NEWS - Crescenta Valley Weekly
Transcription
NEWS - Crescenta Valley Weekly
14 PAGE Crescenta Valley Weekly TH E F OOTHILLS COMMUNITY NEW S PA P E R FEBRUARY 19, 2015 City Reaches Settlement in Discrimination Lawsuit By Ted AYALA The City of Glendale has finally reached a settlement with the last plaintiff in a federal lawsuit that had been pending against the Glendale Police Dept. (GPD). The lawsuit alleged mistreatment and retaliation against officers from ethnic minority backgrounds. The settlement with plaintiff John Balian, a former member of the GPD, was reached last month, resulting in the lawsuit’s being dismissed earlier this week. In the settlement agreement, the city agreed to pay $7,500 in attorney’s fees for Balian. It also agreed to deposit into his leave bank 250 hours worth of sick time and 50 hours of vacation time. According to the terms of the settlement, Glendale denies any admission of liability for any wrongdoing. Balian had been, along with former GPD officers Vahak Mardikian, Tigran Topadzhikyan, Robert see GCC on page 8 w w w . c v w ee k l y . c o m VOL . 6 , N O . 2 5 Say ‘Hello, Dolly!’ at CV High School By McKenna MIDDLETON T his weekend, community members are invited to say “hello” to the Crescenta Valley High School Theater Arts Dept. as they present this year’s spring musical. “Hello, Dolly!” which will open at the McDonald Auditorium at CVHS on Friday, Feb. 20 at 7 p.m. The show is directed and choreographed by Broadway actress Kay Cole, who has worked with the cast for the past few months in making her vision of “Hello, Dolly” a reality. “My style is finding what makes [an actor] special and celebrating that so it’s a personal experience. This production will never be done like this again because we will never have this group of actors ever again,” Cole said. “Hello, Dolly!” is the story of Dolly Levi, a matchmaker from New York. The musical takes place around 1912 as Dolly travels around New York searching for love and happiness for those around her. The cast members describe it as a story of unexpected love. The CVHS performance will showcase the talent of the cast and feature intricate sets, and a full orchestra composed of the Crescenta Valley Photo by Dan HOLMES The Crescenta Valley High School “Hello, Dolly!” cast will be performing this weekend and next at MacDonald Auditorium. High School Instrumental Music Dept. “We wanted to do a large musical to use the most performers possible. We chose one that was happy and celebrated love and friendship,” Cole said. “I personally knew we didn’t have ‘dancers’ per se, so I wanted to inspire this group to be character-driven in a song, both vocally and physically.” The role of Dolly will be played by CVHS junior Samantha Abelson. She has led a cast of 23 students through timeconsuming rehearsals for the past few months to reach the level of perfection that will be displayed for the public on opening night. “[This role] is a really big opportunity to show all the things I’ve been working on in the drama department for the past few years and it’s just a really fun musical,” Abelson said. “We have worked so hard the past few months and every single person, whether cast or crew, has put everything they have into this show.” The play has a long and respected history. “Hello, Dolly” is a book by Michael Stewart. The play is based on a Thornton Wilder play titled, “The Matchmaker” with music and Fire at CV Tow is Suspected Arson By Mary O’KEEFE Photos by Mary O’KEEFE Investigators believe arson was behind a fire that destroyed vehicles at CV Tow on Monday morning. The clean up continues after an early morning fire took place on Monday at Crescenta Valley Tow in the 4400 block of Cloud Avenue. At about 1:40 a.m., a Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Dept. sergeant who was patrolling the area noticed smoke coming from behind a gate at the CV Tow lot. The Los Angeles County Fire Dept. was called. The fire was knocked down in 19 minutes, according Stephanie English, LACoFD spokeswoman. “Two vehicles in the garage were in [flames] when Fire got here,” said CV Tow owner Hal Present. “A motorcycle was also burned.” Another motorcycle outside the garage and two other vehicles, one that was on a hoist, were also damaged in the fire. The damage is estimated at $450,000. see DOLLY on page 8 “There appeared to be a fire accelerant on one of the vehicles,” said Lt. Randy Tuinstra of the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Dept.CV Sheriff’s Station. “It is definitely an arson investigation,” said Sgt. John Hanson of the LASD Arson and Explosive Detail. There was a surveillance tape from CV Tow that appeared to show a substance being poured onto the vehicles in the garage. Investigators are reviewing the tape. “We do not know if the business or one of the cars was being targeted,” Hanson said. “There was damage to the [wall] near the office.” The Glendale Police Dept. Narcotics Unit was holding one of the vehicles that was damaged by the fire in the garage, said Tahnee Lightfoot, GPD spokeswoman. It appeared the suspect/suspects entered see FIRE CV on page 8 » news » YOUTH » SPORTS Eat Right, Exercise and Be Healthy Local Teen Ready for the Korean Experience New Crusade for Former Falcons Pa g e 3 Pa g e 1 0 Pa g e 1 3 don’t miss founders day on sunday in the montrose shopping park! Page 2 www.cvweekly.com from the desk of the publisher Revisiting and Recommitting New Year’s Resolutions INSIDE Well, we’re about 45 days into the New Year – how are you doing on your resolutions? Losing weight is the No. 1 New Year’s resolution according to staticbrain.com and, if you’re anything like me, making the resolution is a mere memory at this point. After all, it’s hard to make a new habit or break an old one. And exactly how do you go about it? Well, this issue of CV Weekly is here to help! We’ve talked to experts in all fields of health to help kick start a healthy regime or encourage you in your ongoing battle to walk more, drink less and eat your vegetables. From self-help direction to organized exercise, we’ve got some professional advice for you. And how lucky are we to be living in Southern California? As the east coast continues to get bombarded with wet, snowy, cold weather, we’re deciding whether or not we need a sweater when we go out. There are no better conditions in which to get healthy! Especially here in the Crescenta Valley, which was founded on its healthy climate and good air quality. Back in the 1800s, tuberculosis was at epidemic levels in the United States. The only cure that doctors suggested for tuberculosis, also known as consumption, was dry clean air. This drove the infirm to Arizona, Colorado, Southern California and the Crescenta Valley. On a hillside in nearby Sunland you can see the remnants of one of these sanitariums. According to historian and Treasures of the Valley writer Mike Lawler, tens of thousands of invalids and consumptives streamed to the slopes of the San Gabriel Mountains, the so-called “sanitarium belt,” made up of hospitals, resorts, hotels, and boarding houses, all hoping to attract health-seekers from the east. These pristine conditions still exist today, which should encourage us to get outside and start moving. Local bike paths and hiking trails are at our doorsteps making it that much more difficult to come up with a reason not to get healthy. But regardless of how well we monitor our health, we can still fall prey to illness and disease. As co-chair of this year’s American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life taking place April 11-12 at Clark Magnet High School, I’m painfully aware how devastating cancer is for those who are fighting it and for their friends and family who many times feel helpless. I encourage you to mark your calendar right now to be at Clark at some time between 9 a.m. on Saturday morning to 9 a.m. Sunday morning to meet with caregivers, survivors and fighters as teams take to the field, walking for 24 hours to show support and solidarity. www.relayforlife.org So whether you want to maintain your health, get healthy or support someone who is fighting to regain his or her health, you’ll find plenty of help. So pull up a kale smoothie and read on! Robin Goldsworthy is the publisher of the Crescenta Valley Weekly. She can be reached at robin@cvweekly.com or (818) 248-2740. NewS��������������������������������� 3 HEALTH SECTION����18 Viewpoints������������������ 9 BETWEEN FRIENDS� 18 Local Youth������������10 LEISURE�������������������������21 SPORTS����������������������������12 JUST FOR FUN�������������23 RELIGION���������������������24 BUSINESS�������������������������26 CLASSIFIEDS������������������27 Weather in the Foothills “Oh, give me a home… Where the skies are not cloudy all day… How often at night, the heavens are bright. With the lights from the glittering stars…” “My Western Home,” excerpts of poem by Brewster Higley, 1870s Later became “Home On The Range” While Boston lies buried beneath est resolution to be obtained from space. 65 inches of snow – one month’s accu- Global maps will now display moisture mulation – the Crescenta Valley basks content, be it thawed or frozen, in the beneath clear skies with a rain-season top two inches of the earth’s soil. The total of 7.44 inches. Upcoming days of- following, from SMAP’s program direcfer little change for either coast. More tor Christine Bonniksen, best describes snowstorms are expected in the east and the potentials gleaned from the study. “Scientists and decision-makers out west a chance for drizzle is it for the coming days. “Home on The Range” or around the world will be better equipped “home in The Foothills” is this winter’s to understand how the Earth works as a system and how soil moisture impacts a theme! Weather here is beautiful, but a little myriad of human activities, from floods dull; although in the scientific weather- and drought to weather and crop yield world there is great excitement. A new forecasts.” It seems help is on the way! tool is available to fine-tune weather To summarize: The water content forecast accuracy. On Jan. 31, NASA launched its Soil Moisture Active Pas- in soil affects weather and climate. sive (SMAP), a satellite/observatory Detailed study by SMAP may help scifrom Vandenberg Air Force Base in entists monitor droughts and predict California. NASA’s JPL in Pasadena floods. Information from soil and water manages SMAP for the Science Mis- data could also prove instrumental in sion Directorate in Washington. With determining crop yields and possible a drop of irony, due to disturbances in famines worldwide. The NWS forecast is vague, to say the upper atmosphere (i.e. the weather), the launch was delayed by several days. the least. Mostly clear/partly clear skies Now underway and on its three-year are expected with an “80% chance of no mission, SMAP will orbit the earth from rain” for the weekend and into next pole to pole every 98.5 minutes, repeat- week. Temperatures remain mild, ranging the same ground every eight days. ing between daytime highs around 70 Observations of the entire equatorial and nights hovering close to 50 degrees. Our beautiful weather brings “disregion take three days and the higher latitudes two days with the satellite’s couraging words” – no rain. 620-mile measurement swath. The Sue Kilpatrick is a words “soil” and “moisture” in SMAP Crescenta Valley resident and are key in understanding its mission. Official Skywarn Spotter for the The new NASA satellite enables the National Weather Service. Reach most accurate imagery with the highher at suelkilpatrick@gmail.com. JOIN A COMMUNITY NOT JUST A PLACE To help get you started: Bring this Ad to the Y when joining and the rest of February monthly dues will be on us! *Joining Fee still applies. YMCA OF THE FOOTHILLS 1930 Foothill Blvd. La Cañada 6840 Foothill Blvd., Tujunga February 19, 2015 ymcafoothills.org February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Page 3 NEWS Eat Right, Exercise and Be Healthy By Isiah REYES P eople who exercise without watching what they eat, and vice versa, will not see any substantial results. That’s what Linda Taix, owner and founder of Extreme Boot Camp and Taix Workout Studio in La Cañada, believes. She added that being more fit helps stimulate the endorphins, resulting in a more relaxed state of mind that also makes people strong enough to handle the ups-and-downs of life. In a recent article Taix wrote about depression, she stated that exercise could be the best remedy in dealing with depression. “Fitness helps you not only physically but mentally and emotionally as well,” said Taix. “It plays a big part in our lives. When you are physically and mentally fit, you are less prone to medical conditions. People who are fit are healthier individuals and they can maintain their weight better than someone who just diets.” Taix has noticed over the years that people still like to work out in groups, such as when people take spin classes rather than biking by themselves. An activity like biking is also commonly done in groups, mainly because people like to feed off the energy of others by being challenged or pushed. This idea applies to activities like yoga as well. But this is more difficult when someone is alone. Another trend that caught Taix’s attention over the past decade is that more men are participating in group fitness classes, like spin classes or step classes, than in the past. The attitude towards this type of group fitness seems to have changed from being thought of as a “chick thing” to becoming more acceptable and interesting to men. Other exercise trends include functional training where people are using their own body weight to work out rather than employing machines. Another shift is from working out to build strength to now making sure the body is more agile – something pro athletes are concerned about. Keeping on top of trends and interests in the exercise field is something that Taix feels is important. Just last weekend she said she was at a fitness expo in Pasadena to stay updated with fitness trends. Attending these events has allowed her to be informed about new exercises, supplements and machines. She said she needs to be knowledgeable to answer questions from her clients who work out at Taix’s Workout Studio. Currently, Taix’s Workout Studio is under construction. Everything is being redone and the updates are expected to be finished by the end of February. An open house is planned for mid-March and the public is invited. This month is also the 13th year anniversary of the Extreme Boot Camp founded by Taix. It is a military-type fitness boot camp in an atmosphere of discipline and structure. She just hired two new instructors; one is an Army sergeant. Taix gravitates toward former military personnel, saying she believes in giving back to the military and also because the military is the one who came up with this intense style of training. For more information on Taix’s studio and boot camp training, visit www.taixworkoutstudio.com and www. extremebootcamp.com. ABOVE: In addition to her studio, Linda Taix (with bullhorn) and her crew can be found around town offering exercise encouragement and instruction. LEFT: Linda Taix founded Extreme Boot Camp and Taix Workout Studio in La Cañada. CV WEEKLY is online! www.CVWEEKLY.com Beeve Vision Care Center IN Brief CVTC Meets Tonight Attendees to the CV Town Council meeting tonight, Thursday, Feb 19 will be greeted with a full agenda. Among the items that will be discussed is the California High Speed Rail Authority http://www.hsr.ca.gov/ and tentative plans to build a highspeed rail in nearby areas. Also on the agenda is S.A.F.E (Save the Angels Forest for Everyone) https://www.dontrailroad.us/. Street light petitions will also be discussed. For more information, see page 4 of this week’s paper. Due to certain time constraints public comments and announcements will be at the end of the meeting. The CV Town Council meets at the La Crescenta Library, 2809 Foothill Blvd. in La Crescenta. Sustainability Issues Lecture Held At GCC “City of Glendale Jumps Ahead in Sustainability Issues” will be presented at Glendale Community College on Thursday, Feb. 26 at 12:30 p.m. in Cimmarusti Science Center room 177 as part of the Humanities/Social Science Lecture Series. The speaker is Glendale City Council member and past mayor Laura Friedman. She will discuss the Greener Glendale plan as well as other sustainability issues impacting Glendale. Admission is free and open to the public. Additional information may be obtained by calling (818) 240-1000. The college is located at 1500 N. Verdugo Road. Preparing for Arbor Day Glendale Beautiful and the City of Glendale Community Services and Parks invite all to the 2015 Arbor Day event. Light refreshments will be served. Certificates will be given to those who donate trees for the city’s parks and library grounds. Tree donations are due by Feb. 24 and the donation form is available for printing from the city’s website, http://www.glendaleca.gov/home/ showdocument?id=19892. For more information, contact Roberta Medford (818) 248-8151 or by email at rmedford@ucla.edu. An Ophthalmologist’s exam may not only be sight saving, it may be life saving! eye exAms mAy detect Glaucoma Retinal Problems Diabetic Neuropathy Call for an appointment today! 818.790.8001 www.drbeeve.com 1809 Verdugo BlVd, Suite 150 • glendale, Ca 91208 NEWS Page 4 • February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Big CVTC Meeting to Discuss HSR and Street lighting By Mary O’KEEFE Tonight, Thursday, Feb. 19 the Crescenta Valley Town Council will be hosting a discussion concerning the California High Speed Rail Authority. The council will host a representative from the Authority as well as a representative from S.A.V.E. (Save Angeles Forest for Everyone), a group of residents from the area that is opposed to the proposed East Corridor section of the high-speed rail routes. The HSR representative will be the first to present, with a chance given for questions and answers, followed by S.A.V.E. and another chance for Q&A. Then both representatives will be brought forward to discuss the issue together. The East Corridor would head north out of Burbank, go around Hansen Dam and run through the Angeles National Forest toward Lake Palmdale and would include about 20 miles of tunneling. The proposed routes would directly affect the communities of Shadow Hills, Lake View Terrace, Sunland-Tujunga, La Tuna Canyon and Kagel Canyon. The HSR is in the process of prequalifying routes for an Environmental Impact Report. For this to happen the Authority needs access to private property within the affected communities. They will conduct environmental tests including collecting soil and water samples. Residents in those communities recently received letters informing them of the EIR and requesting permission to enter their property. Although the area of ANF does not directly impact La Crescenta residents, CVTC President Robbyn Battles wanted the issue to be brought to the meeting to bring awareness of what is happening to CV neighbors. “[HSR] is not going through our backyard but neither is the 710 tunnel,” Battles said. “We have to be sympathetic and empathetic to our neighbors. One day it is going to be us [who need help] and we will want our neighbors’ support.” In addition to the residences, the affected land houses an equestrian center as well as several hiking trails, camping sites and recreational areas. The CVTC will also be receiving an update on a petition that is circulating concerning street lights in a La Crescenta neighborhood above Foothill Boulevard. Representatives from the Los Angeles County street and lighting will be on hand to discuss the issue. Resident Desiree Rabinov, who was recently voted onto the CVTC, first brought the idea of streetlights in the area to the council. Battles wants to make it clear that the lighting proposal and petition are not CVTC sponsored. “I want to clarify that the petition being circulated was started by a resident who is now a councilmember but this is not a council petition,” she said. However the issue will be ! discussed because residents ACK did B initially bring it to the ’S CVTC. K N The CVTC meeting FRA is tonight at 7 p.m. at the La Crescenta Library community room, 2809 Foothill Blvd. The CV Youth Town Council will be meeting prior beginning at 6 p.m. CV Weekly Subscribers! Don’t forget to show your card and receive your reward This week’s featured business: Offer Expires Jan. 24, 2015 FAmouS CATERING! Frank’s Lunch Time Meal Deal (Choose any 2 of the following with your meal. 1 coupon per person per order) FREE Dirty Chips, Cookie or Small Soda 3315 N. Verdugo Rd., Montrose/Glendale • 818-249-6100 Montrose Verdugo City Chamber of Commerce Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce and the Crescenta Valley Sheriff Support Group invite you to the Crescenta Valley Day at the Races Sunday March 15, 2015 • Santa Anita Park 285 W. Huntington Dr. Arcadia, CA 91007 MISSING YOUR CV WEEKLY? The gates open at 11:00 AM. The first of 9 races start at 12:30 PM. The cost is $25.00 for Adults (18+) 17 and under is $15.00. And once again we will be in a private area in the grand stand area “The Top of the Stretch”. Proceeds benefit Montrose City Chamber, CV Chamber and the CV Includes: 9 exciting Thoroughbred races, parking, official racing program, Sheriff Support Group. BBQ lunch, soft drinks and expert Please respond by March 9, 2015 handicapping advice from Rick Dinger. Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce 3131 Foothill Blvd. Ste. D La Crescenta, CA 91214 There will also be a raffle and a silent (818)248-4957 • Fax (818) 248-9625 auction so you have many chances to leave a winner. For more info, call Rick Dinger at 818-248-4500 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. Ajemco Go Fit Go Bradys Mercedes Dilbeck Real Estate Mr. Walters Coiffures NEWS February 19, 2015 • Page 5 www.cvweekly.com Community Member Honored Getting Ready for with Two Very Different Awards Founders Day By Isiah REYES The people in the ADG photo are (From left to right) Cindy Slagter (set decorator), Tony Hale (presenter, actor from VEEP), Richard Toyon (production designer), L.J. Houdyshell (art director), Jaclyn Hauser (asst. art director). By Samantha SLAYBACK Two months into the New Year many people are just beginning to think about filing their taxes, while others are giving up on New Year’s resolutions and some are still recovering from the holidays. However, for one community member it has already proven to be a successful year. Richard Toyon started off 2015 winning two very different awards. Cinematic production designer by day, Toyon works on the HBO show “Silicon Valley.” But when he’s not working on the show, he spends a great amount of time with his family and, in the past several years, acting as a volunteer leader for the Foothill Division of the Boy Scouts. “Production design is my day passion and scouting was my evening and weekend passion,” explained Toyon. Toyon first became involved with the Boy Scouts when his son became a Tiger Scout for Pack 317 in the first grade. “Scouting is one of those programs that still reveres a tradition and passage to manhood,” said Toyon. “Our youth have many influences coming at them every day and Boy Scouts provides a safe, fun and characterbuilding path to a smarter future.” Toyon added that the Scouts encompassed many things he wanted his son to experience, such as camaraderie, outings, campfires and just simple, goofy fun in general. Toyon remained alongside his son as he rose through the ranks from Tiger Scout to Eagle Scout. “I think my greatest joy was to see the kids grow to young men then endeavor at their own speed and success, and begin to captain their own ship,” said Toyon. “Of course, I was especially proud of my own son when he achieved his Eagle rank, but I was also exceptionally proud of each Scout who made Eagle.” Eventually, Toyon took over as Scoutmaster and held that title for seven years. After all of his time spent mentoring the Scouts, Toyon kicked off 2015 by being awarded the Silver Beaver Award by the Verdugo Hills Council of Boy Scouts. The Silver Beaver Award is an honor given to an adult leader who has shown hard work and dedication and given many years of service. It is generally presented to those who do not seek it and is the highest award a volunteer scout leader can receive from a Boy Scout council. “I really did not expect it, but I am proud and honored to be chosen to receive it,” said Toyon. “I will wear my honor with distinction and pride.” After being honored by the Boy Scouts, Toyon received yet another, very different kind of recognition when the Art Directors Guild presented him with the Excellence in Production Design Award for “Silicon Valley.” Toyon had previously been nominated for an Emmy Award twice, and nominated for an ADG award three times. “It is nice to be Emmy nominated, but being nominated by my peers for the ADG award is nothing less than gratifying – sort of a validation of one’s craft,” said Toyon. SMART-A-THON 2015 Wednesday, March 25, 2015 • 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. USC Verdugo Hills Hospital, 4th Floor Council Rooms 1812 Verdugo Blvd., Glendale Pot ‘O gold & Drawing!! 3 non-profit organizations will win $500 each! 1 non-profit organization will win the Pot O’ Gold To be eligible, a non-profit organization must have a team of 4 players in the 2015 Smart-A-Thon and have on file or bring proof of a 501(c)(3) designation. BOARD OF ADVISORS MEMBERS Warren Boehm, Rick Dinger, Jo Loomis, Jean Maluccio, Bobbi Parker, Mary Pinola, Julia Rabago, Teri Rice, Renee Riendeau, Patty Steur, Eleanor Wacker, Chris Waldheim ThE FunD IS A DOnOR-ADVISED FunD OF ThE COMMunITy FOunDATIOn OF ThE VERDugOS Edna Karinski, Chief Executive Officer Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce 3131 Foothill Blvd., La Crescenta, CA 91214 (818) 248-4957 Montrose will be celebrating its 102nd birthday by inviting everyone to enjoy music, retail booths and more on Feb. 22 in the Montrose Shopping Park. To celebrate Founders Day, local restaurant Zeke’s Smokehouse will host a Rancho-style barbecue in the 2200 block of Honolulu Avenue at Verdugo Road alongside a beer and wine garden. Strolling mariachis will also be present to entertain diners from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. “The celebration of Founders Day in Montrose began more than 10 years ago with the idea of commemorating both Montrose history and Montrose community,” said Event Coordinator Dale Dawson. “It is timed to coincide with the original land sale held on Washington’s Birthday, Feb. 22, 1913, which created the subdivision of Montrose. Three hundred acres were auctioned off at Verdugo Road and Clifton Place with a catered barbecue near what is now the Mobil station.” The regular Sunday Harvest Market and Marketplace will supplement its regular offerings with a number of added producers and retail booths for this occasion. A nearby stage will feature performances by local dance troupes as well as the annual Founders Day Award ceremony. The Montrose Shopping Park Association recognizes members of the community who have made significant contributions to the Montrose Shopping Park and its surrounding area each year with a presentation of plaques. It will be followed by the singing of “Happy Birthday, Montrose” and the serving of the giant Montrose birthday cake to everyone present by Mary Dawson and CV Weekly publisher Robin Goldsworthy. Awards will be presented for outstanding Community Service and Business Achievement, as well as the MSPA’s top award, the Montrose Founders Award, newly renamed the Montrose Heritage Award. This year’s Heritage Award recipient is Myrna Grijalva of Joselito’s Mexican Restaurant. Past recipients have included Frank Roberts, Bernard “Buz” Anawalt, Faye Snow, Raiford Dorsey and Val Grayson, among others. The award is given to those who have shown exceptional dedication and vision in shaping the character of the Montrose business district and the Montrose community as a whole. City officials will be invited to participate in the awards ceremony as well. Added to the event will be local law enforcement and firefighters with vehicles on display in a section designated as the “First Responders” area. In addition, the Kids Zone has been expanded to feature pony rides and a petting zoo. see FOUNDERS DAY on next page Hometown County Fair 2015 Car Show! Save the date april 25, 2015 Hometown Country Fair Call 818 248-4957 for more info. Come in & meet our friendly team of professionals J’s Maids can work miracles on any kitchen! When you call J’s Maids, you know your cleaning team is responsible, trustworthy, trained, experienced and local. 818.248.2001 www.JsMaids.com V V C kly Wee 2014 C kly Wee 2012 V C kly Wee 2012 V C kly Wee 2014 All employees clear our thorough background check. Insured, bonded, trained and supervised. J’s Maintenance and J’s Maids, proudly supporting our community since 1969. Visit Us At 3550 Foothill Blvd., La Crescenta NEWS Page 6 • February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Foothill 1Ne0w%C OFF Plumbing SenioMrsil•ituEstdoumcaetorsrs For all your plumbing needs new and old. Trusted in Sunland-Tujunga for over 25 years. Michael Lonsdale (818) 352-0015 LEGO Monument Tour comes to Glendale ary Call for details! Lic. #866813 24-HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE COMPLETE PLUMBING AND ROOTER SERVICE FAST EFFICIENT SERVICE foothillplumbing247@gmail.com www.FoothillPlumbing247.com Photos by Isiah REYES Visitors to the Glendale Galleria last weekend had the chance to visit American landmarks built by LEGOs. The LEGO Monument Tour is on display at the Glendale Galleria through Feb. 22. The event includes replicas of the nation’s most recognizable landmarks like the U.S. Capitol building, White House, Supreme Court and Washington Monument. The LEGO creations will be on display throughout the mall. The Glendale Galleria is just one of the stops along the LEGO Americana Roadshow: Building Across America. From Glendale, the show travels to malls in Utah, Colorado, Texas, Wisconsin, Ohio, Alabama, Georgia and Delaware. The one-of-a-kind, large-scale models of American landmarks made completely out of LEGO bricks by LEGO master builders will entertain customers with stunning visuals and fun facts. Those who stopped by the Glendale Galleria last weekend had the opportunity to build then take home a mini version of the LEGO U.S. Capitol building. FOUNDERS DAY from previous page Photos by Mary O’KEEFE The history of Montrose will be highlighted with special booths. They will be located at the intersection of Ocean View Boulevard and Honolulu Avenue showcasing the local historical societies and the Montrose Public Library. Historian and author Robert Newcombe will be conducting a Montrose Shopping Park History Walk to unveil the newly installed brass plaques opposite the original locations of such former businesses as the Montrose Hotel and the Montrose Button Hole Company. Overall, the event will be ideal for anyone looking to shop, dine and stroll on a historic day. The Harvest Market and Marketplace will operate with extended hours from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The barbecue will begin serving at 10 a.m. with the beer and wine garden starting at 11 a.m. Performances will begin on the stage area at 11:30 a.m. The history walk will take begin at 1 p.m. and the awards ceremony and cake cutting will occur at 2 p.m. Event concludes at 4 p.m. There is no cost to attend the festivities. NEWS February 19, 2015 • Page 7 www.cvweekly.com Job Seekers Connect at HireLive By Isiah REYES Hopeful job candidates had their chance to network during HireLive’s career fair at the Pasadena Hilton on Feb. 11. HireLive is a leading national sales, retail and management recruitment and marketing company specializing in corporate hiring events and candidate career services. “The importance of this event is helping people get jobs,” said HireLive Account Executive Erin Campeau. “We’re helping [lower] the unemployment rate.” The companies represented included Automobile Club of Southern California, Gemini Bio Products, New York Life and NYLife Securities, IOTEC, Hershey’s, Ortho Mattress, Charter Communications, American Solar Direct and Covered California. Most of the companies were looking for candidates to fill positions that included consultants, account executives, retail sales representatives and sales representatives. Many of the companies HireLive works with offer full benefits and 401Ks among other incentives. “You’re getting a face-to-face interview versus just applying online and having no idea where it goes,” said HireLive Account Manager Steve Flannery. “You’re getting almost immediate feedback.” Flannery said all the companies present were there to fill a position immediately as opposed to just collecting resumes. Brandon Cosio of American Solar Direct said he was looking for a candidate who was able to have a conversation and had a gogetter attitude. He said he liked the event because it gave him the opportunity to engage with the community in different ways and to see different types of people. Upcoming HireLive events in Southern California include the March 11 Los Angeles Job Fair at the Doubletree Hotel in downtown Los Angeles; the March 10 San Fernando Valley Job Fair at the Hilton Hotel in Woodland Hills; and the May 7 Pasadena Job Fair at the Sheraton Pasadena Hotel. For more information visit https://hirelive.com. Photos by Isiah REYES Job seekers talk to Hershey reps to learn what opportunities the company might hold for them. Glendale City Council ‘Work Boot’ Meeting Planned The Glendale City Council has launched “Work Boot Tuesday,” a once a month session in lieu of the City Council’s customary afternoon session. The monthly sessions, technically special City Council meetings complete with roll call and public comment, will provide an opportunity to conduct a site visit of Glendale’s critical systems and programs. The purpose of the sessions is to put “boots on the ground” and allow the councilmembers to familiarize themselves with the people and operations that deliver services to Glendale residents and businesses. The first Work Boot Tuesday is scheduled for Feb. 24 and will be held at Grayson Power Plant. The council will be briefed by power plant personnel and then tour the facility. Members of the public will be invited to join the tours. The Grayson site visit is important to the council’s consideration of the GWP Integrated Resource Plan (IRP), which will outline the future options for the council pertaining to potentially repowering the plant – an undertaking that would comprise the largest single public works project in the city’s history. Future onsite meetings in March and April, respectively, will focus on police field investigations and traffic/pedestrian safety, and EMS/paramedic service delivery. According to a press release, the goal is not to cover the entirety of departmental operations in one session, but rather allow policymakers to delve into the details through tours, live demonstrations, and interactions with the boots on the ground. ‘Charlie Chaplin’ Greets Montrose Shoppers with a Rose and a Smile Montrose Shopping Park shoppers on Saturday were treated to a gift of a Valentine’s Day rose presented by Charlie Chaplin (actress Audrey Ruttan). The free longstemmed roses were a big hit for passersby, and made possible by the Montrose Shopping Park Association. From 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the corner of Ocean View Boulevard and Honolulu Avenue, “Charlie” worked the crowd in pantomime and many rose recipients were heard to say, “You made my day!” or “You made me smile.” With a flower cart as a backdrop, rented from a Hollywood prop company, “Charlie” gave away 500 beautiful roses, perhaps launching a Montrose Valentine’s Day tradition. Shoppers could also take pictures with a cut-out “kissing booth” photo spot while acoustic guitarist Dave Winstone sang romantic love songs. Next up for the Montrose Shopping Park is the annual Founders Day celebration on Sunday, Feb. 22 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 2764 Foothill Blvd. La Crescenta Independently Owned Your HomeTown Pharmacy al Fre e loYc Deliver Come Meet Our Knowledgeable and Friendly Staff! 818.248.5851 CRESCENTA-CAÑADA TILE FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1975! SALES AND INSTALLATION EXPERTS! Tile • Marble Granite • Caesarstone Cabinets & Countertops (818) 790-8219 1105 Foothill Blvd. • La Cañada, 91011 Hometown County Fair 2015 Dog Parade! Save the date april 25, 2015 Hometown Country Fair Call 818 248-4957 for more info. NEWS Page 8 • February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Goodbye to Fred Nelson By Mary O’KEEFE Crescenta Valley has been compared, several times, to Mayberry, that iconic little town where everyone knows everyone and help is never further than a neighbor away. The reason CV is raised to this level of the classic depiction of American life is because of the people who not just live here, but those who volunteer and support it. Fred Nelson was one of those residents who supported the community that he had grown to love. Fred passed away on Feb. 3 at the age of 74, leaving an empty chair at many of community events and organizations that he was a part of for many years. Fred and his wife Liz moved to California from Chicago in 1979 and, like many who leave the cold Midwest, they moved directly to the beach. For years they lived in the Huntington and Newport Beach areas. Then the couple went to a party at the Montrose Bowling Alley and Liz just had a feeling this was the place they should be. “It took me awhile to get him to leave the beach,” Liz said. “But within a year of living [in CV] he was happy, happier than he had ever been.” They moved to the Crescenta Valley in 2007. The couple immediately got involved with just about everything that was happening in the area. They became members of CERT (Community Emergency Response Team), Fred helped plant trees RUMMAGE SALE AT THE FIRE HOUSE On Saturday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. members from Prom Plus Club, Fire House and students from Crescenta Valley High School’s drama department will be holding a Rummage Sale. Monies raised will go toward all the two organizations and toward students who will be traveling to CRIME Feb. 14 1900 block of Lombardy Drive in La Cañada Flintridge, several checks were stolen from an unlocked vehicle parked in an unlocked garage between 11 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Feb. 13 500 block of Meadowview Drive in La Cañada, a floor safe with personal items, jewelry and a handgun were stolen and several rooms were ransacked at a home between 12:30 pm. and 5:30 p.m. Greece this year with the school’s drama department. The groups are taking donations from the public of items to sell. The Rummage Sale will be held at the Fire House, 2563 Foothill Blvd. at the north east corner of Foothill Boulevard and Rosemont Avenue. for the Experimental Forest in the Verdugo Mountains and in Deukmejian Wilderness Park, they joined the Little Landers Historical Society in Tujunga and the Historical Society of Crescenta Valley, and the Stone Barn Vineyard Conservancy – just to name a few organizations they were involved with. Fred was always ready with a joke and, Liz said, people here “got” his sense of humor. “Fred was an interesting guy. He would regale you with stories of time travel and traveling through the galaxy,” said Stuart Byles, member of the Historical Society of the Crescenta Valley and cofounder of the Stone Barn Vineyard Conservancy. “Fred was a big reader. He had an arcane sense of humor. You never knew if he was pulling your leg or was serious.” The couple was very active in CERT and helping the community. Fred was in the hospital during the Station Fire but was very active during the flooding that followed. “We helped when the mudslides happened,” Liz said. The couple patrolled the neighborhoods with CERT and helped where they were needed. Fred and Liz manned booths at the CV Chamber of Commerce Hometown Country Fair and at Harvest Market for their various organizations. But Fred had an aggressive form of arthritis that began to affect his ability to attend all the events he wanted to, Liz said. It may have slowed him down but didn’t stop him – at first – but as it progressed there were more doctors’ appointments as the illness began to take its toll. On Thanksgiving 2014, Fred slipped and fell at his home. The result was an injury to his back; after that he wasn’t getting any better. Then Liz thought Fred had the flu but they soon found he had suffered a heart attack. For two months he struggled with his injury, the arthritis and his heart condition. “He couldn’t walk two feet, but the weekend before he [passed away] he wanted to take out the garbage,” she said. “He wanted to help.” The reasons the couple loved the community became even more evident as neighbors and friends rallied to bring food and help with yard work. Fred had told Liz that he did not want to die in a hospital. When he had his final heart attack he was home, holding onto his wife’s hand like he had for almost 45 years. He did not want any services. “He said, ‘The people that I care about know that I care and I have said everything to everyone I need to,’” Liz said. She added that although he is gone, his spirit remains at all of the community events and his presence will always be felt. CV FIRE from Cover BLOTTER Feb. 12 Foothill Boulevard and Hillhaven Avenue in Tujunga, a North Hollywood woman was arrested on suspicion of concentrated cannabis after a routine traffic stop that also discovered the woman was driving on a suspended license at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 9 Alta Canyada Road and Foothill Boulevard, a Long Beach man was arrested and was found to be on parole for burglary and in possession of what appeared to be marijuana at 11:55 p.m. 2015 Foothills Relay For Life 15th Annual Foothills Relay For Life Come Celebrate, remember, and Fight baCk at Clark Magnet High School 4747 New York Ave on April 11-12 Opening Ceremony and Survivors’ Lap - April 11 at 9 am Luminaria Ceremony April 11 at 9 pm This event is free and open to the public. This is a 24 hour event and there is entertainment all day long. For more information on starting a team, joining our survivor lap or just attending visit our website: www.relayForlife.org the business through a back gate south of Foothill Boulevard at the east end of the CV Tow property. After the sheriffs and fire personnel left, Present surveyed the damage. The garage where the fire appeared to have started was filled with ash and twisted metal. The side wall of the garage that is shared with the office was charred and the window was shattered. “We hold cars all the time [for law enforcement agencies] and we have never had anything like this happen,” Present said. No injuries were reported. An employee that usually stays at the yard throughout the night was not on duty at the time of the fire. “We’ve been in business 53 years and never had anything like this happen before,” added Sue Present. “We’re thankful no one was hurt.” The incident is still under investigation. Anyone with information on the fire is asked to contact Sgt. John Hanson at (323) 881-7500. lawyer Carney Shegerian, who represented the plaintiffs, said that her clients had made it “real clear” that they had “extremely strong stories and evidence about what had gone on in Glendale.” “As a group and individually they just described … being treated as second class citizens,” she said.” Calls to Shegerian’s office seeking comment were not answered. De Pompa had strongly denied any misconduct in 2010. “We are absolutely committed to … diversity. We simply can’t do [our jobs] without it,” he said. “[My] firm belief is that our environment is free of discrimination, harassment and retaliation.” Two other officers, Marc Mendoza and Tyrone Hunter, of Filipino and African-American descent respectively, would later also file suit against the city alleging similar mistreatment. The other officers in Balian’s lawsuit all eventually settled or had their cases dismissed. A federal jury in 2013 tossed Topadzhikyan’s claim that he had been discriminated against. Persegian, Simonzad and Mardikian all settled with the city. Mardikian’s settlement raised eyebrows last year when it was learned that Las Vegas police had arrested him attempting to solicit a prostitute in an undercover sting. That case is still under investigation. on Feb. 20, Feb. 21, Feb. 27 and Feb. 28 and the 2 p.m. show on Feb. 22, the cast will perform for local elementary schools during the day. For the past two Saturdays, local elementary school students have come to CVHS to participate in a program called, “Hello, Dolly!” Junior, in which “Hello, Dolly!” cast members pair up with the kids to teach them a number from the show. The elementary school students will be performing during intermission at the Feb. 21 and Feb. 28 shows. Tickets are $10 for the student balcony, $15 for general admission, and $20 for reserved front orchestra. The cast and crew of “Hello, Dolly!” encourages the public to enjoy their rendition of the show and witness the months of hard work and preparation pay off in applause. GCC from Cover Parseghian and Benny Simonzad, one of the plaintiffs in a highprofile lawsuit alleging that the GPD engaged in discriminatory practices against ArmenianAmerican officers. Among the accusations in the lawsuit were allegations that the GPD and its former chief Ron De Pompa “[used] administrative leave and internal affairs investigations as reckless abuse of power to intimidate and retaliate, as well as to send a fearful message to other employees that, if they engage the department in litigation or support those who do, they too will be subjected to the same type of treatment.” In an interview with the Crescenta Valley Weekly in 2010, DOLLY from Cover lyrics by Jerry Herman. It first opened at the St. James Theatre in New York on Jan. 16, 1964 and closed after 2,844 performances on Dec. 27, 1970. On Broadway the lead role of Dolly Levi was first portrayed by Carol Channing and directed by Gower Champion. The film version starred Barbara Streisand as Dolly and directed by Gene Kelly in 1969. In addition to the 7 p.m. shows February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Page 9 VIEWPOINTS NEWS FROM SACRAMENTO » MIKE GATTO A Common Sense Solution for Midday and Late-Night Traffic It has happened to anyone who lives in Southern California. A late-night accident or mysterious slowing clogs the rightmost freeway lanes, while the carpool lane sits empty − a situation that seems to defy common sense. There is no reason why drivers should have to continue to endure this. For this reason I have introduced a bill that would give drivers access to carpool lanes when they are being underutilized. Assembly Bill 210 calls for the creation of a pilot project, administered by California Dept. of Transportation, that would allow single-occupancy vehicles to access High Occupancy (HOV) lanes (also known as carpool lanes) along certain portions of the 210 freeway and the 134 freeway during nonpeak hours. After all, carpool lanes are intended to increase the capacities of our freeways, reward those who carpool during rush hour, and protect the surrounding environment from harmful exhaust. Unfortunately, these goals often go unmet and, at times, the problem worsens when a major fraction of the highway is unnecessarily restricted to motorists. The proposed measure would give the highway system more flexibility in accommodating commuters, with significant benefits to surrounding communities. A single accident would be less likely to close an entire freeway and disruption of traffic patterns would be minimized. Those who work in the film and entertainment industries when leaving would find the 134 less congested during their late night drive home after a long day at the studio. Neighborhoods lining the 134 and 210, particularly in Glendale, La Crescenta, La Cañada Flintridge and Pasadena, would see a decrease in surrounding noise and smog pollution. I am also told this proposal would save lives. A significant number of accidents are caused by people adjacent to the carpool lanes being unexpectedly hit by a motorist who darts across the double-yellow carpool striping. Changing this to a lane with ingress and egress will prevent such accidents. Many northern California freeways already have this flexibility, and it works very well. It only makes sense to bring these solutions to our Southern California freeways, especially when so many carpool lanes are not used to full capacity during off-peak hours. Mike Gatto is the chairman of the Consumer Protection and Privacy Committee, and the longestserving current member of the State Assembly. He represents Burbank, Glendale, La Cañada Flintridge, La Crescenta, Montrose and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Atwater Village, East Hollywood, Franklin Hills, Hollywood Hills, Los Feliz and Silver Lake. Follow him on Twitter @ MikeGatto or visit www.asm.ca.gov/ gatto. LETTERS WANTED! (All letters must be 250 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. Treasures of the Valley » Mike lawler Ananda Ashrama Today – Part 3 La Crescenta’s Ananda Ashrama went through some changes after its founder and leader Swami Paramananda died in 1940. Vedanta, a branch of Hinduism and Ananda Ashrama’s philosophical base, had its parent order in India. Although it was a gender inclusive philosophy – both sexes are ordained – traditional Indian culture reserved leadership for men. Swami Paramananda had ignored that and had prepared women in his order to take over for him at his death. As I related last week, those women were faced with a dilemma – to carry on their founder’s wishes, thus angering their parent order, or to accept a new male Swami from India. They honored Paramananda’s wishes, assumed leadership themselves, and were dispossessed by the Ramakrishna Math, the spiritual organization that forms the core of the Vedanta movement. Under female leadership they have grown and strengthened as an independent Vedanta order, and are perhaps the only Hindu sect run by women. Their leader today is Sudha Ma, an American woman with roots in La Crescenta. Sudha Ma, also known as Dr. Susan Schraeger, had always had a strong attraction to spiritual issues. Early in life she was an Episcopalian, even becoming a nun. She left that church to continue her schooling, gaining a Ph.D in education. She worked in the Glendale school system, becoming an administrator at Clark Junior High. She heard about the Ananda Ashrama from the students there, who described it variously as an evil cult, a hippie commune or a nudist colony. Curious, and still attracted to the spiritual, she decided to check it out. What she found there she immediately recognized as her true faith, and also recognized the Ashrama’s leader Gayatri Devi as her teacher. She moved to the Ashrama in 1982, and took her monastic vows in 1985, taking the name of Sudha Ma. Before Devi died in 1995 she chose Sudha Ma as her successor to lead the Ashrama. Since assuming this role she has ambitiously achieved many goals. She has expanded the Ashrama’s two schools in India, now serving 6,000 impoverished children. She travels between La Crescenta, the Ashrama in Boston and another two Ashramas in India, teaching and leading services. She has overseen the restoration of the buildings at Ananda Ashrama, and has managed the financial resources of her order carefully. Like many churches, they are not endowed, and rely on donations and volunteers to continue their work. Despite the changes in the leadership of Ananda Ashrama, the physical aspects haven’t changed since it was established in the 1920s. It is still an oasis of peace and tranquility in a busy world. Nestled between a quiet residential neighborhood and the national forest, its 120 acres offer quiet reflection in a natural setting. Many lifelong CV residents have never heard of the Ashrama, and of those that have, few have visited it. Yet it is freely open to all those who respect the peace of the place. I often visit the grounds myself, making sure I honor News from CV Alliance Hi, CV! Did you know four Marlboro Men died from smokingrelated illnesses? I watch John Oliver’s HBO show, “Last Week Tonight” and learned this fact during his exposé on tobacco, specifically Big Tobacco. Google it for yourself. The language is raw; the facts are cold. While no mention was made of e-cigs, hookah or vaping, I have been thinking about their local use as we reapply for our grant. According to 2013 California Healthy Kids Survey data, 98% of seventh graders, 76% of ninth graders and 79% of 11th graders at CV High have never tried vapes, e-cigs or hookah. That means there are too many that did, or said they did. We know traditional cigarettes are frowned upon by young people; what about these new delivery systems? Violet Mesrkhani, PhD, runs GUSD TUPE classes (Tobacco Use Prevention Education). She heard they are as innocent as teapot vapor. A Yelp search found nine vape stores in our area and, when I included Glendale and Pasadena in my search, there were nearly 100 vape stores reviewed on Yelp. And it’s not just specialty shops; e-cigarettes are sold in convenience stores, dollar stores, grocery stores and gas stations. Last year, a mother called to say her young son asked her to buy him an e-cig because “all of his friends” had them. She was wondering if this was true and she wanted information about them. Unless her son’s a part of the 2%, he was exaggerating. But she did inspire me to put information on our website about vaping, the Ashrama’s tranquility by leaving my dog at home and keeping my volume down. Driving up Pennsylvania to the intersection where it turns right and becomes Markridge, I take a left into the Ashrama’s driveway, located between two stone pillars. The long driveway winds through trees and meadows, where I invariably spot deer grazing. The driveway loops through the property, through orchards and tended gardens, passing by the many small cabins where some Ashrama members live. One can park in the parking lot, and wander up to the beautiful temple. To see the glorious interior of the church and its monuments to the world’s religions, all are welcome to their Sunday 11 o’clock services. The message they give is simple – there are many paths to God. Swami Paramanada said, “My idea is not to bring here a Hindu creed or a Christian creed or a Buddhist creed, but to take the best out of all and embody the universal aspect of all. That is my dream.” The dreamer has moved on but his dream is alive here in La Crescenta. Ananda Ashrama is truly a treasure. Mike Lawler is the former president of the Historical Society of the Crescenta Valley and loves local history. Reach him at lawlerdad@yahoo.com. e-cigs and hookah so I thank her here. So how are kids getting their hands and lips on these things? What do you know about this trend? I would really love to hear your thoughts. And, just so you know, Glendale Police Officer and fan favorite Joe Allen is speaking on this topic at our March 3 parent session from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in the CV High library. If you would like to bring your child to this talk, let me know and we’ll open it up to kids. If not, it will be parents only. Suzy Jacobs is the executive director of CV Alliance located at 3131 Foothill Blvd. Suite D La Crescenta, CA 91214 (818) 646-7867 http://cv-alliance.org/ Page 10 www.cvweekly.com February 19, 2015 YOUTH Local Teen Ready for the Korean Experience By Samantha SLAYBACK Sixteen high school juniors, including Rachel Harvey of Crescenta Valley High School, will be flying to Korea in April as part of Project Bridge, a yearlong program that immerses students in the nuances of Korean culture, while encouraging the development of leadership skills and cultural understanding. Developed by the nonprofit Pacific Century Institute, the program annually selects 16 students as youth ambassadors and, over the course of the year, the ambassadors are introduced to various aspects of Korean culture, history and government and the experience of Koreans in America. Harvey’s interest in Korean culture began in the fourth grade when she befriended a Korean exchange student named Divina. Though Divina eventually moved back to Korea, Harvey and Divina still maintain contact, a friendship that sparked a continuing enthusiasm for the Korean language and culture. Now in her second year of Korean language classes at CVHS, Harvey was introduced to Project Bridge through her teacher, Tina Song. To Harvey, the program sounded like “a once in a lifetime opportunity.” In order to trim 135 applicants to just 16 (eight from the Los Angeles region, eight from the New York region), Harvey and the other students underwent an application process that was akin to applying for college, including an interview, multiple essay prompts, letters of recommendation and a reviewing of transcripts. Fiftyone applicants made it to the interview phase. According to Judy Choi of the Pacific Century Institute, “A review committee chose 16 of the most promising candidates, weighing their leadership capacity, commitment to the program, personal motivation and goals for participating in the program.” The youth ambassadors had their first orientation in Koreatown in December and have begun meeting regularly several times a month, attending educational seminars to expand upon their knowledge of Korean society and, of course, brush up on their Korean language skills. Those skills will be put to the test when the students fly to Korea in April for a study tour, which will have the youth ambassadors visiting several notable sites and experiencing Korean culture firsthand during a stay with a host family. Among the locations the youth ambassadors will visit are Korean high schools and universities, historical landmarks, cultural landmarks such as the Seonunsa Buddhist Temple, various businesses and industrial sites, government buildings, the U.S. Embassy, and the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating North and South Korea. From April 1 to April 12, the students will plunge headlong into Korean life, something Harvey has looked forward to for much of her life. ““I have always wanted to go to Korea,” said Harvey. “I am so excited. We’re going to get to see a lot of things that regular tourists don’t get to see and completely immerse ourselves in the culture.” Photos courtesy of the Harvey Family Crescenta Valley High School junior Rachel Harvey is preparing for a 12-day Korean excursion as an ambassador with Project Bridge. YMCA of Glendale Girls Gymnastics Team Sweeps San Diego Rhythm Invitational Long known for one of the best gymnastics programs in Southern California, the YMCA of Glendale girls’ gymnastics team dominated the 2015 San Diego Rhythm Invitational on Jan. 10-11, bringing home an impressive 35 awards. The 16 competitors – who all hail from Glendale – competed in six categories (all around, ball, clubs, floor, hoop and rope) in five of the 10 age-levels. Held at San Diego City College, a top facility for gymnastic and rhythmic competitions in Southern California, the winners were: Eva Amirkanian, 9, second place, all around; Tamara Chinivizyan, 11, first place, all around, ball, rope, clubs and second place, floor; Acasia Fong, 8, first place, all around; Hayarpi Ghadimian, 10, first place, ball; Ekaterina Likhvareva, 7, first place, rope; Jodie Mendoza, 13, first place, all around, rope, hoop, floor, clubs; Ani Muradyan, 13, first place, hoop, second place, floor, all around and third place ball, clubs; Hana Nguyen, 11, third place, floor, ball; Carla Ohanian, 11, first place, all around, floor, rope, ball, clubs; Sofia Panoosian, 7, first place, floor, ball; Anastisia Papadeas, 11, third place, floor, clubs; Ariana Saenz, 7, first place, ball; Leila Sears, 7, second place, ball; Michelle Shvedov, 13, first place, ball and second place, rope, clubs; Emily Sulian, 11, first place, rope; and Eugenia Zhenikova, 6, first place, floor. “We are extremely proud of spacious new boarding kennels & air conditioned runs 6934 Foothill Blvd, Tujunga, CA 91042 • (818) 352-6085 the Glendale YMCA gymnastics team, which ranked as the number one team in 2010 and 2013,” said Arpi Avetyan, head gymnastics instructor at the Glendale Y. “Our girls have worked very hard to reach this level of achievement and many of them have aspirations to participate in the 2015 Junior Olympics this summer. I look forward to cheering them on.” Rhythmic gymnastics is an activity in which individuals or teams of five manipulate one or two pieces of apparatus in five categories: ball, clubs, hoop, ribbon, rope and free (no apparatus). An individual athlete manipulates only one apparatus at a time. When multiple gymnasts are performing a routine together, a maximum of two types of apparatus may be distributed through the group. An athlete can exchange apparatus with a team member at any time during the routine. Therefore, an athlete can manipulate up to two different pieces of apparatus through the duration of the routine. The sport combines elements of ballet, dance, gymnastics and apparatus manipulation. The victor is the participant who earns the most points, determined by a panel of judges, for leaps, balances, pirouettes (pivots), apparatus handling and execution. The choreography must cover the entire floor and contain a balance of jumps, leaps, pivots, balances and flexibility movements. Each movement involves a high degree of athletic skill. Physical abilities needed by a rhythmic gymnast include strength, power, flexibility, agility, dexterity, endurance and hand-eye coordination. Photo provided by YMCA of Glendale The YMCA of Glendale gymnastics team brought home 35 awards from the 2015 San Diego Rhythm Invitational. Pictured are Michelle Shvedov, 13, Carla Ohanian, 11, head YMCA gymnastics coach Arpi Avetyan, Tamara Chinivizyan, 11, and Anastisia Papadeas, 11. YOUTH February 19, 2015 • Page 11 www.cvweekly.com Build Season Draws to a Close for Team 696 Build season for FIRST – For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology – robotics team 696 from Clark Magnet High School has drawn to a close. The robot had to be finished, bagged and ready to go by Tuesday, meaning that students would not be allowed to work on the robot or make any changes. During the six-week build season, the team attended two science fairs at Lincoln and Mountain Avenue elementary schools. They demonstrated last year’s robot, Snapdragon, to the group of excited kids who eagerly interacted with the robot. Team 696, the FIRST robotics team at Clark Magnet High School, involves hard working and enthusiastic students who are devoted to creating robots for the purpose of spreading awareness of science and technology-based education and competes in FIRST robotics competitions. This year’s game is called Recycle Rush, in which teams must build robots that can pick up boxes and green recycling containers, stack them, and place a swimming pool noodle inside the recycling bin. Team 696, The Circuit Breakers, have been spending many late nights working tirelessly to meet all the deadlines they have set for themselves, as well as the ultimate deadline: bag day. They will be attending two regional competitions this season: Los Angeles Regional on March 1114 and the Ventura Regional on March 26-29. Team 696 is looking forward to a successful season. Contributed by Anna PARSAMYAN Great Camping … and Lots of Fun The Boy Scouts of Troop 317 went camping and hiking at picturesque Death Valley National Park Jan. 30 – Feb. 1. Although the troop was met with a surprising rain shower on their arrival at the campsite on Friday, the scouts adapted and enjoyed what nature offered. Led by Scout Master David For more stories, please visit us online at www.cvweekly. com Januzik, Steve Norkus and Adrian Ponce, the Boy Scouts who attended were Sean Salazar, Allister Quizon, Dylan Sibal, Colin Carr, Eagle Scout Nick Zamora, Joshua Ponce, Sean Metz, David Januzik, Adam Sibal, Eagle Scout Chris Carr, Anthony Norkus, Ryan Januzik and Ethan Arellano. The troop meets every Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Holy Redeemer Healy Hall, 2411 Montrose Ave. in Montrose. Submitted by Roly QUIZON tortoise and the hare A W or ld P r em ie r m usicAl T he e nT i r e F Am i ly W i ll l ove ! Book, Music & Lyrics by CAROL WEISS Directed by DANIEL SMITH Musical Direction by WAYNE MOORE ANIMAL HIGH Home of the Beasts How Students Tackle Illness By Sebastian TRIPP, Intern Classrooms and doctor’s offices have been busy this flu and cold season with patients complaining of body aches and runny noses. Although the flu season is coming to an end, there are still precautions that should be taken by both adults and kids. “The best way to prevent the spread of sickness is to stay home until [students and adults] are well,” advised Dr. John Rodarte, a pediatrician with an office in La Cañada Flintridge. It may seem like a logical reaction – you’re sick, so stay home; however, that is not always what happens. In a recent unscientific survey, students from Crescenta Valley High School were asked a few questions about their response to the cold and flu season. Out of 14 randomly chosen students, 11 said they still attend school if they are sick. All of those students cited their decision to go to school was based on homework and how difficult it would be to make up the lost days. Of the three students who stated they did not go to school when sick, only one gave the reason of not wanting to spread the illness to others. Thirteen randomly chosen students were asked if they felt school was a healthy place. Eight said no, five said yes. And flu vaccinations are not necessarily the answer. The flu vaccinations that were YOUTH NOTES Comedy Sportz on Friday The next performance of Comedy Sportz is tonight, Thursday, Feb. 19 at 5 p.m. at the Underground Theatre at CV High School, 2900 Community Ave. in La Crescenta. All are invited to come out and support the Comedy Sportz team. Scholastic Bowl Planned The 25th annual Glendale Unified School District Scholastic Bowl will be held on Monday, March 2 at 7 p.m. at the John Wayne Performing Arts Center on the campus of Glendale High School. The Scholastic Bowl is an academic competition administered in late 2014 and 2015 were actually for the wrong strain of flu that has been affecting people. “It has been a busy year with influenza A,” Rodarte said in a previous interview with CVW. The flu vaccine that many received prior to flu season did not cover both strains – “A” and “B” – that spread throughout Los Angeles County and the nation. Although the number of flu cases seems to be slowing down, Rodarte still advises everyone, both children and adults, to cover their mouths when they cough, be aware of those who are sick around you, stay home if you are sick and see a doctor if you have any concerns. for GUSD high schools. Each high school is represented by a team and answer questions on a series of academic subjects. NBC channel 4 weatherman Fritz Coleman will host the Scholastic Bowl. High school students from Clark Magnet, Crescenta Valley, Glendale, and Hoover will compete for scholarship money donated by businesses and groups throughout Glendale. Each member of the first place team will win $500, second place will win $250, third place will win $150 and fourth place will win $100. For questions, contact Vicki Atikian at (818) 243-1809. THE RACE OF THE SCHOOL YEAR TOP MATHLETE vs TOP ATHLETE Photo by Esau Rosales FIVE WEEKS ONLY è CALL NOW FOR TICKETS 323-469-1970 SundayS 2pm: march 1, 8,15, 22, 29 è Saturday 2pm, march 28 t icket d o n at i o n $12 è t i c k e t S a l S o a va i l a b l e a t nineoclockplayers.com or brownpapertickets.com a SSiStance l eague p layhouSe è 1367 north St. andrewS place Bonners Party Rentals 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 Page 12 www.cvweekly.com February 19, 2015 SPORTS New Crusade for Former Falcons By Brandon HENSLEY O ne of Jon Sampang’s proudest moments in life came after a loss, surrounded by his Crescenta Valley teammates who were openly weeping in the locker room. For some, it was the end of a season. For the seniors, it was the end of their high school career. Sampang was one of those seniors that day in 2003 but, as he was interviewed after the loss to Mission Viejo, a reporter noted he wasn’t one of the boys crying. There was nothing to cry about, Sampang told him. He had left everything on the court, and the Falcons had lost. But so what? That’s life. Sampang had almost lost a part of himself that year, his only season on the varsity team. He wanted to quit at one point. The lessons Crescenta Valley basketball tried to impart on the young man fell on deaf ears. Put me in and I’ll score a basket, he thought, but don’t talk to me about becoming a better man down the road. After some basketball soul searching, and a positive experience with his teammates in a Marin County tournament, Sampang understood a little better. “It humbled me,” he said. “I knew what the coaches wanted out of me as a human being.” One year earlier, the Falcons rode the hot hand of senior Justin Tagawa in a league game against Hoover High School. Tagawa hit seven 3-pointers that night. At one point, then-coach Adam Jacobsen drew up set plays for him, which wasn’t the norm. Tagawa’s father and grandmother were in the stands. Starting point guard Chris Tarne, whom Tagawa battled every day in practice for playing time, congratulated him. It was the proudest moment of his career. It is more than a decade later, and the lessons on and off the court both men were given by their coaches at Crescenta Valley are the same they try to impart now at Village Christian School as leaders of the Crusaders girls’ high school team. “That’s what coaching’s all about. Making sure you’re there for players that need the guidance,” said Sampang, whose coaching roster includes his sister Jayme, Vince DeGuzman and former WNBA player Kim Hudspeth. He and Tagawa didn’t run in the same circles in high school, but had respect for one another on the court. Both had coaching gigs at other places as adults, and when Sampang nabbed the Village job in 2009, he brought Tagawa on board. “I thought I’d try it one year. Five years later here I am,” Tagawa said. “I’ve been given so much being a coach for this program and at this school.” Their faith is what drives them to teach the girls how to become better people for the future, but they’ve also experienced winning during their tenure. The Crusaders reached the CIF Division V championship game in 2013 before losing to Sierra Canyon. They played in two state playoff games after that, an experience everyone on the team soaked in as much as they could. “That was a rag-tag team,” recalled player Avery O’Neal. “We weren’t the best in league that year.” After a ridiculously easy 60-8 win in the first round, Village was the favorite in every game after. Led by a roster heavy with seniors, the team made the finals. Tagawa said the motto for that season was “Destiny has no doubt.” “Basically, by the end of the year, we were sisters,” O’Neal said of her teammates. O’Neal is currently a junior, and the only player left from that roster. The program lost eight seniors the next year, and four more after last season. The youth movement has been a tough transition, although it helps to have talent like freshman Micaela Cacho-Negrete, a former player at Rosemont Middle School who made the move to Village instead of CV. She’s a fan of Sampang’s communication skills. “He’s always open to hear what you have to say,” said CachoNegrete, a team leader in points and rebounds. “He doesn’t shoot you down. I can have real conversations with him.” As a coach, the line between being strict and personable can be thin. Shawn Zargarian, the current boys’ coach at CV, knows all about that. He was a varsity assistant for Sampang and Tagawa, and both said they felt closest to him when they played. After all, when the head coach is screaming his head off, players need someone else to ease their minds. “As an assistant coach, it’s so much easier to be the good guy,” Zargarian said. “You put your arm around them, give ’em a hug, tell them it’s going to be okay.” Tagawa was also a teachers’ assistant in Zargarian’s biology class, and was comfortable enough to ask for Zargarian’s Ford Expedition – replete with a new sound system – on prom night. “We had that kind of relationship,” Tagawa said. “He trusted me.” Zargarian recalled both as hard-nosed players, with chips on their shoulders. Maybe they were undersized, but they were out to prove something every time they stepped on the court. O’Neal appreciates that aspect of them. She said players don’t walk all over Sampang because he knows when to lay down the law. At the same time, when the girls make mistakes, he isn’t hard on them. He’s someone the girls can easily embrace. “I’m very proud to know that two of our guys are coaching and coaching together,” Zargarian said. And they’re doing it their way, which is the Falcons way, which is now the Village way. “It’s a blessing,” Sampang said, “to think how many games we’ve played and lessons we’ve learned along the way and how many relationships we’ve built.” The Lady Crusaders finished this season 13-12 overall. They play at Calvary Chapel in Downey tonight at 7 p.m. in the first round of the CIF playoffs. Photos by Dan HOLM ABOVE: Justin Tagawa (left) and Jon Sampang have found success coaching Village Christian after spending their childhoods in the Crescenta Valley Falcons program. BELOW: Avery O’Neal, a junior, is the only player left from the Crusaders team that made it to the CIF finals in 2013. SPORTS February 19, 2015 • Page 13 www.cvweekly.com CV Coaches Steer Athletes in Right Direction By David O’CONNOR You’re only as strong as your weakest link. Ex-minor league baseball player and baseball performance coach Dustin Emmons and Crescenta Valley High School assistant hurdles coach Eric Kwong both subscribe to this theory when they’re treating their athletes on a holistic scale, rather than following the outdated and ineffective coaching stereotype of “no pain, no gain.” Emmons was sitting at school and checking his phone and found that his dad left him a message: “You just got picked up in the 43rd round.” As a 17-yearold kid in his senior year of high school, Emmons described that moment as “pretty surreal” and realized that his childhood dream of becoming a professional baseball player was coming to fruition. The former CVHS pitcher represented Riverside College in the Big West Conference and he cited his career highlight as being drafted three times – by the Florida Marlins, the New York Mets and the Pittsburg Pirates. “I just felt super-lucky. That’s a unique thing, so I’m always thankful that three times somebody was interested and [somewhere] along my career I was doing something right,” Emmons said. While representing the Kingsport Mets in Tennessee in December 2012, Emmons was called into the manager’s office and was ready to face the music. After enduring a rigorous four weeks of rookie ball that involved 10 players getting cut every week, the La Crescenta native was told that “we no longer need you.” Looking back on his short-lived minor league career, Emmons doesn’t regret a thing and treasures the profound lessons he picked up, and realizes that his most important lesson was being more aware of his body. He admitted that “things weren’t going well health-wise.” Emmons is currently pursuing a career in athletic performance coaching at a youth baseball facility called 360 Elite Performance Sports in Pasadena and applies a holistic coaching style to his athlete’s programs by working them from the inside out. He wants his students to learn from his baseball journey. “I learned over my career to work smarter, not harder. Just as you get older [and] you have to learn about your body a little bit [more], that’s how I have come into helping other athletes to create a relationship with their own body, listening to it when you need rest and when it’s time to work,” Emmons said. Eric Kwong shares a similar philosophy when he coaches athletes at CVHS. “Train smart, not stupid,” the assistant hurdles coach preaches to his team on a regular basis. “I do a very holistic approach where we target all the major muscle groups. We’ve been doing weight room the past couple of years. This year I’ve made it mandatory and that’s actually been helping a lot,” Kwong said. Preventative care and rehab is another crucial part of the Falcons’ track and field program. This ensures the athletes are avoiding unnecessary injuries by diligently carrying out Kwong’s program on and off the track, which allows them to keep their body in balance and less susceptible to any surprising ailments. “Preventative care is prehab and rehab. Pre-hab is preventative rehab and rehab is to get you back if you’re hurt,” said Kwong. “We do a lot of hip and bare foot strengthening and we do core each day.” Emmons, certified in Joga, a fast-growing form of yoga for pro and urban athletes, feels one of the other mistakes he has seen in baseball coaching programs is the lack of pre-hab or rehabilitation programs. “[The goal is] before a player gets injured having a program like Joga or a system to implement into their training regimen that finds a balance between their strength and flexibility,” Emmons said. Kwong ran track, did high jump, hurdles and pole vault at CVHS for four years and represented the Cal State Fullerton Titans in hurdles and sprints. He did this while pursuing his bachelor’s in kinesiology and also gained a master’s degree in kinesiology at CSUF with an emphasis in sports performance. The La Crescenta resident managed to acquire vital experience working in a physical therapy clinic for three years, which has assisted him in addressing various injuries his athletes may encounter. Emmons and Kwong have both witnessed poor communication between athletes and coaches that has led to preventable injuries. Both coaches feel that communication is not only a valuable component in their coaching programs, but it also could be the difference between an athlete’s succeeding or being disenchanted and walking away from a sports career. “Something that I think is crucial that should be implemented is a cross-referral system that treats player injuries. This will move the focus all the way up the ladder,” said Emmons, when describing the process of identifying which health care or fitness professionals an athlete needs to see when or if he/she becomes injured. Kwong believes that coaches need to stop putting Band-Aid solutions over injury problems and added that this uneducated attitude stems from not understanding the psychology of dealing with injuries. “The most common mistake is the psychology of it,” said Kwong. “A lot of times coaches will say to the athlete, ‘Go and sit down, go ice, just go away,’ and at that point the athlete stops being motivated in terms of getting back. What I’ve always told my athletes is if you’re injured it’s not less work, it’s more work.” Emmons and Kwong share a balanced coaching method with their students, and understand that any imbalances in a training program or in an athlete’s body can likely lead to injury. “Injuries are caused by imbalances,” says Kwong. The way in which both coaches conduct their programs shows that their athletes are not only in good hands, but they’re on the best path for success in their performances and overall health. It pays to be simple. Simplify and replace stacks of bills. The Simple1 Loan. 1 lower payment. Call (800) 300-9728 Click www.wpcu.org/Simple1 Or visit your local branch Northridge/Granada Hills Sun Valley North Hills Plaza Shopping Center 16840 Devonshire St. Canyon Plaza Shopping Center 8413 Laurel Canyon Blvd. *All credit union loans are subject to income verification and ability to pay. Your rate may be higher based on your credit score. This loan may not be used to refinance existing WPCCU loans. Member fee waived if you bring in this ad. Membership requires $25 minimum savings account balance. WPC-0003_Print_Ad_CVWeekly_02.indd 1 7/2/14 4:26 PM Page 14 www.cvweekly.com February 19, 2015 Turning the Page on Good Health By Jason KUROSU Two local chiropractors have taken their desire to help others from the adjustment table to the written word. Dr. Mark Anthony and Dr. Dale Ellwein, who both practice in the Crescenta Valley, have recently published books on how people can not only stay healthy in their daily lives, but also be content and stressfree. Anthony has been a chiropractor for 35 years and has practiced at Anthony Chiropractic, located at 3935 Foothill Blvd., since 2001. “Accelerate Your Health! The Simple, Fast Way to Get and Stay Healthy” is his first book, which emphasizes how to live healthily through proper eating and exercise. Anthony thinks that, though the concept is simple, many Americans tend to overlook the obvious or blame their health problems on bad genetics, age, a faulty healthcare industry, simple bad luck or a host of other outside circumstances. “How can America, which is one of the greatest countries in the world, We can help you with: –ProtectingyourhousefromMedi-Cal Recovery –AvoidingCapital Gains Taxesduringahousetransfer –QualifyingforMedi-Calwithoutlosingassets –SettingupanIrrevocable Trust We are highly experienced in ELDER LAW, PROBATE, ESTATE PLANNING (WILLS & TRUSTS) and SPECIAL NEEDS TRUSTS. We help you protect your family’s hard earned assets! Call us for a free consultation at: (818) 241-4238 www.la-lawcenter.com 300 W. Glenoaks Blvd. Suite 300, Glendale CA 91202 also be one of the sickest in the world?” Anthony asked. He believes that though there are many temporary solutions to various physical ailments which plague people, it is a pattern of healthy behavior that eludes most folks, leading them to seek quick relief from doctors or accept that they are simply beyond help. “I want to give people a way to help themselves,” said Anthony. His book recommends a variety of healthful eating habits (e.g., eating only when hungry, do not drink with your meals) as well as emphasizing avoiding processed foods. The book also features a series of exercises that readers can perform at home, with regular exercise combating numerous bad habits, the worst of which is the increasing regularity of sitting down according to Anthony. “You will sit for breakfast, sit in the car while you drive to work and sit some more while you work. When you get a break, you do not go outside and run around and play. You usually look for the break room and sit some more,” said Anthony in his book. “All during this time we are reminded by advertising and many health professionals that you work hard so now it is time to take it easy. This advice and these habit patterns are a slow form of suicide!” Anthony posits that these lifestyle choices have led to people being more stressed than ever. Just as he sees in his chiropractic career, the resulting stress leads to a host of physical ailments, most of which are treated with painkillers rather than a change in lifestyle. “If you must get only one idea from this book, it should be that you usually don’t get sick randomly, but from the choices you make on a regular basis in life,” he said. “Make better choices and have a better life.” Anthony is currently working on a second book, “Accelerate Your Life,” with Laurie Day. He is also in the process of recording an audio version of “Accelerate Your Health,” which will feature exercises in hypnosis and guided visualization. Anthony will be hosting a book signing at his office on Thursday, March 5 at 6 p.m. Dr. Dale Ellwein has been a practicing chiropractor for 24 years, and currently treats patients at Standing Tall Chiropractic, located at 3436 Verdugo Road. His newest book, “Life Alchemy 1.0: The Daily Workbook to Impressively Transform Your Life,” seeks to help readers motivate themselves towards their ultimate goals in the form of a 90-day program of journal entries, allowing readers to reflect upon their progress as they read. Ellwein, who also authored another self-help book “Dear Oprah” in 2013, said that the concept for the book came directly from his chiropractic care, as he wanted to figure out a way to keep patients focused on caring for themselves outside of his office. “I wanted to give my patients more value,” said Ellwein. “I soon found that not only could a program like this help my patients with their bodies, but also in their everyday lives.” For 10 minutes each day, “Life Alchemy 1.0” encourages readers to set down their priorities on paper and then reflect on how much and how well that end was accomplished. The book also asks questions of the readers to help them focus on whatever their ideal life would be, such as, “If there were no rules, and I could not fail, what would my life be like?” “A lot of people go through life and don’t follow up on their dreams,” said Ellwein. “The book asks the readers questions that encourage them to think and offer themselves feedback.” Some of this encouragement comes from having readers change their perspective on their goals. For example, one of the activities the book proposes is the daily eating of a (figurative) frog, from the Mark Twain quote, “Eat a live frog first thing in the morning and nothing worse will happen to you the rest of the day.” Ellwein equates the frog to “the thing you know you should do and maybe need to do, but you are just not doing it.” Thus, among the entries in “Life Alchemy 1.0”’s journal are “My biggest frog to eat today,” allowing readers to further visualize their progress towards an ideal life with concrete examples of their change in overall behavior. Ellwein also discovered benefits when applying the tenets of his book. “I discovered that the key thing I needed to achieve my ideal life was energy. This motivated me to start exercising, meditating and doing my affirmations. This lifted my spirits and that reflected in my family relationships and practice. “I want to teach people how to stay healthy, but also that they should try to live the best life they possibly can.” Ellwein hopes to hold book signings at upcoming Harvest Markets in Montrose. XTREME E BOOT CAMP® www.ExtremeBootCamp.com 6-WEEK OUTDOOR FITNESS PROGRAM ORIENTATION THIS SATURDAY 2/21/2015 AT 8 AM SESSION BEGINS MONDAY 2/23/2015 www.TaixWorkoutStudio.com PERSONAL TRAINING INDOOR BOOT CAMP GYM MEMBERSHIP NO CONTRACTS ~ NO ENROLLMENT FEES 818-790-7727 1424 Foothill Boulevard La Caňada-Flintridge, CA 91011 February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Page 15 Page 16 www.cvweekly.com ADVERTISEMENT Protecting Your Loved Ones with over 25 YEARS of Experience Norman Taylor & Associates specializes in elder abuse and other select personal injury cases. While we are selective of the types of personal injury cases that we offer to represent, the following is a list of those areas where we have successfully represented clients over the years. – nursing Home abuse/neglect – dog bites and animal attacks – travel & aviation accidents – auto and truck accidents – Slip and Falls – Burns and Fractures – elder abuse – Head, Brain, and Spinal injuries – Pedestrian accidents Please consider Norman Taylor & Associates for you, your family or friends’ personal injury needs. Give us a call. It costs you nothing to have your matter reviewed except for your time. We have the time and willingness. Call us Now for a FREE CONSTULATION (877) 768-7227 425 W. BroadWay, Suite 220 • Glendale, Ca 91204 (818) 244-3905 www.losangeleselderabuselawfirm.com February 19, 2015 The Healing Power of Touch By Isiah REYES Stress is the number one killer in the world claims massage therapist Jerome Johnson of Anthony’s Chiropratic in La Crescenta. And his advice as to the best way to combat stress is to get a healing massage. When the tension in muscles builds, the body begins to cringe, said Johnson. A massage is meant to loosen up the muscles and to release toxins in the muscles allowing them to expand to their fullest capacity. This is especially true for bruised and injured muscles when the blood circulation improves and the muscle tissues soften. There are many different styles and techniques in massages, with Swedish massage, deep tissue massage and sports massage being the most common in the Western world. “A lot of clients may complain about deep tissue massages hurting, and that’s not a good massage,” Johnson said. “You don’t want it to hurt.” The difference between Swedish and deep tissue massage is that Swedish massage typically includes faster and lighter techniques, which some consider to be more superficial on the body. Johnson said deep tissue massage employs techniques that work deeper into the muscles, which is a good stress reliever when done correctly. Sports massages are good when they’re given post- and pre-workout to get a better performance from the athlete and for a quicker Frustrated with your dentures? Get a grip and take control of your life. Transitioning from natural teeth to dentures brings about a number of changes in a patient’s life, and the limitations that removable dentures can cause in the wearer’s chewing function, speech, appearance, and overall level of comfort are major concerns most patients share. Infinite Dental Wellness fits patients with partial and full stabilized denture implants, providing the security you need to continue living a full life as a denture wearer. “I am so happy with my new dentures. I am now able to eat and speak normally without feeling uncomfortable, embarrassed, or in pain. 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E-mail info@ cvweekly.com to receive an e-mail with the latest community news. To advertise in our Wellness & Style section, call 818.248.2740 CV WEEKLY We’re here for you! February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Page 17 Introducing an Elder Abuse Law Firm All New Spring & Summer Wig Collections Arriving Weekly! Wigs • Hairpieces • extensions and MucH More Call for your appointment now 818-790-2652 or 818-522-9087 Conveniently located in the Foothill Community www.jackieshairagogo.com GET READY TO DISC VER call for more info In today’s fast-paced world, the tradition of community and family caring for elderly parents and grandparents has been replaced by nursing homes or assisted living facilities. Tragically, life in many of these facilities can be a far cry from our image of active, healthy, happy residents sharing the company of others their age. The sad truth is that thousands of dependent adults suffer abuse, malnutrition and neglect at the hands of the very people entrusted to care for them. Over 25 Years of Experience on Your Side Norman Taylor & Associates is dedicated to the representation of elder abuse in nursing care facilities throughout California. For over 28 years, Norman Taylor has built a strong reputation for consumer advocacy. John Ciccarelli, of counsel for the firm, has over 25 years experience in medical malpractice law. The team represents a cut above the average law firm and it uses their considerable years of experience to provide each case the quality attention it deserves. Help: Free Consultation Many elderly individuals left unattended suffer from a number of ailments that could have easily been prevented with proper care, and adequate nursing and medical attention. Once we offer our services and a client retains us for their representation, it is our purpose to bring as much relief as the law permits. It is possible to gain a fair settlement with the proper parties without going to court. In other instances, when the situation requires and meets all necessary requirements, the firm will pursue a lawsuit and do so vigorously. When you contact Norman Taylor & Associates at (818) 244-3905 we will gladly review your matter and inform you what we believe can be accomplished. Providing Advocacy for Victims of Abuse and Neglect Elder abuse nursing care facility cases are exceedingly personal and any information given will remain confidential. Signs of Elder Abuse may consist of: • Bedsores • Dehydration • Lack of proper care • Lack of dignity and respect • Unaddressed infections and sepsis • Malnutrition • Sexual elder abuse • Wandering or elopement • Violation of residents’ rights HOW NORMAN TAYLOR & ASSOCIATES CAN CV WEEKLY is online! www.CVWEEKLY.com T:10 in Heart specialists who never miss a beat. T:7.25 in If you know you’re at risk for heart disease, your heart’s in the right place. Visit Dignity Health Glendale Memorial Hospital and Health Center and connect with a cardiologist who cares about your heart as much as you do. Learn more at dignityhealth.org/glendalememorial or call 818.502.4533. 1420 South Central Avenue, Glendale, CA 91204 Page 18 www.cvweekly.com February 19, 2015 BETWEEN FRIENDS A Blessed Project at FSHA Photos from Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy LEFT: Sr. Carolyn McCormack, O.P. stands in front of the wooden shield taken out of the old auditorium. Once completed, the shield will be placed in the new Arts Center. RIGHT: Dylan Neil ’16 shares her thoughts about the new Arts Center remodel. F aculty, staff and students celebrated the beginning of the Arts Center remodel at Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy with a blessing on Monday, Feb. 2. Sr. Carolyn McCormack, O.P. president of Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy, and Sister Celeste Marie, O.P., principal, presided over the blessing of the project, which included the sprinkling of Holy Water on the property of the remodel. The blessing read in part, “May all who pass through the new Arts Center’s doors be filled with the joy of Your abiding presence as they work and learn, laugh and dance, design and create, in the light of our Catholic faith.” The Arts Center remodel project is independent of the master plan. FSHA is currently in the process of seeking approval from the City of La Cañada to modernize some of the school’s older facilities, built more than 60 years ago. Dylan Neil, ‘16, a student performer, took the podium to speak about the project. “I never noticed any of the flaws in the old auditorium because of what we, the students, were able to do with it,” said Neil. “But it’s exciting to think of everything we will achieve once we have a real theatre.” The event closed with all in attendance singing the “Dominican Blessing” (May God Creator Bless us. May God Redeemer heal us. And may God the Holy Spirit fill us with light.) “I was happy to be part of the old auditorium,” said Neil, “but I’m really excited to be part of the new tradition that will begin once the new theatre is completed.” “The arts are an important part of our Dominican heritage,” added Sr. Carolyn McCormack, “and we are proud to create a space that honors that tradition.” It’s Paradise at CCLCF Hula Classes By Samantha SLAYBACK As folks age, finding new and entertaining ways to get their exercise can become a challenge. But the Community Center of La Cañada Flintridge, a mainstay in the foothills community, answers their quest. Hula dancing class, led by instructor Barbara Dempsey, is attracting seniors ready to sway to the tropical beat. Prior to undertaking her role as YOUR LANDSCAPE LIGHTING EXPERTS DBA LOW VOLTAGE LIGHTING • LICENSE #994733 www.lighthouse-lights.com/socal email: kim.m@lighthouse-lights.com tel: 818-541-0745 • • • • New Installations LED Retrofitting LED Bulbs Solid Brass Fixtures an instructor at the community center, Dempsey danced professionally for 15 years. She performed at venues from Marina Del Rey to Las Vegas and all the way to New Jersey, with many stops in between. Along the way, Dempsey stopped dancing to settle down and start a family. But in 2010 she suffered a knee injury that required surgery. During her recovery her mobility was limited and, along with the loss of functionality in her knee, she also experienced weight gain. This injury ended up being a blessing in disguise because that’s what it took to get Dempsey dancing again. “The physical aspect [of hula dancing] was good for my knee recovery and weight loss,” said Dempsey. “Being over 50, it also helped with aches and pains.” Fortunately for Dempsey, it was during this same time that the CCLCF was in search of an interesting new class to offer. Dempsey now teaches her hula dancing class at CCLCF on Wednesdays for continuing and intermediate dancers, on Saturdays for beginning dancers, and on Tuesdays she can found at the senior center in Sierra Madre. The average age of dancers in her class is 68, but the oldest dancer is 87 and the newest and youngest addition to the dance group is only 5 years old. When it comes to this hula dancing class, age is just a number. Every student of Dempsey’s is a repeat student from previous hula courses, and many have been dancing with her for the past two and a half years since she began teaching her class. The class is beneficial for seniors in that it works not only on dancing coordination but also addresses stretching, balancing and posture. The course begins with these exercises that later get incorporated into the actual dance moves. Every 5-6 weeks students learn a hula routine and, for the past year, Dempsey has had her dancers perform these routines at various senior homes in the area. Classes have performed at senior homes in Montrose, Altadena, Sierra Madre, Tujunga and Sunland and, according to Dempsey, they’ve gotten fantastic audience responses. “After the women perform, people get out of their seats to shake their hands,” shared Dempsey. “It’s like they’re rock stars!” Dempsey also explained how learning and practicing the hula dances in order to perform helps to improve a dancer’s memory. The class just finished learning and performing a Tahitian hula and are now starting on a new hula routine with more of a Spanish flare. Dempsey said that they should be performing this new routine in March. “This course gives members a chance to get a work-out that’s also fun,” she said. “Unlike Zumba, you don’t have to be constantly moving the entire time, so it’s better geared towards seniors.” Video hula lessons are also available on the course website, free of charge, for those who would like to learn from home. Videos range from very slow motion lessons to fast-paced routines. To learn more about Dempsey’s hula dancing classes, sign up for lessons, or practice at home, visit the website at www.alohaallure. org/#!events-performances. CV WEEKLY We’re here for you! BETW EEN FRIENDS LCV Republican Women Club Celebrates Presidential Birthday February 19, 2015 • Page 19 www.cvweekly.com New Board Installed for Guild The La Cañada Guild of the Orthopedic Institute for Children has a new board that will continue to help the Institute build a new Ambulatory Surgery Center. The Guild is over half way to reaching its pledge of $100,000 toward the $10 million project. The Institute plans The LCV Republican Women Club celebrated the birthday of President Ronald Reagan, which is on Feb. 6, at its Feb. 12 meeting. Shown are club Vice President Nicky Kapadia with former President Ronald Reagan aide, Peggy Grande. The meeting was held at the Oakmont Country Club. Photo provided by LCVRWC to break ground in 2015 and be operational in 2016. This donation of this year’s check of $18,000 from the annual Authors’ Luncheon was voted on at the February meeting at the La Crescenta home of Danette Erickson. Pictured from left are Recording Secretary Danette Erickson, Corresponding Secretary Patti Rademacher, President Joan Cleven, Vice President Ginney Pruitt, Treasurer Joanne Ploszaj and Event Chair Arlene Massimino. Contributed by Danette ERICKSON CV Weekly On The Move!! Veterans Corner Guide to Filing a Veterans Medical Claim Submitted by Andy GERO To All Military Veterans: The Crescenta Valley American Legion, Post 288 and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 1614 honors all veterans who served our country. Your dedication and sacrifice to protect our nation and constitutional rights is above and beyond the call of duty. All veterans are cordially invited to attend the American Legion monthly meeting on the first Wednesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. and the Veterans of Foreign Wars meeting on the third Wednesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. Come and share your military experience and the camaraderie of our Posts social event after each meeting (membership is not required). Dedicated and knowledgeable members of our Posts are there to greet and assist you with your benefits and thank you for your service. Current active members of our Armed Forces are also invited. Both the American Legion Post and the VFW Post are located at 4011 La Crescenta Ave. in La Crescenta. Andy Gero is a life member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 1614 and the American Legion Post 288 in La Crescenta. He can be reached at Veterans Corner by mail at 4011 La Crescenta Ave., La Crescenta, CA 91214; by email crescenta. vets@gmail.com or phone (818) 541-1336. WELLNESS STYLE & CONSULTANTS To advertise in our Wellness & Style section, call 818.248.2740 It’s that time of the year when many high school seniors are looking at possible colleges. Katie Davis from CV High School made sure to bring the Crescenta Valley Weekly with her when checking out the University of Michigan. CV Weekly loves to travel! Take us along on your next trip and send us a photo. You may find yourselves on the pages of the community’s favorite newspaper. BETW EEN FRIENDS Page 20 • February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Questions About Today’s Real Estate? Ask Phyllis! Reverse Mortgage Pitfalls Dear Phyllis, Years ago my parents obtained a reverse mortgage; my father passed first. After our mother became ill, my brother moved back into the home and was her primary caretaker; mom passed a year ago. As both parents are deceased, the bank is demanding the loan be paid off. My brother will need to find a place to move but it will be difficult because he wants to keep the stray cats our mother took in. Two months ago the bank filed a notice of default – of course we don’t want to lose the home and our parent’s equity, but we don’t want to give it away in a fire sale. I am the trustee but don’t know what my next move should be as there are just so many issues. Feeling Helpless Dear Helpless, While no payments are due with a reverse mortgage, the mortgage is payable upon death. Sadly, you need to face a harsh reality. Now that the Notice of Default has been filed (NOD) you have approximately 90 days before the sale date (foreclosure date). If you do not pay the amount owed, a Notice of Sale can be recorded which states that the trustee will sell your home at (foreclosure) auction in 21 days. You need to stay in close contact with your parent’s trust attorney (or another attorney). You are in jeopardy of losing your parent’s home. Unless your attorney advises otherwise, you should immediately get this home listed for sale with a seasoned real estate agent. Their experience with distress sales may prove valuable in your obtaining an extension of the sale (auction) date. Once hired, your Realtor® should begin the process of trying to postpone the sale date. I know that as the trustee you have some difficult decisions to make, but decisions need to be made and made very quickly. If the home is foreclosed your brother and the stray cats will be evicted. Unfortunately, un- less you can pay off the mortgage the reality is that he and the cats are moving one way or the other. Phyllis Harb is a Realtor® with Dilbeck Real Estate She may be contacted at (818) 790-7325 or by email Phyllis@HarbandCerpa.com. People Making News Lauren Galantai of La Cañada Flintridge, Olivia Lynch of La Cañada and Alex Shin of La Crescenta are high-achieving students from Whittier College who made the fall 2014 dean’s list. ___________ Maia Shields, of La Crescenta was named to the Fort Lewis College dean’s list for the fall 2014 semester. Shields’s major is psychology. To be eligible for dean’s list, a student must carry a semester GPA of 3.6 or better in no fewer than 15 credit hours of graded college level work and have completed all work for which they are registered by the end of the semester. Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado is the Southwest’s crossroads of education and adventure. ___________ Gregory Stratz of La Cañada graduated with a Bachelor of Arts, political science from Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Marquette University is a Catholic, Jesuit university that draws its more than 11,500 students from all 50 states and more than 75 different countries. ___________ Amelia Kunert from La Cañada has been named to the Wake Forest University dean’s list for fall semester 2014. Students who achieve a 3.4 grade point average and no grade below a “C” were named to the list. ___________ Army and Navy Academy announced that Ian Kim of Shadow Hills and Brandon Um of La Cañada were named to the dean’s list for the third grading period of the 2014-15 school year. Both earned a GPA of 4.0. Um was also named a “cadet of distinction.” This title is given to those students who have achieved the highest citizenship grade attainable and zero demerits for the entire third grading period. Students with a grade point average of 3.80 or higher are named to the dean’s list. Founded in 1910, the Army and Navy Academy is a private not-forprofit institution that provides an academically robust, characterbased education for young men, grades 7 through 12. ___________ Kara Lankey of La Cañada and Michael Ashley of Tujunga were named to the dean’s list at Pacific University (Oregon) for the fall semester 2014. They are among 344 of Pacific’s 1,876 undergraduate students to achieve this high academic honor. To qualify for the dean’s list at Pacific, a student must achieve a term grade-point average 3.70 (4.00 scale) and complete 12 or more graded hours. Founded in 1849, Pacific University (Oregon) is a diverse and sustainable community dedicated to discovery and excellence in teaching, scholarship and practice. ___________ Angela Gaignard of Sunland was recently named to the 201415 Great American Conference Fall All-Academic Team as it was announced by the league office. Gaignard is a senior athletic training major at Southern Arkansas University. & Wellness Style Montrose’s Gentle Senior Yoga Getting down on the floor and standing on your head or twisting into a pretzel are not requirements for yoga. Rosalie Blum, who became a yoga instructor at 75, believes that having a positive attitude about caring for your physical body can bring other positive aspects to your life no matter what your age. She started Gentle Senior Yoga, which is done using a chair, to help older people stay active. It focuses on breathing more effectively, paying attention to your body and moving with more balance, flexibility and grace. It is about taking charge of This Weeks Special 20% OFF your physical, mental, and for new clients this month and every service spiritual self. Join the fun is entered into a raffle for a gift basket. www.bellahairstudiolc.com Thursday mornings at 9 A.M. Knights of Columbus Hall, 2657 Honolulu Ave. Montrose call 818-590-7296 Support this paper! Visit our advertisers! Gift Certificates Walk-ins Welcome Gentle Yoga For Seniors For Mind, Body, And Soul Thurs. 9-10am (818) 790-2062 Everything you need to look and feel your best. Get Your Life Back At Standing Tall Chiropractic First Class FREE For more information, call 818-590-7296 Knights of Columbus Hall 2657 Honolulu Avenue, Montrose XTREME E BOOT CAMP ® New Spring Boot Camp session starts Monday 2/23/15 Contact us to enroll. 835 Foothill Blvd. • La Cañada, CA 91011 We’re a full service Hair & Nail Salon. Support this paper! Visit our advertisers! 1424 Foothill Blvd. La Cañada CA 91011 818.790.2770 Bootcamp@ExtremeBootCamp.com Dr. Dale Ellwein of Standing Tall Chiropractic wants you to take a big leap forward in the pursuit of your ideal life. Get his new workbook “Life Alchemy 1.0” and discover the catalyst that will ignite your life and transform it into the brilliant, glorious, bright life you have been craving. Dr. Dale Ellwein Standing Tall Chiropractic 3436 N. Verdugo Rd, Suite 250 Glendale, CA 91208 To purchase your copy of “Life Alchemy 1.0,” go to www.lulu.com/lifealchemy or call Standing Tall Chiropractic at (818) 249-9355. February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Page 21 LEISURE Alex Brings ‘Billy Elliot’ to Glendale By Jason KUROSU D ue to major renovations, the Alex Theatre was out of commission for close to a year, but the iconic theater is back and presenting major productions, with an upcoming run of the Tony Award winning musical “Billy Elliot” next on the marquee. From Feb. 20-22, the musical, based on the highly successful 2000 film, will be in Glendale, giving local audiences an opportunity to enjoy a larger scale production than the Alex could previously provide. The $5.2 million, 6,600 square foot expansion of the Alex Theatre has provided the theater with larger backstage facilities, allowing for accommodation of larger casts and increased loading capabilities. The theater has also received upgrades to its sound and lighting, as well as larger dressing rooms and new passenger and freight elevators. Elissa Glickman, CEO of Glendale Arts, a nonprofit that manages the Alex Theatre, said that the expansion gives the theater “the opportunity to give people what they want to see.” According to a poll conducted by Glendale Arts, what the people want to see is musical theater. Since the renovations completed last summer, the Alex Theatre featured a presentation of “Les Miserables” in January and with La Mirada-based McCoy Rigby Entertainment’s production of “Billy Elliot,” Glickman hopes that the Alex can continue onto larger productions than Alex Theatre audiences have ever seen. “Billy Elliot” is the story of a young boy torn between his family’s blue collar, coal miner tradition and his personal aspirations to be a dancer. Glickman cited “tremendous reviews” from the musical’s current three-week run in recommending the show, which she called “a first class production.” “If anyone has seen the film or the musical before, they should expect the same caliber production here,” said Glickman. “Billy Elliot” will be at the Alex Theatre Friday and Saturday nights, Feb. 20 and Feb. 21 at 8 p.m. and Sunday afternoon, Feb. 22 at 3 p.m. Tickets are available and range in price from $25 to $75. Visit www. alextheatre. org for more information. Commentary from the pages of True-Believer.net How to Parlay Attendance to ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ By Charly SHELTON Valentine’s Day arrived and the big news was “Fifty Shades of Grey” finally hit theaters. With TV spots playing every few minutes and Fifty Shades merchandise gracing shelves in sex shops, novelty gift shops and even grocery stores, the men of the world came to one terrifying realization: She is going to make you see this movie. To those who have a girlfriend, wife or very close friend who is female, just accept the fact that you will be seeing this movie soon. There is no way to fight it. But relationships are all about give and take. If she drags me to see this chick flick, what am I going to drag her to in return? Tit for tat. And from what I have heard about Fifty Shades, guys can stand to reap quite a bit of tat from having to sit through this. But we need to be smart about it. You don’t want to waste your free pass on something like “Hot Tub Time Machine 2.” It needs to be more epic. Here are a few suggestions. Everyone is going to see “Avengers” in May, so don’t bother redeeming it for that. She will Then & Now | Walgreens Then » This location on the northwest corner of Foothill Boulevard and Ramsdell Avenue was for many decades home to a restaurant and a gas station. In the ’60s the restaurant was a steakhouse called the Scotch Mist, owned by Vince Dundee, who also owned the Polynesian-themed Kona Kai across the street. In its later years it changed names to Maxwell’s, here shown just before demolition. Fifty Shades of Grey movie poster, left, and Ant Man and Wasp reading Fifty Shades of Gray Hulk. How will you redeem your brownie points? want to go see that one. But “Ant Man” is a different story. If your girlfriend is anything like mine, she will just laugh when you ask her to go see “Ant Man.” With the Fifty Shades trump card, she will have to go without complaint. Up the ante a little bit; go to see Fifty Shades in a suit and grey tie, clean and confident. That counts as going to a movie in costume. Now how cool will it be when you take your girl to see “Ant Man” while dressed as Ant Man and Wasp? If a movie isn’t right for you, maybe go to a comic signing. A con is an all day thing and not an equal trade, but an afternoon signing at a local comic shop is totally worth the trade. And again, you can go in couples costumes. Then there is the Marvel Experience in San Diego until Feb 22. Visitors can go to the facility and be trained as S.H.I.E.L.D. operatives to help save the Marvel Universe from HYDRA and M.O.D.O.K. And after seeing Fifty Shades, you can do that together as well. This is a two-hour experience of full-on geeking out with an awesome ride, projection screens and a shop at the end to get some great Marvel stuff. But it is in San Diego, so be sure to go to a nice dinner down there to sweeten the pot for her to say yes to this one. If all else fails, just go for a midnight screening or retro screening of an old cult classic. Find “Clerks” or “The Big Lebowski” on the big screen and make a night of it. That’s probably something she will say yes to anyway, but you get full license to geek out all the way there and back. Summarize what “The Infinity Gauntlet” is about for the whole car ride there and then tell her everything that’s wrong with the “Green Lantern” movie all the way back. That should make it even. Until next time, True Believers, Fight On! True-Believer.net is published as a digital exclusive newspaper every other Friday and is the headquarters for nerd news. Courtesy of the Historical Society of CV Now » About 10 years ago, the restaurant building and the gas station were removed, and a new Walgreens Pharmacy joined several other large pharmacy chain outlets in the valley. The building’s placement on the very shallow lot required a variance from code and, in exchange for the variance’s approval, the builder agreed to build a real rock façade rather than the usual faux-rock appliqué. LEISUR E Page 22 • February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Dining Delights February 19 SPECIALS!! th Welcome to Pepe’s Montrose We specialize in regional Mexican cooking made with fresh, high quality ingredients. Most of our dishes come from the region of Zacatecas in central Mexico where our family is from. We serve many favorites from our family’s home town. Enjoy our famous margaritas and delicious food including our potato tacos and chili rellenos in our lively, colorful dining room. We have many special days to come in and sample our delicious food: Taco Tuesday, Margarita Wednesday, $5 Thursday, and Sunday Brunch, to name a few. Pepe’s was founded by the Bugarin family who had a dream to offer delicious Mexican food and drinks. Pepe’s was first opened in 1970 in La Cañada and moved to Montrose in 2008. Later, after achieving success and a loyal following, the Bugarin family opened Margaritas in 1977 in Pasadena. Now the first and second generations of the Bugarin family operate these two successful restaurants. Customers come for the delicious Mexican food and amazing drinks and come back because they feel part of the family. Many customers have grown up eating at our restaurants and have seen them transform. The Bugarin family, Bernardino, Victor, Rolando and Ruby, would like to thank all of our loyal customers for being part of our family. Pepes Mexican Restaurant 2272 Honolulu Ave, Montrose (818) 248-5622 www.pepesmontrose.com Got Good Food? Call 818.248.2740 for advertising info. Available sizes: 2x2, 2x4 or 4x4. City Hall Coffee Shop Open for Breakfast and Lunch 7 days a week! 2 eggs + 2 bacon + 2 sausage ~•~ Kids (12 and under) eat free with paying adult ~•~ See our web page for upcoming events at www.giosbaguettes.com 818-330-7135 2332 Honolulu Ave. • Montrose 818-248-4905 3805 Ocean View Blvd., Montrose 91020 2327 Honolulu Ave • Montrose Elevated cuisine. Down-to-earth atmosphere. Ten Dollar Tuesdays House call “bottle” of red or white wine for $10. Family Package $16.99 Feeds up to 4 people, includes: Whole Chicken, 8oz Hummus, 8oz turnip pickles, 3 garlic sauces, 1 pkg. pitas, and 1 large garden salad. Imported French pastries & baguettes Free salad with purchase of sandwich 818-249-4949 Company Coming? Be prepared! appetizers, sides, desserts, eTC., eTC... Pasta Wednesdays All pastas and risottos only $15. www.thecrowsnestsg.com ~•~ 40+ beers on tap, pool tables and over 20 TVs y CV ekl We 4 1 0 2 M-F 6am to 3pm Sat 7am to 3pm • Sun 7:30am to 3pm For a ime t limited $2.99 Breakfast y CV ekl We 4 201 Family Fridays All kids eat off the kids’ menu free with purchase of adult entree. 204 1/2 N Brand Blvd • Glendale, CA 91203 The Crows Nest Sports Grille 7279 Foothill Boulevard Tujunga, CA 91042 (818) 242-3835 farnienteglendale.com (818) 353-0852 or www.thecrowsnestsg.com 3600 Ocean View Blvd, Montrose 91208 818-249-3587 fresH COOKies Gift s CertifiCate Gift Certificates Available Buy one get one Free CupCake! Famous Catering For any Special Event! Free ExpirEs 3/4/15 Free Call us for details! “ HHHHH ” Mon-Thurs 5 Star Food and Service at Happy Hour Pricing Daily SpecialS** Monday $3 Drinks Specials Tuesday Taco Tuesday $1.50 tacos Wednesday $3 Margaritas Happy Hour EVERYDAY from 4:00pm to 6:30pm Call for details and reservations 3826 Oceanview Boulevard I Montrose RSVP gm@dineov.com or 818.248.2722 Thursday Special Menu for $5.55 ** Restrictions apply for specials. See restaurant for details 2272 Honolulu Ave., Montrose (818) 248-6622 • pepesmontrose.com February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Page 23 JUST FOR FUN Weekly Horoscopes by John Deering and John Newcombe Provided by horoscope.com February 16, 2014 - February 22, 2015 This week’s New Moon is unusual because it’s the second New Moon in Aquarius this year, giving you another chance to kick-start Aquarius-based activities such as networking and exploring cutting-edge ideas. The Sun glides into Pisces midweek, enhancing intuitive energies and psychic tendencies. On Thursday Mercury links with Saturn, again, as it steadies itself after its retrograde phase. Over Thursday, Friday, and Saturday it may seem like Valentine’s Day has arrived a week late as Mars and Venus eventually unite in Aries. A ARIES March 21 - April 19 CALENDAR this JLP TO HOST 2ND ANNUAL SIMPLY SPEAKING BENEFIT LUNCHEON On Saturday, April 11, the Junior League of Pasadena, Inc. (JLP) will host its second annual benefit luncheon, Simply Speaking, at the University Club of Pasadena. This year’s guest speaker is Jane Olson, an inspiring humanitarian and Pasadena area local. Olson has devoted her life to international justice and humanitarian work and has chaired the International Board of Human Rights Watch and the Landmine Survivors Network board. The event will feature a seated lunch and silent auction. In addition, the 2015 recipient of the Nancy Reed Payne Achievement Award will be announced acknowledging a sustaining member for her exceptional contribution and years of dedication to the Junior League and to her community. All funds raised through the event will directly benefit the Junior League of Pasadena and its community projects. To purchase tickets and to learn more about the Junior League of Pasadena, please visit www.MyJLP.com. ‘BALLETS RUSSES’ AT BRAND LIBRARY The Brand Associates and Glendale Library, Arts, and Culture present “Ballets Russes,” an award winning film by Dan Geller and Dayne Goldfine. The screening will take place on Thursday, Feb. 19 at 7 p.m. at Brand Library & Art Center (Recital Hall) in Glendale. Admission is free and open to the public. Complimentary parking is available in Brand Park adjacent to the library and an accessible entrance and parking is available on the east side of the building. “Ballets Russes”(2005) is a documentary that captures the charismatic personalities of the revolutionary 20th century dance company, “Ballets Russes.” The company, composed of Russian refugees, evolved into two rival dance companies that fought the infamous “ballet battles” that consumed London society prior to World War II. The film includes stunning archival footage and interviews with its glamorous stars, prominently featuring the legendary Irina Baronova, one of the“baby ballerinas” who was George Balanchine’s protégé. Special guest speaker is Victoria Tennant, an Emmy and Golden Globe nominated actress. Tennant is the daughter of “Ballets Russes” star Irina Baronova and she has written a compelling book about her mother,“Irina Baronova and the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo.”The book is an intimate recollection including rare photographs, letters, and interviews capturing Baronova’s dramatic life. A book sale and signing with Tennant will follow the screening. Brand Library & Art Center (Recital Hall), 1601 W. Mountain St., Glendale CALTECH-OCCIDENTAL CONCERT BAND PRESENTS WINTER CONCERT The Caltech-Occidental concert band, directed by William Bing, will present its annual winter concert on Friday, Feb. 20 at 7:30 p.m. in Thorne Hall at Occidental College. Featured music will be by P.D.Q. Bach, Edward Elgar, Jamie Rankin, Ryan George, Rolf Wilhelm among others. There will also be presentations by the Caltech clarinet choir, the Caltech percussion ensemble, the Caltech flute choir, and the Caltech trombone choir. The guest soloist will be tuba player Gabriel Sears. Admission is free with no tickets required. For further information, visit bands.caltech.edu or call (626) 395-3295. RAPP SCREENING PLANNED RAPP – Read And Practice Peacemaking is presenting “Inequality for All” on Friday, Feb. 20 at 7:30 p.m. at Crescenta Valley United Methodist Church. In “Inequality For All” Robert Reich promises to present information deep enough so that the labels of liberal and conservative become irrelevant. He does not claim that total equality is necessary, but asks, “When does inequality become a problem?” Doors open at 7 p.m.; film begins at 7:30 p.m. Crescenta Valley United Methodist Church, 2700 Montrose Ave., Montrose. ‘ALICE THROUGH THE WORMHOLE’ AT CALTECH THEATRE Theater Arts Caltech presents Caltech Theater Lab’s original and world premiere production of“Alice Through the Wormhole”running from Feb. 20 through March 1. This is a full-length original musical with book, music and lyrics by Brenda Varda and the Caltech community, and directed by Caltech’s Brian Brophy. In this original adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s “Alice in Wonderland” and “Alice Through the Looking Glass,” Alice is a new grad genius in spintronics with a passion for marionetting. On a tour of a major science institute, Tellkech, a manic PhD candidate, WB, drags her down a wormhole to the underbelly of the campus. Once she enters into this world, all logic and reality lose ground as she gets caught in the battle between the Queen of Funding and the Dark Prince of Future Science. Along the way she battles to pursue the cutting edge research she passionately believes in, while sustaining her creative imagination and emotional balance. Our Alice fights against all odds, from a rap-singing dissertation by a Humpty Dump professor to appearances from the dead gods of science, from Soylent Green drinking grad students to an enigmatic beat poet Cheshire chimp lab assistant, Tweedles, and the search for graphene. Will she ever get out, or will she decide to stay? “Alice” trips your way with a starstudded opening night premiere gala on Friday, Feb. 20 and Feb. 27 at 8 p.m. Saturday shows Feb. 21 and Feb. 28 are at 8 p.m. and Sunday shows, Feb. 22 and March 1, are at 2:30 p.m. in Ramo Auditorium on the Caltech campus. To purchase tickets, call (626) 395-4652. Ticket prices are $5 for Caltech students, $9 for other students, seniors, Caltech/ JPL staff and faculty, and $18 for general admission. For more information, contact Cindy De Mesa at (626) 395-3295 or Brian Brophy at Brophy@caltech.edu. TACIT website is http://www.tacit.caltech.edu/. ALMA QUARTET AT BRAND LIBRARY On Saturday, Feb. 21 at 2 p.m. the Brand Associates is hosting the second concert in their 2015 music series. The artists performing will be the Alma String Quartet. They will be playing Haydn’s String Quartet Op. 76 No. 4 “Sunrise” and Mendelssohn’s String Quartet Op. 80. The concert will be in the Brand Library Recital Hall. Admission is free and a reception will follow the concert. For more information visit the Brand Library website http://www.brandlibrary.org or the Brand Library Facebook page https:// www.facebook.com/brandlibrary. The Brand Library Recital Hall is located at 1601 W. Mountain St. in Glendale. KEN OSMOND AT GLENDALE CENTRAL LIBRARY Ken Osmond discusses his new book “Eddie: The Life and Times of America’s Preeminent Bad Boy”with coauthor Chris Lynch on Saturday, Feb. 21 from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Glendale Central Library. Osmond is a former dancer, model and actor best known for playing the overly effusive and unctuous character Eddie Haskell from the TV show, “Leave it to Beaver.” A former veteran, Osmond spends his time currently supporting U.S. military and volunteering for the American Legion. Co-author Lynch is a Los Angeles native who has written for numerous local and national publications. He is the author of the “One Eyed Jack” series of crime novels about a professional blackmailer who operates in and around the South Bay area of Los Angeles. Lynch will return to the Central Library on March 7 with his popular workshop on self-publishing. Visitors to the Central Library receive three hours free parking at the MarketPlace parking structure across Harvard with validation at the Central Library Loan Desk. Glendale Central Library, 222 E. Harvard St., Glendale AAUW STATE PRESIDENT TO SPEAK Kathleen Doty, state president of the American Association of University Women, will be the speaker at a joint meeting of the Pasadena and Glendale branches of the AAUW on Saturday, Feb. 21 in Pasadena. A member since 1985, she will discuss current issues facing the board of directors. She has held almost every position in the Alhambra-San Gabriel branch. The luncheon meeting will begin at 11:30 a.m. at the Women’s City Club, 160 N. Oakland in Pasadena. For reservations, call Gloria Reynolds at (626) 798-3896. JEWEL CITY KNITTERS NEWS Jewel City Knitters will hold its monthly JCK Charity Knit & Crochet on Saturday, Feb. 21 from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Chevy Chase Library, 3301 E. Chevy Chase Dr., Glendale, (818) 548-2046. Enjoy a relaxed afternoon of knit, crochet and conversation. For more information, visit www. jewelcityknitters.com or email sandra. canfield@yahoo.com. Your sensitive, spiritual side is out in full force early this week, so pay attention to subtle nudges that could save you time and money. The New Moon encourages you to move in new circles and think about expanding your social options. There’s fun to be had if you want it. Passions will be unleashed from Thursday, putting you in a much more proactive mood. Your sex appeal could shoot up several notches, too, making this the perfect time for a sizzling date. B TAURUS April 20 - May 20 You’re on a roll socially, with many opportunities to mix, mingle, and enjoy some fabulous evenings out. You might feel motivated to volunteer, too, particularly if others need a helping hand. It should now be easier to make headway with your career and begin to put plans into action. Later in the week the focus shifts to spiritual matters, rest, and relaxation. If you’ve been burning the candle at both ends, the cosmos hints that the chance to recharge could do you good. C GEMINI May 21 - June 20 With a full house at the top of your chart, you might be in the position of having to make key decisions that could affect future plans. If you have big dreams, you’re ideally placed to start manifesting them. The New Moon in Aquarius encourages you to move outside your comfort zone and challenge yourself in the process. Your social life starts to sizzle from Thursday, with many opportunities for magical evenings out. Saturday in particular spotlights passion and desire! CANCER June 21 - July 22 The New Moon in your zone of shared resources may be one of the best times for reorganizing your financial situation, or at least making a start on it. Use this opportunity to get advice and put it into action. You’re also primed for adventure and embracing a learning curve. A lineup in Pisces might encourage vacation plans, whether you go abroad or stay close to home. The important thing is to relax and nurture key goals that you’ll soon put into action. E LEO July 23 - August 22 With Mercury now gathering pace in Aquarius, interactions settle down and become more predictable. This is a good time to sign documents, close deals, and generally get back into the swing of things. When it comes to finances you’ll need to keep a grip on things. The Pisces focus suggests you’ll be tempted to splurge just for the sake of it, so go easy if you can. The fun begins later, when action-packed influences coincide with unleashed passions. F VIRGO August 23 - Sept. 22 Romantic opportunities seem particularly upbeat this week, encouraging you to add a touch of magic to an ongoing relationship or to help a new liaison blossom. You’ll also find that everyday interactions, including business meetings, benefit from your creative and inspirational input. When Mars and Venus head into Aries you could be more impulsive when it comes to spending your money or flirting with someone who takes your fancy. It helps to adopt a sensitive approach to avoid unnecessary misunderstandings. G LIBRA Sept. 23 - Oct. 22 The midweek New Moon can be helpful if you’ve been thinking of starting a business enterprise or developing your creative potential. Mercury is picking up speed, so this is the perfect time to move from research to action. Romantic opportunities look promising, with a chance to take a budding liaison to a new level of commitment. Things really start to sizzle from Saturday, making this an excellent time for a passionate encounter. If Valentine’s Day was disappointing, this weekend should be sensational. H SCORPIO Oct. 23 - Nov. 21 The early part of the week can offer tender embraces and the chance for a special date. Romance is sweet and magical, leading to the potential for a relationship that encompasses mystery and the unknown. You have a great opportunity to start on DIY projects or other plans as the cosmos lends its support. You’ll be more competitive at work and while working out. If you’re eager to exercise, you might decide to increase your reps in order to get fit. I SAGITTARIUS Nov. 22 - Dec. 21 Home life seems upbeat so long as everyone is being honest with each other. There’s a chance that this might not be the case, particularly if you sense someone isn’t telling the truth. Any dilemmas resulting from this may be short-lived when Mars and Venus move into Aries later this week. Instead of holding back, people will be ready to tell it like it is, helping to clear the air. On a positive note, a burst of passion could reignite a relationship. J CAPRICORN Dec. 22 - Jan. 19 This isn’t the time to be overconfident or take things for granted. Instead, it helps to bring balanced judgment to the table, particularly if your reputation is at stake. Later, indecision and a lack of facts may give way to a determination to succeed no matter what. A more dynamic mindset could work wonders as Mars and Venus enter Aries. This can also be the perfect opportunity to clear out clutter and get your place looking exactly as you want it. K AQUARIUS Jan. 20 - Feb. 18 This week’s New Moon is the second in Aquarius this year, bringing another opportunity to forge ahead with an idea whose time has come. As Mercury gets up to speed, you’ll find your efforts are quickly rewarded. Meanwhile, continue to stay in control where finances are concerned. Cut back on items you no longer use or need, as doing so could save you a lot. New ideas inhabit your mental universe, enhancing conversation. Go easy to avoid a spat, however! . PISCES Feb. 19 - March 20 You’ll gain control of the reins as the Sun glides into your sign midweek, enabling you to forge ahead with personal plans. On the same day, the New Moon in your spiritual sector can be useful for starting practices such as meditation, yoga, or anything else that helps you feel more peaceful. Mars and Venus jog into your personal money zone, so it’s time to take action. Avoid impulsive spending and direct your energy wisely. Take care of any immediate problems. Page 24 www.cvweekly.com February 19, 2015 RELIGION Q uestion: We have a family member who we know is struggling financially. He was in a car accident, not his fault, and has been off work for six months and cannot yet go back to work. His injury case has not settled. We were told by another family member that he is in danger of losing his house. He has two children and, although his wife works, there doesn’t seem to be enough income to make ends meet. The family member who told us of his plight also told us that he is reluctant to accept help, even though there are several family members who can afford to help and are willing to. We had a little meeting on our own (six of us), and we decided to give the family whatever it takes to keep the house and their expenses current. We do not expect to be paid back. We want this to be a gift with no strings attached. We welcome your advice on how to make this happen. ~ Family Quandary Dear Family Quandary, It’s wonderful that your family is in a position to help a financially struggling member. These days many are not so fortunate. If you are absolutely certain your relative’s home is threatened, there are some possibilities that occur to me. The family member who has the best relationship with him could approach him and his wife, unless she’s the relative telling you of their difficulties, and explain that it is truly better to give than receive; the givers are able to feel good about themselves. It is simply a chance occurrence that he had an accident and cannot work. There is no shame in an unforeseeable accident and subsequent insurance difficulties. You can emphasize that later, when he is back on his feet financially, he can pay it forward to another deserving family member or anyone else. Keep Your Home California may be able to help. If your relative hasn’t explored this option, their website, http:// keepyourhomecalifornia.org/, has information on a number of programs. Lastly, you could try contacting the financial institution that holds the mortgage on the home. Perhaps there is a way to make an anonymous payment to cover the amount in arrears. If you are successful in getting your relative to accept your help none of the people involved should ever bring it up again. Wishing your relative a speedy recovery, Sharon Weisman Atheist/Agnostic/Secular Humanist/Free thinker sharon@jetcafe.org Dear Family in a Quandary, First let me express appreciation for you wanting to help out. I am always grateful for generous RELIGION SERVICE DIRECTORY Center for Spiritual Living - La Crescenta “Where it is our dream to help you build and manifest your dreams!” 4845 Dunsmore Ave. La Crescenta, CA 91214 (818) 249-1045 Celebration Service Sunday 10:00 a.m. Ongoing spiritual growth 7:00 classes Wednesday Night Service p.m. and counseling available Crescenta Valley United Methodist Church WORSHIP Sunday 10am Childcare and Sunday School offered at 10 am. REV. STEVE POTEETE-MARSHALL 2700 Montrose Ave Montrose, CA 91020 www.cvumc.org To be in our Ser vice Director y contact Emily Fairchild at (818) 248-2740 COME MEET US! St.(Missouri Luke’sSynod) 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 Spiritually Speaking Spiritually Speaking answers personal questions and concerns from a spiritual perspective. Local religious leaders taking part in the discussion include Mark Yeager/Chaplain YMCA of the Foothills; Bryan Griem of Montrose Community Church; Jon Karn of Light on the Corner Church; Kimberlie Zakarian of Holy House Ministries; Skip Lindeman of La Cañada Congregational United Church of Christ; Rabbi Simcha Backman of Chabad of Glendale; Rabbi Janet Bieber of Jewish Community & Learning Center of the Foothills; Levent Akbarut of Islamic Congregation of La Cañada Flintridge; Betty Stapleford of Unitarian Universalist; Steve Marshall of CV United Methodist Church; Elaine Cho of La Canada United Methodist Church; Holly Stauffer of St. Luke’s of the Mountains Episcopal Church; Beverly Craig of La Crescenta Center for Spiritual Living; Randy Foster of Christian Life Church; Centers for Spiritual Living Practitioners: Laney Clevenger-White, Sandra Shields, Anthony Kelson, Gary Bates; Marsalee Forrestar/Shamanic Practitioner; Mary Morgan of Redondo Beach Center for Spiritual Living; and Sharon Weisman, atheist/agnostic/secular humanist/free thinker. We welcome your questions and comments. Email us at spiritual@cvweekly.com. Responses are offered from the perspectives of individual clergy members, which may or may not be in agreement with other respondents of Spiritually Speaking nor the editor and staff of the Crescenta Valley Weekly. hearted persons in our world. Often, money is the one issue that can divide families, create hurt feelings and even divorce or lawsuits. So to have you gather together to offer your gift is an important step. Second, I am not sure what you are talking about as far as a gift. If the family situation is that they have a home and mortgage, and you are concerned about them losing the house, this is a complicated matter, one that may need guidance from a financial counselor. Our church just completed a Financial Peace University class taught by David Ramsey who has helped thousands get out of debt and helped them figure out what choices they need to make to be free from debt. One option is to find a qualified financial counselor and have them Q uestion: help map out a strategy for their financial situation. Getting a coach for finances costs very little in comparison with making poor choices. Once there is a plan in place, that will help them see what their options are, then they can make the decisions they need to make. Your gift to them can be part of their goal to recover from the debt they are facing, and can be seen as part of what they need to do to meet their goals. You can sponsor them attending a class. Just go to the David Ramsey Financial Peace University website and you can find a class in our area. Third, depending on the size of your gift, it can be designated Rev. Steve Poteete-Marshall Crescenta Valley United Methodist Church planetarypilgrim@gmail.com (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 Light on the Corner Church Pastor Jon Karn 1911 Waltonia Drive Montrose (818) 249-4806 1700 Foothill Blvd. La Cañada Flintridge SUNDAYS AT LCIF Worship and Communion 8AM & 10AM Children’s Church 10AM Sunday School for Youth & Adults 9AM Sunday services 10:45 a.m. www.lightonthecorner.org THE REV. JIM BULLOCK, Interim Pastor www.lcifoothills.org / 818-790-1951 )LUVW%DSWLVW&KXUFK DW/D&UHVFHQWD ^hEztKZ^,/W ϭϬ͗ϰϱĂŵ ŚŝůĚĂƌĞͲͲͲ^ƵŶĚĂLJ^ĐŚŽŽůϵ͗ϭϱĂŵ KĨĨŝĐĞ,ŽƵƌƐ DͲͲͲdŚ͘ϵ͗ϬϬĂŵƚŽϰ͗ϬϬƉŵ ϰϰϰϭ>ĂƌĞƐĐĞŶƚĂǀĞ͘ ;ϴϭϴͿϮϰϵͲϱϴϯϮ tĞďƐŝƚĞǁǁǁ͘ĨďĐůĐ͘ŽƌŐ in a certain way to help them with their situation. The hardest part is facing up to the reality of your situation. Hopeful thinking, denial, and thinking it will just blow over are ways that families get in way over their head and end up on a downward slide. I can’t tell you how many homeless folks I have talked to who have had their lives turned upside down in a very short period of time who did not understand how precarious their financial situations were until one day it all changed. Lastly, supporting them in simple ways, talking to them, taking them out for dinner, or bringing them dinner, praying for them, are simple ways to transmit your care and concern for them. Again, thank you for your caring concern and willingness to help! May God bless your actions. Q uestion: ST. BEDE the VENERABLE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH A Catholic Community ~ Here to Worship, Called to Serve ALL ARE WELCOME Rev. Msgr. Antonio Cacciapuoti, Pastor Rev. Greg Dongkore, Associate Pastor Deacon Augie Won SCHEDULE OF SERVICES Masses Monday-Friday: 8:10 a.m. Saturday: 8:10 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. When a person one cares about has gained considerable weight, is there a kind and loving way to speak to them without causing a broken relationship? Quite frankly, I don’t know what to say. I’m concerned about a dear friend who I’ve known for over 40 years. As a teenager, she was overweight. She then went on a weight loss program, and was see SPIRITUALLY SPEAKING on next page Others Vespers: Monday-Friday 5:30 p.m. Reconciliation: Saturdays 4:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. or by appointment Rosary: 8:30 a.m. Weekdays and following Vespers 215 Foothill Boulevard La Canada Flintridge, California 91011 (818) 949-4300 • www.bede.org CV Weekly is on line: www.crescentavalleyweekly.com R ELIGION February 19, 2015 • Page 25 www.cvweekly.com SPIRITUALLY continued from previous page trim and fit for at least 22 years. About three years ago, she began gaining weight again, and didn’t seem to care. My concern is for her health because she has numerous health challenges including high blood pressure. I’m a Christian and I want to do the right thing to support her, or should I just leave the subject alone? ~ Loving Friend Dear Loving Friend, It seems to me that you are a caring friend who is genuinely concerned about the health of your friend. And your concern about whether you should talk to her and how to talk to her is valid. However, there is no easy answer to your question. There are so many variables. I would suggest that you prayerfully take time to evaluate the situation. First I’d look at myself. Do I sincerely care about my friend and does she know that I care? Do we have the kind of friendship that allows us to talk about the difficult topics? Does she have permission to talk to me about areas in my life that need improvement? (We all have areas that need some work.) Finally, are you willing to be there for her if she decides to deal with this issue? Second, I’d prayerfully consider my friend. Is she the kind of person who is able to handle this kind of input? Right now, is her emotional state strong enough to receive this information? How has she handled this kind of conversation in the past? Some people are able to receive the loving negative feedback from a friend and others, for whatever reason, are not able to. If you have any reservation on any of these questions, you might not be the right person to bring up this topic. But if you sense that both you and she are ready for this kind of conversation, then carefully and prayerfully consider when and what you are going to say. Be sure to begin by affirming your love for her and concern for her health. Be careful to listen to her response. There may be some emotional or medical causes behind her weight gain. If there is an emotional basis for her weight gain, then counseling might be needed. A spirit of love and humility will go a long ways towards having a meaningful and productive conversation. May God give you much love and wisdom as you reflect on these questions. Your friend is lucky to have someone like you in her life. Warmly, Pastor Bill Flanders First Baptist Church at La Crescenta bill_flanders@att.net Dear Loving Friend, That’s what you are, a loving friend, and that’s all any of us can be when our friends are going through painful life situations. In 1999, I was seven years sober and my marriage was falling apart. I had two small children at home and I had acted out in such a way that was causing a lot of pain and discord in my marriage. Instead of talking about it, I decided to start drinking again. A very close friend of mine who was also sober in AA, though very concerned about me, my marriage, my children, was the most loving a friend could be by allowing me the dignity to find my way through it all without shaming me, guilting me or making me feel any worse than I already felt. And I felt horrible. I felt worthless, I felt like a failure and I was horribly ashamed. After the marriage fell apart and I found my way back into the rooms of AA and sobriety, I talked to my friend about our relationship and she said, “I loved you and prayed for you, and let you work your way through it on your own. I just wanted you to know that I would always be here for you when you were ready to ask for help.” We don’t need friends pointing out our failings, we need friends to love us when we are ready to face our failings and begin to do the long, arduous spiritual and emotional work it takes to heal from our own brokenness. All any of us want is to be really seen, really heard, really loved for who we are. And all of any of us can do is be willing to be that person for the ones we love. Holly Cardone, MDiv., Postulant St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church hollystauffer@gmail.com NOTES & NODS Tabletop Tuesday On Tuesday, March 3 at Bethel Church in Sun Valley, LAPD Officer Fernando Avila will give a talk entitled “The Truth About Gangs.” Who are the gangs in your neighborhood? What can you do about it? How do you know if your child is joining a gang? How can gang members change their lives? The lecture will be preceded by a potluck supper. The potluck starts at 6:30 p.m., the video presentation starts at 7:15 p.m., followed by dessert and discussion at about 8:30 p.m. Free to attend. Bethel Church, 10725 Penrose St., Sun Valley What’s Happening at Center for Spiritual Living Foundations class facilitated by Rev Bev. is being formed. Call (818) 2491045 or sign up in the Center bookstore with preference of days and time, so this valuable class can begin. The cost is $200 plus textbook and materials cost. Nourish yourself, bring out your creativity, join our ongoing art classes with Rochelle Niemerow. Mondays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. is the stained glass class. The cost is $115 for eight weeks or $20 per class. On Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. is a class on jewelry designing. The cost is $20 per class. On Fridays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. is the mixed media and acrylic painting. The cost is $115 for eight weeks or $20 per class. Save the dates All are invited for a very special day with Beca Lewis, author of “The Shift” series, on Sunday, Feb. 22. Shift your perception and the world shifts with you! *Living in Grace: The Shift to Spiritual Perception *The Daily Shift: It’s Not What You Think … It’s Better Than That *The Four Essential Questions: Choosing Spiritually Healthy Habits *The 28 Day Shift to Wealth: A Daily Prosperity Plan *The Intent Course: 28 Days to Discovering and Living Your Life’s Intent. Beca will be our guest speaker at 10 a.m. Her topic is “Practical Woo-Woo.” She will facilitate a workshop from noon to 2 p.m. after lunch. Feel free to rewrite your own story! $15 suggested love donation. Center rummage sale will be on Saturday, March 7 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Bring unwanted items for repurposing and donation to our sale. Contact the office (818) 249-1045 if you have items to donate. On March 22 at noon is the annual membership meeting. Those who would like to become a church member before the meeting, which entitles voting privileges, should contact Rev Bev at the office or on Sundays. All are welcome to become part this growing, loving membership. Center for Spiritual Living, 4845 Dunsmore Ave., La Crescenta New Year, New Women’s Bible Studies at Montrose Church On Fridays through March 27 from 8:45 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. and on Wednesdays through April 1 from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., Montrose Church is having a women’s Bible study focused on the book, “Seeking a Heart Like His” by Beth Moore.“God will never give up on you.” Explore how David’s life proves this promise to be true. In this examination of the “man after God’s own heart,” David will delight and disappoint you. You’ll want to be just like him at times and nothing like him at others. If you’ve ever experienced doubts, temptations, losses, family problems, or personal inconsistencies, this study is for you! Childcare provided. On Sunday mornings through March 29, a study of Beth Moore, “Breaking Free” takes place from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. “Breaking Free” leads readers through a study of the Scriptures to discover the transforming power of freedom in Jesus Christ. In this study, Beth Moore explains that anything that hinders us from the benefits of knowing God is bondage. With themes from Isaiah as a guide, you’ll identify spiritual strongholds in your life, no matter how big or small. Childcare provided. Montrose Church, 2409 Florencita Dr., Montrose. Glendale Latino Association 2015 Installation and Awards Luncheon ~ Oakmont Country Club ~ 3100 Country Club Drive • Glendale CA 91208 Thursday, February 26th, 2015 ~ 11:30am • $75 Admission ~ PRESENTING THE GLA 2014 HONOREES: ☆ ☆ ☆ WOMAN OF THE YEAR BUSINESS OF THE YEAR MAN OF THE YEAR Senior Vice President THE STONE-BECK GROUP AT MORGAN STANLEY WEALTH MANAGEMENT Higher Education GLENDALE FIRE DEPARTMENT Toni Beck Espinoza Glendale Community College 818.557.7700 Harold D. Scoggins Fire Chief www.GlendaleLatinoAssociation.com CV WEEKLY is online! www.CVWEEKLY.com Page 26 www.cvweekly.com February 19, 2015 BUSINESS » Montrose S h o p p i n g Pa r k N e w s It’s All About the Birthday Cake! The Montrose Shopping Park knows how to throw a memorable birthday party. This Sunday we are celebrating Montrose turning 102! The mayor and Glendale city officials will be joining us to present awards. There will be lots of food and entertainment spanning two blocks. The Harvest Market will be in full swing. But for me the day seems to revolve around the birthday cake. Here are some pics of our cakes going back to 2004. This year, working with Henry Baeza of Montrose Bakery, we have a spectacular new design and color combo for our cake! Watch for multi-tiered circular cakes of all sizes, decorated in red and pink roses with strawberry cream inside! I can hardly wait! The ceremony starts at 2 p.m. at the stage in front of Billy’s Boardshop where you will once again find Robin Goldsworthy and me, knives in hand, ready to cut and serve. There’s nothing like freshly baked birthday cake! Wait ‘til You Hear Trio Mariachi Capri! » Montrose Verdugo-City Chamber of Commerce Election Ballot Measures Up for Vote in April The first thing you should do before you go to the polls on April 7 is to log onto glendalevotes.org to educate yourself about all the candidates who are running and the four measures that will be on the ballot. There are two open Glendale City Council seats and seven candidates running. There are two open GUSD Board of Education seats and four people running. There are two open Glendale Community College Board of Trustee seats and three people running. Don’t forget: Those in the unincorporated parts of Montrose and La Crescenta will only be casting ballots for the GUSD school board, but your vote still matters! If you are in the City of Glendale you will be voting for the city council, GUSD school board, GCC board of trustees and the four ballot measures. If you can’t take time to make it to the polls, you can use the vote by mail system. Log onto glendalevotes.org and scroll down, click on the Vote by Mail tab under 2015 election resources, print the application and mail to the address given. It’s that simple! You can also pick up a Vote by Mail application at the Montrose-Verdugo City Chamber of Commerce office. One caveat – your ballot must be received by the Glendale City Clerk’s office no later than March 31, seven days prior to the election. I think many of us who live in the far north area of Glendale forget that we need to vote. Everyone who lives east of Lowell Avenue, west of Pennsylvania Avenue, north into the Angeles National Forest and south to the Verdugo Mountains is in the City of Glendale. It gets confusing in the Montrose area. The City of Glendale ends at the alley behind the Montrose Shopping Park area and extends behind the Indian Springs Shopping Center to USC Verdugo Hills Hospital and south into the San Rafael Hills. There is also a small portion of Glendale/ La Crescenta on Montrose Avenue at Rosemont Avenue that travels west to Pennsylvania Avenue. There are four measures on the ballot that you will be voting on. Measure C will amend the city charter to modify how much council members get paid. Currently, the compensation is based on population size. The change would allow council members to implement salary increases by ordinance. Council members currently earn $17,160 a year, about half of their previous salary since the dissolution of the Redevelopment Agency and the drop in the city’s population to under 200,000 people. Measure D asks voters to amend the city’s charter and abandon the city’s at-large election system, which has been in place since its founding, in favor of having district representation. Based on the city’s municipal code, preference is given to officers elected by the people, then to bona fide associations of citizens and, finally, to individual voters. Measure E is a similar ballot item asking voters whether the charter should be amended to require the board of education to establish the method of electing the members and, if the board establishes trustee areas as the method for electing its members, does it require that the board arranges said trustee areas pursuant to the California Education Code. Measure O is the only item that will require raising taxes by aiming to increase the transient occupancy tax – paid for by those staying in hotels – from 10% to 12%, a change that could generate about $800,000 annually for the General Fund for aiding essential public services, maintaining public areas and supporting quality of life activities. Log onto the glendalevotes.org website to find arguments for and against each measure. Melinda Clarke, executive director Montrose-Verdugo City Chamber of Commerce 818-249-7171 mvcc@montrosechamber.org www.montrosechamber.org » Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce “Our Business is Your Business” Yes, that is Ryan Gosling posing with Trio Mariachi Capri. This Sunday at our Montrose birthday party you will find out why he, along with Dustin Hoffman, Matt Dillon, and many others, book this group for their big parties. With over 30 years of experience, this father and sons trio will be serenading us right in the Montrose Shopping Park. Oh, and did I mention we are having a rancho-style barbecue complete with a whole roasted pig on a spit hosted by Kirk Gelsinger of Zeke’s Smokehouse? Buy your tickets from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for $10 and enjoy a menu including chicken or pork machaca, refried beans, Spanish rice, handmade tortillas and a beverage. Beer, wine, and sangria will be offered for only $4. Yum! See www.shopmontrose.com for more details. We Have a Slice of Birthday Cake For You! Henry Baeza with Mary Dawson. Mary Dawson Montrose Shopping Park Love to SHOP & Dine Montrose! A big thank you goes out to Bob Smith Toyota for hosting our February Pre Smart-a-Thon mixer. The good times rolled at the Mardi Gras-themed party. Cajun music played (thanks to a sound system rigged up by Todd Black of Electromotive) while guests noshed on homemade jambalaya and King cake (courtesy of members of the Pinola Fund) and sipped wine and beer (thanks to Mike and Pete Smith). Local business owners mingled and old friends caught up. Remember, you don’t have to own a business or even be a member to attend. All community members are welcome. Attendees were introduced to some of the Chamber’s newest members: owners of Harvest Juice Co., Thee Elbow Room and Etc. Gourmet Kitchen. It seemed like everybody won a raffle prize thanks to dozens of prize donations from Chamber members. The only prize that went unclaimed is the progressive cash pot which next month grows to $200. Sorry, Bruce Bartels of Bruce’s Automotive: As a member in good standing, your name was picked out of the fishbowl but, alas, you weren’t present! Try again next month at our mixer hosted by Etc. Gourmet Kitchen on March 11. Get your reservations in for next month’s Smart-aThon on March 25 at USC Verdugo Hills Hospital. More “Hollywood Squares” than “Jeopardy,” the Smart-aThon is a great way to bring members of your organization or business together, laughing while brainstorming. Create a team of four or have the Smarta-Thon folks place you on a team. If you’re a non-profit, your organization may win cash! But in any case, you’ll be supporting the Community Foundation of the Verdugos Education Fund, an organization that awards worthwhile grant requests from local educators. Visit the CV Chamber website, under Annual Events, for a registration form. Or purchase tickets ($35) at the Chamber office any weekday between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. While you’re here, why not fill out our Chamber survey? We’d love to get your feedback on important issues to Chamber members and potential members. Consider some of these questions: What benefits do you expect to realize from a Chamber of Commerce membership? What could the Chamber do better? How many mixers do you attend? How could they be improved? Do you attend other Chamber events such as the Hometown Country Fair, Day at the Races, Business Expo and Taste of the Foothills? If not, what are some reasons you don’t attend? In your opinion, what is the purpose of the Chamber of Commerce? We’d appreciate your thoughts. Submissions will be discussed at upcoming board of directors meetings. Finally, do you know a Woman of the Year? Every March, during Women’s History Month, Congressman Adam Schiff honors outstanding women from the communities in the 28th Congressional District. This area includes La Crescenta, La Cañada, Montrose, Glendale, Burbank, Sunland and Tujunga (among others). These women come from all walks of life and represent the thousands of women who make a positive impact in our region. While there are no specific criteria for nomination, Rep. Schiff looks for women who, through their work or volunteerism, have improved the quality of life in our community. If you would like more information on submitting nominations, call the Chamber office at (818) 248-4957 or email me at info@ crescentavalleychamber.org. Lisa Dupuy, executive director CV Chamber of Commerce 3131 Foothill Blvd. ‘D’ La Crescenta, CA 91214 (818) 248-4957 February 19, 2015 www.cvweekly.com Page 27 GET READY TO DISC VER CLASSIFIEDS & Service Directory LEGAL Employment Fictitious BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 2015034997 FIRST FILLING. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as CAREER PATHWAYS, 2748 Mayfield Ave La Crescenta, CA 91214. The business is conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Signed Emma M. Sanchez. The statement was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Los Angeles on February 9, 2015. NOTICE: This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed prior to that date. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14411 ET SEQ., Business and Professions Code). Pub. Crescenta Valley Weekly February 12, 2015, February 19, 2015, February 26, 2015, March 5, 2015. Office ManagerChiropractic (2+years billing experience) IMMEDIATE OPENING. Well established office looking for a full-time office manager who possess 2+ years insurance billing experience, enthusiastic, and energetic. Must be self- motivated, able to multitask, organized, and have exceptional people skills. Job duties/ experience requirements include but not limited to; Insurance billing ICD-9 and ICD-10 to all types of carriers including Medicare; claim follow-up/collection. EHR documentation software. Microsoft programs; Word, Excel. QuickBooks experience helpful. Knowledge of HIPPA compliance requirements. Some time spent performing front desk duties. If you feel you are a qualified candidate, we look forward to speaking with you. Email resume: thsawyerdc@sbcglobal.net. For Rent Services SPACE FOR RENT HOUSE CLEANING SERVICE Secure storage space available on Foothill. 24-hour access. Spaces from 75 to 250 sq.ft. Long term preferred. Call Jim (818) 957-2659 for great pricing. Services MATH TUTOR California credentialed Math tutor with 20+ years experience. Pre-algebra, algebra, geometry, pre-calculus & calculus. Call (818) 269-6941 Life Coach How to train your inner Dragon and get past it to your goal! Goal Educational Kinesiology please visit www.brain-gym.us. For contact please email info@brrain-gym.com or call (818) 726-0228. Responsible, dependable, local Great price! References upon request. Leslie (818) 823-4332 PET SITTING In business since 1996 Bonded & insured. Walks, pet sit & medications. Call Audri (818) 515-9251 or email adogsfriend@hotmail.com. Housekeeping Reliable, trustworthy, great work ethic and experience. Affordable prices. Miriam (323) 304-3193. Hauling You CALL, WE HAUL! Yard, garage, estate left overs & any clean out! Now also offering Pressure Washing Service. Call Mario (818) 426-3949. • AIR CONDITION & HEAT • Crescenta Valley Weekly is ready for your legal notices! Call emily today! (818) 248-2740 Estate Sale Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 21 & 22 at 3442 Downing Ave. at 8 am Everything goes, including piano. wanted Quiet GUEST HOUSE Quiet guest or back house at least two bedrooms. On a quiet street, no smoking. In the areas of La Canada, La Crescenta, or Montrose. Please contact Corky Davis (818) 260-8787 press “0” and ask for Corky. WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE Washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranges. Pay top dollar. (818) 248-1344. wanted Your old motorcycle. Running or not. Pay top dollar. Call (818) 568-9788. • CleaNING SERVICES • Maids.com WINTER SPECIAL Call us to have your system serviced! WANTED! YOUR CLASSIFIED AD HERE! Call Emily F. @ (818) 248-2740 www.cvweekly.com • Construction • Yard Sale www.lacanadaair.com We Clean Homes One Time • Weekly • Monthly Service Call for a free estimate! 818.790.8000 818.248.2001 License #536450 • Master Card and Visa Accepted • Furniture • • GRAPHICS • • Roofing • • Your Business Here • Pinecrest Roofing WANTED! • Event Services • Bonners Party & Equipment Rentals 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 • LIGHTING • • music • • Plumbing • ★ Music Lessons... Tim Mitchell’s DBA LOW VOLTAGE LIGHTING • LICENSE #994733 YOUR LANDSCAPE LIGHTING EXPERTS • New Installations • LED Retrofitting • LED Bulbs • Solid Brass Fixtures www.lighthouse-lights.com/socal email: kim.m@lighthouse-lights.com tel: 818-541-0745 Puts Music in Your Life In your home or in studio. Guitar, violin, Piano and more. Free introductory lesson. Call 818-731-5957 Have a job to advertise? Having a yard sale this weekend? Have property to rent or lease? Plumbing Service PROFESSIONAL SERVICE & REPAIR ★ BATH REMODELING ★ Serving The Crescenta Valley Since 1985 (818) 249-6470 Contractors License #469492 Bonded • Insured Maximize your ad’s potential…Use print and online services to enhance your ad’s visibility and get more eyes on your ad! “TOP QUALITY WORK” • • • • • • Serving The Foothills Composition Roofs Tile Roofs Flat Roofs Repairs Gutters Skylights LIC. #564628 818-957-5238 www.PincrestRoofing.com FREE Estimates Call Emily F.@ (818) 248-2740 YOUR BUSINESS 2X2 SERVICE DIRECTORY AD HERE! Call Emily F. TODAY @ (818) 248-2740