George Washington`s Real Birthday Is Saturday!

Transcription

George Washington`s Real Birthday Is Saturday!
George Washington’s Real Birthday Is Saturday!
BEVERLY HILLS
VOLUME XXXXVIIII NUMBER 8 $135 PER YEAR - $1.25 PER COPY •
www.bhcourier.com
SINCE 1965
THIS ISSUE
February 21, 2014
Beverly Hills Looks
To Make City SmokeFree, Regulate Vapes
By Victoria Talbot
The City of Beverly Hills has adopted an ordinance that regulates electronic cigarettes and
“vaping” just as cigarettes are currently restricted,
The Beverly Hills Rotary
Club holds its annual music
competition.
4
(see ‘E-CIGS ’ page 7)
Horace Mann students get a
lesson on bullying.
4
THREE HOLLYWOOD ICONS–The U. S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s dinner at The Beverly
Hilton on Thursday, March 6, will honor Academy Award-winning actor Sir Ben Kingsley (left).
Among those taking part in the program will be Oscar-winning actor Morgan Freeman and honorary chair Sherry Lansing.
20th Anniversary Of
IAPA To Honor Lee
Baca, Stanley Black
By Steve Simmons
The Iranian American Parents Association will
celebrate its 20th anniversary with a black-tie
Nowruz gala and awards presentation to Lee Baca,
retired L.A.County sheriff, and entrepreneur Stanley Black on Sunday, March 9 at The Beverly
Kingsley with its “National Leadership” Wilshire.
award recognizing his contributions to
The event will feature cultural displays such
keeping Holocaust memory alive and ad- as carpet weaving and a Persian tea room with
vancing the museum’s mission.
special china (catered by Arax Pary Coordinating),
Ben Kingsley To Be Honored At
March 6 Holocaust Museum Dinner
Jonah Okum celebrates his
Bar Mitzvah.
4
By John L. Seitz
The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s March 6 dinner in The Beverly Hilton
is titled, ”What You Do Matters.” The event
will honor Oscar-winning actor Sir Ben
(see ‘HOLOCAUST MUSEUM ’ page 7)
FLIRTY
T E D DY —
Big
Boy
Teddy Bear
teased Kyle
Chandler
and Camille
Grammer
before The
Hungover
Games premiere
in
Hollywood.
Beverly Hills lyricist Carol
Connors hosts “Girlfriends
are Forever.”
5
Muslim and Jewish students collaborate to raise
awareness for Darfur.
5
•Arts & Entertainment 11
•Health & Wellness
12
•Birthdays
20
24th ‘Night Of 100 Stars’ Gala
To Be Packed With Celebrities
Jimmy Fallon And
Nancy Juvonen,
The Producing
Partner Of Drew
Barrymore, Named
Their Daughter
Winnie After Lake
Winnipesaukee in
New Hampshire
Where He
Proposed
Editorial from
Rabbi Pressman
AND MORE
CLASSIFIEDS
•
•
•
•
•
Announcements
Real Estate
Rentals
Sales
and More
24
Oscar-Winning Fashions
Come To Robinson Gardens
For
more
photos, see
G e o r g e
C h r i s t y ’s
column on
page 6.
Celebrity Photo Agency/Scott Downie
George Christy,
Page 6
(see ‘IAPA ’ page 8)
By John L. Seitz
Norby Walters’ 24th “Night of
100 Stars” Oscar viewing gala at
The Beverly Hills Hotel on Sunday,
March 2, may have one of its
largest celebrity attendances in history, according to media coordinator Edward Lozzi.
(see ‘100 STARS ’ page 8)
FASHION AT THE MANSION–A lecture at the Virginia Robinson Gardens this week explored the relationship between high fashion and film
in anticipation of next weekend’s Oscars. Pictured (from left): Marian
Power, Clarissa Esguerra, and Kerstin Royce.
By Laura Coleman
Just a week-and-a-half before the 86th Academy Awards
on Mar. 2, the Friends of
Robinson Gardens held a salon, “Fashion & Oscars,” at the
103-year-old Beverly Hills es-
tate that took attendees on a
sumptuous journey of costumes and gowns from 1929
until today.
On Wednesday, Clarissa
Esguerra, assistant curator of
(see ‘ROBINSON GARDENS ’ page 7)
FIRE CHIEF PINNED– Chief Ralph Mundell
and Deputy Chief Greg Barton were pinned
with their new badges in a ceremony at City
Hall Tuesday. (From left): Engineer Kerry Gardner, Firefighter/Paramedic James Charron,
Engineer Charles Ratcliff, Captain John Eccles, Battalion Chief David Grate, Firefighter
Kevin McHale, Firefighter Ryan Goble, Firefighter Jake Morrow, Fire Chief Ralph Mundell,
Battalion Chief/Fire Marshal Joe Matsch,
Deputy Fire Chief Greg Barton, Engineer
Ernie Carol, Firefighter/Paramedic Kurt VerSteeg, Firefighter Chad Beery, Engineer Scott
Steele, Firefighter/Paramedic Mark Hein.
BEVERLY HILLS
Page 2 | February 21, 2014
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
DATE:
TIME:
February 27, 2014
1:30 PM, or as soon thereafter as the matter
may be heard
LOCATION: Commission Meeting Room 280A
Beverly Hills City Hall
455 North Rexford Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
The Planning Commission of the City of Beverly Hills, at its
REGULAR meeting on Thursday, February 27, 2014, will hold a
public hearing beginning at 1:30 PM, or as soon thereafter as the
matter may be heard to consider the following:
Zone Text Amendment. A request for a Zone Text
Amendment to amend the Beverly Hills Municipal Code
regarding provisions for rooftop employee lunchrooms on
commercial buildings. Current code provisions allow for
rooftop employee lunchrooms to be exempted from applicable parking requirements only when the rooftop lunchroom
would exceed the otherwise allowable maximum height for
the property. The requested amendment would allow rooftop
employee lunchrooms to be exempted from providing parking, regardless of whether said employee lunchroom exceeds
the otherwise allowable maximum building height; and
Development Plan Review. A request for a Development
Plan Review for the property located at 228 South Beverly
Drive to allow the construction of an approximately 2,200
square foot rooftop employee lunchroom on the roof deck of
the existing building without providing additional parking
spaces. This request is being made pursuant to the proposed
Zone Text Amendment described above, and would be contingent
on the approval of the Zone Text Amendment by the City Council.
This project has been assessed in accordance with the authority
and criteria contained in the California Environmental Quality
Act (CEQA), the State CEQA Guidelines, and the environmental
regulations of the City. The project qualifies for a Class 5
Categorical Exemption for minor alterations in land use limitations and a Class 1 Categorical Exemption for interior and exterior alterations to an existing commercial building, and the project
has been determined not to have a significant environmental
impact and is exempt from the provisions of CEQA.
Any interested person may attend the meeting and be heard or
present written comments to the Commission.
According to Government Code Section 65009, if you challenge
the Commission's action in court, you may be limited to raising
only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing
described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to
the City, either at or prior to the public hearing.
If there are any questions regarding this notice, please contact
Ryan Gohlich, Senior Planner in the Planning Division at
310.285.1194, or by email at rgohlich@beverlyhills.org. Copies
of the applications, plans, and Categorical Exemption are on file
in the Community Development Department, and can be reviewed
by any interested person at 455 North Rexford Drive, Beverly
Hills, CA 90210.
Sincerely:
Ryan Gohlich, Senior Planner
BEVERLY HILLS
February 21, 2014 | Page 3
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 4
HERE!
B E V E R LY H I L L S M A I N N E W S
Horace Mann Students Come Early
To School For Lesson On Bullying
TOLERANCE—Education Coach Lily Ross
(pictured) helped guide
Horace Mann middle
school students on appreciating
diversity.
Ross is pictured with
HM 6th graders Nathan
Maryamian
and
Thomas Recupero.
LET THERE BE MUSIC—The Rotary Club of Beverly Hills held its annual music competition finals at The
Beverly Hills Hotel. Some 18 students from Beverly Hills High School auditioned and the panel of judges
chose four to perform. Included were a piano performance of Franz Liszt, a song from Beauty And The
Beast, and quartet performance of Dave Brubeck's Take Five. All performers received a grant from the club.
Julia Choi was then chosen to perform at the Rotary District Competition. This annual event recognizes
and celebrates talent among BHHS students. Pictured above (from left): Bill Bradbury (BHHS Instrumental Music Teacher) Matt Shterenberg (drums), Stephan Kim (bass cello), Julia Choi (piano) Wanda Presburger (BH Rotary member and music competition chair), Scott Senior (vocal and saxaphone), and Susan
Berk (BH Rotary president).
By Laura Coleman
On Wednesday morning,
dozens of Horace Mann middle students filled the cafeteria
before school started for a pre-
Ed Hookstratten
house force for a wide ranging array of sports, film, television, journalism and news icons, earning the
reputation as a ferocious negotiator
in getting his star clients innovative, lucrative and unprecedented
deals.
His “who’s who” client roster
included Elvis Presley, Johnny Carson, Peggy Lee, Tom Snyder, Vince
Scully, Dick Enberg, Dick Stockton,
Joey Bishop, Don Meredith,
George Allen, Bryant Gumbel, Pat
(see ‘HOOKSTRATTEN ’ page 8)
(see ‘BULLYING ’ page 8)
NEW MAN—Beverly
Vista 7th grader Jonah Okum celebrated
his Bar Mitzvah this
month at Wilshire
Boulevard Temple
with
family
and
friends. His Torah
portion was called
Parashat T'Rumah
and it was about giving through the kindness of your heart.
Famed Beverly Hills Attorney/Agent Ed Hookstratten
By John L. Seitz
his nickname, became a powerMourned
In just the past few weeks, Beverly Hills has lost some of its more
colorful show biz-oriented citizens
from comedy genius Sid Caesar to
Leonard Hirshan, Clint Eastwood’s
agent/manager for the past 50+
years. Another whom would definitely fit into that category is Edward Gregory Hookstratten, the
legendary attorney/agent, who died
of congestive heart failure in his
home here Jan. 22 at age 83.
In a career spanning more than
five decades, “The Hook,” as was
sensation on bullying and
building relationships.
The hour-long program by
Conservation And Wise Water
Storage Help In Drought
By Victoria Talbot
While California is in a
Drought Emergency, experiencing the worst drought on
record, Southern California is
managing well, according to a
report from the Metropolitan
Water District. Years of investment in water storage infrastructure, storage of surplus
(see ‘DROUGHT ’ page 8)
DANCING WITH THE DADS—Beverly Hills girls attended the annual Father Daughter Dance at Greystone mansion. Pictured above (from left): Amy and Andy Geller, Leia and Fred
Gluckman, Bronte and Skip Henfling, Kayla and Karl Naufal, Mia and Max Subin, Ella and Glen Revivo, Alexa, Joely, and Mitch Newman, Addison, Alexa and Brad Kreshek, Melina
and Don Rosen, Isabela and Kevin Painter, Samantha and Jerid Maybaum, Camille and Josh Lieber, Arden and Michael Brown, Naomi and Boris Mayzels, Natalie and Simon Raviv, Reese and Noah Margo, Emma and Chris Maurer, Jennalee and Dan Leopard, Ava and Johnson Chan
REFLECTIONS—At this
year’s BHUSD PTA Reflections awards ceremony,
held in the Beverly Hills
High School Science and
Technology Building, Beverly Vista 1st grader
Chase Kim was among
those honored. He won
first place in the visual arts
category. Pictured (from
left): PTA Council President Marc Saleh, Kim, Superintendent Gary Woods
and PTA Council Reflections
Chair
Sharon
Persovski.
Gold Is Peacemaker For Two City Commissions
By Victoria Talbot
After a turf dispute erupted
over public art and green space
in Beverly Hills, Councilmem-
ber Julian Gold stepped forth to
assist in outlining a procedure
to clarify issues of jurisdiction
and clear up disagreements
between the two commissions
over the placement of art in the
public parks.
(see ‘GOLD ’ page 18)
Surplus From Centennial Concert
To Fund Beverly Hills Days
By Victoria Talbot
The Centennial Beverly
Hills
Days
Volunteer
Committee has been granted
funding for a 6’ x 6’ art piece
made up of thousands of photographs of local residents
assembled to resemble the
Beverly Hills Shield. The
(see ‘CENTENNIAL ’ page 18)
MEET MARLEY— Marley
is a lovable, 4-month old,
male Yorkie Maltese mix
puppy. He weighs 8pounds and is happy to be
safe at ShelterHopePetShop.org after being abandoned at a high kill facility.
Those interested in giving
this sweet pup a happy
home may call Shelter
Hope at 805-379-3538 or
email Kira Lorsch at
4Dogs@RHLgroup.com.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 5
Jewish, Muslim Students Unite To
Bring Awareness To Darfur Genocide
COLLABORATION—Muslim and Jewish students worked together
this week to raise awareness about the genocide in Darfur. Pictured
above (from left): Ethan Roofian, Amitai Seger, Robin Franco, Ahmad
Eissa, Jonathan Gabay, Brittney Moalemzadeh, Ariana Wilner, Dalia
Marouf and Layla Karam.
Courier Photo by Laura Coleman
‘VALENTINE GIRLS’—Beverly Hills lyricist Carol Connors hosted her “CC’s Girlfriends Are Forever” party
at Doma on Camden. Enjoying the festivities were, from leff: Dr. Caren Caty, Barbi Benton, Connie Stevens,
Carol Connors, Kira Lorsch, Deanna Lund, Elke Sommer and Candace Smith. Photo by Maxine Picard
By Laura Coleman
On Wednesday, dozens of
Jewish students at Sinai Akiba
partnered with Muslim students from New Horizon in
80 Years Of El Rodeo History Preserved In An Old
School Recipe Book
ADL’s Deborah Awards To Honor
Four Women Of Achievement
By Laura Coleman
At 93, El Rodeo alumna Kathleen
Simmons Pomeroy, who graduated from
the Beverly Hills middle school in 1934,
still recalls her time at as a student most
fondly.
“I started second grade the day the
school opened in 1927 and graduated
in June, 1934,” she told The Courier. “I
will never forget our Home Economics
classes - big rooms with individual
FOUR SCORE, AN EDUCATION AGO—El Rodeo (‘34) stoves and sinks where we were taught
graduate Kathleen Simmons Pomeroy still has her school to make breakfast, lunch and dinner. It
recipe book and ER patches (above left). She is pictured, was here that I started collecting
(above, right) on her graduation day 80 years ago.
(see ‘EL RODEO’ page 14)
Drive.
(see ‘RED LIGHT’ page 14)
CELEBRATING HAIR
AND AGE—Celebrity
hairstylist and TV personality Daniel DiCriscio, “The Real
Blonde of Beverly Hills,”
held his 6th annual
Birthday Bash at the
ABH Rooftop at the
new Hotel Sixty, formerly the Thompson
Beverly Hills. Pictured
(from left): Rusty Updegraff, Vikki Lizzi, DiCriscio,
McKenzie
Olsen and Andre Soriano.
Beverly Hills Pet Care Foundation Adoption Event
‘Woofstock’ Returns March 2 To La Cienega Park,
By Steve Simmons
The Pet Care Foundation
(Pets 90210) will host its largest
pet-adoption event to date
from 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Sunday,
March 2 at La Cienega Park, La
Cienega and Olympic.
With adoptable cats and
dogs from several organizations, the event will coincide
with the City of Beverly Hills’
(see ‘WOOFSTOCK’ page 14)
(see ‘DARFUR’ page 14)
ADL’S DEBORAH
AWARDEES–The
Anti-Defamation
League will bestow
Deborah Awards
March 19 to (from
left): Lisa Bloom,
Liane Weintraub,
Pooneh Mohajer
and Fung Der.
By John L. Seitz
The
Anti-Defamation
League will honor four women
from diverse fields and backgrounds at its 20th Deborah
Awards on Wednesday, March
19, at the SLS Hotel on La
Cienega.
The honorees are: Lisa
Bloom, founder/owner of The
Bloom Firm, author and NBC
(see ‘ADL’ page 14)
ABL DEBUT–More than 100
turned out at Mari Vanna
Restaurant for the inaugural
invitational fundraiser of the
Academy of Business Leadership (www.goabl.org). CEO
Anna Ouroumian (center) presented Mark Dalzell, senior VP
of Capital Research, with the
“ABL Champion” award for his
dedication to the nonprofit
which provides business and
leadership education to 7,000
local youths. She is joined by
Olga Kovalenko, “Miss Russia
LA” (right) and TV host Olga
Gorshkova (left). Photo by
Tatyana Csarycheva
Smile For The Beverly Hills Red Light Traffic Camera!
By Victoria Talbot
The red-light camera at Whittier and Wilshire is
not going anywhere unless regulations for the state
of California change.
Despite disgruntled motorists and poor public
relations, The Courier has confirmed that the City
of Beverly Hills has absolutely no plans to end the
red-light photos that can cost an errant driver about
$480 in fees, points on their driving record and
higher insurance rates as a result of the offense.
The cameras, located on the east and west
sides of the Wilshire Boulevard-Whittier Drive
PHOTO RED LIGHT—A red light camera is intersection, bring the City of Beverly Hills about
watching you! The camera is visible inside the cir- $116,482 month in fines. Last year, the Photo Red
cle above, at the corner of Wilshire and Whittier Light Program (PRL) issued 16,800 citations to
Pasadena to create tents that
raise awareness about the
genocide in Darfur in a special
event put on by Jewish World
BHUSD Hires Rutan & Tucker To
Investigate School District Leak
By Laura Coleman
The Board of Education
voted 4-0 to hire Rutan &
Tucker, LLP to investigate the
source of a leaked preliminary
draft of the investigation by the
Beverly Hills Unified School
District into the financial dealings of Beverly Hills High
(see ‘LEAK’ page 18)
SWEET CELEBRATION—The PTA Horace Mann Hospitality Committee put together a Valentine's Day Teacher Luncheon to show appreciation and support for its staff of teachers. Pictured (from left): Lobat
Zargar (instructional aide), Afi Delijani (3rd grade teacher), Nicole Locatelli (2nd grade teacher) and Elise Castillo (instructional aide).
GEORGE CHRISTY
George Christy
Brenda Vivian
Celebrity Photo Agency/Janet Gough
Bryan Callen and Amanda
Humphrey
Clint Culpepper greeted Sony’s Amy Pascal and
John Legend at the Pan African Film and Arts
Festival Premiere in Hollywood of Screen Gems’
About Last Night
Eniko Parrish and Kevin Hart
Jimmy Jean-Louis
Keri Hilson
Page 6 | February 21, 2014
Krystal Harris
Lil Mama
Nicki Micheaux
Christopher McDonald
Regina Hall
Yaani King
Joy Bryant
Balani Khalfani
Catherine Chu
BEVERLY HILLS
BEVERLY HILLS
February 21, 2014 | Page 7
E-CIGS
(Continued from page 1 )
within City limits.
In adopting the ordinance, the
Beverly Hills City Council also directed
the City staff and the Health and Safety
Commission to explore ways to further
restrict the use and sale of tobacco
products and e-cigarettes within City
limits, attracting widespread media
attention.
The City Council is concerned
about the potential health risks of electronic cigarettes and the growing popularity among teenagers, young adults
and non-smokers.
The new ordinance will amend the
City municipal code so that the definition of smoking will include e-cigarettes. Also, there will be an amendment to the City recreation and park
regulations to prohibit the use in City
parks and recreational facilities. The
devices are prohibited from being sold
at vending machines.
Electronic cigarettes are battery
operated, adjustable nicotine-delivery
systems that use vapor cartridges with a
choice of flavors.
The objective of the regulations are
a “healthy city.” The ordinance anticipates
the Food and Drug
Administration’s intent to regulate the
product as tobacco. Currently, state
laws only restrict the sale of e-cigarettes
to minors.
“Our job is to protect resident and
non-resident health by limiting availability and exposure and non-user
exposure,” said councilman Julian
Gold, who first directed staff to create
the ordinance.
At Tuesday’s meeting it was Mayor
HOLOCAUST MUSEUM
(Continued from page 1 )
Honorary chairs are Sherry Lansing
and the late Tom Sherak. Dinner chairs
are Janet and Lenny Rosenblatt and
Rosanna Arquette and Todd Morgan.
The event supports the museum’s comprehensive campaign led by honorary
chair Elie Wiesel to keep Holocaust
memory alive in the 21st century.
Kingsley, who won a “Best Actor”
Academy Award for Ghandi, has appeared in such films such as Schindler’s
List and Anne Frank: The Whole Story.
He has introduced countless people
worldwide to Holocaust history and inspired them to learn more.
The evening includes a tribute to
ROBINSON GARDENS
(Continued from page 1)
costume and textiles at the Angeles
County Museum of Art offered the soldout lecture an intimate glimpse into
nearly a century of cinema and the interconnectivity of costume designers,
couture and actors.
“From the beginning, [the Oscars]
was a fashion event,” she said. “The relationship between Hollywood and
fashion dates to the role clothing plays
in storytelling.”
Costumes are foundational to
character, Esguerra explained, underscoring that clothing informs first impressions and signify change. Is the
character sassy? Reserved?
For example, designer Gilbert Adrian (the Wizard of Oz was among the
200-plus films he costumed) was transformational in the life and career of
Janet Gaynor, the first woman to win an
Oscar for “Best Actress.”
“Through clothing, he transformed
John Mirisch who opened the discussion on a “smoke-free” city. As proposed by Mirisch, the City could ask
businesses for a combination of voluntarily restricting use and sales and ordinances that will “fill in the gaps of existing state law” to keep smoking and vaping from affecting the public’s health.
Mirisch expressed a desire to “ban cigarettes sales or at least a partial ban.
There may be exceptions or a voluntary
program,” he said.
“Smoking of any kind should be
discouraged, especially for teenagers,”
said Mirisch. “By taking these steps, the
City is sending a strong message to the
community that we take the health of
our citizens very seriously.”
Gold cited the 443,000 deaths each
year the Centers for Disease Control
attributes to smoking. By contrast, drugs
and alcohol deaths combined are about
130,000.
The ordinance extends prohibitions
on smoking as well as vaping to include
public plazas, including open courtyards or spaces accessible to the public,
farmers markets, outdoor service lines,
such as ATMs, and outdoor public
events.
Health and Safety Commissioner
Chair Gail Millan made the presentation. The ordinance will have a second
reading at the March 4 City Council
meeting and become law on June 1. The
Commission provided the interim period for public outreach and education.
Vice Mayor Lili Bosse asked how
the ordinance would be enforced.
“We wouldn’t be able to go out and
aggressively enforce it,” said BHPD Lt.
Shan Davis, commander of Emergency
Services Bureau. Enforcement will be
primarily complaint-driven.
Kingsley in which a variety of Hollywood stars will take part, both by video
and personal appearances including
Morgan Freeman, Rosanna Arquette,
Steven Spielberg and Joe Mantegna.
“Sir Ben’s commitment to Holocaust awareness and education is both
genuine and meaningful,” said Michael
J. Sarid, Western regional director at the
museum, which has hosted 36 million
visitors during its 20 years on the National Mall in Washington D.C.
The dinner is open to the public,
but advance registration is required. Individuals must RSVP by Feb. 28 by calling
310-556-3222
or
email
western@ushmm.org. For sponsorship
opportunities, contact Michael Sarid at
msarid@ushmm.org.
her to a woman,” Esguerra said, underscoring how Adrian’s “grown up” designs for the diminutive actress got people to see her as an adult.
Over the years, a deep connection
between actors and designers blossomed (Adrian and Gaynor were married; Audrey Hepburn eventually added
a clause to her contract that she work
with Hubert de Givenchy) and cemented careers, such as Vera Wang, who
found success as a fashion designer after her friend Sharon Stone wore a
Wang creation to the Academy Awards.
Today, upwards of 40 gowns are
sent to top Oscar contenders for use on
the Red Carpet, pre-ceremony and
post-ceremony events.
Esguerra said she expected the Oscar for best costume designer would go
to Michael Wilkinson for his work on
American Hustle. In addition to perfectly capturing the period, she said: “He’s
just so nice.”
E-CIGS
(Continued from page 1
BEVERLY HILLS
Page 8 | February 21, 2014
100 STARS
(Continued from page 1)
So far, acceptances to join
the festivities have come from
Cloris Leachman, Bo Derek,
Ryan O'Neal, Lee Majors,
Laura Dern, Steve Collins,
Tom Sizemore, Anne Heche,
Ron Perlman, John Heard,
Vincent Pastore, Tony Danza,
Ed Begley Jr., Arielle Kebbel,
LeeAnn Rimes, NFL’s Terrell
Owens, Kenny (Babyface) Edmonds, Jennie Garth, Garry
IAPA
(Continued from page 1)
ornaments, Nowruz displays
and Hafez reading. Music and
dancing will be provided by
the Black Cats, Navid and Sevent Orchestra, the Koobang Ensemble, Djanbazian Dance
Academy and Farshid Amin.
An anniversary cake will
follow the traditional 4-course
Persian dinner catered by Ba-
BULLYING
(Continued from page 4)
Ross invited 6th-8th grade students to discuss stereotypes,
DROUGHT
(Continued from page 4)
supplies and growing conservation efforts is saving Southern
Marshall, Richard Dreyfuss,
Michael Nouri, Bruce Boxleitner, Armand Assante, John
Corbett,
Joe
Pantoliano,
Dolph Lundgren, Tia Carrere,
Robert Carradine, Richard
Grieco,
Bryan Cranston,
John Ratzenberger, Autumn
Reeser, Missi Pyle, James
Pickens, Nicholle Tom, Patrick
Warburton, Michelle Lee,
Diane Baker, Sean Astin,
Krista Allen, Ed Asner, Jason
Alexander, Powers Boothe,
Daniel Baldwin, Jermaine
Jackson, Timothy Busfield, Renee Taylor, Joe Bologna, Susan Blakely, Keith Carradine,
David Hasselhoff, James
Cromwell, Stephen Collins,
Michael Chiklis, Joanna Cassidy, Kevin Dillon, Traci
Lords, Lolita Davidovich,
Robert Davi, Bruce Davison,
Lou and Carla Ferrigno,
Frances Fisher, Lorraine Toussaint, Dave Foley, Jon
Favreau, Joely Fisher, Robert
Forster, Jeff Garlin, Judd Nelson, Barry Newman, James
Darren, Carla Gugino, Lou
Gossett Jr., Dennis Haysbert,
Dule Hill, Cheryl Hines,
Monty Hall, Harry Hamlin,
Marilu Henner, Ken Howard,
Richard Karn, Martin Landau,
Vincent Spano, Ron Livingston, Hal Linden, Richard
Lewis, Sharon Lawrence,
Michael Lerner, Matthew Modine, Chris McDonald, Dylan
McDermott, Jesse Metcalfe,
Ming-Na,
Kevin Nealon,
Danielle Panabaker, Kevin
Pollak, Stefanie Powers,
Michelle Phillips, Lou Diamond Phillips, Freddie Rodriguez, Jason Ritter, Brenda
Dickson, Brande Roderick,
Jenna Jameson, Fred Savage,
John Schneider, Rob Schneider, Amber Tamblyn, Mimi
Rogers, Jennifer Tilly, Sharon
Gless, Gary Busey, Kim Delaney, and many more.
For tickets only at $1,000
per seat, call 310-446-5416
or visit: www.nightof100stars.
com.
hador Gourmet Catering.
Baca and Black will be
honored for their dedication to
the organization’s “One Life to
Live” program, working to save
the lives of young people by
helping them make wise choices.
The Courier’s Publisher
Clif Smith will also be recognized for the newspaper’s support of the organization and its
programs.
During the past two
decades, the IAPA has sponsored events serving more than
50,000 attendees including
galas, outdoor events, educational seminars for BHUSD
students and personnel, candidate forums and youth visits to
L.A. jails and VIDA centers.
“Our programs’ sole objective is to bridge cultural
gaps and save our youth,” says
Dr. Nanaz Pirnia, IAPA president.
All proceeds from the gala
will benefit the “One Life to
Live” program.
Sponsorship opportunities
in the ad book range from
$160 to $1,000.
Besides Pirnia, other board
members include Nadia Nourian, first VP; Mojgan Karian,
secretary and Dr. Khosrow Assadi and Farimah Fayyad, treasurers.
Nowruz committee members include: Mahvash Amid,
Shahrzad Ardalan, Pantea As-
sadi, Edmon Babayova, Ramella Babayova, Felor Bahadori,
Azita Hannasab, Simin Helali,
Abbas Hojatpanah, Maryam
Hosseinzadeh, Suzi Khatami,
Alina Khodabakhshian, Hoda
Kord, Niki Manavi, Tikva Nemani, Ali Pirnia, Venus Safaie,
Diana Sarshar, Ariane Shahbazi, Shida Shirazi and Dr.
Khosrow Sobhe.
For information, call 310286-1480.
Tickets are also available
difference and tolerance in
an effort to held children celebrate both what makes them
special, in addition to engendering tolerance for others.
“The best part is kids come
early to school,” said HM Principal Steve Kessler.
Wednesday morning’s ‘Appreciating Difference Work-
shop’ by Ross was the second
in a series of programs to improve childrens’ lives.
Kessler said the program,
which gives those who attend
two hours of community service volunteer credits, is patterned after Hawthorne’s middle school speaker series on
late-start Wednesdays.
California and Beverly Hills - for
now.
“The drought is serious but it
could have been a lot worse,”
said Robert Wunderlich, board
member of the Metropolitan
Water District of Southern
California for Beverly Hills.
MWD's storage capacity has
increased from less than 1 million acre -feet of
water to over 5
million acre-feet
since 1980 as a
result of investments in storage
and conservation. So far, this
is the driest year
on the record
with a Sierra
snow pack at 12
percent of normal. Our State
Water Supply
allocations are
coming
from
storage.
The good
news, he said, “Is that we have
unprecedented water supply
conditions and we are prepared
to meet the demand. But conservation is essential to reduce the
demand.” He cited efforts to curb
usage, drought-resistant planting,
wiser use, changing habits and
overall lower demand.
Last year was drier than
expected, with an increase in
demand for water. With such a
large supply of stored water, the
WMD was able to meet the
demand without having to recover the cost of buying the water.
The cost of that water was
incurred when it was originally
purchased and stored. The result
is that there is more money than
was expected.
Rate Setting is targeted for
April. In his report to the City
Council Tuesday on the rate-set-
HOOKSTRATTEN
(Continued from page 4)
Marcus Allen, Dan Rowan and Dick
Martin, Joey Bishop et al.
Said client Tom Brokaw of NBC:
“He was a one-man force in the agency
business--the last of the great and effective lone operators who knew everyone
on both sides of the table. I don’t think
there will be anyone like him again.”
Another longtime pal, L. A.
Dodgers’ announcer Vince Scully,
added: “Ed was a brilliant lawyer, my
representative and one of my dearest
friends in the world.”
As his son Jon Hookstratten explained it: “My father was a larger than
life personality in a town that specializes
in them. He was obsessed with taking
care of his clients who became part of
his family.”
Hookstratten was born in Whittier
on June 12, 1930. His high school is
baseball prowess earned him a scholar-
ting process and the MWD surplus, Wunderlich outlined several options for the surplus.
One option would be to
keep rates lower, he said.
Another would be to build funds
to pay to replace the water in
storage that is being consumed.
Another option is to pay the
unfunded liability of postemployment benefits at an accelerated pay-down. The MWD
could also add additional funds
for the maintenance of facilities
that has been deferred during the
recent economic slowdown.
The MWD will probably
combine several of the options,
said Wunderlich. There are 26
member agencies and 6 counties
served by the MWD, a public
utility and not a for-profit agency.
ship to USC where he pitched for the
school’s famed coach Rod Dedeaux. He
eventually was to become the prime
force raising funds to build Dedeaux Field
on the campus, according to media
mogul Dennis Holt, who helped him in
the effort.
After graduating from Southwestern
School of Law, he soon was to establish
his firm as an entertainment lawyer and
agent, a combination somewhat unprecedented at the time. His sports acumen led
him to become general counsel to the Los
Angeles Rams and its then-owners Carroll
Rosenbloom and the latter’s wife, Georgia.
He is survived by his widow Aimee;
former wife Pat Crowley Friendly; son
Jon; daughters Ann Osher, Eve and Mae
Hookstratten; and five grandchildren.
Donations in his memory may be
made to: USC Athletics-Baseball, c/o Jill
Dennis, 3501 Watt Way, Los Angeles CA
90089-0602.
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 9
TO SEE AND
BE SEEN
Fashion News & Notes
Downton Abbey Stars Attend Mulberry Dinner
The BAFTAs may have been taking place on the
same night, but Mulberry boasted a starry
turnout of its own at a dinner Sunday with
guests including Allen Leech, Lily James,
Holliday Grainger, and Freddie Fox. Leech and
James are filming the latest season of Downton
Abbey.
“Our calves are coming out,” said James of the
hemlines on the costumes. “And the dresses
we're wearing you could easily wear today.”
Leech said he has no plans to quit Downton,
unlike some of his original co-stars. “As long as
Julian [Fellowes] keeps writing, I'll keep acting,” he said. Leech also stars alongside Keira
Knightley and Benedict Cumberbatch in The
Imitation Game, a forthcoming film about
Britain's famous World War II code breakers.
POP-UP SHOP—
Until Feb. 26, The
Cottage at Shutters
welcomes the weeklong addition of
Emporio Sirenuse, a
pop-up shop from
the Amalfi Coast
offering a selection
of sophisticated and
luxurious clothing,
accessories
and
homewares
from
artisanal designers.
The dinner was co-hosted by
Cara Delevingne and
Ronnie Cooke Newhouse,
and also counted Eliza
Doolittle, Kelly Osbourne,
Tallulah Harlech among its
guests.
It marked the launch of a
new bag designed by
Delevingne for Mulberry,
and also featured acoustic
performances by Marika
Hackman and Will Heard.
Watch the last episode of
Downton Abbey on Sunday!
WWD
BEVERLY HILLS
Now In Our 48th Year
9100 Wilshire Blvd., Ste 360E.
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
310-278-1322
Fax: 310-271-5118
www.bhcourier.com
Publisher
Clifton S. Smith, Jr.
OOOOOOOOOO
Publisher Emeritus
March Schwartz
OOOOOOOOOO
Associate Publisher & Editor
Marcia W. Hobbs
OOOOOOOOOO
Senior Editor
John L. Seitz
Special Sections & Features
Steve Simmons
Editor – International Digital
Staff Reporter
Laura Coleman
Staff Reporter
Victoria Talbot
General Manager, Digital Services
Clifton S. Smith III
Editor-Digital
Tara de Lis
Director of Graphic Design
Andrew Dunn
Interns
Chantel Bernabo
Mathew Williams
OOOOOOOOOO
Fashion Director
Tawny Sanders
OOOOOOOOOO
Columnists :
George Christy
Joan Rivers
Dr. Fran Walfish
Rabbi Jacob Pressman
Joan Mangum
Frances Allen
Connie Martinson
OOOOOOOOOO
Contributing Writers
Jerry Cutler
Marta Waller
Roger Lefkon
OOOOOOOOOO
Cartoonist
Janet Salter
OOOOOOOOOO
Display Advertising Manager
Evelyn A. Portugal
Senior Sales Executives
Lanna Solnit
Classified Advertising Manager
Rod Pingul
Classified Account Executive
George Recinos
Sales Executive Outside Travel
Emzy Veazy III
Accounting
Ana Llorens
OOOOOOOOOO
Production Artists
Ferry Simanjuntak
Robert Knight
2012 MEMBER
California Newspaper
Publishers Association
Photos and Unsolicited Materials Will Absolutely Not Be Returned.
Only unposed, candid photos will be considered for publication. All
photos and articles submitted become property of the Courier. No payment for articles or photos will be made in the absence of a written
agreement, signed by the Publisher.
Adjudicated as a Newspaper of general circulation as defined in Section 6008
of the Government Code for the City of Beverly Hills, for the Beverly Hills
Unified School District, for the County of Los Angeles, for the State of California and for other districts which include the City of Beverly Hills within each
such district’s respective jurisdiction in proceeding number C110951 in Superior Court, California, on February 26, 1976.
All contents copyright © 2013 Beverly Hills Courier Publishing Co., LLC, all
rights reserved. No part of this publication may be copied, transmitted or otherwise reproduced without the prior written consent of the Beverly Hills Courier
Publishing Co., LLC.
Member: Agence France Presse, City News Service.
ARTS &
E
N
T
E
RTA
I
N
M
E
N
T
Farhang Foundation’s Film Fest Top
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 10
Nominees Picked, To Be Screened
The top six nominees of the
6th annual Farhang Foundation
Short Film Festival have officially been announced. They are
Aghaye Past (Canada), Brain of
Terror (USA), Bride Of Rain
(Iran), K-von Presents: A Splash
Of Nowruz (USA), Lady with
Flower-Hair (Iran), and Legend
of Gheysar (USA).
More than 110 submissions
were received this year from all
over, including the U.S. Iran,
Canada, UK, Italy, and
Malaysia all competing for top
honors at the festival and an
opportunity to win $10,000
(first place), $5,000 (second
place) or $3,000 (third place).
“We are pleased to say that
this year we received one of our
most diverse and dynamic array
of submissions to date,” said
Mark
Amin,
Farhang
Foundation board member and
chair of its festival committee.
“While this made it challenging to select only six finalists, we are delighted to know
that the world has many talented artists each with a unique
eye for storytelling and a deep
passion for Iranian culture.”
This year, the screening of
the top six films, an award ceremony recognizing the top
three films, and an exclusive
reception in honor of the filmmakers, with a red carpet
arrival, will be Saturday, March
22, from 6-9 p.m.. at the Leo S.
Bing Theater in the L. A. County
Museum of Art as part of
Farhang Foundation's 2-day
Nowruz festivities at the museum.
Tickets for this evening,
co-sponsored by LACMA’s Art
of
the
Middle
East
Contemporary and Farhang
Foundation, are $35 for
LACMA members and $45 for
non-members.
Tickets will be available
starting Saturday, March 1; for
additional information, visit
www.farhangfilmfest.org.
For
information
on
Farhang’s 6th Nowruz (Iranian
New Year) Celebration at
LACMA, visit www.farhang.
org/nowruz.
OUTLOOK
B E V E R LY H I L L S
OUTLOOK
After 25 years on Beverly
Drive, the Beverly Hills Beauty
Center has moved to 9606 S.
Santa Monica Blvd.
To celebrate its relocation
to little Santa Monica between
Bedford and Camden, the store
is offering a 15 percent discount on the entire stock and
services through Friday, March
7.
A free membership card for
a 10 percent discount (with no
expiration date) is also available. (Cannot be combined
with relocation offer)
The full-service salon offers
nail, hair and skin care, candles, bath gift item, accessories
and free gift wrap.
For more information, call
310-278-8815.
*****
Gary Jones, Armstrong
Garden Center’s VP of marketing, will present a garden class
at 10:30 a.m., Wednesday, at
Virginia Robinson Gardens,
1008 Elden Wy.
Jones lectures for UCLA’s
horticulture department, was a
board member for the L.A.
County Arboretum and is a
board of advisors member of
the Souther California Chapter
of the Mediterranean Garden
Society.
Docent-led tours of the
estate are available by appointment from 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
Tuesdays through Thursdays by
appointment.
For information on classes
and tours, visit, www.robinsongardens.org.
*****
Coming To The Saban—
Upcoming shows set for the
Saban Theatre, 8400 Wilshire
Blvd. include:
• The Fab Four, Saturday,
Feb. 22. Doors open at 6 p.m.
for the 8 p.m. show. Tickets
range from $28-$75.
• Ambrosia, Friday, Feb.
28. Doors open at 6 p.m. for
the 8 p.m. show. Tickets range
from $35-$99.
For tickets and more information, call 888-645-5006 or
visit www.sabantheatre.org.
*****
The Da Camera Society
will kick of its “Jazz at the
Mansion!”
series
with
Ukranian-born jazz pianist
Vadim Neselovskyi at 8 p.m.,
Sunday, March 1 at The
Doheny Mansion, 8 Chester
Place.
The mansion’s Pompeian
Room with its marble glass and
gold and Tiffany dome of gold
glass is the central venue of the
society’s “Chamber Music in
Historic Sites.”
Tickets are $70 and
include a post-concert champagne and dessert reception.
For tickets and more information, call 213-477-2929 or
visit www.DaCamera.org.
The weekly update and
news for Beverly Hills.
Jim Sturgeon in Brief Encounter.
Photo by Jim Cox
Noel Coward’s Brief Encounter
Now at The Wallis Thru March 23
The latest version of Noel
Coward’s ‘30’s era drama, Brief
Encounter, about requited and
unrequited love in “all too proper” England opened to a sell-out
audience
at The
Wallis
Annenberg Center for the
Performing Arts Wednesday in
the Bram Goldsmith Theater.
This production, from
England’s Kneehigh Theater
Company, proved again that
British-trained
actors
and
actresses can actually act. The
play is a big step up from The
Wallis’s first show, Parfumerie.
Kneehigh is an ensemble
company. Emma Rice is artistic
director and choreographer.
Perhaps it’s hard to make
something work today that
shocked the “this is not done”
audiences of about 80 years ago
when first performed. This production does a fine job of it.
The leads, Jim Sturgeon and
Hanna Yelland, are fresh-looking and convincing. The supporting cast, led by Annette
McLaughlin and Joe Alessi,
nearly steal the show. Character
actress comedienne supreme,
Dorothy Atkinson, always
brought laughs from the audience with her well-timed antics.
All could sing just fine.
Tickets are available online
at www.thewallis.org; phone at
310 746-4000; and in person at
9390 N. Santa Monica Blvd.
Paleyfest To Honor Judd Apatow
The Paley Center for Media
announced yesterday that
writer, producer, and director
Judd Apatow will receive the
2014 Paleyfest Icon Award,
named for William S. Paley, TV
pioneer and founder of The
Paley Center, which recognizes
individual creative achievements in television.
Apatow will receive the
award at a celebration hosted
by Pat Mitchell, Paley Center
president/CEO, on Monday,
March 10, which will serve as
the kickoff event.
The celebration will launch
the 31st annual Paleyfest,
which will take place March
13-28 at the Dolby Theatre at
Hollywood & Highland.
Paleyfest events at the
Dolby Theatre are currently on
sale via www.paleyfest.org and
the Festival’s ticket provider:
www.ticketmaster. com, and at
800-745-3000.
Tickets are also available at
the Dolby Theatre box office
during the theater’s regular
business hours.
MMPA’s ‘Night Before The
Oscars’ Party Set For March 1
By John L. Seitz
On Saturday, March 1, the
Beverly Hills-based Multicultural Motion Picture Association will host “Night Before
the Oscars … The Envelope
Please...” to benefit MMPA’s
Educational Scholarship Fund
for student filmmakers.
The MMPA has played host
to some of entertainment’s
biggest names and provides aspiring filmmakers with an opportunity to reap the benefits of
this charitable event that has
been supported and nurtured
over the years by writers, cinematographers, directors, and
actors, all of whom believe the
greatest path to success is one
paved with opportunity.
The event includes live
entertainment, a silent auction, raffles, hors d’oeuvres
and lavish dessert table for
this celebrity crowd of discerning tastes and taste makers.
The MMPA provides funding
annually to young men and
women of diverse backgrounds seeking to bring various voices and perspectives to
the filmmaking community.
For further information,
contact 310-358-8300.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
IFF HONOREES–Honorees at the 28th Israel Film Festival are (from
left): Sasson Gabay, Meir Fenigstein, Rabbi David Baron, Greg and
Bob Laemmle.
Photo by Abraham Joseph Pal
Israel Film Fest Announces
Dates, Honorees, Prime Sponsor
At its gala luncheon earlier
this month, organizers of the
28th Israel Film Festival (IFF), the
largest showcase of Israeli Films
in the U.S., announced the
dates—Oct. 23-Nov 6—and
welcomed the Israeli American
Council as a prime sponsor.
The luncheon also honored
Jewish leaders: Rabbi David
Baron of the Temple of the Arts
and Saban Theatre received the
“IFF
Community Theatre”
award; Israeli star Sasson Gabay
–the “IFF Career Achievement”
award; and Bob and Greg
Laemmle–the “IFF Community
Partnership” award in honor of
the Laemmle Theatres’ 75th
anniversary.
IFF’s mission is to spotlight
Israel’s thriving film and TV
industry and enrich the
American experience of Israel’s
social and cultural diversity.
During the last 2-1/2
decades, IsraFest Foundation
Inc., festival organizer and creator, has presented more than
1,000 Israeli feature, documentary and student films to more
900,000 film enthusiasts in L.A.,
New York and Miami.
Festival
event
venues
include The Saban Theatre,
Writers Guild Theater and the
Laemmle Music Hall and Town
Center 5 theaters.
For further information, visit
www.IsraelFilmFestival. com
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 11
Some of the featured, richly costumed dancers in Shen Yun.
Shen Yun Dance Spectacular Returns To Nokia
The Shen Yun World Tour
returns to Los Angeles on March
22-23 in the Nokia Theatre at
L.A. Live, bringing back 5,000
years of Chinese civilization
and culture that were nearly
lost.
The dance and music performance dancers are trained in
classical Chinese dance.
During Shen Yun (which
translates to “divine beauty or
grace”) performances, audiences are taken on a journey
through ancient legends, modern heroic tales and stories set
in heavenly realms.
Dancers who perform stunning aerials and leaps are
dressed in richly colored traditional costumes and accompanied by animated interactive
backdrops, that add a modern
edge to the performance, and a
live orchestra.
The Shen Yun Performing
Arts World Company, a nonprofit based in New York that
runs independently of the
Chinese regime, is committed
to sharing the Chinese heritage,
with people of all cultures.
Academy Award-winning
actress Cate Blanchett said:
“[Shen Yun is] exquisitely beautiful…an extraordinary experience for us and the children.
The level of skill, but also the
power of the archetypes and the
narratives, were startling.”
Other celebrities who have
praised the show include Joy
Behar, Drew Carey and Robert
Stromberg, Oscar-winning production designer for Avatar,
Performances are 2 and
7:30 p.m., on Saturday, March
22, and 1 and 6 p.m. on
Sunday, March 23.
For tickets, visit: tickets.
shenyun.com.
HOW DO
YOU FEEL?
CHLA Awarded $17 Million From NIH
To Fund Clinical HIV/AIDS Research
Grace Aldrovandi, MD,
CM, principal investigator at The
Saban Research Institute of
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
(CHLA), has been awarded $17
million by the National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, part of the National
Institutes of Health. The goal of
this grant is to provide scientific
leadership and infrastructure for
laboratory testing as part of the
International Maternal Pediatric
Adolescent AIDS Clinical Trials
(IMPAACT) Network.
“HIV infection is a global
public health issue, with children, adolescents and women
being particularly vulnerable,”
says Aldrovandi, who is also
professor of pediatrics, pathology and molecular microbiology
and immunology at USC’s Keck
School of Medicine.“ Our work
on optimizing the prevention,
diagnosis and treatment of HIV
infection in these populations
will benefit nations, communities and families throughout the
world.”
The specialized laboratories
of the IMPAACT Network have
been crucial in establishing the
standards of care for HIV-infected pregnant women, children
and adolescents. The IMPAACT
Network Laboratory Center, led
by Aldrovandi, will continue to
support clinical trials aimed at
curing HIV, optimizing antiretroviral therapies, decreasing
incident HIV and HIV-associated infections, evaluating treatments for tuberculosis (including multidrug resistant tuberculosis), improving TB diagnostics
in children, and decreasing
mortality and morbidity, and
enhancing the diagnosis, prevention and management of
HIV-related complications.
These laboratories have
been on the forefront in the
development of assays for infant
diagnosis, viral load monitoring,
drug resistance, antiretroviral
pharmacology, host genetics
and the measurement of
immune responses.
They have also developed
new methodologies and novel
approaches to work with the
small volume of specimens
available from infants, children
and pregnant women.
Aldrovandi will provide
oversight to more than 50 laboratories in the U.S., Asia, Africa
and India. “Childhood stands
out as the single best time to
maximize our human potential,”
says Brent Polk, MD, director of
The Saban Research Institute.
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 12
M E D I C I N E , H E A LT H & W E L L N E S S
How The Brain Networks: USC Researchers
Reveal White Matter ‘Scafforld’ Of Human Brain
For the first time, neuroscientists have systematically identified the white matter “scaffold”
of the human brain, the critical communications
network that supports brain function.
Their work, published last week in the opensource
journal
Frontiers
In
Human
Neuroscience, has major implications for understanding brain injury and disease. By detailing
the connections that have the greatest influence
over all other connections, the researchers offer
the first map of core white matter pathways, and
also show which connections may be most vulnerable to damage.
“We coined the term white matter ‘scaffold’
because this network defines the information
architecture which supports brain function,” said
senior author John Darrell Van Horn of the USC
Institute for Neuroimaging and Informatics and
the Laboratory of Neuro Imaging at USC.
“While all connections in the brain have
their importance, there are particular links which
are the major players,” Van Horn said.
Using MRI data from a large sample of 110
individuals, lead author Andrei Irimia, also of the
USC Institute for Neuroimaging and Informatics,
and Van Horn systematically simulated the
effects of damaging each white matter pathway.
They found that the most important areas of
white and gray matter don't always overlap.
Gray matter is the outermost portion of the brain
containing the neurons where information is
processed and stored. Past research has identified the areas of gray matter that are disproportionately affected by injury.
But the current study shows that the most
vulnerable white matter pathways – the core
Graphical representation of human brain connectivity scaffold. Courtesy USC Institute for
Neuroimaging and Informatics.
“scaffolding” – are not necessarily just the connections among the most vulnerable areas of
gray matter, helping explain why seemingly
(see ‘BRAIN,’ page 13)
BEVERLY HILLS
February 21, 2014 | Page 13
Spousal Support Is Good For Your Health; Dealing With A Cussing 7-Year-Old
Q. Dear Dr. Fran: I read a
recent study on heart disease
risk linked with spouses’ social
support. What may be a possible reason as to why spouses
who are often more upset have
a higher risk of heart disease?
Murray B.
A. Dear Murray: The study
you’re referring to linked here:
h t t p : / / w w w. p s y c h o l o g i calscience.org/index.php/news/
releases/heart-disease-risklinked-with-spouses-social-support.html found that spouses
with ambivalent relationship
support when one partner was
upset had a higher risk of heart
disease.
Possible reasons include
the fact that we are interdependent beings. From birth, we
BRAIN
(Continued from page 12)
small brain injuries may have
such devastating effects.
“Sometimes people experience a head injury that seems
severe but from which they are
able to recover. On the other
hand, some people have a
seemingly small injury which
has very serious clinical effects,”
are dependent on our mothers
for food and comfort. It is
healthy to develop dependency
needs and nourish those needs
over the lifespan.
When a trusted, beloved
partner is ambivalent (sometimes helpful and sometimes
upsetting), it evokes not only a
feeling of aloneness in the person, but also combativeness.
The upset individual must
then self-advocate for emotional comfort and nourishment that
should be automatic. It is a
highly stressful experience.
When social support for a
partner is provided during
moments of upset it calms the
individual. The settling down
provides a partnership that creates a feeling of “you and me
against the world.” It is an
says Van Horn, associate professor of neurology at the Keck
School of Medicine of USC.
“This research helps us to better
address clinical challenges such
as traumatic brain injury and to
determine what makes certain
white matter pathways particularly vulnerable and important.”
Read more at www.bhcourier.com, Health
Breast Health Organization Sets
‘Pretty In Pink’ Luncheon, Awards
The Get In Touch Foundation’s “Pretty In Pink” Luncheon & “Women of Strength”
Awards, hosted by Rob Lowe
and honoring Dr. Kristi Funk
and Dr. Nalini Chilkov,
L.Ac.O.M.D., will be from 11
a.m.-3 p.m, Sunday, March 16
at the Casa del Mar Hotel, 1910
Ocean Wy., Santa Monica.
The mission of the foundation is to provide breast health
initiatives that educate men and
women of all ages how to “get
in touch” with their bodies, and
information in its crusade
against breast cancer.
Funk, a board-certified surgical breast specialist founded
the Pink Lotus Breast Center in
2007 with her husband and
business partner Andy Funk.
Known for her expertise in
minimally-invasive diagnostic
and treatment methods for all
types of breast disease, she has
helped thousands of women
through breast cancer treatment,
including celebrities Angelina
Jolie and Sheryl Crow.
Chilkov combines her training in traditional Oriental medicine, modern biomedicine and
cell biology with 30 years in private practice.
L.A. co-chairs include
author/publisher
Angelique
L’Amour
and
Jennifer
Nicholson Salke, president of
NBC Entertainment.
he
event
committee
includes
L’Amour,
Alison
Mahay, Anna Musky-Goldwyn,
Gina Rugolo Judd and Christy
Walker.
Tickets range from $200$500. For information, visit
www.getintouchfoundation.org
or call 818-994-4661.
Plato Society Sets ‘Live To 120 Plus,’
Seminar On Latest Longevity Research
“Live to 120 Plus—Utopia
or Dystopia?” a public symposium, organized by The Plato
Society of Los Angeles, will explore issues raised by new
longevity research with leading
thinkers and scientists in the
field from 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.,
Saturday, March 8 at Mount St.
Mary’s College, 12001 Chalon
Rd. in Brentwood.
• Keynote speaker will be
Dr. Pinchas Cohen, dean of
USC’s Davis School of Gerontology, and co-founder of CohBar,
a biotechnology company developing mitochondrial peptides
for diseases of aging,
• Afternoon speaker will be
Dr. Gary Small, UCLA professor
of psychiatry and aging and director of the UCLA Longevity
Center.
• An academic panel will
include: Aubrey de Grey, PhD,
biomedical gerontologist from
the SENS Research Foundation;
JoAnn Damron-Rodriguez, PhD,
professor in geriatric medicine
and gerontology in the UCLA
Multicampus Program; and Laurie Zoloth, PhD, McCormick
Professor at Northwestern who
teaches in the departments of
medical
humanities
and
bioethics, religious and Jewish
studies.
The $25 ticket includes
lunch and free parking.
For registration and information,
visit
http://www.eventbrite.com or
call the society at 310-4437676.
Dr. Fran
Walfish
Answers Your
Questions
empowering antidote to aloneness.
Although I am not an M.D.,
I’d bet that this also reduces
blood pressure and heart rates
and is a better anti-anxiety than
medication.
Occasional arguments, or
different points of views are
expected in a relationship or
marriage. But when conflicts
become frequent and a partner
feels he or she must work hard
to be understood and validated,
it is extremely distressing.
The hope is that in healthy
relationships we choose partners who will nurture and nourish us through thick and thin.
When a partner has a different opinion or view, it can be
stated in a kind and supportive
manner. If it is presented in a
critical, judgmental or putdown
way, it’s counter-productive and
over time may cause cracks in
the foundation of the marriage
as well as potential health problems.
Q. Dear Dr. Fran, our 7-yearold son has started to cuss and
say bad words. How do you
best suggest we deal with this?
Michael M.
A. Dear Michael: The best ways
to deal with your child cussing
and using bad language are to
have him “correct"” what he
just said.
For instance, if he says:
“You B____!;” it is up him to fix
it by using other words to tell
you he’s angry. He can say:
“Mom, I hate your rules” or
“Mom, “I’m super mad at you!”
Depending on the age of
the child, sometimes when the
child is very young , under 4
years; it’s better to just ignore
the words and let their power
fizzle.
Dr. Fran Walfish–Beverly
Hills psychotherapist and
author of The Self-Aware Parent
at www.DrFranWalfish .com.
Send questions to franwalfish@
gmail.com
Page 14 |February 21, 2014
RED LIGHT
(Continued from page 5)
motorists. The City collects
about $111 from each citation;
the difference, said Lt. Michael
Foxen, Emergency Services
Bureau commander of the
Beverly
Hills
Police
Department, is split between
the state of California, Los
Angeles County and the county’s Superior Court.
The BHPD has officers
assigned full time to the program. Reflex Traffic Systems,
Inc. monitors the system for
$52,380 a month along with
ADL
(Continued from page 5)
legal analyst; Fung Der, managing director/regional executive, U.S. Trust/Bank of Ameri-
EL RODEO
(Continued from page 5)
recipes, something that I continue to do to this day.”
DARFUR
(Continued from page 5)
Watch at the West Los Angeles
temple.
Fifteen local schools are
participating in the so-called
“Tent Project,” where students
create their own tent designs
on a facsimile of a 6’ x 8’
refugee tent. The collaborative
WOOFSTOCK
(Continued from page 5)
Woofstock, with food and retail vendors, doggie demon-
BEVERLY HILLS
You need a certain amount of
roadway to stop your car,”
Beeber said.
“That increases the number
of violations and tickets by a
huge amount.”
Changes will come from
the committee recommendations to Caltrans, or from a
State Assembly Bill AB 612,
mandating longer minimum
yellow light times.
So the PRL is safe for now,
but it looks as if motorists may
be getting a break in the future.
the BHPD.
The PRL has come into the
crosshairs of Jay Beeber of Safer
Streets LA, the man who ended
the red-light cameras in the
City of Los Angeles. He says the
problem is shorter yellow-light
intervals, combined with a
reduction in the speed limit
from 35 to 30 mph, upon
approaching the light from the
west.
“Yellow light intervals are
determined by the posted
speed limit as required by
California’s Manual of Uniform
Traffic
Control
Devices
(MUTCD),” said Foxen, affirm-
ing that the length of the yellow
light is determined by the
reduced speed limit.
“As you approach the
Beverly Hills City limit eastbound on Wilshire Boulevard
from West Los Angeles, the
posted speed limit does
decrease from 35 mph to 30
mph. Signs are posted indicating the change in speed limit,
the signal ahead and the photo
red light,” said Foxen.
This month, with a recommendation from the Traffic
Control Devices Committee for
the state of California that
longer yellow light intervals are
safer and prevent accidents, the
committee is considering a
change. A longer interval will
be determined either by considering the actual speed of
drivers or mandating the posted
speed limit PLUS 7 mph.
Jay Beeber is on the Traffic
Control Devices Committee.
The interval for the
Wilshire/Whittier PRL is currently set at 3.3 seconds, a minimum based on 30 mph, in a
zone where motorists typically
drive 40-45 mph, studies show.
Beeber says that its just not
enough time to slow down.
“There are physics involved. . .
ca Private Wealth Management; Pooneh Mohajer, cofounder/COO of Tokidoki; and
Liane Weintraub, co-founder
/CEO of Tasty Brand.
ADL presents the Deborah
Awards (named for the
prophetess Deborah–noted for
her courage, wisdom and leadership) to outstanding women
whose leadership in their professions and civic contributions
exemplify the qualities and
ideals of the ADL.
Event co-chairs are Jessica
Babrick and Sharyn Nichols
while emcee for the dinner is
Joel Grover, KNBC investigative reporter.
Individual tickets are $400
with advance reservations re-
quired.
For further information,
call 310-446-4267, email
LA@adl.org
or
visit
www.adl.org/2014deborahawards.
Pomeroy shared her recipe
book from her time as a student
and the collection of recipes
from that time is telling - from
baking powder biscuits to
cocoa to dried fruit sauce to
macaroni and cheese to mayonnaise, each recipe is handwritten or typed and glued to
individual pages that are now
80 years old.
“This will be my 80th
reunion year,” she said. “I
loved my years at El Rodeo and
wore my ER emblem with
pride. I was so fortunate to
grow up here, and am so
happy that my son and his family are now living in Los
Angeles.”
process, whereby a basic, stark
shelter, is transformed into a
message of hope, dedication
and commitment is based on
the 2008 Save Darfur Coalition
protest on the Washington
Mall.
“It’s interfaith as a way to
be connected,” New Horizon
School leader Amira Al-Sarraf
told The Courier.
Once the project is complete, it is displayed somewhere on campus with an explanation of the what, how and
why of the project. The students use it as a point of engagement as they become the
“experts” in educating their
community about the on-going
genocide in Darfur and other
regions of Sudan, in addition to
helping educate others about
can be done to support the survivors.
“It’s really nice getting to
know people of different religions,” Sinai Akiba student
Brittney Moalemzadeh said.
In April, all of the tents will
be brought to the JWW Walks
to End Genocide. The students
who have created their tents
will serve as docents for walk
participants, describing their
motivation for their tent design.
In the fall, Jewish World
Watch partners in the Little
Ripples project (Early Childhood Education in the refugee
camps) will take the canvases
to Africa, where they will be
used as outdoor play shelters
for the youngest refugees.
strations and pet products.
Free parking is available in
the structure across the street.
For more information, visit
www.pets90210.or
LOCAL BALLERINA—Beverly
Hills High School freshman Matisse Love (pictured with Eli Gruska) competed in the (YAGP) Regionals for youth Ballet this
month and placed 1st place in
her Pas a Duex, 3rd place in
Classical Ballet and 12th place in
Contemporary dance. Her performance qualified her to compete in the World Finals in New
York on April 3-9.
Questions? Comments?
Concerns?
Email: LColeman@bhcourier.com
B E V E R LY H I L L S
R E A L E S TAT E
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 15
Q-4 Prime Residential Strong in LA, Beverly Hills
By Victoria Talbot
A report, authored by the Agency
on Prime Residential Real Estate, shows
a strong fourth quarter market with tight
inventory and improving values for both
single-family and condominium homes
in the $1 million and above prime market.
Consistent with reports from realtors throughout the past 6-months, the
agency says that a deficiency of inventory and strong demand are driving prices
up in both markets, but especially in
condominiums.
“The lack of inventory in prime
neighborhoods has driven buyers, who
would otherwise be single-family home
buyers, into condominium markets as
location has trumped size in recent
years,” said the report. Buyers who
would like to purchase a home are cooling their heels in condos until the market settles up.
Sales are
improving; up
1- percent for
homes and 9percent
for
condominiums
year-over-year
from
2012’s
fourth quarter.
And it’s a
developers’
market, too, as
new developments
are
experiencing
strong
sales
throughout the
prime
real
estate market.
In
Q-4,
804
singlefamily homes
sold, a number
that is closing
in on peak levels
experienced in 2005,
when
927
were sold in
Q-3. The highest
average
price for the
year was $2.538 million, slightly less
than a year ago. The Agency reports a
record sale at 918 N. Roxbury Dr. for
$29.6 million; $1,973 per square foot.
Similarly, prime market condos
priced over $500,000 are trending to
sufficient gains.
918 N. Roxbury Dr.– The property sold for a
For single-family homes, the aver- record price of $29.6 million reports the Agency,
age selling price per square foot is reflecting strong sales and values.
$825, according to the report; condominiums are averaging $561 per square
foot.
Westwood, Cheviot Hills and
Venice have the lowest supply of singlefamily homes. Malibu is the only oversupplied area. All prime markets are
below supply-demand equilibrium.
The market is still catching up to
pre-recession levels, but it is strong,
consistent and under-supplied. Real
estate remains a strong investment statement, which still has room to appreciate.
R E A L LY ? –
1200 block of
Loma Vista
Sunday (top)
and Schuyler
and
Carla
Ridge, Saturday (bottom).
Take a pic
with
your
iPhone and
send it to
vtalbot@bhcourier.com
SCHOOL
IS FUN!
Marlborough Summer School
Focuses On ‘Art, Smart And Heart’
t Marlborough Summer
School students’ imaginations, minds, and bodies thrive. The school offers
oppor tunities for girls and
boys from art to science, and
from creative writing to
sports.
Art classes will teach students to express themselves
through dance, painting and
music.
When is Summer School?
There are two sessions.
• Classes in the one-week
session will be June 16-June
A
20.
• The five-week session
will run from June 23-July 25.
The earliest classes begin at
8:15 a.m. Before School Care
is available beginning at 7
a.m. and After School Care
ends at 5 p.m.
Registration
To access the catalog and
register for classes (opening
March 3), visit the Summer
School website at www.marlboroughsummerschool.org.
For any questions, call
323-935-1147, ext. 401.
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 16
E D U C AT I O N
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 17
Healthy Eating With Pamela Salzman
Gluten-Free Fudgy Brownies
(makes an 8 x 8-inch pan)
• 6 tablespoons unsalted butter or unrefined coconut oil (does infuse a hint of
coconut)
• 8 ounces bittersweet or dark chocolate, coarsely chopped
• 10 pitted dates (buy the moistest ones
you can find), about 1 cup
• 1/2 cup hot water
• 3/4 cup coconut palm sugar (or cane
sugar)
• 3 large eggs
• 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
• 1/2 cup GF oat flour
• 1/2 teaspoon fine grain sea salt
• 1/2 teaspoon aluminum-free baking
powder
• 3/4 teaspoon instant coffee powder
(optional, but makes the brownies taste
more chocolate-y)
instant coffee powder until just combined.
Pour into the prepared pan and
bake for 30-35 minutes, or until a
toothpick inser ted in the center
comes out with moist crumbs, but not
wet. Do not overbake. Transfer pan to
a wire rack to cool completely. They
taste best if they have been allowed to
sit at least an h-our.
Run a knife or offset spatula
around the edges of the pan. Pull on
the edges of the parchment to lift
brownies out of pan. Transfer to a cutting board; cut into 2-inch squares.
Notes: You can fold in 1/2 cup
chopped or halved walnuts and/or 1/2
cup chocolate chips after the flour.
Pamela Salzman’s blog Kitchen
Matters, with tips for healthy kids’
snacks, is at pamelasalzman.com.
Place butter in a large heatproof
bowl set over (but not touching) simmering water; dip a pastry brush in the melted butter and use it to grease the bottom
and sides of an 8 x 8-inch baking pan.
Add the chocolate to the melted butter
and stir frequently until chocolate is
melted. Remove bowl from heat; let cool
about 10 minutes.
Place the dates and the hot water in
a medium bowl and allow to soak for at
least 10 minutes while you prepare
everything else.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
Line the baking pan with parchment
paper, leaving a 1-inch overhang on two
sides. Set aside.
Transfer the dates and water to a
food processor fitted with the metal
blade and process until a smooth paste
forms. Add the palm sugar and process
until smooth. Alternately you can do this
in the bowl of a stand mixer and beat
with the paddle attachment. However,
the food processor will make the date
paste much smoother.
Add the date-sugar mixture to the
butter and chocolate mixture and blend
well. Add the eggs one at a time, whisking until smooth after each addition.
Whisk in vanilla.
Stir in flour, salt, baking powder and
*BH Courier’s 2014 Summer School Program*
Summer Camps & Schools
Issue Dates:: 2/28, 4/25 & 5/2
Call: Lanna Solnit 310-278-1322, ext.108
Special Discounted Pricing
BEVERLY HILLS
Page 18 | February 21, 2014
Late Child Star Icon/Diplomat Shirley
Temple Had A Beverly Hills Connection
By Laura Coleman
The late child star turned
diplomat Shirley Temple Black,
who died last week at age 85
spent her early adult years
when marriedto actor John
Agar as a resident of Cielo
Drive in Beverly Hills.
The legendary movie icon
was born in Santa Monica and
grew up in Brentwood began
her film career in 1932 and
two years later found international acclaim in Stand Up
And Cheer and Bright Eyes,
features designed specifically
for her talents and for which
she won a Juvenile Academy
Award.
From 1935 through 1938,
Temple became the #1 box
office star and is often credited
for saving her employer–Fox
Film Corporation (later 20th
Century-Fox)– from potential
bankruptcy with such hits as
Curly Top, Captain January,
Our Little Girl, The Littlest
Rebel, Poor Little Rich Girl,
Heidi and others.
John L. Seitz, The Courier’s
senior editor, recalls his father,
the esteemed pioneer cinematographer/inventor John F.
Seitz, who shot five of those
hits, telling him: “Shirley was a
real pro in every sense of the
word. She had her dance routines with such talents as Bill
‘Bojangles’ Robinson and
Buddy Ebsen as well as the
speaking lines of herself and
those of her fellow actors
down pat. There were very few
repeat takes required.”
Temple films were seen as
generating hope and optimism,
and President Franklin D.
Shirley Temple
Roosevelt said: “It is a splendid
thing that for just 15 cents, an
American can go to a movie
and look at the smiling face of
a baby and forget their troubles.”
When she reached adolescence, however, her career
began to wane and by age 12,
she had left Fox and entered
Westlake School for Girls.
Temple’s movie career never
regained its footing though she
appeared in a handful of MGM
and David Selznick films during her later teen years.
Temple began her diplomatic career in 1969, with an
appointment to represent the
U.S. at the United Nations
General Assembly; appointed
U.S. ambassador to Ghana,
and later Czechoslovakia;
then became the nation’s first
female chief of protocol. In
1988, she published her autobiography, Child Star.
After her first marriage to
John Agar ended, Temple was
married for 55 years to Charles
A. Black who died in 2005.
She has three children: Linda,
Charles and Lori.
COSTUMES FOR A CAUSE—Mark and Lyn Cohen (pictured above,
left), attired in historic costume, attended the "Hollywood & History"
fundraiser for the LA-Eschscholtzia chapter of Daughters of the
American Revolution at FIDM Museum. The museum’s 22nd Annual
Art of Motion Picture Costume Design Exhibition runs through April
18. Pictured (above right) are costumes on display from American
Hustle, as part of the exhibit. Photo by Franceasca Seiden
GOLD
(Continued from page 4)
The problems came to the
public’s attention recently with
a dispute over the protection of
the Kusama Hymn of Life,
which flared in a rather public
way at City Council last month.
Fine Art Commissioners and
Recreation
and
Parks
Commissioners had agreed on
an “inverted barrier,” a motelike structure that would have
surrounded the art at a cost of
$75-100,000. Then, at the
EVERYBODY LOVES FASHION
—Everybody Loves Raymond star
Doris Roberts poses in front of
one of her costumes Wednesday
night at the Hollywood Museum’s
opening of the “Celebration of Entertainment Awards.” Courier
Photo by Laura Coleman
Council meeting, Commissioner
Robbie Anderson surprised
everyone with a “post and
chord” solution similar to that
on boats, at a fraction of the
cost.
At the same time, disagreement over the placement of
future acquisitions in the parks
surfaced, exacerbating problems between the two commissions. Councilmember Gold,
who serves as a liaison on both
commissions, volunteered to
assist with “talking through the
issues,” to arrive at a satisfactory
recommendation.
The Commissions have
agreed to the following procedures and jurisdictions: The Fine
Art Commission (FAC) will
advise the Recreation and Parks
Commission (RPC) in the earliest stage of acquisition of their
intent and selected installation
sites. If a site cannot be agreed
upon, the dispute shall be
resolved with the City Council.
LEAK
CENTENNIAL
(Continued from page 4)
Community Art project will
consist of photos taken by
local residents as well as by
Beverly Hills artist-photographer Zale Richard Rubins.
Richard and Brenda
Rubins have developed the
initiative for a celebratory art
show in the City Hall
Municipal Gallery and the
Beverly Hills Art Show.
“We would like to show
what life is like beyond the
media, and to gather photo
images that will be our own
statement of Beverly Hills
Days . . . to create a tapestry of
images that truly represents
the City,” said Richard and
Brenda Rubens.
The images will be harvested over a 2-4 week period
of community outreach in the
late spring. They will be submitted through a website and
assembled into the image of
the Beverly Hills shield.
Richard Rubins is also documenting Centennial events
throughout the year.
For more information on
the Beverly Hills Days art
project email info@beverlyhillsdays.org
(Continued from page 5)
School
Principal
Carter
Paysinger. Boardmember Lewis
Hall left just before open session
resumed Tuesdays evening and
was not present at the time of the
vote.
“We’re taking formal steps to
investigate the alleged leak [and]
I’m hoping it shows transparency,” Board President Noah Margo
told The Courier. “This should be
a very simple investigation.”
Paysinger is under investigation by the district for financial
dealings of the privately operated
Beverly Hills Sports Academy,
which he and others operated for
several years. That investigation
is still underway and a final report is still forthcoming.
BEVERLY HILLS
February 21, 2014 | Page 19
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A N O T H E R B I RT H D AY ! ?
Roger Behrstock
Selma Archerd
Bernardo Puccio Charles Aidikoff
Rod Pingul
Fred Wehba
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER | FEBRUARY 21, 2014
Page 20
BIRTHDAY GREETINGS—Tyne Daly, Selene Walters
Lamm (Happy 90th!!), Kelsey Grammer and Kyle
MacLachlan (Feb. 21); Drew Barrymore, and Traude
Winik (Feb. 22); Fred Wehba, Charles Aidikoff, The
Courier’s Rod Pingul, Dakota Fanning, and Peter
Fonda (Feb. 23); Barry Bostwick, Edward James
Olmos, Joe Lieberman,and Paula Zahn (Feb. 24);
Sean Austin, Bernardo Puccio, Billy Packer and Sally
Jessie Raphael (Feb 25); Selma Archerd, Roger
Behrstock,Michael Bolton and Lazar Berman (feb.
26); Bradford Lawson, Carla Howard, Tom Tellefsen,
Chelsea Clinton Mezvinsky, Joanne Woodward and
Selene Walters Lamm Ralph Nader (Feb. 27)
ASTROLOGY
Joan Mangum
by Holiday Mathis
FUNDRAISER–On hand for the Family Equality Council’s West Coast
fundraiser at Universal Studio’s Globe Theater are: (left photo, from left):
Dan Bucatinsky, Tony Goldwyn, and Scott Foley, all from ABC-TV’s
Scandal; and (above, from left): Darren Criss, creator Ryan Murphy, and
actor Alex Newell from Fox-TV’s Glee.
Photos by Getty Images
The “Viennese Luncheon”
presented at the Four Seasons by
the Loren L. Zachary Society for
the Performing Arts and chaired
by Nedra Zachary brought together the talents of tenor Jorge
Lopez-Yanez
and
soprano
Michele Patzakis with soprano
Alina Roitstein and musicians
Laszlo Cser and Daniel Faltus, piano, and Peter Hubner, trumpet.
The event honored opera star
baritone Rod Gilfry who entertained the guests with music from
Lehar’s The Merry Widow.
The society was established
in 1972 to assist in the development of the careers of young
opera singers through its National
Vocal Competition.
Vladimir Chernov, Beverly
Cohen, Mary Levin Cutler, Mitzi
Eisenberg, Carolyn Fried, Marion
Goldenfeld, Dr. Ewald Heer and
Lore, Ruth Flinkman Marandy,
Christine Marie Ofiesh, Dr.
Michael Patzakis and Susan,
Astrid Rottman, Audre Slater, Joe
and Jennifer Sliskovich, Joe and
Joyce Stein, Yordan and Natasha
Trenev, Consul General of Germany Bernd Fischer and Jutta,
Consul General of Switzerland
Jean Francois Lichtenstein, Austrian Trade Commissioner Rudolf
Thaler, and Austrian Consul in Los
Angeles Andreas Lins and Ivonne,
under whose auspices this event
was held, were among the many
who came out to support this
cause.
******
Family Equality Council’s premier West Coast event at Universal
Studios’ Globe Theater raised a
record $571,000 honored notables in the world of arts, entertainment, and politics for their efforts
to advance equality for all families.
Honorees were Jennifer Tyrrell
along with Peter Paige and Bradley
Bredeweg, creators of ABC Family’s The Fosters. The latter is a compelling drama about a multi-ethnic
family mix of foster and biological
kids being raised by two moms.
The evening was hosted by
Alex Mapa while event co-chairs
were Scandal’s Dan Bucatinsky,
David Miller and Casey Bloys. Entertainers included Darren Criss
and Amber Riley of Glee, Adam
Lambert, and a surprise performance by Meliisa Ethridge–all terrific.
Presenters included Glee creator Ryan Murphy, actress Busy
Phillips, and Scott Foley, Tony
Goldwyn and Jeff Perry, from the
cast of ABC’s Scandal.
Other guests included Tim
Allen, Pauley Perrette, Laura Prepon, George Takei, Harold Perrineau, Aisha Tyler, Kathleen
Robertson, Tuc Watkins, Alex
Newell, Dale Dickey, Debbie Holliday, Amanda Bearse, and The
Fosters’ cast including Maia Mithcell, David Lambert, Cierra
Ramirez, Jake T. Austin, Danny
Nucci and Hayden Byerly.
Frances Allen
Desert Roundup
Desert AIDS Project celebrated its 30th anniversary at
the 20th Steve Chase
Humanitarian Awards Gala.
It’s the largest LGBT/straight
event in the Valley and it took
the resources of the Palm
Springs Convention Center to
accommodate
the
SRO
crowd of about 1,500 creatively-costumed party-goers
who had cocktails among a
huge silent auction before sitting down to a three-course
meal, entertainment and
awards presentation.
Presented by Integrated Wealth Management and co-chaired
by Jim Casey and Barbara Keller (pictured above), local caterer
Savories, provided the meal and Helene Galen the entertainment
presented by Live It Up Productions.
The evening’s honorees were Desert AIDS Project board member Curt Ringness, Jr., who received the “Distinguished
Leadership” award for 14 years of service to the organization;
David Kaplan and Glenn Ostergaard received the “Partners for
Life” award; and, Terri Ketover for her work on behalf Desert AIDS
“100 Women” award.
The evening also recognized those who are active in support
of “AIDS in Cinema.” They included Sarah Pillsbury and Midge
Sanford of And The Band Played On; David Roos of Boys On The
Other Side; David France and Joy Tomchin of How To Survive A
Plague; and, Ron Nyswaner and Ed Saxon of Philadelphia.
Following the adage that “one good party deserves another,”
Desert AIDS project presented a high-energy after-party at the
Convention Center for those unable to cut the fun short … they
weren’t wrong. The after-party lasted as long as the one that preceded it.
Why is this important? Because the Steve Chase Humanitarian
Awards raises more than $1 million for Desert AIDS Project services, which include providing physical, emotional and healthcare
to persons living with HIV and AIDS in the Coachella Valley. More
information is at 760-323-2118.
310.275.0579 • 434 N. CANON DRIVE
MON. - THURS. 11:30 AM - 10:00 PM
FRI. & SAT. 12:00 PM - 10:00 PM
I TA L I A N R E S TA U R A N T
TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Feb. 21). You
are wiser than ever this year and seek
an empowering viewpoint in all
things. Money you’ve waited for finally arrives in March. April has you processing surprising feelings. You’ll love
the professional development that
happens in May. June brings fast
action, money and change. Sagittarius
and Aries people adore you.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Appearances will be more important than
usual. You’ll dress to show your
respect to the people around you, and
they will appreciate the way you class
up the environment.
ARIES (March 21-April 19). This is no
time to show your work to negative
people. Seek the response of encouraging people only. Less than helpful
feedback will make you want to
splurge on something that will make
you feel better.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Even
though you were born under the stars
of material wealth, you make your life
about people and relationships, not
things. At least you try to do this.
Today you may have to try harder than
you do on other days.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Someone
depends on the kindness of strangers,
and the go-to stranger today will be
you. You will be kind, indeed; just be
sure to be smart, as well. Don't let
your guard down.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Beauty is
about romance, romance about mystery, and mystery about ignorance. The
less you tell someone about yourself
the more beautiful you may be to that
person now.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ve been
known to balance efforts to entertain
others with stretches of time spent hiding out. It’s an excellent idea, as you
are sure to feel recharged at the end.
But consider what you’re really hiding
from.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You desperately need a practical soul on your
side. The people you’re among do not
represent the majority, though they
speak like they alone have the key to
knowledge.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). People
want your focused attention. People
want anybody's focused attention. It’s
such a rare commodity these days, but
you give focus and feedback in an
especially heartening manner.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Don’t
expect your loved ones to want what
you want. You don’t see things the
same way or have the same needs, so
why would you? No wonder they feel
free around you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Strength untapped is passive and neglectful. Uncontrolled strength is violent. The events of the day are
designed to help you be your best by
finding your strength, tapping it and
controlling it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Fellowship and community fulfill a
human need. That’s why solitary confinement is considered punishment.
However, lately you may feel like
you're getting a little too much of a
good thing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). It will
be hard to separate what is said from
the person who says it, but you
should. Extremely credible advice will
come from an unlikely and unpopular
source.
BEVERLY HILLS
February 21, 2014 | Page 21
PUBLIC NOTICES
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014006210 The following is/are doing business as:
THE GORILLA CO. 412-1/2 S.
Spalding Dr., Beverly Hills, CA
90212;
Gorilla Subscription
Services LLC 412-1/2 S. Spalding
Dr., Beverly Hills, CA 90212; The
business is conducted by: A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, registrant(s) has begun to transact business under the name(s) listed
herein November 18, 2013:
Michael Burnett, Managing
Member: Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: January 09,
2014; Published: February 07, 14,
21, 28, 2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014007340 The following is/are doing business as: 1)
COMPTON LEGIT 2) CELESTIAL
ANGEL OUTREACH
1379
Parkwestern Dr. #127, San Pedro,
CA 90732; Angela Reed 1379
Parkwestern Dr. #127, San Pedro,
CA 90732; The business is conducted by:
AN INDIVIDUAL,
registrant(s) has NOT begun to
transact business under the
name(s) listed herein: Angela
Reed: Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: January 10,
2014; Published: February 07, 14,
21, 28, 2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014007370 The following is/are doing business as:
KANDI PAINT 1379 Parkwestern
Dr. #127, San Pedro, CA 90732;
Angela Reed 1379 Parkwestern Dr.
#127, San Pedro, CA 90732; Asia
Jimerson 1379 Parkwestern Dr.
#127, San Pedro, CA 90732; The
business is conducted by: A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP, registrant(s)
has NOT begun to transact business under the name(s) listed
herein: Asia Jimerson: Statement
is filed with the County of Los
Angeles: January 10, 2014;
Published: February 07, 14, 21, 28,
2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014023765 The fol-
lowing is/are doing business as:
RAHNAMA CAPITAL
1516
Westwood Blvd. #204, Los Angeles,
CA 90024; Ariel Rodd Rahnama
1516 Westwood Blvd. #204, Los
Angeles, CA 90024; The business is
conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL,
registrant(s) has NOT begun to
transact business under the
name(s) listed herein: Ariel Rodd
Rahnama: Statement is filed with
the County of Los Angeles: January
29, 2014; Published: February 14,
21, 28, March 07, 2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014026707 The following is/are doing business as: 1)
3RD STREET DANCE 2) THIRD
STREET DANCE 3) DANCE ON
3RD 4) DANCE ON THIRD 8558 W.
3rd St., Los Angeles, CA 90048;
Leslie Ferreira 8558 W. 3rd St., Los
Angeles, CA 90048; The business is
conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL,
registrant(s) has begun to transact
business under the name(s) listed
herein January 01, 2014: Leslie
Ferreira: Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: January 31,
2014; Published: February 14, 21,
28, March 07, 2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014030861 The following is/are doing business as:
BLOWN ON CANON 275 N. Canon
Dr., Beverly Hills, CA 90210; Blown
LA, LLC 445 N. Rossmore Ave.
#313, Los Angeles, CA 90004; The
business is conducted by: A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, registrant(s) has begun to transact business under the name(s) listed
herein January 05, 2014: Paul
Lindsey, Owner: Statement is filed
with the County of Los Angeles:
February 05, 2014; Published:
February 14, 21, 28, March 07,
2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014030862 The following is/are doing business as:
PAT GEORGE DESIGN 455 N.
Palm Dr., Beverly Hills, CA 90210;
Patricia H. Karp 455 N. Palm Dr.,
Beverly Hills, CA 90210; The busi-
ness is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL, registrant(s) has begun to
transact business under the
name(s) listed herein 2000:
Patricia H. Karp: Statement is filed
with the County of Los Angeles:
February 05, 2014; Published:
February 14, 21, 28, March 07,
2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014030972The following is/are doing business as:
ZUBIETOVSKY MAINTENANCE
1231-1/2 W. 48th St., Los Angeles,
CA 90037; Francisco Zubieta
1231-1/2 W. 48th St., Los Angeles,
CA 90037; Aracely Zubieta 12311/2 W. 48th St., Los Angeles, CA
90037; The business is conducted
by: A MARRIED COUPLE, registrant(s) has begun to transact business under the name(s) listed
herein
March
02,
2009:
Francisco Zubieta: Statement is
filed with the County of Los Angeles:
February 05, 2014; Published:
February 14, 21, 28, March 07,
2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014039299 The following is/are doing business as:
HYPMED 9171 Wilshire Blvd.
Penthouse, Beverly Hills, CA 90210;
Viviana Levi M.D. 9171 Wilshire
Blvd. Penthouse, Beverly Hills, CA
90210; The business is conducted
by: AN INDIVIDUAL, registrant(s)
has begun to transact business
under the name(s) listed herein
February 2014: Viviana Levi
M.D.: Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: February 12,
2014; Published: February 21, 28,
March 07, 14, 2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014040454 The following is/are doing business as:
HOW YOU GLOW 5920 Bowcroft
St., Los Angeles, CA 90016; Tara
Sowlaty 2659 Wallingford Dr.,
Beverly Hills, CA 90210; Jessica
Groveman 8913 Dorrington Ave.,
Los Angeles, CA 90048; The business is conducted by: A GENERAL
PARTNERSHIP, registrant(s) has
NOT begun to transact business
under the name(s) listed herein:
Tara Sowlaty: Statement is filed
with the County of Los Angeles:
February 13, 2014; Published:
February 21, 28, March 07, 14,
2014 LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014028221 The following is/are doing business as:
SHOPIST 1801 Century Park East,
#2400. Los Angeles, CA 90067;
MAP THE BRAND, INC. 1801
Century Park East, #2400. Los
Angeles, CA 90067; The business is
conducted by: A CORPORATION,
registrant(s) has NOT begun to
transact business under the
name(s) listed herein: MAP THE
BRAND, INC. Christopher Johnson,
CEO: Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: February 3,
2014; Published: February 7, 14, 21,
28, 2014 LACC N/C
PUZZLE ANSWERS
02/14/14 ISSUE
H
O
R
E
B
A
L
E
X
A
W
I
D
E
N
H
I
H
A
T
O
N
E
N
D
S
I
N
G
N
O
E
L
O
T
T
O
R
O
A
D
W
H
A
T
S
D
O
N
E
I
S
D
O
N
E
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
THE NEW YORK TIMES SUNDAY
MAGAZINE CROSSWORD PUZZLE
B
E
A
D
S
9 With 11-Down,
subjects of this
puzzle
10 Enzyme suffix
11 See 9-Down
12 Rampage
13 Way to go
14 Nickname for
this puzzle’s
subjects
15 Free
16 Bikini blast,
informally
17 Song sung by this
puzzle’s subjects
on 6-Down’s show
on 2/9/64
18 Big rig
19 Lead-in to while
28 ___ creek
30 Dictator Amin
33 Broadway’s
___-Fontanne
Theater
35 Promise of
payment
37 Frist’s successor
as Senate majority
leader
38 One of the six
counties of
Northern Ireland
39 Escort to the door
44 Yes
DOWN
45 Balanced conditions
1 A majority
47 Band material
2 Aware of
3 Craze caused by this 48 Park, e.g., in N.Y.C.
49 Wallach of “The
puzzle’s subjects
Misfits”
4 Schoolyard rejoinder
51 Subtitle for “Star
5 Card count in
Wars Episode IV,”
Caesar’s Palace?
with “A”
6 Host for this puzzle’s 53 Just so, after “to”
subjects on 2/9/64
55 Bakeshop worker
7 Places atop
59 Free throw
8 Eban of Israel
avgs., e.g.
27
32
8
10
11
12
13
80
75
50
55
60
93
98
66
103
107
108
117
77
44
45
83
84
85
78
95
90
91
96
97
100
101
102
104
105
106
110
118
111
112
119
113
120
122
123
124
125
126
127
61 One team in the
N.B.A. All-Star
Game, with “the”
64 City on the Nile
66 Junior Olympics
org.
68 Certain NASA
launch
71 Had a ball at
72 Unpredictable
75 Composer
Khachaturian
78 Slave
79 Apes
43
73
89
109
19
68
72
76
94
18
62
67
71
88
99
17
56
61
80 Apes
81 Where this puzzle’s
subjects got their
start
83 Song sung by this
puzzle’s subjects
on 6-Down’s show
on 9/12/65
84 Earth’s habitable
parts
85 Dawnlike
88 Common monthly
expense
90 Ladies’ man
93 Prey for a dingo
95 Molly formerly on
“S.N.L.”
96 Like some dessert
orders
97 King in 1922 news
99 Hot
102 Instrument
depicted by the
shaded squares in
this grid
114
M
E
A
N
T
T S A
S H E R
R E E S
A S T O
C O N
T O
I T H E
A T E D
I R E
A S S N
S H
T P O T
O L E S
R A N K
Y O S
51
82
87
U
L
N
A
R
37
81
86
92
16
42
54
65
70
74
N
O
U
R
I
31
49
59
64
69
15
36
41
53
63
14
30
35
48
58
U
H
H
U
H
25
29
40
47
57
W
K A
A N D
L O S
I C
A K S
K O
E N T
C O
O C O
K A
W R
E H E
O O D
N S
T O
H O
C E H
O R
W E
22
34
52
116
9
28
33
39
46
79
L
E
I
24
26
38
N
O
H
O
P
E
E R S A T
R E A C H
R M I T E
S
D U R
P O
T C M
B
E A U
O
A K N O T
L E I C
T A
R
R O C
I T A P H
L I C I A
E S E
R
D H S
M
T E
A B I R D
L L F U L
I O N
I
C O O
F
E D T
E
21
23
102 Bold
103 Stuck, after “in”
104 Queen who fell for
Zeus’ swan song?
105 It may be a plot
106 Lone-Star State
sch.
107 500 letters?
108 Cause of the
witch’s demise
in “Hansel
and Gretel”
110 ’60s war zone
112 Rice-A-___
114 Fraternity chapter
116 Big to-do
120 They’re played at
un conservatoire
122 Undermines,
as support
123 Living in a swing
state?
124 Kind of jacket
with pockets on the
chest
125 Tilted
126 Oxford’s St. ___
College
127 City on the Seine
upstream from
Paris
O
W
E
E
N
E
R
O
SUDOKU
20
56 “The Battleship
Potemkin” locale
1 Cellphones, in
Britain
57 An O’Neill
58 More appropriate
8 Alone
60 Houston sch.
13 13-Down, in
Dresden
62 Followers of exes
20 A debater takes it
63 Detour, e.g.
21 Jazz count?
65 Coal distillate
22 In that direction
67 Announcer’s aid
23 One favoring
69 Plural French word
that spells its
a strong central
singular English
government
form in reverse
24 ___ Vista
70 Much of the
25 Turns in
audience for
26 Film terrier
6-Down’s show
27 Bar order, with
on 2/9/64
“the”
73 Trounces
29 Sadness
74 “When ___
31 Narrow cut
younger, so much
younger …”
32 Move in an ungainly
(“Help!” lyric)
way
76 More modern,
34 Mine, in Madrid
in Munich
36 Cherished by
77 Relative of
38 Literary inits.
a convertible
40 It’s below the
79 Part of a train from
humerus
a refinery
41 Trig. function
82 Servant, e.g.
42 “Let ___”
86 “Why ___ so shy
43 ___ deferens
when …?” (“It’s
Only Love” lyric)
46 Dweller on the Red
87 Snack chip
Sea
89 Nest on a cliff
48 Less than right
50 Crème de la crème 91 Author Umberto
92 Dave Clark ___
52 1996-2001
show featuring
94 “___ the time …”
home videos
96 Playwright Fugard
53 Actress Gardner
97 General ___
chicken
54 The People’s
Champion
98 Attractive legs,
in slang
Online subscriptions:
100 “Yuck!”
Today’s puzzle and more
than
4,000 pastFOUND
puzzles,
101 Actor Hemsworth
ANSWERS
nytimes.com/crosswords
of “The Hunger
IN NEXT
($39.95 a year).
Games”
WEEK’S PAPER…
A
V
E
L
S
I
E M
T
C I S E
O L E R
K I A
C O S T
L F
I
E H O
U H O
B M I N
R A
E
I N
F
S K Y E
K I E L
N E L
N D
S
I N
W
L E O O
S H O
S O P
NOTICE— Fictitious
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
before that time. 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 14400, et seq.,
Business
and
Professions Code).
IT WAS 50 YEARS AGO By CHARLES M. DEBER / Edited by Will Shortz
ACROSS
S
N
E
R
D
115
121
107 1965 and 1966
concert site
for this puzzle’s
subjects
109 Sweeping
111 Soon
113 Be domestic
115 Medical suffix
117 Calendar keeper,
for short
118 Medical suffix
119 The “S” of CBS:
Abbr.
121 Sci-fi sighting
BEVERLY HILLS
Page 22 | February 21, 2014
NOTICE CALLING FOR BIDS
BEVERLY HILLS UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
Bid Deadline: 1:00 PM on Tuesday March 18, 2014
Place of Bid Receipt: 255 Lasky Dr. Beverly Hills, CA 90212 – Purchasing
Department
Project: BID #13-14/007 HORACE MANN SCHOOL NEW CLASSROOM
BUILDING PROJECT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Beverly Hills Unified School District of
Los Angeles County, California, acting by and through its Governing Board,
hereinafter referred to as "DISTRICT," will receive up to, but not later than,
the abovestated time, sealed bids for the award of a contract for the above
Project from each Multi-Prime Bid Package. Those bids timely received
shall be opened and publicly read aloud.
A “NON-MANDATORY” Pre-Bid Conference and walk will be held at Horace
Mann School at 8701 Charleville Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA 90212. The conference will commence at 9:00 am on Tuesday February 25, 2014. Late
arrivals will not be allowed entrance. All attendees will be escorted through
the school site by a District Representative. All potential CONTRACTORS planning to submit a bid for the project ARE ENCOURAGED to attend the pre-bid
conference and job walk to become familiar with the conditions of the jobsite
and the project requirements; as well as to have the opportunity to request
additional information. Prospective bidders may not visit the Project Site without making arrangements through the Facilities and Planning Department.
Bidders may obtain an electronic copy of the Contract Documents from the
District’s Facilities and Planning Department 241 Moreno Drive, Beverly Hills,
CA at (310) 551-5100, Ext. 2390 at no cost to the contractor. Bid Contract
Documents will be available for bidders after February 14, 2014. To the
extent required by Public Contract Code Section 20103.7, the District shall
also make the Contract Documents available for review at one or more plan
rooms. The Documents can be found on
• Planwell – C2 Reprographics –www.c2repro.com
• FW Dodge Mcgraw Hill – www.construction.com
• iSQFT – www.isqft.com
• Reed Construction Data – www.reedconstructiondata.com
In accordance with the provisions of California Business and Professions
Code Section 7028.15 and Public Contract Code Section 3300, the DISTRICT requires that the bidder possess a valid State Contractor's License at
the time the bid is submitted. Any bidder not so licensed at the time of the bid
opening will be rejected as nonresponsive.
This project is a “multi-prime” project consisting of the following Bid Packages:
HMS-01
HMS-02
HMS-03
HMS-04
HMS-05
HMS-06
HMS-07
HMS-08
HMS-09
HMS-10
HMS-11
HMS-12
HMS-13
HMS-14
HMS-15
HMS-16
HMS-17
– Site Demolition, Earthwork
– Concrete, Rebar, Masonry
– Landscape
– Structural Steel, Misc Steel, Guardrail/Handrail
– Roofing and Sheet Metal
– Framing, Drywall, Plaster, Doors, Hardware
– General Construction
– Casework/Finish Carpentry
– Glass and Glazing
– Acoustical Treatments
– Flooring
– Ceramic Tile
– Painting
– Plumbing
– Fire Sprinklers
– HVAC
- Electrical
Each Prime Contractor is responsible for the performance and completion of all items in
the Scope of Work. The Prime Contractors shall coordinate all work and shall cooperate with the other prime contractors and the Construction Manager as necessary to
ensure progress and timely completion of the Work.
Each bid shall be accompanied by a bid security in the form of cash, a certified or cashier's check or bid bond in an amount not less than ten percent
(10%) of the total bid price, payable to the DISTRICT.
Each Bidder is required to furnish and maintain proof of Commercial General
Liability Insurance, Comprehensive Automobile Liability Insurance, and
Workers’ Compensation Insurance.
The DISTRICT reserves the right to reject any or all bids or to waive any
irregularities or informalities in any bids or in the bidding process.
The DISTRICT has obtained from the California Department of Industrial
Relations the general prevailing rate of per diem wages in the locality in
which this work is to be performed for each craft or type of worker needed for
the Project. Such rates are as follows:
Craft, Classification, or Type: Use Applicable Prevailing Wage Rate
The general prevailing rate of per diem wages is based upon a working day
of eight (8) hours. The rate for holiday and overtime work shall be at least
time and onehalf. It shall be mandatory upon the successful bidder to whom
the contract is awarded, and upon any subcontractor listed, to pay not less
than the said specified rates to all workers employed by them for the Project.
No bidder may withdraw any bid for a period of Sixty (60) calendar days after
the date set for the opening of bids.
Pursuant to Section 22300 of the Public Contract Code, the Agreement will
contain provisions permitting the successful bidder to substitute securities for
any monies withheld by the DISTRICT to ensure performance under the
Agreement or permitting payment of retentions earned directly into escrow.
Award of Contract: The District shall award the Contracts for the Project to the
lowest responsible bidder from each bid package as determined from the
base bid alone by the District. The District reserves the right to add to or
deduct from the Contract any of the Alternate Bid Items listed, after the lowest responsible bidders have been determined. The District reserves the right
to reject any or all bids or to waive any irregularities or informalities in any bid
or in the bidding process. Bid protests, if any, must comply with the requirements set forth in the information for Bidders in order to be timely and considered by the District.
The last day to submit questions shall be March 10, 2014. All questions must be submitted in accordance with the procedures set forth
in the Information for Bidders.
Publication Dates: February 14, 2014 and February 21, 2014
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE'S
SALE
Trustee
Sale
No.
752784CA Loan No.
3062211721
Title
Order No. 110470786CA-MAI ATTENTION
RECORDER:
THE
FOLLOWING REFERENCE
TO
AN
ATTACHED SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE
TO THE NOTICE
PROVIDED TO THE
TRUSTOR
ONLY.
PURSUANT TO CALIFORNIA CIVIL CODE
2923.3 NOTE: THERE
IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION
IN THIS DOCUMENT
ATTACHED YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 03-28-2006.
UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE
SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE. IF YOU NEED
AN EXPLANATION OF
THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST YOU, YOU
SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER. On 03-122014 at 9:00 AM,
ALAW as the duly
appointed
Trustee
under and pursuant to
Deed
of
Trust
Recorded 04-14-2006,
Book N/A, Page N/A,
Instrument
06
0823084, of official
records in the Office of
the Recorder of LOS
ANGELES
County,
California, executed
by:
ABRAHAM
BENELYAHU
AND
ROYA NEJATHAYM,
HUSBAND AND WIFE
AS
COMMUNITY
PROPERTY
WITH
RIGHT
OF
SURVIVORSHIP,
as
Trustor,
WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK,
FA, as Beneficiary, will
sell at public auction
sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier's
check drawn by a state
or national bank, a
cashier's check drawn
by a state or federal
credit union, or a
cashier's check drawn
by a state or federal
savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank
specified in section
5102 of the Financial
Code and authorized
to do business in this
state. Sale will be held
by the duly appointed
trustee as shown
below, of all right, title,
and interest conveyed
to and now held by the
trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to the Deed of
Trust. The sale will be
made, but without
covenant or warranty,
expressed or implied,
regarding title, possession,
or
encumbrances, to pay the
remaining
principal
sum of the note(s)
secured by the Deed of
Trust, interest thereon,
estimated
fees,
charges and expenses
of the Trustee for the
total amount (at the
time of the initial publi-
cation of the Notice of
Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth
below. The amount
may be greater on the
day of sale. Place of
Sale: Doubletree Hotel
Los Angeles-Norwalk,
13111
Sycamore
Drive, Norwalk, CA
90650
Legal
Description: LOT 1864
OF TRACT NO. 6380,
IN THE CITY OF BEVERLY HILLS, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, AS PER
MAP RECORDED IN
BOOK 69 PAGE 11 TO
20 INCLUSIVE OF
MAPS,
IN
THE
OFFICE
OF THE
COUNTY RECORDER
OF SAID COUNTY.
Amount of unpaid balance
and
other
charges: $856,325.38
(estimated)
Street
address and other
common designation
of the real property:
225 SOUTH CANON
DRIVE
BEVERLY
HILLS, CA 90212 APN
Number: 4331-002007 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any
liability for any incorrectness of the street
address and other
common designation,
if any, shown herein.
The property heretofore described is being
sold "as is". In compliance with California
Civil Code 2923.5(c)
the
mortgagee,
trustee, beneficiary, or
authorized
agent
declares: that it has
contacted the borrower(s) to assess their
financial situation and
to explore options to
avoid foreclosure; or
that it has made efforts
to contact the borrower(s) to assess their
financial situation and
to explore options to
avoid foreclosure by
one of the following
methods: by telephone; by
United
States mail; either 1st
class or certified; by
overnight delivery; by
personal delivery; by email; by face to face
meeting. DATE: 02-102014
ALAW,
as
Trustee MARIA MAYORGA, ASSISTANT
SECRETARY ALAW
9200 OAKDALE AVE. 3RD
FLOOR
CHATSWORTH, CA
91311 (818)435-3661
For Sales Information:
www.lpsasap.com or
1-714-730-2727
www.priorityposting.co
m or 1-714-573-1965
www.auction.com or 1800-280-2832 ALAW
IS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT.
ANY INFORMATION
OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this
property lien, you
should understand that
there are risks involved
in bidding at a trustee
auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself.
Placing the highest bid
at a trustee auction
does not automatically
entitle you to free and
clear ownership of the
property. You should
also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off
may be a junior lien. If
you are the highest
bidder at the auction,
you are or may be
responsible for paying
off all liens senior to
the lien being auctioned off, before you
can receive clear title
to the property. You are
encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may
exist on this property
by contacting the county recorder's office or a
title insurance company, either of which may
charge you a fee for
this information. If you
consult either of these
resources, you should
be aware that the
same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or deed of trust
on
the
property.
NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this
notice of sale may be
postponed one or
more times by the
mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court,
pursuant to Section
2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law
requires that information about trustee sale
postponements
be
made available to you
and to the public, as a
courtesy to those not
present at the sale. If
you wish to learn
whether your sale date
has been postponed,
and, if applicable, the
rescheduled time and
date for the sale of this
property, this information can be obtained
from one of the following three companies:
LPS Agency Sales and
Posting at (714) 7302727, or visit the
Internet Web site
w w w. l p s a s a p . c o m
(Registration required
to search for sale information) or Priority
Posting and Publishing
at (714) 573-1965 or
visit the Internet Web
site www.priorityposting.com (Click on the
link for "Advanced
Search" to search for
sale information), or
auction.com at 1-800280-2832 or visit the
Internet Web site
w w w. a u c t i o n . c o m ,
using the Trustee Sale
No. shown above.
Information about postponements that are
very short in duration
or that occur close in
time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be reflected in the
telephone information
or on the Internet Web
site. The best way to
verify postponement
information is to attend
the scheduled sale. A4443142 02/14/2014,
02/21/2014, 02/28/2014
THE BEVERLY HILLS COURIER
Advertising Policies
The Beverly Hills Courier reserves the right to refuse the
publishing of any advertisement and to delete any objectionable
word(s) or phrase(s).
Submission of an advertisement to a Beverly Hills Courier
salesperson does not represent an agreement by the Beverly Hills
Courier to print the advertisement.
The Beverly Hills Courier will not be liable for failure
to publish an advertisement as requested. If there is an error
or an omission in the printing or the publication of an advertisement, the liability of the Beverly Hills Courier shall be limited to
a maximum of the cost of the incorrect advertisement or the
reprinting of the correct advertisement. The Beverly Hills
Courier, under no circumstances, shall be liable for other damages.
The Beverly Hills Courier will not accept any cancellations or
changes to a classified ad/ads after 12:00 PM Wednesday, and
display ads after 5:00 PM Tuesday of that requested week of publication. Legal notices already published once is 10 days prior to
publication date. We will reserve one major change to a classified
ad running on a five-week term. Changes in addition to the one
alteration will incur a minimal charge of $3.00 per change.
For additional policies on advertising, please contact
the Beverly Hills Courier at: (310) 278-1322.
SUDOKU ANSWERS
02/14/14 ISSUE
NOTICE— Fictitious 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 before that time.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 14400, et seq., Business and Professions Code).
BEVERLY HILLS
February 21, 2014 | Page 23
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
TO CONSIDER THE
ISSUANCE OF AN
ORDER FOR ABATEMENT
CASE NO. 5977-1
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that the South
Coast
Air
Quality
Management
District
Hearing Board will hold a
public hearing at 9:00
a.m. on WEDNESDAY,
MARCH 5, 2014, in the
Hearing Board Room,
District
Headquarters,
21865 Copley Drive,
Diamond Bar, California,
to consider the issuance
of an order for abatement
against ROXBURY MEDICAL TOWER, LLC ROXSAN
TOWER,
465
Roxbury Drive, Beverly
Hills, California, 90210,
for an emergency fire
pump.
A copy of the petition is
available for inspection at
the office of the Clerk of
the Board, 21865 Copley
Drive, Diamond Bar,
California.
Interested persons may
attend and submit oral or
written statements at the
hearing. Bring eight (8)
copies of any exhibits you
wish to present at the
hearing.
Interested persons wishing to attend the hearing
should notify the Clerk of
the Board, (909) 3962500, in order to be notified of any changes
regarding the scheduling
of the hearing.
This notice and related
documents are available
in alternative formats to
assist persons with disabilities. Further, disability-related accommodations, including aids or
services, are available to
individuals who want to
attend or participate in
the hearing. Please direct
any requests to the Clerk
of the Board as soon as
possible at 909-396-2500
(for TTY, 909-396-3560),
or by e-mail at
clerkofboard@aqmd.gov.
DATED:
February 19, 2014
SOUTH COAST
AIR QUALITY
MANAGEMENT DISTRICT
HEARING BOARD
BY Peggy White
Deputy Clerk Transcriber
2/21/14
CNS-2590651#
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER
—
—————
Trustee Sale No. :
20110134003620 Title
Order No.: 110514887
FHA/VA/PMI
No.:
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S
SALE YOU ARE IN
DEFAULT UNDER A
DEED
OF
TRUST,
DATED
11/06/2006.
UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT
MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE
OF THE PROCEEDING
AGAINST YOU, YOU
SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER. NDEx West,
L.L.C., as duly appointed
Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust
Recorded on 11/28/2006
as
Instrument No.
20062618704 of official
records in the office of the
County Recorder of LOS
ANGELES County, State
of CALIFORNIA. EXECUTED BY: STEVE FOX
AND LUANN ARONSON,
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO HIGHEST
BIDDER FOR CASH,
C A S H I E R ' S
CHECK/CASH EQUIVALENT or other form of
payment authorized by
California Civil Code
2924h(b), (payable at
time of sale in lawful
money of the United
States). DATE OF SALE:
03/06/2014
TIME OF
SALE: 10:00 AM PLACE
OF SALE: BEHIND THE
FOUNTAIN LOCATED IN
CIVIC CENTER PLAZA,
400 CIVIC
CENTER
PLAZA, POMONA CA.
STREET ADDRESS and
other common designation, if any, of the real
property described above
is purported to be: 1041
NORTH
MARTEL
AVENUE, WEST HOLLYWOOD,
CALIFORNIA
90046 APN#: 5531-022019 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness
of the street address and
other common designation, if any, shown herein.
Said sale will be made,
but without covenant or
warranty, expressed or
implied, regarding title,
possession, or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum
of the note(s) secured by
said Deed of Trust, with
interest thereon, as provided in said note(s),
advances, under the
terms of said Deed of
Trust, fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee
and of the trusts created
by said Deed of Trust. The
total amount of the unpaid
balance of the obligation
secured by the property
to be sold and reasonable
estimated costs, expenses and advances at the
time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale
is $1,219,205.08. The
beneficiary under said
Deed of Trust heretofore
executed and delivered to
the undersigned a written
Declaration of Default and
Demand for Sale, and a
written Notice of Default
and Election to Sell. The
undersigned caused said
Notice of Default and
Election to Sell to be
recorded in the county
where the real property is
located. NOTICE TO
POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding on this property lien,
you should understand
that there are risks
involved in bidding at a
trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not
on the property itself.
Placing the highest bid at
a trustee auction does not
automatically entitle you
to free and clear ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that
the lien being auctioned
off may be a junior lien. If
you are the highest bidder
at the auction, you are or
may be responsible for
paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned off, before you can
receive clear title to the
property. You are encouraged to investigate the
existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens
that may exist on this
property by contacting the
county recorder's office or
a title insurance company,
either of which
may
charge you a fee for this
information. If you consult
either of these resources,
you should be aware that
the same lender may
hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on
the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY
OWNER:
The sale date shown on
this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more
times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a
court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law
requires that information
about trustee sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to
those not present at the
sale. If you wish to learn
whether your sale date
has been postponed,
and, if applicable, the
rescheduled time and
date for the sale of this
property, you may call
916-939-0772 for information regarding the
trustee's sale or visit this
Internet
Web
site
www.nationwideposting.c
om for information regarding the sale of this property, using the file number
assigned to this case
20110134003620.
Information about postponements that are very
short in duration or that
occur close in time to the
scheduled sale may not
immediately be reflected
in the telephone information or on the Internet
Web site. The best way to
verify
postponement
information is to attend
the scheduled sale. FOR
TRUSTEE SALE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL:
NATIONWIDE POSTING
& PUBLICATION A DIVISION OF FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY 5005 WINDPLAY DRIVE, SUITE 1
EL DORADO HILLS, CA
95762-9334
916-9390772 www.nationwideposting.com NDEx West,
L.L.C. MAY BE ACTING
AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
I N F O R M AT I O N
OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. NDEx West,
L.L.C. as Trustee Dated:
02/05/2014 NPP0226683
To: BEVERLY HILLS
COURIER 02/14/2014,
02/21/2014, 02/28/2014
—
—————
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S
SALE Trustee Sale No.
757377CA Loan No.
3010256349 Title Order
No. 130030456 ATTENTION RECORDER: THE
FOLLOWING REFERENCE TO AN ATTACHED
SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE TO THE NOTICE
PROVIDED TO THE
TRUSTOR ONLY. PURSUANT TO CALIFORNIA
CIVIL CODE 2923.3
NOTE: THERE IS A
SUMMARY OF THE
INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF
TRUST DATED 08-212006. UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE
OF THE PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST YOU, YOU
SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER. On 03-20-2014
at 9:00 AM, ALAW as the
duly appointed Trustee
under and pursuant to
Deed of Trust Recorded
09-14-2006, Book N/A,
Page N/A, Instrument 06
2047562,
of
official
records in the Office of
the Recorder of LOS
ANGELES
County,
California, executed by:
SUSANA DOSAMANTES,
A SINGLE WOMAN, as
Trustor, WASHINGTON
MUTUAL BANK, FA, as
Beneficiary, will sell at
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier's check drawn by
a state or national bank, a
cashier's check drawn by
a state or federal credit
union, or a cashier's
check drawn by a state or
federal savings and loan
association,
savings
association, or savings
bank specified in section
5102 of the Financial
Code and authorized to
do business in this state.
Sale will be held by the
duly appointed trustee as
shown below, of all right,
title, and interest conveyed to and now held by
the trustee in the hereinafter described property
under and pursuant to the
Deed of Trust. The sale
will be made, but without
covenant or warranty,
expressed or implied,
regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to
pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s)
secured by the Deed of
Trust, interest thereon,
estimated fees, charges
and expenses of the
Trustee for the total
amount (at the time of the
initial publication of the
Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set
forth below. The amount
may be greater on the day
of sale. Place of Sale:
Doubletree Hotel Los
Angeles-Norwalk, 13111
Sycamore
Drive,
Norwalk, CA 90650 Legal
Description: A CONDOMINIUM
COMPOSED
OF: A) AN UNDIVIDED
1/21ST INTEREST IN
AND TO LOT 1 OF
TRACT
NO. 37518,
COUNTY
OF
LOS
ANGELES, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, AS PER
MAP RECORDED IN
BOOK 980 PAGES 81
AND 82 OF MAPS, IN
THE OFFICE OF THE
COUNTY RECORDER
OF
SAID
COUNTY.
EXCEPTING
THEREFROM ALL OIL, GAS,
AND OTHER HYDROCARBON
SUBSTANCES, AND MINERALS,
INCLUDING
RIGHTS INCIDENTAL TO
SUCH
OWNERSHIP,
NOW OR AT ANY TIME
HEREAFTER SITUATED
IN AND UNDER THE
H E R E I N A F T E R
DESCRIBED LAND AND
LYING BELOW A DEPTH
OF 500 FEET MEASURED FROM THE
SURFACE OF SAID
LAND BUT WITHOUT
ANY RIGHT TO ENTER
UPON THE SURFACE
FOR EXTRACTION OR
REMOVAL OF SUCH
OIL, GAS, OR OTHER
HYDROCARBON SUBSTANCES, OR MINERALS, AND WITHOUT
ANY RIGHT TO PENETRATE OR TO PASS
THROUGH THE 500
FOOT SPACE IMMEDIATELY BELOW SAID
SURFACE FOR PURPOSES
OF
SUCH
EXTRACTION
OR
REMOVAL, AS GRANTED OR RESERVED IN
VARIOUS
INSTRUMENTS OF RECORD
ON FILE IN THE OFFICE
OF
THE
COUNTY
RECORDER OF SAID
COUNTY.
ALSO
EXCEPT THEREFROM
UNITS 101 TO 107 AND
201 TO 214 ALL INCLUSIVE AS DEFINED AND
DELINEATED ON A
CONDOMINIUM PLAN
RECORDED APRIL 8,
1982 AS INSTRUMENT
NO. 82-366617, OFFICIAL RECORDS AND AS
RE-RECORDED
NOVEMBER 24, 1982 AS
INSTRUMENT NO. 821181925,
OFFICIAL
RECORDS. B) UNIT 203
AS
DEFINED
AND
DELINEATED ON THE
ABOVE REFERRED TO
CONDOMINIUM PLAN.
Amount of unpaid balance and other charges:
$724,607.96 (estimated)
Street address and other
common designation of
the real property: 720
HUNTLEY DRIVE #203
WEST HOLLYWOOD, CA
90069 APN Number:
4337-011-101 The undersigned Trustee disclaims
any liability for any incorrectness of the street
address and other common designation, if any,
shown herein. The property heretofore described
is being sold "as is". In
compliance
with
California Civil Code
2923.5(c) the mortgagee,
trustee, beneficiary, or
authorized
agent
declares: that it has contacted the borrower(s) to
assess their financial situation and to explore
options to avoid foreclosure; or that it has made
efforts to contact the borrower(s) to assess their
financial situation and to
explore options to avoid
foreclosure by one of the
following methods: by
telephone; by United
States mail; either 1st
class or certified; by
overnight delivery; by personal delivery; by e-mail;
by face to face meeting.
DATE: 02-13-2014 ALAW,
as Trustee JANET GONZALEZ,
ASSISTANT
SECRETARY
ALAW
9200 OAKDALE AVE. 3RD
FLOOR
CHATSWORTH,
CA
91311 (818)435-3661 For
Sales
Information:
www.lpsasap.com or 1714-730-2727 www.priorityposting.com or 1-7145 7 3 - 1 9 6 5
www.auction.com or 1800-280-2832 ALAW IS A
DEBT
COLLECTOR
ATTEMPTING TO COL-
LECT A DEBT. ANY
I N F O R M AT I O N
OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
NOTICE
TO
POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding on this property lien,
you should understand
that there are risks
involved in bidding at a
trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not
on the property itself.
Placing the highest bid at
a trustee auction does not
automatically entitle you
to free and clear ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that
the lien being auctioned
off may be a junior lien. If
you are the highest bidder
at the auction, you are or
may be responsible for
paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned off, before you can
receive clear title to the
property. You are encouraged to investigate the
existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens
that may exist on this
property by contacting
the county recorder's
office or a title insurance
company, either of which
may charge you a fee for
this information. If you
consult either of these
resources, you should be
aware that the same
lender may hold more
than one mortgage or
deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice
of sale may be postponed
one or more times by the
mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of
the California Civil Code.
The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be
made available to you
and to the public, as a
courtesy to those not
present at the sale. If you
wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled
time and date for the sale
of this property, this information can be obtained
from one of the following
three companies: LPS
Agency
Sales
and
Posting at (714) 7302727, or visit the Internet
Web
site
w w w. l p s a s a p. c o m
(Registration required to
search for sale information) or Priority Posting
and Publishing at (714)
573-1965 or visit the
Internet
Web
site
www.priorityposting.com
(Click on the link for
"Advanced Search" to
search for sale information), or auction.com at 1800-280-2832 or visit the
Internet
Web
site
www.auction.com, using
the Trustee Sale No.
shown above. Information
about
postponements
that are very short in
duration or that occur
close in time to the
scheduled sale may not
immediately be reflected
in the telephone information or on the Internet
Web site. The best way to
verify
postponement
information is to attend
the scheduled sale. A4443837
02/21/2014,
02/28/2014, 03/07/2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014019955 The
following is/are doing business
as: CLOUD SPA USA 269 S.
Beverly Dr. #1250, Beverly Hills,
CA 90212; Planet Advertising
Group, Inc. 6549 Mission
Gorge Rd. #351, San Diego, CA
92120; The business is conducted by: A CORPORATION,
registrant(s) has begun to
transact business under the
name(s) listed herein January
03, 2014: Alan Sklar, CEO:
Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: January
24, 2014; Published: January
31, February 07, 14, 21, 2014
LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014017694 The
following is/are doing business
as: PALATE POPS 308 N.
Sycamore Ave., Los Angeles,
CA 90036;
Paul Vincent
Cerrito 308 N. Sycamore Ave.
#202, Los Angeles, CA 90036;
David Ravandi
308 N.
Sycamore Ave., Los Angeles,
CA 90036; The business is conducted by: A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP, registrant(s) has
NOT begun to transact business under the name(s) listed
herein:
Paul Cerrito:
Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: January
24, 2014; Published: January
31, February 07, 14, 21, 2014
LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014026656 The
following is/are doing business
as:
1) LIFE’S UPS AND
DOWNS LIFE COACH 2)
LIFE’S UPS AND DOWNS
2001 Barrington Ave., West Los
Angeles,
CA
90025;
Hengameh Caroline Melamed
2001 Barrington Ave., West Los
Angeles, CA 90025; The business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL, registrant(s) has NOT
begun to transact business
under the name(s) listed herein:
Hengameh Caroline
Melamed: Statement is filed
with the County of Los Angeles:
January 31, 2014; Published:
February 07, 14, 21, 28, 2014
LACC N/C
––––––
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 2014023121 The
following is/are doing business
as: WESTSIDE REAL ESTATE
CONFIDENTIAL
10501
Wilshire Blvd. #2107, Los
Angeles, CA 90024; Claudine
Clayman-Cook 10501 Wilshire
Blvd. #2107, Los Angeles, CA
90024; The business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL,
registrant(s) has NOT begun to
transact business under the
name(s)
listed
herein:
Claudine P. Clayman-Cook:
Statement is filed with the
County of Los Angeles: January
29, 2014; Published: February
07, 14, 21, 28, 2014 LACC N/C
NOTICE— Fictitious
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
before that time. 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 14400, et seq.,
Business
and
Professions Code).
Page 24 | February 21, 2014
BEVERLY HILLS
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43
LEGAL
SERVICES
PERSONAL
CHEF
Beverly Hills, Holmby Hills, Bel Air, Brentwood
213/380-3311
Obituaries .............................................00
Bookkeeping/Accounting ......................01
Announcements....................................02
Mail Boxes............................................03
Lost & Found ........................................04
Personals .............................................05
Phone Cards ........................................06
Legal Services......................................09
Catering ................................................10
Valet Parking Services ..........................12
Auctions................................................25
Travel Tours..........................................40
Personal Chef.......................................42
Party Services ......................................43
Video/Photography ...............................44
Schools/Instruction ...............................45
Computer Consultants..........................46
Health & Beauty....................................47
Fitness ..................................................48
Professional Services...........................50
Alterations ............................................53
Jobs Wanted ........................................55
Situations Wanted ................................58
Jobs Wanted Domestic ........................60
Domestic Agencies...............................85
Child Care ............................................86
Elderly Home/Care ...............................88
Employment Opportunities...................90
Volunteer Work.....................................98
RENTALS
BUSINESS AND FINANCIAL
MISCELLANEOUS/SALES
Business Opportunities .......................110
Business Wanted ................................115
Investment Opportunities....................125
Investors Wanted................................126
Business Services ..............................130
Financial Services ..............................135
Money to Loan....................................150
Mortgage Loans ..................................151
Real Estate Loans ..............................155
Money Wanted....................................165
Antiques/Paintings for Sale................460
Antiques/Paintings Wanted.................461
Jewelry ...............................................468
Furniture For Sale ..............................469
Miscellaneous for Sale........................470
Miscellaneous Wanted ........................471
Pianos For Sale ..................................472
Pianos Wanted....................................473
Fashion ...............................................474
Garage/Estate Sales...........................475
Pets ....................................................480
Auctions .............................................488
REAL ESTATE
Income Property for Sale ...................200
Income Property Wanted ....................201
Commercial Property For Sale...........202
Businesses For Sale ..........................208
Business Property for Sale .................210
Business Property for Rent.................215
Business Property Wanted.................220
09
LEGAL
SERVICES
ARE YOU
OWED SUPPORT?
TOP “A/V” RATED
CENTURY CITY
LAW FIRM
CAN HELP YOU.
Specializing
In:
Divorce &
Collection
of Support
& Complex
Personal
Injury Cases
(auto accident, etc.).
No Recovery, No Fee!
Free Consultation.
LAW OFFICES OF
• BRADFORD L. TREUSCH •
310/557-2599
“A/V” R ATED FOR
O VER 30 Y EARS .
www.Treusch .net
RATED BY
Rentals to Share ................................404
Wanted to Rent ..................................405
Garage/Storage Rentals .....................407
Rooms for Rent...................................415
Hotels & Motels...................................416
Boarding House/Senior Living ............418
Houses for Rent Furnished ................420
Houses for Rent Unfurnished.............425
Apartments for Rent Furnished..........435
Rental Referral Services ....................439
Apartments for Rent Unfurnished ......440
Vacation Rentals ................................449
TRANSPORTATION
Autos for Sale ....................................500
Motorcycles ........................................525
Aircraft’s for Sale................................540
Aircraft’s Wanted ................................545
Boats/Yachts ......................................555
or 626/316-2658
45
“Many people have items in their garage, basement &
attic that they don’t know have value.” -Aaron
Business and Commercial Lots .........235
Wanted to Rent, Offices.....................239
Offices, Stores for Lease....................240
Commercial Property For Lease .........241
Building Material.................................245
Industrial Lots.....................................250
Acreage, Residential Lots ..................260
Condominiums and Townhouses........270
Real Estate for Exchange ..................280
Real Estate Services ..........................281
Real Estate Loans..............................288
Property Management .......................290
Houses for Sale .................................300
Wanted to Buy....................................302
Wanted to Buy Houses ......................303
Palm Springs for Rent ........................331
YOUR PRIVATE CHEF
Accounting, Taxation family will not gain weight
& Consultation Needs? with the meals I prepare”
Full Service Firm,
By Appointment only
s p e cializing in both
Individual, small/mid- Mon. - Fri • 10am to 7pm
size business, partner- Please call Michael
ships and Corporation.
at 626/215-9858
Shahram Jahanian, CPA
MISCELLANEOUS/ANNOUNCEMENTS
50
PROFESSIONAL
SERVICES
We Will Sell for
EXPERIENCED
D
R
IVER AVAILABLE
You
on
EBAY!
Experienced well travelled
Hourly
• P/T • F/T
cook, can prepare any meal.
My
Car
or Yours.
Do you need a CPA Specializing in healthy cuisine. SHOPitLA Sell it on eBay!
For errands, shopping,
Largest Registered
firm to handle your “I gaurantee you and your
ELITE CERTIFIED PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANCY CORP.
A n t i q u e s • F l a t w a re • E l e c t ro n i c s
CLASSIFI ED INDEX
46
COMPUTER
CONSULTANT
S U P E R L AW Y E R S
Bradford L. Treusch
SuperLawyers.com
45
SPIRITUAL
GUIDANCE
Do You Wish For More
PASSION, PURPOSE
& CREATIVITY?
We are an experienced lifespiritual & radio personality
coach team who will work
with you in unblocking
your true potential.
213/536-7533
SCHOOLS &
INSTRUCTION
appointments, child
eBay Drop Off Store in LA! transportation, etc.
Clean DMV. Insured.
1852 Westwood Blvd
Call/Text/Email for Appt:
Los Angeles, CA 90025
www.shopitla.com
Mon-Sat. 10-6pm
Bonded, Insured, Discrete.
Ask for Sean
310-441-1799
sean@shopitla.com
Philip: 760/799-7278
PPHILIPOFF@GMAIL.COM
88
ELDERLY CARE
SERVICES
I AM A RESPOSIBLE,
CARING FEMALE.
PREMIER TUTORING
Seeking position as
SERVICES
a CAREGIVER.
TechnoEntomology
AVA I L A B L E
22 years experience
Experienced, CA
licensed CNA with
On-Site
credentialed teacher
great references.
specializing in
Live-in/out position. I am
SPECIALIST
grades K-5, all subjects.
patient, compassionate
Please call
Small Business Networks and a very hard worker.
Courtney
Data Safeguard & Recovery Call 213/422-9495
310/266-0667
Cloud
Computing, Backup
**
**
—————––––
COMPUTER
—————––––
CHINESE MANDARIN
* * * TUTOR * * *
16 years of experience.
Standard Chinese
Education Teaching
Style and Material.
All ages.
Anna Ross
—————
& Remote Access Services
COMPANION/DRIVER
Notary Services Also
AVAILABLE
Available
Experienced Female.
Local References Too! Fluent English. W/ car
(310) ASK-DAVE
(310) 275-3283
David@TechnoEntomology.com
lanlan10_99@yahoo.com
& clean DMV for errands
+appts. LIght cleaning
+cooking. Dog/cat care.
C ARING , H ONEST
& R ESPONSIBLE .
Suzan: 323/394-4146
————––––
—————–––– —
• C O M P U T E R • —————––––
VOICE / PIANO Repair & Training PRIVATE COMPANION/
LESSONS
CAREGIVER
* * * * * * *
Years of Experience • Home or Office
• Installation • Setup
as Professional
• Software Training
Singer/Musician/Teacher.
• Virus & Spyware
BM-Northwestern
Removal
Univ. School of Music • Website Design
MARLA 323/377-1790 CALL E. STURM:
www.marlajones.com 310/678-2173
—————–––– —————––––
18 Years Experience.
Excellent cook.
Energetic personality.
FRIENDLY, DEPENDABLE
AND H ONEST .
Speak English,
Hungarian, Romanian.
520/820-5259
GOOD REFERENCES.
—————––––
LifeSpiritualCoaching@
gmail.com
CAREGIVER/
COMPANION
To Advertise
Experienced
European
Female Available.
in
The Courier
call
310.278.1322
• R ELIABLE C ARE •
Fluent English.
Cooking, light
cleaning & activities.
• GREAT REFERENCES •
310/402-4100
BEVERLY HILLS
February 21, 2014 | Page 25
88
ELDERLY CARE SERVICES
88
90
240
ELDERLY CARE
SERVICES
EMPLOYMENT
OFFICES
FOR LEASE
• New Beginning •
Private Care Services
Our Goal:
NEED HELP?
WE UNDERSTAND.. .
Mama’s caregivers are loving, caring,
trained & bonded. Live in or out.
M AMA’ S H OME C ARE
323/655-2622
Caregivers /
Companions / CNA’s
with great experience
& dedication. We have
experience with the
mentally impaired.
Your Personal Care
Manager always avail.
C ALL J ULIE :
818/916-2146
Great People Make
GOOD COMPANY
Our premiere private
duty
home
care
agency is currently
seeking professional
caregivers to assist
our senior clients.
CNA’s,
CHHA's,
MA's preferred.
Great References.
Great paying positions
available throughout
Los Angeles, Hancock
Park, Beverly Hills,
Bel Aire, Pacific
Palisades and San
Fernando Valley.
Caregiver/
House Manager/
Personal Assistant
• ELDERCARE •
IN-HOME SPECIALIST
• Companions
• Live-In / Live-Out
Bonded & Insured• Licensed • Fully Screened
310.859.0440
www.exehomecare.com
BBB A+ (Highest Rated)
RN on Staff
ARE YOU A
SENIOR AND NEED
ASSISTANCE?
We can help YOU!
****************
We provide experienced
Cargivers, CNA’s & HHA’s
for seniors needing
companions to drive them to
doctors, prepare meals,
light housekeeping, etc...
We offer responsible and
nurturing care. Our staff is
—————–––– thoroughly screened and we
FILIPINO / AMERICAN
care. Live In/Out.
CAREGIVERS
Professional staff.
Caring Companion and
Assisted Living.
BOARD & CARE
****************
Call Lisa 24hrs.
323/877-8121
323/806-9498
Placement available
Drivers: Doctors appointment, Errands, Etc...
Flexible Pricing.
Free Consultation!
The Courier
Call Randy
call
323/537-5733
To Advertise
in
310.278.1322
BEVERLY HILLS
OFFICES
Prime Location on
Wilshire next to
To provide quality care
for your loved one.
—————––––
• Caregivers
• CNA • CHHA
OPPORTUNITIES
Motivated, Honest,
Eager & Passionate.
Problem Solver.
Majored in P.R. &
Communications.
V ERY E XPERIENCED.
EXCELLENT REFERENCES.
818/913-4446
89
BEAUTY
SALON
Please call
(323) 932-8700
112
BUSINESS
FOR SALE
LOBSTER PLANT
FOR SALE
$150,000
Academy of
Motion Picture
• Executive Suite $400 up
includes utilities
• Penthouse 2,267 SF
• 4F w/views 2500-5000 sf
250
Real Estate Services
DISCRETE
CLOSING
In today’s competitive real estate market, timing is everything.
Domino Realty is your ideal buyer, today.
We can close in 10 working days, including due diligence.
We will work with the broker of your choice.
We are an all cash buyer, no financing contingency.
We buy apartments, retail and office spaces.
CALL DOMINO REALTY TODAY
Driscoll Sullivan (310) 551-5430 | driscoll.sullivan@dominorealty.com
9990 Santa Monica Blvd. Beverly Hills, California 90212
258
LAND FOR SALE
Mylene 310/246-9625
or 310/242-0507
Private Office Suite
at 9595 Wilshire Bl.
508 RSF • $2,300/Mo.
1 Large Executive
Window Office &
1 Support/
Reception Area.
Contact: Stan Gerlach
Or: Bryan Dunne
310/550-2500
270
270
TOWNHOMES/
CONDOS FOR SALE
TOWNHOMES/
CONDOS FOR SALE
WILSHIRE CORRIDOR
KELEMEN
REAL ESTATE
(310) 966-0900
3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH
License 00957281
SPACIOUS CONDO
CHEZ GERMEN
all listings are on
2,200 SQ. FT.
CenturyCityLiving.com
HAIR SALON IN WITH EXISTING CHINA
Completely Remodeled NOW AVAILABLE
BEVERLY HILLS EXPORT ACCOUNTS.
GATED 5 STAR
with new high-end quality
2 GREAT HAIRSTYLIST ANNETTE WOLF • AGT.
LUXURY PROPERTIES
appliacnes. full security,
310/441-1811
*BEL AIR
STATION FOR RENT
FOR LEASE
310/766-1812
*WESTWOOD
all amenities, 24hr. valet.
3,260 SQ.FT.
Well established, great
*CENTURY CITY
$850,000
BEAUTIFUL
125
location and parking.
MEDICAL SUITE Diana 310/486-5033
BEL AIR CREST
INVESTEMENT
Owner Retiring.
Will teach new
buyer oprations.
—————
Please call Daniel
at 310/246-1270
90
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
PART-TIME
SECRETARY
••••••
Need Part-Time
Experienced
Secretary to Work
in Home Office.
Hours are flexible.
Prefer Mon. & Thurs.
10am to 2pm,
Or... ?
Must know Mac,
Quickbooks and
live on the Westside.
Write checks, travel
arrangements,
follow up.
Need person
who THINKS.
Best would be
person with grown
family that wants
part-time work.
OPPORTUNITY
ENTERTAINMENT CO.
WITH TREMENDOUS
TALENT & HUGE
UPSIDE POTENTIAL
secfornow@
yahoo.com
Please call:
Stephanie
310/276-2119
—————
865 COMSTOCK AVE.
3 BD. + 3 BA. CONDO
Completely Remodeled
New kitchen, new baths,
WILSHIRE BLVD Hardwood floors throughIs SEEKING
Investor(s)
RETAIL FRONTAGE out, washer/dryer in unit
For Marketing & & SMALL OFFICE
Full Service Building.
Promotional $$.
—————
from $5,800,000.
THE REMINGTON
from $1,199,000
THE CENTURY
from $2,750,000
CENTURY TOWERS
from $1,250,000
PARK PLACE
from $719,000
*** SUITES ***
$869,000
NO NNN
310/494-6094
Call 310/435-3558
BILLY@REV-ENT.COm All Utilities Included.
Must Lease Now!
CENTURY WOODS
Call 310/237-2977
or 713/266-1444
CENTURY PARK EAST
Call Billy Star:
—————
240
OFFICES
FOR LEASE
—————
EXECUTIVE & VIRTUAL OFFICES IN BEVERLY HILLS 90210
Come to the heart of the golden
triangle starting at $500 a month.
FREE wireless internet. Phone
reception and forwarding, mail
service, conference rooms.
This is a
permanent
position.
PLEASE EMAIL
RESUME TO:
AVAILABLE
“MUST SEE”
468 North Camden Drive
888-909-0210
For more info call:
Virtual Offices
Starting At $95/Month
www.gbcone.com
SOLD OUT!
LE PARC
from $1,499,000
2 Bed/2 Bath
$663,000
Ocean & City Views
Totally Renovated. Wood
Floors. Updated Kitchen
2 Large Balconies
Walk-in Closet
Some Complexes include
Heated Pools, Sundeck,
Tennis, Doorman,
Houseman, Staff
Engineers, Switchboard,
Security Staff,
Switchboard, Saunas,
Business Center, Pet
PlayLand, Restaurant,
Acres of Flower Gardens
and Grassy Lawns.
For Lease
See our Ad Sec. 440
CLASSIFIED
Page 26 | February 21, 2014
R E N TA L S
BEVERLY HILLS
300
425
440
440
440
440
HOUSE
FOR SALE
HOUSES
FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED
APT’S/CONDO’S
UNFURNISHED
APT’S/CONDO’S
UNFURNISHED
APT’S/CONDO’S
UNFURNISHED
APT’S/CONDO’S
BRENTWOOD
1343 Carmelina Ave.
11938 GOSHEN AVE.
• Bright Unit •
On-site laundry,
on-site parking.
Close to
transportation.
B.H.P.O.
Benedict Canyon
GREAT FAMILY HOME
ON LARGE CORENER LOT
4 Bdrm. + 3 Bath
Open kitch., lrg family
rm. w/ fireplace, French
doors, pool/spa.
CALL WAYNE PRIDGEN
Agt: 310/301-6523
Cell: 310/310-5422
—————––––
One of The Best
Streets in Beverly Hills
FANTASTIC 3 +2 H OME
+ 2-S TORY G UESTHOUSE
Re-built 1992. Spacious
updated kitchen+baths.
Lrg. rms., hrwd flrs.,
central air, 2-fireplaces.
• O PEN & B RIGHT •
Nasrin: 310/497-8997
—————––––
BEVERLYWOOD
CHARMER 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
BEVERLYWOOD
C O N T E M P O R A RY W I T H
NEW HARDWOOD FLOORS,
COUNTRY KITCHEN, LARGE
DECK FOR ENTERTAINING.
BRITE ROOMS AND HUGE
DINING ROOM FOR HOLIDAYS.
BRC00456048
$5,500/MO.
SANDRA LEWIS
AGT • 310 770-4111
BEAUTIFUL EXECUTIVE / FAMILY SPANISH
• B E V E R LY H I L L S •
3 BEDROOMS + 3 BATHS • $7,000 Month
Available Immediately
2 HOMES UNLISTED
IN BEVERLY HILLS
BEVERLY HILLS BRENTWOOD
LIKE A HOME
11640 Kiowa Ave.
SMITHWOOD DRIVE Newly Updated
3 BDRM. + 2 BA.
1 Bdrm. + 1 Bath
Upper Duplex
••••••••
Balcony, dishwasher,
Dining room, living
room with fireplace, a/c, heated pool, WiFi,
elevator controlled
breafast room, sun
access,
on-site laundry,
room, hardwod floors,
parking.
Close to
service porch, A/C,
Brentwood
Village,
2 car garage, new
&
Restaurants
.
Shops
carpet and paint.
•
310/826-4889
•
City Views. Nice yard.
Call 310/339-5714
—————––––
Huge 26,000sq+ lot.
Perfect Move-In Condition.
1 BDRM., 1 BATH
Bright unit with balcony.
Available March.
Call Mike:
** 310/801-3310 **
—————
—————––––
—————––––
Call 310.271.3435
407
435
440
GARAGE/STORAGE
GUESTHOUSE
FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED
APT’S/CONDO’S
TO RENT
SANTA MONICA
G U E S T H O U S E / A P T BRENTWOOD
427 Montana Ave.
Storage
Space
Av a i l a b l e
for Rent.
Close to Beach .
310/394-7132
407
GARAGE/STORAGE
TO RENT
Completely
Furnished Turnkey,
A Home Away
From Home,
Unique Property
With Privacy
1 BedroomDesigner Done
~ Lower ~
Benedict Canyon
11938 GOSHEN AVE.
1 BDRM., 1 BATH
Bright unit with balcony.
Available March.
Owner • Realtor
GUESTHOUSE
WANTED TO RENT
—————
Professional
Single Male
Private Guestwing:
Architectural Bdrm
+Bath +Own Study.
• BEL AIR •
HONEST, RELIABLE,
Hi-ceilings, French
PRIVATE, RESPECTFUL. windows,
views, deck.
Non-Smoker.
No pets, no smoking.
Travels a lot.
References needed.
E ASY A CCESS TO
Great References!
UCLA
& S TUDIOS !
CALL JEREMY:
lauriewynngolden@
310/683-9868
aol.com
WESTWOOD
10905 Ohio Ave.
Granite counters, dishpool, elevator,
washer,
balcony, stove,
• Free WiFi Access •
laundry
facility, prkg.
~ 310/476-3824 ~ intercom-entry, on-site Close To U.C.L.A.
laundry, parking.
entry, on-site
laundry, parking.
P LEASE C ALL :
310/435-3693
BRENTWOOD & U.C.L.A. CLOSE
310/207-1869
310/477-6856
—————–––– —————–––– —————–––– —————––––
BEVERLY HILLS
• • • • • • •
• 2 Bd. + 2 Ba.
• GORGEOUS UNITS
•
•
•
Central air, large
balcony, pool, elevator,
Call Mike:
on-site laundry,
** 310/801-3310 **
intercom entry.
320 N. La Peer Dr.
Patio in woodsy setting.
Hardwood flrs., built-ins, L O W M O V E - I N !
2 tv’s, cable, DSL, spa L.A.’S FINEST, MOST
LUXURIOUS APT. RENTAL
tub, washer/dryer.
* * * * * *
$2,600 • Short-Term Avail.
Single Occupant
Call: 310/271-5971
Rooftop pool,
deck, central air,
Balcony, dishwasher, elevator, intercom
entry, on-sight laundry,
elevator, intercom
gym, parking.
BEVERLY HILLS
LIVING.
—————––––
•
•
• 1 Bd.+1 Ba. •
••
••
• • Bachelor • •
∞ ∞ ∞ ∞ ∞ ∞ ∞ • • •2 Bd.+2 Ba.• • •
1 Bdrm. + 1 Bath
•
•
Wifi, Bright, controlled
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
access, balcony,
—————––––
310/441-1811
310/766-1812
WEST L.A.
1628 Westgate Ave.
—————––––
Brentwood Village
Gated Courtyard and Grassy Backyard; BHUSD.
Close to Restuarants & Rodeo Drive.
• 424/744-6342 •
—————––––
~ 1 Bd.+1 Ba. ~
• • 2 Bd. + 2 Ba. • • • • • • • • NEWLY REMODELED
B.H. Flats North
Gourmet Chef's Kitchen, Granite Counters, Stainless
• •
•
• Jr. Executive
of Santa Monica Appliances, Custom Cabinets, Step Down living Rm.,
•
• •
• •
1 Bdrm.+1 Bath •
6 Bd+5 Ba+Maids Rm Dining Rm, Plantation Shutters, Wood Floors, Master
• • • • • • • WEST L.A.
Approx. 15,000sf. lot. with Large Walk-In Closet; A/C, Security System, B R I G H T & S P A C I O U S
12333 TeXaS Ave.
ANNETTE WOLF • AGT.
- 1 Bdrm.+1 Bath
Bright & Airy.
Dishwasher,
• BRENTWOOD •
Intercom entry, on-sight
125 N. Barrington Av. BRENTWOOD
parking, on-sight
BEVERLY HILLS • 2 Bdrm.
The Carlton
laundry facility.
218 S. Tower Dr.
11666 Goshen Ave.
+ 2 Bath •
Close
to transportation.
•
••
1 Bd.+1 Ba. ••
Upscale, Bright, ( • ) ( • ) ( • ) ( • ) ( )
310/820-1810
•
•
• Gorgeous & Spacious. Single+Loft+1 Ba.
Old World Charm !
Single
~ WEST ~
• • • • •
Bright, intercom entry, With Pool, balcony,
L
O
S ANGELES
( • ) ( • ) ( • ) ( • ) ( • ) 2 Bdrm. + 1 Bath
fridge, stove, laundry fac. central air, fireplace,
CLOSE TO RESTAURANTS stove, elevator, inter- WiFi, central air/heat,
Balcony, stove,
fireplace, patio,
com entry, prkg. gym.
& SHOPPING .
controlled access,
• 310/476-2181 • controlled access, on-site laundry, prkg.
310/531-3992
Close to shopping. pool, elevator, parking, 1307 Barry Ave.
laundry facility.
310/473-1509
BEVERLY HILLS
310/312-9871
S
MALL QUIET BLDG.
443 S. Oakhurst Dr. B R E N T W O O D
Shopping
&
Dining
in
•1 Bd. + Den + 1 Ba.• 11730 SUNSET BLVD.
—————
North of Sunset
Gated 7 Bd+8 Ba
WEST L.A.
“The Mission ”
• Westwood •
• 310/246-0290 •
CLOSE TO
SHOPS & DINING
—————
SANTA MONICA
808 4th St.
**
**
• 2 Bd.+2 Ba.
*
• 1 Bd.+1 Ba.
1 Bd.+Den+1 Ba. *
*
*
• • • • •
*
*
6-Month Lease Avail.
*
*
* * * * * *
Large, Unique &
Every Extra Luxury:
custom cabinets, granite
countertops, stone entry,
pool, health club, spa.
• Free WiFi Access •
• Close to UCLA •
1350 S. MIDVALE AVE.
L.A., 90024
Contact Mgr.:
• 310/864-0319 •
MAKE YOURSELF AT HOME.
Condo Style Living In Beverly Hills
LUXURY 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS
L UXURY 2 B EDROOM
$3150
fromA PARTMENTS
$3150 to FROM
$3995
$3350
Gorgeous. Fireplace,
balcony, dishwasher,
intercom entry,
elevator, prkg., pool.
Gourmet Granite Kitchens & Baths, Pool, Gym, In Home Laundry Rooms
• Close to Beach •
310/394-7132
www.almonttowers.com • 310.888.8875
TO
133 North Almont Towers
BEVERLY HILLS
A PA RT M E N T / C O N D O R E N TA L S
WESTWOOD HOLLYWOOD
1409 Midvale Ave.
858 BEDFORD ST.
• • • • • • • • • • • • Single
•
•
•• S i n g l e •• • Bachelor
Controlled access,
• •
•
laundry facility.
• • •
SOPHISTICATED
PENTHOUSE
1769-1775 Sycamore Av.
WiFi, a/c, intercom
entry, laundry facility,
elevator, parking, pool.
Utilities Included.
323/851-3790
Close to Everything.
—————––––
CLOSE TO U.C.L.A.,
SHOPPING & 1 BLK. L O S A N G E L E S
TO WESTWOOD PARK. 4 0 1 S . H O O V E R S t .
• • • • • • • •
310/478-8616
—————–––– •• 21
Bd.+1 Ba.
B
d.+2 Ba.
• WESTWOOD •
550 Veteran Ave. • • • • • • • •
Control access, pool,
•••••
dishwasher, elevator,
• 2 Bd.+2 Ba.
on-site laundry
= = = = = = =
and parking.
= = = = = = = =
213/385-4751
Very spacious,
granite counters,
microwave, intercom
KELEMEN
entry, on-sight laundry, parking & WiFi.
REAL ESTATE
Very close to UCLA
(310) 966-0900
& Westwood Village.
License 00957281
310/208-5166
all listings are on
• WESTWOOD • CenturyCityLiving.com
323/937-6468 x201
3 BDRM, 3.5 BATH
$5,500/MO.
2,253 sq. ft. All Stainless
Steel Appliances, W/D in
Unit, Multiple Balconies
+ Deck, Fireplace and
Large Living Room.
—————
10933 Rochester Ave.
Jr . Executive
2 Bd.+2 Ba.
Spacious a/c, fireplace,
pool, controlled access,
laundry fac., prkg.
• Free WiFi Access •
310/473-5061
Close To U.C.L.A.
—————––––
WILSHIRE
CORRIDOR
10530-10540
Wilshire Bl.
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
• 1 Bd.+1 Ba. •
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
Luxury Living
NOW AVAILABLE
GATED 5 STAR
LUXURY PROPERTIES
F URNISHED & U NFURNISHED
*BEL AIR
*WESTWOOD
*CENTURY CITY
CENTURY PARK EAST
2 BED/DEN/2 BATHS
FULLY FURNISHED
$5,450/MONTH
High Floor Corner. Over 1,400 sq.
ft. of Luxury. 2 Jumbo Balconies
State of the Art Renovation
Marble Floors. Granite Counters
Custom Cabinets. Spa Tub
Load of Closets
Fantastic City/Ocean Views
with valet,
lush garden
surrounding pool,
gym, elevator, etc.
Dishwasher,
central air, balcony.
Call: 310/470-4474
Totally New Renovation.
Quartz Counters. Real Hardwood
Floors. Walk-In Closet
No Common Walls
Separate Tub & Stall Shower
**CENTURY CITY**
1 BED/1 BATH
$2,900/MONTH
—————––––
2220 S. Beverly Glen
• 1 Bd.+Den+1 Ba. •
••
••
•
L
o
t
s
o
f
•
•
•
Character & Charm !
Alcove fireplace, fridge,
laundry facility, gated
parking, intercom
entry, WiFi and more.
• 310/552-8064 •
Rooftop jacuzzi
with panoramic
city views.
—————––––
CULVER CITY
3830 Vinton Ave.
•
•
• Single •
• •
•
• • ••
Pool, sauna,
intercom entry,
elevator, on-site
laundry, parking.
All Utilities Paid.
310/841-2367
1 BED/1 BATH
HIGH FLOOR
$3,250/MONTH
High Floor
Under Renovation
Partial City/Ocean Views
Available January, 2014
CENTURY TOWER
3 BED/ 2 BATH
$5,950/MONTH
Refurbished high floor
Full 3 Bedrooms
Hardwood & New Carpets
Unobstructed Views
of Century City
2 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH
Dining Room, Den, Large
Kitchen, Wood Floors
Cenral Air/Heat, Private
Patio, Covered Garage.
***
$5,000/MO.
Call 310/770-9637
For Sale
See our Ad Sec. 270
—————
—————––––
BEVERLY HILLS
LOWER DUPLEX
2 BD. + DEN + 3.5 BA
Exclusive private
access to backyard.
Feels Like A Home
His/Hers bath in master.
Washer and dryer in unit.
Hardwood floors and
central air. $4,800/MO.
Call 310/651-1732
—————
B E V E R LY HILLS
MIRACLE MILE
• Cozy Bachelor •
$795 Inclds. Utilities
New carpet, mini-blinds
& paint. Microwave,
refrigerator, shower.
No kitchen or stove.
Close to LACMA/
transport./restaurants
323/954-1318
NEAR WILSHIRE/FAIRFAX
—————
Exceptional Condition!
BEVERLY HILLS
323/937-3737
GARAGE APARTMENT
Adjacent to
ANNENBERG CENTER
1 BDRM., 2 BATHS
Includes 1 garage,
laundry, private entry.
Close to shops and
restaurants. Canon Dr.
$2,500/MO.
Call 310/275-8738
218 S. Tower Dr.
————— ••• 1 Bd.+1 Ba.
BEVERLY HILLS ADJ. •
$1,800/MO.
Spacious 2 BD + 2BA
Newly decorated unit,
air condition, hardwood
floors, stove, fridge,
laundry, storage, carport.
• BEVERLY HILLS • Call 818/701-6600
or 818/640-8082
• 2 B d . + 1 1/ 2 Ba.•
Must see! X-L ARGE
*** DELUXE ***
E LEGANT A PT.
BEVERLY HILLS
DESIGNER APT.
Newly Remodeled • Newly Updated •
BEVERLY
HILLS
3 Bd.+2 Ba. • $3,100 New Carpet, drapes,
—————
—————
————— —————––––
w/d hook-ups, hi-ceilings, LARGE 1BD + 1BA
$1,800/MO.
Open Space Floor Plan. mirrored closets. Shared
Hardwood flrs., central
Separate kitchen, laundry
backyard. No pets.
air, fireplace, laundry
on the premises, Crown
$2,490/Month
facility, prkg. 4-unit bldg.
moulding, wood floors,
310/271-6811
2 BLKS. TO LA CIENEGA PARK
new fixtures, A/C and
Cell: 310/994-4122
310/985-8787
private security garage.
439 S. Rexford Dr.
Near Century City and
BEVERLY HILLS /
CENTURY CITY BEVERLY HILLS ADJ Roxbury Park in small
quiet building. No Pets
1 Bedroom Penthouse 9583 ALCOTT ST.
Call 310/713-1664
B RIGHT & S UNNY
—————––––
20th Floor
—————––––
* SPACIOUS *
UPPER SPANISH DUPLEX
3 BDRMS + 2 BATHS
$4,775/MO.
EXCELLENT VIEW
2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
Include Pool, Gym,
Upper, new carpet, bar,
Sauna and Tennis Court. balcony, stove, dish$2,900/MO.
washer, laundry on each
Bright, spacious living Call 310/872-6405
floor, subterranean
room w/stained glass
parking. No pets.
window, marble fireplace, BEVERLY HILLS
$2,400/MO
wood floors, lrg. formal 232 S. Rexford Dr. Call 310/437-1826
—————
dining, breakfast nook, Luxurious & Spacious
all new stainless steel
2 Bdrm, 2 Baths
appliances, washer & Hardwood floors, new
dryer in unit, central A/C kitchen cabinet with
a n d 2 car garage. granite counters, all
Call 310/717-2755 appliances, washer
and dryer in the unit.
$2,800/MO.
Cell 310/926-6088
PANORAMIC VIEW or 213/622-1428
—————––––
BEVERLY HILLS
201 N. LA PEER DR.
2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
$2,395/MO.
New hardwood & carpet
flooring, upgraded kitchen,
balcony, central air, pool,
elevator, secured parking.
—————––––
••
••
Old World Charm !
Bright, intercom entry,
fridge, stove, laundry fac.
CLOSE TO RESTAURANTS
& SHOPPING .
310/531-3992
—————
BEVERLY HILLS
443 S. Oakhurst Dr.
•1 Bd. + Den + 1 Ba.•
• • 2 Bd. + 2 Ba. • •
• •
•
•
• •
• •
BRIGHT & S PACIOUS
BEVERLY HILLS
LIVING.
Balcony, dishwasher,
elevator, intercom
entry, on-site
laundry, parking.
P LEASE C ALL :
310/435-3693
464
PLOTS
FOR SALE
WESTWOOD
MEMORIAL PARK
320 S. CLARK DR.
Double Plot
Robertson/Burton Way
For Sale
IMMACULATE
ONE BEDROOM
$1,595/MO.
New stove, microwave,
vinyl and new carpets.
Balcony, ceiling fan, tub +
stall shower, ELEVATOR,
A/C, gated garage, controlled access in quiet
building. No pets.
Non-smoking facility.
in Sold Out
Exclusive Area
Opposite Chapel.
Please Call For
More Information:
310/273-6060
Owner Leaving Area,
REDUCED 40%.
Call 323/252-5600
or 424/249-3012
We File &
————— Publish
N. of Sunset/W. of Doheny —————
Call 310/821-4903 B E V E R L Y H I L L S
L
&U
P R I M E L O C A T I O N —————–––– TOTALLY REMODELED
2 Bd. DEN 2 / Ba. S A N T A M O N I C A
BEVERLY HILLS ADJ
GUESTHOUSE
DBA’s
• Penthouse •
North of Wilshire Bedford/Olympic
O
D .
—————––––
UXURIOUS
Some Complexes include
Heated Pools, Sundeck,
Tennis, Doorman,
Houseman, Staff
Engineers, Switchboard,
Security Staff,
Switchboard, Saunas,
Business Center, Pet
PlayLand, Restaurant,
Acres of Flower Gardens
and Grassy Lawns.
BEVERLY HILLS
UNIQUE &
1017 S. SHERBOURNE
•
Spacious
•
SPACIOUS
Very Private & Spacious
2 BDRM. + 1.5 BATH 2 Bdrm.+2 New Baths C O R N E R U N I T !
upper unit with breakfast Quiet building. New
Pico/Robertson
large granite kitchen, 2 Bd.+2 Ba. $1,975
and formal dining room.
• L IGHT & A IRY •
Yard, laundry & parking. microwave, dishwasher,
$3,500/MO.
hardwood floors, large 1 Newly Remodeled Bath
Call 213/804-3761 closets, a/c balcony. New custom built-ins in
kitchen, dry bar, balcony,
• Pet Friendly •
patio, huge closets, a/c,
$2,500/Month
central heat, 2-car prkg.,
Call: 310/556-1284 laundry facility. Cat OK.
PET FRIENDLY
CALL TODAY
TOWNHOUSE
————— DELUXE
IN BEVERLY HILLS
—————––––
BEVERLY HILLS ADJ.
February 21, 2014 | Page 27
+
NIQUE
+
1
2
Like A House • 3,000+sf.
Newly remodeled. High
ceilings, lrg. sunroom &
patio, formal dining rm.,
3-fireplaces, lrg. closets,
wet bar, new appl.+w/d,
alarm. • $4,250/Mo.
310/717-9029
2 Bdrm. + 2 Bath
AKHURST
R
2 BD, 2 BA CONDO Furnished/Unfurnished
$2,150/MO.
Carpet, a/c+heat, fully
L ARGE & B EAUTIFUL
Upper front unit. HardApprox. 1400 Sq. ft. tiled bathroom, fridge,
wood floors, appliances,
Lower
unit with fridge, good closet space,
patio, front+back yard.
washer/dryer in unit
cable, parking.
7-Blocks to Beach
and
2
car
parking.
$1,200 • Utlities Incld.
$2,595/Month
310/666-8360
Call 310/880-7281
310/854-9500
For More
Information
Please Call:
310.278.1322
Page 28 | February 21, 2014
S E RV I C E
472
508
BAGS
WANTED
BUY & SELL ESTATE
PAWN SHOP
WANTED
ALLIGATOR,
CROCODILE,
EXOTIC SKINS;
CHANEL, GUCCI
HERMES,
AND DESIGNER
HANDBAGS
TOP DOLLAR PAID
Call 310/289-9561
475
GARAGE/
ESTATE SALE
BEVERLY
GARAGE
HILLS
SALE
Sat. & Sun.
10am-4pm
433 N. Palm Dr. #205
Leather couches,
Italian dining set (8),
Samsung
4-door fridge,
quilts & much more.
EVERYTHING
MUST GO!
We Buy Estates
• Watches • Platinum • Silver • Diamonds
• Coins • Signed pieces • Gold
25 years of experience.
We Specialize in watches, estate and
signed jewelry.
We also do repairs on high end watches
AUTOS
WANTED
$$ CASH $$
FOR CARS
We Will Buy Your Car,
Running or Not.
* * * * * *
• Top money paid.
• At home private consultation available.
Dov Markovich
17326 Ventura Blvd
(at the CVS shopping center)
Encino, Ca. 91316
All Types.
Will appraise your
car for free.
818-788-7117 • 954-675-4546
CALL TERRY:
323/868-4119
JEWELRY
I BUY
.
USED CARS
CALL ED
310/413-1138
ANTIQUES
BUY & SELL
ANTIQUES / JEWELRY
HIGHEST CASH
LUXURY JEWELS
BUY & SELL
PRICES
PAID
••••••••••
VINTAGE & NEW
BEVERLY HILLS
D I R E C T O RY
Antiques - Old Coins Tiffany Items
Paintings - Objets d’Art Estate Jewelry:
Gold - DiamondsVintage Watches
Lalique - Art Glass Fine Porcelains:
Meissen - Sevres Marble Statues
Bronze Sculptures Clocks - Silver
Furniture: French English - American
One Item or Entire Estates Purchased
For Cash. Prompt &
Considerate Response
to All Inquiries.
House Calls O.K.
••••••••••
MICHAEL NEWMAN
310/276-0188
818/888-9200
OF
BEVERLY HILLS
Bring us your watches, diamonds,
estate jewelry, gold/silver, coins,
art, & antiques. We have over 100
combined years of expertise in
buying, selling, and appraisals.
WE PAY PREMIUM PRICES!
*WE BEAT MOST AUCTION HOUSE PRICES*
BUY•SELL•LOA N•T R A DE •CONSIGN
203 S. Beverly Dr, Beverly Hills 90212
310.205.0093 • info @ ljobh.com
license# 19100971
we buy antiques!
Highest prices paid, satisfaction Guaranteed!
Paintings
Art Deco
Art Nouveau
Marble Statues
Russian Items
Chinese Art
Clocks
Chandeliers
Porcelain
Dresden
Sculpture
Jade
Tifanny
Lalique
Galle
Daum
TRADES & CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED TOO!
WE
CAN BUY ONE ITEM OR YOUR ENTIRE HEIRLOOM!
Arté Antiques
Visit my website at
beverlyhil santiques.com
Tel:
310.858.7666
artela@aol.com
www.ArteAntiques.com
588
JEWELRY /
WATCHES WANTED
We Buy and Sell Watches
MAKE THE MOST MONEY,
"CONSIGN" YOUR FINE
JEWELRY & WATCHES
A l t i e r i F i n e Wa t c h e s & J ewe l r y
Off Rodeo Dr. Over 40 years
experience. *Fully Insured*
“We sold Million Dollar Estates”
• Rolex
• Panerai
• Cartier
• Audemar Piguet
• Patek Phillipe
• Chanel
All other high-end watches
RODEO FINE JEWELRY
We Buy Any Gold Jewelry
340 N. CAMDEN DR.
UNIT 200-A
BEVERLY HILLS, 90210
238 1/2 S. Beverly Dr.
Call Martin or Batia
310/275- 8072
LIC.# 1910-1088
Meissen
KPM
Royal Vienna
Islamic Art
Bronze
Beverly Hills, CA
310.385.2200
license
1910-0967
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Call us 310-278-1322
w w w. a l t i e r i b h i l l s . c o m
S E R V I C E
BEVERLY HILLS
CONTRACTOR
ELECTRICIAN
G.C. CONSTRUCTION
PEOPLE
PEOPLE
FREE ESTIMATES
35 Years Experience
HOME REPAIR
& REMODELING
• WHITNEY'S •
ELECTRICAL AND
HANDYMAN SERVICE
30 years of Quality service.
Big and small jobs.
Immediate Response
Excellent reference.
Kitchen/Bathroom &
Additions • Electrical
Call Robert at
Plumbing • Painting
Int./Ext. • Concrete
805-252-2122
Drywall • Carpentry
Welding • Roofing
W e Can Help with • H A N D Y M A N •
All Your Home Needs.
Needs. • Home Repairs
• Remodeling • Carpentry
CALL DAN @
3 2 3 / 8 5 5 - 8 4 0 0 • Ceramic Tile • Plumbing
—————––––
Lic. #841143
MASTERLY INC.
• Water Damage
• Kitchen/Bath
Remodeling
• Room Additions
• Electrical
• Int./Ext. Painting
HANDY
State Lic. #914589
Competitive Prices
Call 310/562-3698
SETTING THE STAGE
F OR A L IFE T IME
Residential/Commerical
New Construction
HANDY
LICENSED
HANDYMAN
• Any Concrete Flatwork
• Concrete Walls
• Resurfacing of Old
Concrete
• Natural Stone Specialist
D I R E C T O R Y
HANDY
PEOPLE
QUALITY, HONESTY &
INTEGRITY GUARANTEED.
—————––––
Honest Handyman
Does It All!
• Drywall • Painting
• Plaster • Wallpaper
• Call Dave •
Cell: 213/300-0223
323/651-1832
Room Additions
Remodeling, Kitchens/ No Job Too BIG
or Too small!
Baths, Roofing, Tile/
Flooring, A/C-Plumbing,
Painting, Carpentry, Decks,
Lighting/Electrical,
Concrete/Brick,
Landscaping, Drywall.
HONEST and
Reliable, No Short Cuts.
RELIABLE
Manny: 310/729-9612
Serving B.H. for 32 Yrs. No job too Big
HANDYMAN
SERVICES
L ICENSED • B ONDED
PAINTING & DECKS
LANDSCAPING
===
VA L D E Z ===
TREE TRIMMING
“Lowest Rates”
• GARDENING
• HAULING
• CLEAN-UPS
• SPRINKLERS
• NEW LAWNS
•• 323/528-2448 ••
•• 323/755-8603 ••
CALIFORNIA
BEST PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
Residential/Commercial
High-Rise Buildings
Plaster, Drywall, Repair
Deck Repair/Resurface/Reseal
Waterproofing & Magnesite
• FREE Estimates •
800-830-3999• 213-255-6121
Bonded • Insured • Lic. #854322
MOVING
SERVICES
RELIABLE
MOVERS
Moving your future ahead.
Dependable
Fast Services
FREE ESTIMATES
CREDIT CARD ACCEPTED
February 21, 2014 | Page 29
ROOFING
• ROOFING
•
•
•
SERVICE •
N E W R O O F S / R E PA I R S
R AINGUTTER & S KYLIGHT S ER VICE
G ARAGE /O FFICE C ONVERSION ’ S
Written roof inspections
for real estate agents.
30 Years in Business • 3rdrd Generation Roofer
• Orsinis Roofing •
Call Steve 24-hrs.:
• 800-213-6806 •
EXCELLENT LOCAL REFERENCES
Insured • Bonded
CALL FRANK
323/470-1077
Mobile Credit Card Payment
And Payment Plans Available.
but not too Small
• Senior Discounts •
323/304-0380
PAINTING
WATER DAMAGE SPEICALIST
LICENSED
HANDYMAN
HAULING
DEBRIS
RAFAEL
WATER DAMAGE P R O S
310/888-0125
WWW.MASTERLYINC.COM
Lic. # B650400
CONTRACTOR
N o j o b t o o S M A L L or BIG .
BLUEPRINTS!
Electrical • Plumbing
• Painting Int./Ext. •
Framing • Tile • Concrete
Drywall • Glasswork
Carpentry • Welding
Additions • Remodeling
Commercial / Residential
• Architectural Design
• Mechanical Design
• Structural Calculation
FREE ESTIMATE • BEST RATES IN TOWN !
For More Information
Call Adam: 818-730-6095
CONTRACTOR
• AC •
CONSTRUCTION
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL
CONSTRUCTION
REMODELING & NEW ADDITIONS
FREE Estimates
310.278.5380
L I C : # 8 0 1 8 8 4 • F U L L Y INSURED
From A to Z.
PAINTING
GOT TRASH?
Commercial/Residential
Debris Hauling • Demolition
• Deconstruction •
• Tree & Yard Debris •
• Large Appliances •
We Recycle The Debris.
20+ Years Experience
INTERIOR/EXTERIOR
Residential/Commercial
Quality Custom Painting • Water Damage Clean Up •
References Available. • Commercial Flood Damage •
+ F ULL S ERVICE
BUILDING MAINTENANCE of Friendly Service.
NO JOB TOO SMALL.
LIC. # 641602
FREE Estimates. Reasonable Prices.
Call Rony:
BONDED + INSURED
• 310/245-1717 • Handyman Services Too 20 Years Experience
818/605-1480
Bonded & Insured
• Senior Discount •
MARBLE
RESTORATION
GOLD COAST
~ MARBLE ~
• Marble Polishing
• Sealing
• Floor Restoration
• Grout Cleaning
Call For Free Estimate:
818/348-3266 • 818/801-9503
• Cell: 818/422-9493 •
• Member of BBB •
REAL ESTATE AGENTS/SELLERS,
PREP YOUR PROPERTY.
323/658-7847
323/864-2490
• Apt. Building Flood Restoration •
• Hardwood Floor Water Damage
• Sewage Damage Emergency Clean Up •
24/7 Emergency Service • 30 Minute Response
• 877/687-0125 •
Licensed * Bonded * Insured
FREE ESTIMATE
WILSHIRE
PAINT & REPAIRS
Residential & Commercial
Licensed & Insured
• Low Rates
• 25 Years Experience
• Interior/Exterior Painting
• Drywall and Texture
• Dryrot Repairs
• Plumbing
• Electrical
Free Estimates
310/462-6910
BEVERLY HILLS COURIER
CLASSIFIED SECTION
INVEST YOUR SMART MONEY
IN COURIER CLASSIFIEDS!
(310) 278-1322
www.bhcourier.com
BEVERLY HILLS
Page 30| February 21, 2014
.
Publisher Clifton S. Smith,
Jr
*******
Associate Publisher Marcia W . Hobbs
Senior Editor John L. Seitz
Special Sections Editor Steve Simmons
******
Founding Publisher March Schwartz (Publisher 1965-2004)
Rabbi Jacob Pressman
ON THE GOOD SHIP LOLLIPOP
Shirley Temple has died and with her a bit of my youth. She was born
when I was 9, which makes me old enough to remember when she was
a child star. Among my memories of her is this tot dancing with Bill
“Bojangles” Robinson, an African-American dancer of note.
The Courier is proud to be a
Education Partner
Unlike child stars who quickly fade after the earliest years, she went
on to become a mature adult, who performed diplomatic chores for our
country. She succeeded in making a smooth transition from wildly
adored child star to adult diplomat, representing our country in many
ways around the world.
Hers is the rare story of a universally famous child star becoming a
universally respected diplomat. In a subtle way, she paved the way for
other major actors to make their contribution on the broader canvas of
diplomacy. She comported herself always with dignity and reflected
credit upon our nation in each of her functions.
For me as perhaps for many others, a major image of her that stays
with me is of this precocious child who grew up to be one of our most
distinguished public servants. No matter how I try, all of her senior activities are somehow less memorable to me than the super cute tot singing
When the Beverly Hills City Council rejected the applications of the Metropolitan Transit On The Good Ship Lollipop.
From the Publisher
CLIF SMITH
METRO SESSIONS–
TALK, AND ZERO ANSWERS
Authority for permits to dig up Beverly Hills and block Wilshire Boulevard, the council–led by Vice
Mayor Lili Bosse with strong questioning by Mayor John Mirisch and Councilmember Nancy
Krasne–asked some pretty straight-forward questions. All the questions can be summarized as
“What’s going to happen to our people, their homes, their businesses and our streets?”
Neither Metro’s representatives nor the City staff could or did answer any of them. In the face
of no answers, the council properly rejected the permits.
To keep matters moving, the council asked Metro and the City staff to hold public sessions for
residents and affected businesses to learn their concerns and give answers. Some of the specific
questions asked by the council, and which Metro and City staff were supposed to answer, are set
forth below. Also below are the “answers” Metro and City staff gave at the public sessions last
week.
Metro and the City staff held the meetings. The people came and asked. These are the
“answers” they heard:
•Electricity: If you lose electricity, call Southern California Edison. This is not our problem.
•Natural Gas: If you lose your natural gas, call the Gas Company. This is not our problem.
•Telephone and Internet: If you lose your telephone and Internet, call the phone company.
This is not our problem.
•Water: If you lose your water, call the water department. This is not our problem.
•Parking: Not our problem. You’re on your own.
•Who Will Do This Work: We don’t know; hasn’t been decided yet.
•What Happens if the Contractors Mess Up: Don’t call us, call them. Won’t be our fault –
it will be their fault if there is a fault.
•Whom Do We Call: Don’t know.
•Traffic Disruption and Congestion: It will happen. Tough.
•Police, Fire, Paramedic Access: No answer.
•How Long Will This Last: Up to eight years or more.
•How Do We Know What Will Happen: Read your notices from Metro. You’ll get them 3
days ahead of time (maybe).
When the City staff was asked about these non-answers, our vaunted City of Beverly Hills staff
simply responded, “You’ll be better off with the subway.”
So, what answers will the council have when the Metro permits come before them again?
Same as they had before – none.
The notion that Beverly Hills would allow anyone to tear up our streets, cut off utilities, block
traffic and obstruct access for police, fire and paramedics is ludicrous, not to mention dangerous.
The fact that Metro proposes to do all of this with no answers or plans for our people is unreasonable. So far, there is no reason for our council to grant Metro any permits, even if our City staff
wants to roll over. We hope the council continues to demand real answers before granting any permits.
The Courier
welcomes
and appreciates
“Letters to the Editor”
Please remember the following guidelines:
(1) The shorter the better;
(2) Refrain from personal
attacks or insults;
(3) Keep to one topic;
(4) Do not send letters appearing elsewhere.
Email:
myopinion@bhcourier.com;
Fax to:
310-271-5118;
Mail to:
The Beverly Hills Courier
9100 Wilshire Blvd. (#360E),
Beverly Hills CA 90212
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
This topic has been addressed by The Courier and myself ad nauseum. I have also been at the council chambers to expose the problems and the City remains in oblivion.
Is concern of liabilities heating up? Is that why Mayor John Mirisch,
Mr. Aluzri and Mr. May are showing concern because a B.H. resident
was recently bitten by a dog without a leash, a small dog was killed
and a second badly injured. These cases were brought to the attention of the City by a councilmember and me, it was not a city finding.
Our city manager and sub- manager have not shown up to the
plate yet and, of course, the city attorney who should have been
advised by the city clerk or the council secretary is also failing to
appear. Now that we perhaps have their attention, they are going the
roundabout way. For example, they don’t want to hear that the L.A.
Animal Control does not come to B.H. as, perhaps, they see us as a
lost cause.
The other silly idea is that they are going to study the subject, even
if they change the municipal code. I have news for these City
mavens–the laws in the City and the state are very clear. Signs are
posted in the parks including the reservoir on Sunset and Rexford. The
issue is enforcement. I have learned the police are short in personnel
and are working at hiring officers. I think officers would accept working weekends etc., if given additional compensation. Either way, as
long as the City is focused on enticing more tourists to the City with
closure of streets for marathons and other festivities, there will never
be enough policemen. In the meantime, perhaps our cycling officers
can ride by and cite the lawbreakers.
In addition to those unheeded laws are sidewalk bicycles amongst
the pedestrians, armored trucks illegally double parked creating traffic
havoc and tourist busses parking (with no driver in sight) along
“fire department only” curbs. Watch out for Segways as soon as the
City allows them to use the sidewalks.
A solution..... revamping of the City, which is bound to happen.
More important is a joint effort by us to make sure the council, city
attorney and the City will be liable along with the dog owners specially when they have been warned of existing dangerous issues?
Pablo Nankin, MD
******
According to former Mayor Stephen Webb, we have sub-committees in our committees. Now who appoints/elects them–is it a subsub committee? What we don't need is anything that perpetuates current conditions. The framers of our Constitution had it right. One term
term limit of limited duration for all elected and appointed positions
in our government. And when that term is up, the individual returns to
the community as a private citizen without any special privileges.
Robert Block
******
I disagree with the Beverly Hills City Council on the issue of regulating and treating e-cigarettes as the same as tobacco. I do not
smoke, but know that e-cigarettes have nothing to do with tobacco
and should not be treated as such.
Councilmember Julian Gold who is a doctor is way off base about
comparing e-cigarettes to smoking tobacco when he said: “I’m very
passionate about this. I really don’t believe there’s a greater public
health issue than smoking.” I have seen people using these e-cigarettes
and in no way are they harmful to others nor the environment.
Also, trying to use this regulation is a step towards making B.H.
one of the healthiest cities in the world as stated by a councilmember
is a bit of a joke. The traffic that flows through here alone will make
that effort futile. Add the fact that we are in the middle of L.A. will
only guarantee that we will remain one of the most unhealthiest cities
in the world.
If you want to concern yourself with people's health, then allow
the use of e-cigarettes because they are a positive step in lowering the
use of tobacco related cigarettes. The council needs to concentrate on
Cartoon for The Courier by Janet Salter issues that pertain to Beverly Hills and not on things they know little
or nothing about.
George Vreeland Hill
BEVERLY HILLS
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