29, supporters can attend a special dinner. The cost is $100 and covers everything – food, drink, entertainment and fun. Please visit the GHK website www. glendalehealthykids.org for further information or call (818) 548-7931. SCIESZKA TO SPEAK AT OUAT Children’s author Jon Scieszka, named by the Library of Congress as the nation’s first ambassador for young people’s literature, wants kids to read. His books hook “reluctant readers” with silliness, factoids, historical elements, gross stuff and humorous drawings CALENDAR THIS continued on following page JUST FOR FUN September 26, 2013 • Page 19 www.crescentavalleyweekly.com CALENDAR THIS from previous page he places in each of his dozens of books: “Stinky Cheese Man,” “The True Story Of The 3 Little Pigs,” “Robotzot,” “Melvin Might,” the Trucktown series, “Time Warp Trio” series. Scieszka will present the final book in the Spaceheadz series about an out of control hamster bent on conquering the world when he visits Once Upon A Time bookstore on Monday, Sept. 30 at 7 p.m. There will be a mystery raffle for those who come hear him speak! Once Upon A Time is located at 2207 Honolulu Ave. in Montrose. NOON CONCERTS OPEN TO PUBLIC Glendale Noon Concerts is a free admission concert series taking place every first and third Wednesday from 12:10-12:40 p.m. in the restored chapel and sanctuary of the First Baptist Church of Glendale (downtown at Louise & Wilson, no religious affiliation). The next concert is on Oct. 2 and features Kewa Ensemble performing Benjamin Britten’s “String Quartet No.2.” First Baptist Church of Glendale, 209 N. Louise St. (at Wilson) in Glendale. NEWS FROM JCK Jewel City Knitters will hold its monthly meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 2 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Scholl Canyon Estates, 1551 E. Chevy Chase Drive, Glendale. Membership is free. Knitters, crocheters, and those who wish to learn are welcome. For more information, visit www.jewelcityknitters.com or email judy@judykits.com. Jewel City Knitters will hold its monthly JCK Charity Knit & Crochet on Saturday, Oct.12 from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Chevy Chase Library, 3301 E. Chevy Chase Drive, Glendale; call (818) 548-2046 for info. Enjoy a relaxed afternoon of knit, crochet, and conversation. For more information, visit www. jewelcityknitters.com or email sandra. canfield@yahoo.com. SIERRA CLUB PRESENTS FIRE SAFETY PROGRAM The Crescenta Valley Sierra Club presents Ranger Richard Anderson’s program on fire safety at the La Crescenta Public Library at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 8. Enter on La Crescenta Avenue for the meeting room and parking. Ranger Anderson is a member of the Angeles National Forest Service. He will give a talk on fire safety, and include the clearing of brush and debris around buildings and homes to insure maximum protections for the community and neighborhoods. Program begins following news of conservation and outings. Refreshments will be served. This is a free program and everyone is invited. Contact program chair Wayne Fisher at (818) 353-4181 for further information. Los Angeles County Public Library, 2809 Foothill Blvd., La Crescenta UTOPIA FOUND AT LITTLE LANDERS Little Landers Historical Society announces the next in its series of monthly programs. October’s program, Utopia, takes place on Oct. 12 and is a fascinating journey into the Utopian Society movement of the early 1900s including its own Los Terrenitos – The Little Lands Colony. The speaker for this program is Paul Greenstein, a local historian, preservationist and coauthor of “Bread and Hyacinths-The Rise and Fall of Utopian Los Angeles.” Join us for a look at the political and social environments that gave rise to the Southern California utopian colonies and the movement that provided the original motivation for the creation of Bolton Hall. This program takes place at 1 p.m. is free and open to the public. Everyone is welcome. Parking is available a few doors uphill at the Elks Lodge. Additional information is available from Little Landers Historical Society, (818) 352-3420, www. littlelandershistoricalsociety.org or email littlelanders@verizon.net. Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Ave., Tujunga AAUW GLENDALE BRANCH OCTOBER MEETING The October meeting of the AAUW Glendale Branch is titled, “Women in Science – the Future” and features guest speaker Laura Faye Tenenbaum, member of the Earth Science Communications Team at JPL. The meeting is from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Saturday, Oct.12 at Oakmont Country Club. The cost is $25 per person; make check payable to AAUW Glendale. Reserve by Oct. 9 by calling Susie Robinson at (818) 951-6104, or (818) 317-5602. Oakmont Country Club, 3100 Country Club Drive in Glendale. K-9s IN THE PARK The Glendale Police Foundation is hosting its fifth annual K-9s in the Park on Oct. 12 at Verdugo Park. This free, family‐oriented and dog-friendly event will run from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. Last year over 5,000 people enjoyed the unique and highly popular event. This is the primary fundraiser for the Glendale Police K‐9 Unit. Attendees can see live police K‐9 demonstrations and dog obedience displays, enter their dog in a costume contest or have their dog’s running speed clocked with a radar gun. There will be face painting, a climbing wall, bounce houses, and a balloon artist for the kids. The Office of the Glendale City Clerk and Vet Care will provide low‐cost vaccinations as well as microchips for cats and dogs. The Pasadena Humane Society will offer pet adoptions as well. Over 25 vendors and dog-related organizations will display their wares. Finally, the Kiwanis Grill Team will sell picnic fare from their food truck. The event is hosted by the Glendale Police Foundation, the Glendale Police Dept. and the City of Glendale, Community Services and Parks. For more information, visit www. glendalepolicefoundation.org or, visit the official website of the Glendale K‐9 Unit at http://www.glendalek9.com. Verdugo Park is located at 1621 Cañada Blvd. in Glendale. FUNDRAISER TO BENEFIT BRAND LIBRARY The Associates of Brand Library & Art Center is hosting a fundraising event on Saturday, Oct. 12. Glendale Collects is from 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and is the first of many gatherings planned in private homes of Glendale’s passionate collectors of original works by artists and artisans. The event will feature an evening of wine, hors d’oeuvres, live music, art viewing and a silent art auction. Tickets for this event are $100 per person or $65 for members of the Associates of Brand Library & Art Center. Individuals may become members of the organization at associatesofbrand.org/join.php. Proceeds from ticket sales will be used to restore and frame six original ceiling painting fragments recovered at the Brand Mansion (originally Leslie Brand’s home, now the library) during its renovation. The venue for the fundraiser is a designated Glendale landmark home and the hosts are passionate art collectors and supporters of the Brand Library. The identity and location of the home is being withheld until ticket purchase. Ticket holders will receive detailed information and directions. Tickets for the event are available online via the Associates of Brand Library & Art Center website at The Americana At Brand concierge desk and at Glendale Community College’s Main Stage Theatre Box Office. Tickets may also be purchased by mail to The Associates of Brand Library, 1601 W. Mountain St. Glendale 91201 (by check payable to “Brand Associates”). Questions may be addressed to caroline@associatesofbrand.org or by calling (818) 937-7888. The Glendale/La Crescenta Stamp Club will be holding an open house on Tuesday, Oct. 15 beginning at 7 p.m. at the La Crescenta Library. Club president and member of the American Philatelic Society Don Schilling will be presenting a program titled, “Learn More About Stamp Collecting – Your Passport to the World.” There will refreshments and free postage stamps for children and adults who would like learn more about one of America’s favorite hobbies. For more information contact, Don Schilling at (818) 903-4451. La Crescenta Library is located at 2809 Foothill Blvd. in La Crescenta. 7 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is free and open to the public. This festive event features local vendors, unique hand-made gifts, live music, a bake sale, and of course the chili bowl sale. Artists are sought to sell their work at this very famous and very large event! Those interested in being a vendor this year can submit an application, found at www.mcgroartyartscenter. org, or call (818) 352-5285 for more information. The holiday boutique vendor application is due by Tuesday, Oct. 15 at 6.p.m. This is not a postmark deadline. For further information contact Monica Hicks-Jenkins, director of Development & Marketing by email at monica@mcgroartyartscenter.org. WDR HOSTING MIXER Women’s Divorce Resource (WDR) is an outreach for single women going through divorce or those widowed. On Oct. 16, WDR is hosting its second mixer. “Sip n Shake” will be held on Oct. 16 at 6 p.m. at Los Gringos Locos, 631 CALL FOR ARTISANS, ARTISTS Foothill Blvd. in La Cañada. There is no FOR ANNUAL HOLIDAY cost to attend. BOUTIQUE For more information, email info@ Every year McGroarty Arts Center WomensDivorceResource.com or call in Tujunga hosts its annual holiday (818) 396-6590. boutique, this year on Saturday, Dec. Oktoberfest is Saturday October 5, 2013 Visit the CV Weekly staff at our Wine Booth in front of Citibank! Visit www.cvweekly.com for more info Page 20 www.cvweekly.com September 26, 2013 RELIGION NOTES & NODS CSL Calendar On Sunday, Sept. 29 at 12:30 p.m., the Center for Spiritual Living – La Crescenta will host Freddie Weber who will present, “Be Here Now.” Freddie’s one-woman show is based on Eckhart Tolle’s, “A New Earth.” The cost is $20 pre-registered and $25 at the door. Freddie will also be the guest speaker and musician for the 11 a.m. celebration service. The Center is located at 4845 Dunsmore Ave. La Crescenta. Tuesday Table Talk On Tuesday, Oct. 1 Bethel Church in Sun Valley will screen the film “The Life of Pi.” The movie follows the adventure of a zookeeper’s son who finds himself stranded on a lifeboat with a 450-pound Bengal tiger named Richard Parker. Pi tries to understand God through religion – Hinduism, Christianity, and Islam. The video will be preceded by a potluck supper. The potluck starts at 6:30 p.m. and the presentation starts at 7:15 p.m., followed by dessert and discussion at about 9:15 p.m. Free. Bethel Church, 10725 Penrose St., Sun Valley CVUMC Hosting Empty Bowls The sixth annual Empty Bowls takes place at Crescenta Valley United Methodist Church on Saturday, Oct. 5. It is a fundraiser that has raised over $30,000 in the past five years that has been given to hunger organizations. The bowlmaking workshops and the event itself have provided many community-building opportunities over the years. Organizers hope that Oktoberfest guests will make their way to the church to buy a bowl then have it filled by one of several restaurants that will be onsite to provide soup or chili. Crescenta Valley United Methodist Church is located at 2700 Montrose Ave. in La Crescenta. “Open Mic Night” at Our Lady of Lourdes Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Tujunga is hosting its first “Open Mic Night” on Saturday, Oct. 5. Singer/songwriters, small musical groups, poets and comedic acts are invited to sign up for a time slot by emailing Tracy Fajota at tlgajota14@gmail. com. Performers are free and guests are $5, which includes refreshments. Sound system, electric piano and drum kit will be provided. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. The event is from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the Parish Hall at 10275 Tujunga Canyon, Tujunga. Bible Studies at Montrose Church A variety of Bible studies and times are available at Montrose Church. A women’s and men’s Bible basics class and study of the Book of James are just some of the studies taking place. Anyone interested in attending one of the studies can go online to register (http://montrosechurch.org/biblestudy). Pre-registration helps with planning for childcare and group assignments. Montrose Church is located at 2409 Florencita Drive in Montrose. Women’s Day Class Community Bible Study, Glendale invites the public to join its Women’s Day Class that is studying the book of Romans, the apostle Paul’s fullest statement of the Gospel. The study meets from 9:45 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. at Glendale Presbyterian Church, 125 S. Louise St., Glendale. For more information, visit the website www.communitybiblestudy.org or call Leslie at (818) 355-2805. RELIGION SERVICE DIRECTORY Light on the Corner Church Directory contact Lisa Mitchell at (818) 248-2740 Center for Spiritual Living - La Crescenta Celebration Service Sunday 10:00 a.m. Ongoing spiritual growth 7:00 classes Wednesday Night Service p.m. and counseling available )LUVW%DSWLVW&KXUFK DW/D&UHVFHQWD ^hEztKZ^,/W ϭϬ͗ϰϱĂŵ ŚŝůĚĂƌĞͲͲͲ^ƵŶĚĂLJ^ĐŚŽŽůϵ͗ϭϱĂŵ KĨĨŝĐĞ,ŽƵƌƐ DͲͲͲdŚ͘ϵ͗ϬϬĂŵƚŽϰ͗ϬϬƉŵ ϰϰϰϭ>ĂƌĞƐĐĞŶƚĂǀĞ͘ ;ϴϭϴͿϮϰϵͲϱϴϯϮ tĞďƐŝƚĞǁǁǁ͘ĨďĐůĐ͘ŽƌŐ COME MEET US! St. Luke’s of-the-Mountains Episcopal Church Sundays Gathering 9:30AM Worship 10:00AM Domingo Misa en Español a las 12:00PM Sunday School and Child Care All are Welcome 2563 Foothill Blvd, La Crescenta 818-248-3639 http://stlukeslacrescenta.org/ www.facebook.com: St. Luke’s of the Mountains Episcopal Church church and the world in new and unique ways. His heart and compassion for people is evident in his messages, and he helps to show the value in others as Religion Sunday services 10:45 a.m. www.lightonthecorner.org 4845 Dunsmore Ave. La Crescenta, CA 91214 (818) 249-1045 T he public is invited to hear Troy Murphy, the chaplain of the Green Bay Packers, at a La Cañada Presbyterian Church presentation of its Growing Families ministry. This event takes place on Saturday, Sept. 28 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall of the church. Murphy will weave storytelling with his experiences as a chaplain, pastor and parent to explain what is needed to raise successful children. Success: How do you define it? How do you achieve it? What is it not? Attendees will find out how to shape their family’s priorities and schedule in a way that fosters and inspires the spiritual growth of both children and family. Murphy will bring his Super Bowl ring for all to check out! Murphy serves as lead pastor of the Green Bay Community Church, chaplain to the Green Bay Packers and the Brown County Sheriffs’ Dept. He has been in a role as youth pastor or lead pastor for over 30 years. Known to many as a pastor, but still others as a creative consulting business entrepreneur, church planter, chaplain of the Green Bay Packers, motivational speaker or former U.S. Marine, Murphy and his natural speaking ability allows him to relate to the To be in this Pastor Jon Karn 1911 Waltonia Drive Montrose (818) 249-4806 “Where it is our dream to help you build and manifest your dreams!” Growing Families Presents Green Bay Packers Chaplain Troy Murphy 9:00am 11:00am CV Weekly is on line: www.crescentavalleyweekly.com ST. BEDE the VENERABLE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Rev. Msgr. Antonio Cacciapuoti, Pastor Rev. Kevin Kester, Associate Pastor Rev. Tony Marti, OFM, Cap. Rev. Mr. Augie Won, Deacon SCHEDULE OF SERVICES Mass Schedule Monday-Friday, 8:10 a.m.; Saturday: 8:00 a.m., and Vigil Mass at 5:30 p.m.; Sunday, 7:30 a.m., 9:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m., 5:30 p.m. Services in the Chapel Lectio Divina; Monday: 5:30 p.m. Evening Prayer and Vespers: Tuesday-Friday 5:30 p.m. Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament: Wednesdays 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Rosary: 8:30 a.m. Weekdays at the close of Vespers 215 Foothill Boulevard La Canada Flintridge, California 91011 (818) 949-4300 • www.bede.org (Missouri Synod) COME JOIN OUR CHURCH FAMILY 2723 Orange Avenue, La Crescenta, CA 91214 818-248-3738 www.glcmslc.org Adult Bible Study: Sundays 9AM Worship & Children’s Sunday School: 10AM Koinonia (Singing & Bible study): Wednesdays 7PM Lutheran Church in the Foothills 1700 Foothill Blvd. La Cañada Flintridge SUNDAYS AT LCIF Worship and Communion 8AM & 10AM Children’s Church 10AM Sunday School for Youth and Adults 9AM PASTOR BRUCE JOHNSON www.lcifoothills.org /818-790-1951 God does. Simply put, his love for Jesus makes others want to love Him. Growing Families is a monthly seminar-type class at the La Cañada Presbyterian Church for parents and grandparents led by a variety of people; some are experts in the field of child development, psychology, and education while others are parents who offer to others what has worked for their families. La Cañada Presbyterian Church is located at 626 Foothill Blvd., La Cañada Flintridge. September 26, 2013 Page 21 BUSINESS » M o n t r o se » Mary Dawson S h o p p i n g Par k Ne w s Happy Anniversary, CV Weekly! Shop, Dine, and fall in love with Montrose! Around the time this paper celebrates its anniversary, I like to pause and reflect on times gone by. Four years ago, I met Robin Goldsworthy and Mary O’Keefe for the first time. I can still see them coming into Mountain Rose Gifts and excitedly handing us their brand new paper – Station Fire, recession and all. It was the beginning of what has developed into a nice relationship with the Montrose Shopping Park. In many ways the paper and the shopping park represent a way of life that is being challenged by today’s fast paced, Internetdriven world. This is all the more reason to cherish the shop owners who follow their heart and to relish the feel of a Thursday paper in your hands. It’s hard to believe it has been four years since I started writing this column. It was all born out of a desire to use words and photos to share the hidden treasures found in our one-of-akind shops, salons and cafes. I also enjoy introducing you to our storeowners and what makes each of them special. My goal is to eventually write about all of the more than 150 businesses in the MSP. Have you seen the Montrose Shopping Park Facebook page? It’s filled with pics that enhance the stories found here. Folks from all over the country can get a taste of Montrose. So often we get comments of joy from those living far away, when they see Montrose, their special little town, in pictures. It seems as fast as we learn one social media a new and improved one pops up. This year has brought Instagram to the MSP. It’s for those who like quick pics rather than a bunch of words. Speaking of words, do you know that the CV Weekly has a fabulous website? Yes, everything is archived online at www.crescentavalleyweekly.com. If you want to look back at this column, all you do is click on the “Business” section and just keep scrolling back. All of the articles are right there for you. This year it was a privilege to write about Montrose Bakery & Café, Walk This Way Shoes, Montrose Jewelers, Needle In a Haystack, Giuseppe’s, Joselito’s, Gelsinger’s Amber Road, Casa Cordoba and Mayhall’s Sewing Center. Now the big question is: have you experienced these one of a kind businesses for yourself? A great deal of time is spent publicizing our many family friendly events. We want people to always have a reason to come to Montrose. This is the best time of year with Oktoberfest, Spooktakular, White Friday, Small Business Saturday, and Old Towne Christmas coming up. But wait! There’s more! Our marketing committee has all kinds of plans in the works. Watch for Boo-Tique Saturday on Oct. 19. The reasons to shop & dine in Montrose just don’t end! So, thank you faithful readers who follow this column. It is always so encouraging to hear your comments. I always get a kick out of the people who tell me they go to the back of the paper first. Cheers to another year! Mary Dawson promotes the Montrose Shopping Park. She and her family own Mountain Rose Gifts and Revelation Tops. » News from the Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce All Can Benefit from 5K It’s time for our annual Running the Foothills 5K event! We invite all to join us this Saturday, Sept. 28 at Two Strike Park in La Crescenta. Runners, joggers, walkers, families, friends, and pets: this event is for all to enjoy! Come rain or shine we will be at the park at 7 a.m. for prepaid check-in and to enter those last minute participants. If you have not yet entered and want to get ahead of the race, you can still register online atwww. crescentavalleychamber.org/5k or visit our chamber office at 3131 Foothill Blvd. in La Crescenta. The fee is $20 for pre-entry and $25 on Saturday. Each person will receive a race T-shirt with each paid entry fee. There will also be a free Kids Fun Run for all our special little participants. If your little one would like a T-shirt, it can be purchased for just $10. We will be honoring first, second and third place male and female winners in each of our seven age groups. In addition, this year we have broken down our age span for each category in order to honor more winners. So all of you competitive spirits come out and show us what you got! Those who are just looking for some fun in the sun – please join us as it’s going to be a wonderful time. Also, I want to remind everyone that we will be donating $5 of each entry to a local school or youth organization of the paying participants choice. If you are looking to raise some extra money for your child’s school, or maybe your little one’s youth sports team, this will be a great opportunity to bring in the funds. I know there are some principals out there who have challenged other schools to see who can raise the most, so be sure to check in with your school office and find out how you can help win the challenge. I am telling you it’s as easy as can be, so sign up for the 5K and just tell us where to send the check! We look forward to seeing you at the race; happy running! a.m. located at 3427 Ocean View Blvd. in Montrose. Join us in celebrating the opening of Boulevard 34 – our new, family owned gift shop. Monthly mixer on Wednesday, Oct. 9 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. It will be hosted by Bonner’s Equipment Rentals located at 6935 Foothill Blvd. in Tujunga. Our annual scholarship golf tournament will be held on Saturday, Oct. 19 at Verdugo Hills Golf Course, 6433 La Tuna Canyon Road in Tujunga. For more details on these and other upcoming events, please contact the chamber office at (818) 2484957 or visit our website crescentavalleychamber.org to see the calendar of events. Ribbon cutting at Boulevard 34 on Wednesday, Oct. 2 at 11 Michele Sierra is the executive director of the Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce. Coming up! » MICHELE SIERRA Harmony Health MD Welcomed to the Neighborhood Amidst the uncertainty of looming healthcare changes, shortage of primary care physicians and decreasing reimbursement rates, one local physician is not holding back. Dr. Emil Avanes has opened the doors for his private medical practice, Harmony Health MD. Harmony Health MD, a new medical practice for internal medicine, celebrated the launch of its spacious offices in the Montrose shopping area with a grand opening earlier this month. Over 400 people attended including City Councilman Zareh Sinanyan, City Manager Scott Ochoa, City Clerk Ardashes Kassakhian, Los Angeles County Medical Association CEO Rocky Delgadillo, Anthony Portantino, representatives from Congressman Adam Schiff ’s office as well as Supervisor Mike Antonovich’s office. “We’re excited to be a part of this wonderful community,” said Dr. Emil Avanes, who has practiced internal medicine for the last five years, most recently at Verdugo Hills Medical Associates, an urgent care facility in Glendale. Dr. Avanes earned a degree in biology at Duke University before graduating from the Chicago Medical School. He completed his training at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, and currently is a Los Angeles County Medical Association district board member, utilization review committee member at Glendale Adventist Medical Center, and Glendale Community College Health Information Technology (HIT) advisory board member. Dr. Avanes is also active in the community and serves on the board of the Armenian American Chamber of Commerce in Glendale and is a member of the Crescenta Valley, La Cañada Flintridge and Montrose-Verdugo City chambers of commerce. He has been active in the Burbank YMCA since childhood, first as a youth athlete and later as a coach. More recently he has been a guest speaker, addressing the fight against obesity. “We welcome new patients and accept most health plans,” said Dr. Avanes, who is fluent not only in English, but also in Armenian and Spanish. Harmony Health MD is located at 3600 N. Verdugo Rd., Suite 202 in Glendale. Contact the office at (818) 369-7470 or visit the website at www. harmonyhealthmd.com. Page 22 • September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com Bonners Party Rentals BUSINESS Local Businesses, Potential Customers Gather at Expo Serving the Foothill Community Since 1939 Chairs • Tables • Linens Tents • String Lights • Heaters Concession Machines Bonners Equipment Rentals 6935 Foothill Blvd, Tujunga (818) 951-9117 www.bonnersrentals.com Photos by Dan HOLM WANT THE LATEST COMMUNITY NEWS? Sign up for our CV Weekly E-BLAST. E-mail info@cvweekly.com to receive an e-mail with the latest community news. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CRESCENTA VALLEY WATER DISTRICT REVISED URBAN WATER MANAGEMENT PLAN Notice is hereby given, that the District’s revised Urban Water Management Plan is available for public review. The Urban Water Management Planning Act requires that urban water suppliers, such as CVWD, prepare a management plan of its current and future water resources so as to continue to provide its customers with an adequate and reliable water supply. The District is inviting public review and comment on the revised 2010 Urban Water Management Plan (UWMP). The public can submit written comments through 4:30 p.m. on October 8th, to CVWD, 2700 Foothill Blvd, La Crescenta, CA 91214 or by email to cjscott@cvwd.com. A public hearing on the revised 2010 UWMP will be held October 8th, 2013, at 7:00 p.m. at the District’s main office located at 2700 Foothill Blvd La Crescenta, CA 91214 All public comments will be reviewed before the Board of Directors considers the revised 2010 UWMP for adoption at its October 8th, 2013 meeting. Copies of the draft revised 2010 UWMP are available for review on the District’s website at www.cvwd.com, or at the District’s main office. Customers may also request an electronic copy by email to cjscottt@cvwd.com. The Crescenta Valley, Montrose-Verdugo City and La Cañada chambers of commerce held their annual Foothills Community Business Expo on Sept. 18, an event that highlighted local businesses that serve the community. This was the 12th year of the business expo. As in the past, it was held in the community rooms of USC Verdugo Hills Hospital from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Though spacious, additional room was needed to accommodate the 67 participating businesses vying for the attention of the 500-plus guests attending. “The expo sold out of booth space,” said Leonard Ghazarian, president of the Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce. “It’s clear that vendors find this event very attractive. It was a huge success.” Participants had the chance to learn of the many area businesses that ranged from restaurants and catering to insurance and service clubs. To encourage them to take full advantage of what the expo had to offer, guests were given a “passport” that they took to every booth to have signed off. The completed passport was brought back to the chamber table and an opportunity ticket was issued for a variety of prizes. Prizes were donated by vendors and other supporters of the event. There was also live entertainment on site provided by Mike Perry. And no one left hungry – several food providers enticed guests with samples of their favorite recipes. “Most people mentioned how good the food was,” Ghazarian said. Ghazarian also praised the volunteers who made the event possible. “All three chambers did an amazing job putting this together,” he said. “I have been part of the expo for eight years now and it keeps getting better.” September 26, 2013 www.cvweekly.com Page 23 Verdugo Hills Medical Group presents: ALEN MIRZAIAN, M.D. Board Certified Internal Medicine “My favorite thing about my profession is the relationship I have with my patients” shine through Treats Hypertension, Diabetes, Cholesterol with an emphasis on Preventative Care Training in Internal Medicine and Hospitalist Care Accepting new patients and most insurances, including PPO, HMO, MEDICARE Doctors in group voted as “Glendale’s Best M.D.” 3 years Colleagues: Gregory Beeve, MD; Holger Bracht, DO; Collin Cooper, MD; Leland Watkins, MD VERDUGO HILLS MEDICAL GROUP A Premier Primary Care Group 818-790-1145 1818 Verdugo Blvd, Suite 108 • Glendale, CA 91208 CLASSIFIEDS & Service Directory For Rent Help Wanted Dianetics Counselors Needed FOR RENT GUEST HOUSE/SINGLE In La Crescenta. Private yard, driveway & shed. A/C, util. incl. No smoking-alcohol-drugs Available mid-Oct. $900/mo. (818) 249-5072. For REnt La Cañada home, 2 bdrm., 1 bath, one sep. studio, 2-car garage, A/C. Close to all schools and shopping. $2,800 per month includes gardening, water, gas and trash pickup. Please call (818) 790-8448 For Sale Do you like helping others? If you know of anyone suffering from self-doubt, loss, insecurities or irrational fears, get trained as a Dianetics counselor to help give them back their potential. It’s inexpensive, easy to learn and it works. Counsel friends and family, or even do it as a career. Come and watch an introductory DVD and see what this highly effective counseling method is all about, then decide for yourself. Giving a person back their joy, freedom and happiness in life is a priceless gift to be able to give. Contact Lynn at the Dianetics Center in Montrose for details. (818) 957-1500. WANTED Elmcroft of Mountview has openings for the following positions: cook, waitstaff, caregivers, housekeeper, maintenance/janitor, receptionist. No phone calls please. Interested applicants, apply in person at 2640 Honolulu Ave., Montrose, CA 91020 Equal Opportunity Employer -M/F/D/V. Services Scooter FOR SALE 1987 Honda Aero 50cc Scooter 3500 miles. Runs good! $800. Call (818) 249-1067. SAM’S HOME REPAIR Plastering, painting, plumbing, tile, stucco, windows, doors, decks. Good work. Reasonable. Local. Sam (818) 249-9949. Services You CALL, WE HAUL! Yard, garage, estate left overs & any clean out! Now also offering Pressure Washing Service. (818) 426-3949. WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE Services MATH TUTOR California credentialed math tutor with 20+ years Experience. Pre-algebra, algebra, geometry, pre-calculus & calculus. Call (818) 269-6941. FOUND BLACK DOG Found on Briggs Avenue. Call (818) 399-4764 WANTED! YOUR CLASSIFIED AD HERE! Call Lisa M.@ (818) 248-2740 Washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranges. Pay top dollar. (818) 248-1344. • AIR CONDITIONING • LOST & FOUND • CleaNING SERVICES • Maids.com FALL SPECIAL Call us to have your system serviced! www.lacanadaair.com We Clean Homes One Time • Weekly • Monthly Service 818.790.8000 Call for a free estimate! License #536450 • Master Card and Visa Accepted 818.248.2001 • Electronics • • Furniture • • Graphics • Electronics Beyond 3448 Foothill Blvd. Glendale, Ca. 91214 818 900-4049 Open Mon-Fri 10am-9pm Sat-Sun 10am-7pm Electronics and Accessories iphone & computer repair Mention this ad for 10% OFF Offer expires 9/28/13 • Party Rentals • • PET Services • Bonners Party & Equipment Rentals VERDUGO PET CABIN Serving the Foothill Community Since 1939 Chairs • Tables • Linens Tents • String Lights • Heaters Concession Machines 6935 Foothill Blvd, Tujunga (818) 951-9117 www.bonnersrentals.com R.POWER SERVICES LICENSED ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Free Estimate on All Electrical Work • Remodeling / Landscaping / CONSTRUCTION • General Contractors Incorporated 2834 N. Verdugo Road 818.548.9840 KITCHEN & BATH SPECIALISTS (First Time Customers Only) (818) 790-8219 Bring 1 Dog, Get 1 Dog Groomed at 1/2 Price! Tues-Sat 8:30-6 Supplies/Boutique/ Doggie Day Care Teeth Cleaning (anesthesia-free) AFFORDABLE ROOFING ROOFING & & RAIN RAIN GUTTERS GUTTERS Repair or New • Tile & Slate • Shingle & Flat Hot Tar • Maintenance • Coatings www.AffordableRoofingService.com 1105 Foothill Blvd. La Cañada, 91011 ★ Tim Mitchell’s Plumbing Service PROFESSIONAL SERVICE & REPAIR ★ BATH REMODELING ★ Serving The Crescenta Valley Since 1985 Office (818) 812-5987 (310) 307-3594 (323) 405-3526 www.Rpowerservices.com Jose Gonzalez 626.216.9374 / Lic #947589 Licensed & Bonded Over 20 years experience (818) 249-6470 Contractors License #469492 Bonded • Insured Your project from Concept to Finish Loc a l Fa m ily Ow ne d Phone: 818.957.2494 Contractors State License Number 879142 N e w Const ruc t ion Re m ode ls Addit ions De c k s U nive rsa l De sign w w w .foot hillc onst ruc t ion.ne t OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 NEW LA CRESCENTA LISTING 3022 PARAISO Three bedrooms, one and a half baths. Fireplace in living room, some hardwood floors, dining area plus eat in kitchen. Double detached garage plus bonus room in backyard. Great location and schools. Trust sale. Needs some TLC. Great floor plan. Loaded with charm! Offered at $539,000 Andersen’s Pet Shop & LOVE THAT DOG HOLLYWOOD! Pet Adoption every Sunday from 9am-2pm 2218 Honolulu Avenue Montrose, CA 91020 818 632-4128 (818) 249-1724 www.janekane4re.com Andersen’s Pet Shop parking lot! Volunteers, Fosters & Donations of Blankets, Towels, Beds... Toys are always needed and greatlly appreciated! Listen to our weekly radio show Wednesdays 2pm - 4pm www.gvbradio.com/lovethatdog ANE KANE “Queen of the Foothills” www.cvweekly.com A CAPPELLA MUSIC CAMP featuring the BUZZ presents MOMENTS IN TIME SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12TH at 7PM 7 PM Show • Students $15 Adults $30 Presented by: Verdugo Hills Showtime Chorus Featuring: The BUZZ, International Queens of Harmony TICKETS: www.verdugohillschorus.org jackiewheatley44@gmail.co 818-419-6360 With Performances By: CHANNELAIRE CHORUS 2012 Chorus Regional Champions TICKETS: $30 CACHET 2012 Quartet Regional Champions verdugoshowtimechorus.org jackiewheatley44@gmail.com Can Grandpa come out and play? A move to Elmcroft isn’t throwing in the towel – it’s getting back in the game. Practically everybody who lives with us has a more active life now than they did when they lived alone. Activities, events, concerts, movies, plays – you name it – they’re seeing it and doing it. Call to schedule your personal visit! 818.248.6737 Senior Living | Memory Care 2640 Honolulu Avenue | Montrose, CA 91020 | elmcroft.com Lic# 197607164 HARMONYHOLICS 2012 Regional YWIH Champions for women… students and adults Saturday, October 12, 2013 Glendale High School Auditorium 1440 E. Broadway • Glendale, CA 91205 9-12 Learn to sing 4 part harmony Students $10 Adults $30 You will learn one song and sing with us on the evening program. Our teachers are sought after around the world and especially love to work with students. 1-4 Audit coaching sessions of Regional Champion Chorus’s and Quartets SIRENS 2013 Quartet Regional Champions Glendale High School 1440 E. Broadway Glendale CA 91205 SINGERS WANTED…LOVE TO SING? Call today. No experience….No problem. We will teach you to sing. Love to Sing…call today 818-419-6360 We will teach you to sing 4-part harmony.