Work on the $5.5-million restoration of Will Rogers State Historic Park, which up until recently proceeded at a snail’s pace for over a year due to changes in park management and bureaucratic delays, has finally jumped into high gear. While steady progress is being made in solving the park’s main problem’lack of proper drainage, which has plagued the 186-acre site since it was built in 1928’the real action last Thursday was taking place in the main stable. Half a dozen volunteers stripped the interiors of the 19 horse stalls, ripping off ‘anything that is not authentic, like the kick boards and plastic food bins,’ explained Randy Young, president of the Will Rogers Cooperative Association. Young’s helpers on Earth Day included three members of the Rogers family, each representing different generations: Judy, widow of Jim, the youngest of Will and Betty Rogers’s three children; Charlie, Jim’s middle child, who flew in from Arizona for the day, and Jennifer Rogers Etcheverry, one of Will Rogers six great-grandchildren. The volunteer work day was her idea. ‘After sitting through so many meetings in recent months I started thinking: ‘What could we do to speed up the renovation process?’ Well, we could certainly roll up our sleeves, which is something my great-grandfather would have done. He wasn’t afraid to get his hands dirty.’ Etcheverry, who lives with her husband and two children on an almond farm in Bakersfield, remembers coming to the ranch as a child. ‘We had family picnics on the lawn and watched the polo matches.’ Now she visits at least once a month to help out. Her job last Thursday was to remove nails from the pine boards, which will be recycled and used to build a barn dedicated to her grandfather, Jim. It will be located 100 yards from the main stable. ‘I think people need to know that the still family cares, a lot,’ said Etcheverry, 38, putting on her work gloves. ‘How are our children going to find out about Will Rogers? We have a chance to teach them right here at the ranch.’ Work on the Jim Rogers barn, a 16,000-sq.-ft. rectangular structure which will have six horse stalls, will begin in June with ‘an old-fashioned barnraising,’ Young said. ‘We want everyone in the Palisades to help by hammering in a nail so that they will feel a part of what is going on here at the ranch.’ Nearly a decade after Will Rogers died in a 1935 plane crash his wife Betty donated their ranch to the state with the proviso that should the property not be properly maintained it would revert back to the family. The dedication took place in August 1944 with Will Rogers’ favorite horse, Soapsuds, part of the ceremonies. Soapsuds is now buried on the lawn in front of the stable and all the horses are gone. Two years ago the commercial boarding operation was closed down, following allegations that it had become the private domain of a lucky few and that the runoff waste from the stable was polluting Rustic Creek below the park.
Palisades American Legion Post to Host Special WWII Event May 29
By BILL BRANCH Special to the Palisadian-Post This Memorial Day, May 29, on the Mall in Washington, D.C., dedication of the World War II Memorial will take place. The memorial will honor the 16 million American servicemen and women who served and fought and those who died in the war to secure democracy and liberate the oppressed. Knowing that not every Palisades WWII veteran could possibly go to Washington, American Legion Post 283 will host a corresponding event on that Saturday to honor Westside veterans and to observe the memorial dedication. The event on La Cruz will provide a venue for members of the WWII generation to gather together, record oral histories, share war stories, and enjoy WWII music. Prizes will be awarded to WWII veterans who wear their uniforms and are judged a ‘best fit.’ In addition, Palisades author Ken Wales will discuss his latest book ‘Sea of Glory,’ based on the true story of the four military chaplains who sacrificed their lives during the sinking of the USAT Dorchester in WWII. The festivities will begin at 11 a.m. on May 29 with a specially-produced satellite broadcast of the Washington dedication ceremony. At noon, Post 283 will host a patriotic program and luncheon, followed by the continuation of the satellite broadcast. Veterans who wish to attend or would like a Certificate of Appreciation should write to the American Legion at 15247 La Cruz Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 and provide their name, address, phone number, branch and years of service, and whether or not they can attend.
Skinner Receives ‘Citizen’ Honors Tonight
During opening ceremonies for the Palisades Pony Baseball Association’s golden anniversary season in March, Mike Skinner was presented with a crystal ball. Hand-carved on the stand was the phrase: ‘If you build it, they will play.’ That was Skinner’s motto during his five-year quest to have a state-of-the-art ‘Field of Dreams’ constructed at Palisades Recreation Center, and his untiring devotion to the renovation project, completed last November, is the reason he will be honored by the Palisadian-Post as Citizen of the Year tonight at the Riviera Country Club. ‘We gave him the job. He took it, he lived it and he made it a reality,’ 14-year PPBA Commissioner Bob Benton said of Skinner’s dedication to the project. ‘None of what we see here now would have been possible without him.’ In addition to PPBA, the facility will be used for other sports, like AYSO soccer and flag football. Long after the project has been completed, Skinner is still hard at work raising money for the facility’s ongoing maintenance fund. In all, about $1,000,000 has now been raised. ‘This has been a community-wide effort,’ Skinner said. ‘A lot of people stepped up to the plate with generous donations to make this happen.’ A longtime youth coach and former chairman of the Park Advisory Board, Skinner was responsible for getting approval first from the Palisades Community Council, then from City Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski, the Department of Recreation and Parks and finally the California Coastal Commission. Once the Community Council overwhelmingly approved the upgrade project (and a skatepark proposal) in May 2000, Skinner’s first priority was to convince residents near the Rec Center that renovating the fields would not adversely affect them. He did so by being organized, providing a scale model and computer-generated images of what the fields would look like upon completion, attending every public meeting and including in his proposal landscaping plans, sound mitigation and reduced light reflection. ‘This is a win-win situation for everybody’the kids, the parents, the park itself, the community as a whole and the neighbors,’ Skinner said to concerned homeowners at a public meeting in May 2002. ‘The fields will look great, they will be safer, the noise level will be reduced and the glare from the lights will be far less than it is right now. Also, construction will be limited to the summertime. You won’t see tractors and trucks cluttering the parking lot for six months.’ Skinner’s next hurdle was finding a suitable contractor. Again, his thoroughness payed off. He and Brian Sullivan ultimately chose Athletic Turfs, Inc.’the same firm that built a baseball diamond on the cornfield in Iowa used for the movie ‘Field of Dreams’ and worked on several sports facilities in Southern California, including Anaheim Stadium and UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium. Finally, there was the issue of fundraising. Again, Skinner never wavered in his belief in the project, its importance to the community and his faith that the $850,000 needed to complete the work could be raised. He insisted a Donor Wall be constructed to recognize individuals, families, groups or foundations who made financial contributions. In addition to the crystal ball he was given on PPBA Opening Day, Skinner also received a wood bat engraved with ‘A world of thanks.’ Tonight’s dinner is another opportunity for friends and neighbors to thank Skinner for overseeing a project that will benefit the community for generations to come.
Dodgers Tie Tigers in Nine Innings
PALISADES PONY BASEBALL ASSOCIATION
In one of the longest and most exciting games so far this season, the Dodgers and Tigers traded leads for two and a half hours before settling for an 11-11 tie Saturday in a battle between first-place teams in the Palisades Pony Baseball Association’s Mustang Division. Bob Jeffers’ National League-leading Dodgers (7-2-1) were ahead 5-3 in the top of the sixth inning when the Tigers plated three runs to even the score. The American League- leading Tigers (8-1-1), coached by Brian Sullivan, took the lead in the top of the seventh, but the Dodgers answered with a run in the bottom of the seventh. Neither team scored in the eighth inning. The Tigers again took the lead with a pair of runs in the top of the ninth inning, but the Dodgers rallied to score two of their own as the game reached its two-and-a-half hour time limit. ‘It was the best game I’ve ever seen played on these fields,’ Jeffers said. ‘Neither side gave an inch, so it was fitting that there was no losing team that day. It was magical in that you had the two league leaders going at it, and the momentum seemed to change every inning. As the home team, the pressure was on us to match whatever they did.’ Saturday’s draw was a rematch of last Wednesday’s series opener, which the Tigers won 11-10 in another seesaw duel. After two games and 15 hard fought innings, only one run separated the two teams and each remained atop its league. Stand outs in the two-game series included Michael Sullivan, Austin Kammel, and Brandon Newman for the Tigers and Charlie Jeffers, Harrison Wollman and Jeremy Cohen for the Dodgers. In other interleague games in Mustang (ages 10-11), the Red Sox and Phillies traded victories, as did the Cardinals and Indians and the Orioles and Braves. The Red Sox (5-5) won 13-10 and lost 3-0 to the Phillies (2-8), remaining three-and-a-half games behind the first-place Tigers in the American League. The Cardinals (5-5) won 4-3 and lost 8-4 to the Indians (3-7) to stay two-and-a-half games behind the Dodgers in the National League while the Braves (5-5) lost 13-1 and won 6-5 against the Orioles (4-6) to stay tied for second place with the Cardinals. Games continue Saturday at Palisades Recreation Center’s Field of Dreams complex. PINTO (ages 7-9) As in the Mustang Division, the Dodgers and Tigers remained in first place atop their respective leagues by splitting a pair of head-to-head meetings in interleague play last week at the Rec Center diamonds. The National League-leading Dodgers (7-3) edged the Tigers, 7-6, in the first game but the American League-leading Tigers (7-3) won the second game 11-7. The Cardinals (5-5) and Indians (6-4) split their two meetings to remain in second place in their divisions. The Cardinals won the first game 12-10 and the Indians rebounded 8-7 in the second. In a matchup between third-place teams, the Red Sox (5-5) swept the Phillies 15-8 and 9-5 to move two games behind the first-place Tigers in the American League. The Orioles (4-6) beat the Braves (2-8) in the first game, 14-10, while the Braves took Saturday’s game 18-5. Games continue Saturday at the Field of Dreams complex. BRONCO (ages 11-13) The Indians remained the only undefeated team in PPBA, improving to 10-0 last week with 6-4 and 1-0 interleague victories last week over the Cardinals. The Red Sox (7-2-1) remained two-and-a-half games back in the American League with 8-6 and 6-2 wins over the Phillies (1-9) and the Dodgers (7-2-1) remained atop the National League with 13-6 and 20-8 triumphs over the Tigers (3-7). In the other series, the Braves (4-5-1) stayed in third in the National League, beating the Orioles (0-9-1) by a 5-2 score in one game. The Orioles played one of their best games of the season in the other meeting, earning a 10-10 tie against their interleague opponent. Games continue this afternoon and Saturday at the Field of Dreams complex.
Lacrosse in Full Swing this Spring
By RHOS B. DYKE Special to the Palisadian-Post One of the fastest growing sports across the nation, lacrosse is becoming a popular sport among youth in Southern California. Though not yet an interscholastic sport, lacrosse has been played in the Palisades for some time by local kids attending Los Angeles-area private schools. This spring, however, the game arrived at Palisades High and could be here to stay. What began with a blank piece of paper at the end of last summer is now the Palisades Lacrosse Club of the Pacific Coast Lacrosse Association (PCLA). The league includes 13 high school varsity level teams, 15 junior varsity squads (including Palisades) and nine middle school clubs, including the Westside Warriors who play at Paul Revere. Palisades’ franchise is off to a 6-2-1 start in it’s inaugural campaign’impressive seeing as only a few of the 20 kids on the team had ever picked up a stick before the season started. Managed by Andrea Dyke and Lori Mendez-Packer and coached by Jeff Hirshberg and Scott Hylen, Palisades upset previously undefeated Malibu, 12-8, Saturday at Stadium by the Sea. The Pali JV club team is led by sophomore attacker Nick Sherman, who scored 33 goals and passed for 11 assists’a total of 44 points’in the team’s first eight games. Sherman, who lives in Mandeville Canyon, leads the league in scoring. Junior midfielder Joe Luckett had 17 goals going into the Malibu game while freshman midfielders Josh Packer and Sutherland Dyke added 15 and 12 points, respectively. Freshman goalie Nico Roe recorded 85 saves in his first six games. Rounding out the squad are midfielders Andre Harris, Colin Vining, Ramsay Potts and Nick Kappeyne; attackers Peter Foster, Max Gross, Max Rosenzweig, Eugene Karachun, Yoni Shoshani and Travis De Zarn; and defenders Josh Sharp, Simon Lewis, Nick Savas, Paul Rago and Rob Seaward. Because lacrosse is not yet a sanctioned CIF sport, kids from any school that doesn’t have a team may play for any club they like, meaning this year’s Pali squad consists mostly of Palisadian boys from St. Monica, Encino Crespi, L.A. Hamilton and Palisades Highs. Pali’s first season began with a 5-3 victory over Beverly Hills on March 3. After nine games, the team’s only losses have come at the hands of league-leading Palos Verdes and an experienced varsity squad from Brentwood School. A 12-4 victory over Harvard-Westlake and Saturday’s win over Malibu have been the standout performances for Pali, which plays its final three games of the season on the road at Chaminade of West Hills, San Gabriel and finally a rematch with Brentwood. Pali hopes to field both a varsity and a junior varsity team in 2005. High school boys interested in playing on the club should contact Andrea Dyke at 230-3298 or Lori Mendez-Packer at 454-0361. For more information, visit the PCLA Web site: www.pacificcoastlacrosse.com.
Erina Digby Reaches Quarterfinals at Ojai
Palisadian Erina Digby advanced to the quarterfinals of the girls’ 18s singles division at the 104th annual Ojai Valley Tennis Tournament last weekend. Digby, a junior at Marlborough, received a first-round bye, then outlasted Keba Baird of Templeton, 4-6, 6-3, 6-1, in the second round. She ousted Maria Malec of Laguna Beach, 6-4, 0-6, 6-0, in the round of 16 before falling to Irvine’s Ashley Williams, 6-3, 7-5, in the quarterfinals. Last fall, Digby led the Mustangs to their third consecutive Sunshine League title and was the league’s undefeated singles champion. In the same division, Palisadian Ashley Alpert got a first-round bye but lost her round of 32 match to Cheyenne Inglis of Encinitas, 6-0, 6-1. The largest and one of the most prestigious amateur tennis events in the United States, Ojai attracts most of the top junior players from Southern California and this year was no exception. In the boys’ 16s singles division, Ariel Oleynik had the misfortune of playing Palisades High teammate Stephen Surjue in the first round and Surjue won, 7-5, 6-1. Surjue lost his second round match to Hunter Lee of Bermuda Dunes, 6-0, 6-1. Two other Palisades High players were in the 64-player draw. Daniel Burge lost his first-round match to Neil Gehlawat of Bakersfield, 6-0, 6-0, while Sepehr Safii, who received a first-round bye, was defeated by Silvio Chiba of Brea, 6-2, 7-6 (8), in the round of 32. After winning the boys’ 16s division last year, PaliHi’s Chris Ko had hopes of doing the same in the boys’ CIF singles division, but the Dolphins’ No. 1 player lost in the first round, 6-2, 7-5, to Sean Tan of Lakewood. Sam Querry of Thousand Oaks won the division with a 6-2, 1-6, 7-6 (5) victory over Kaes Van’t Hof. In the boys’ CIF doubles division, PaliHi’s duo of Darya Bakhtiar and Taylor Robinson played top-seeded Eric Riley and Steven Forman of Torrey Pines in Thursday’s opening round and lost, 6-4, 6-1. PaliHi last won a share of the team title in 2000. In the girls’ 16s, Kelly Stewart, who lives in Malibu but sometimes trains at Palisades Tennis Center, reached the finals, losing to Kristen Flower of Ojai in a tough three-setter, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Brittany O’Neil was the lone PaliHi competitor, but she had to default her first-round match. Ex-Palisadian and longtime Ojai participant Sean Brawley vyed for the men’s Open championship, but another player with ties to the Palisades, Michael Joyce, took home the $10,000 winner’s check with a 6-2, 6-3 victory over Travis Rettenmeir in the finals. Joyce trained at Palisades Tennis Center while he was on the pro circuit and participated in a Prince clinic at PTC in 1998. The Ojai was founded in 1896 by NCAA doubles champion William L. Thacher to promote amateur tennis in California. In addition to boys’ and girls’ junior and CIF, the event includes men’s and women’s community college divisions and PAC-10 men’s and women’s championships.
Strassner is Unsung Hero of Pitching Staff
PALISADES HIGH SPORTS ROUNDUP
Before the season started, Andrew Strassner was fighting for a spot on the varsity roster. Two and four victories later, he has become one of the most dependable pitchers in the Dolphins’ rotation. ‘I started off the spring playing short stop and I was just going all out to fight for a position on the team,’ said Strassner, a senior who played junior varsity last year. ‘I started putting on size over the summer and I’ve been working out ever since.’ Strassner’s hard work has payed off on the mound and in the clubhouse. ‘I knew our pitching would be good, but I did not think it would be as good as it’s been so far,’ Pali co-coach Tom Seyler said. ‘I knew Geoff [Schwartz] would prove himself as the best in our league. David [Bromberg] and Turhan [Folse] have been great and out of nowhere is Andrew… he’s been phenomenal.’ Heading into Tuesday’s game against Westchester, Strassner had the most wins’four’of all the PaliHi starters. He has allowed the fewest walks of any pitcher on the Dolphins’ staff and his four and two-thirds innings against Venice last week kept Pali in the game until the offense got on track. ‘I’d say the curve ball is my best pitch because I can hit my spots with it,’ Strassner said. ‘After that, I’d say my fast ball.’ So far, Strassner has had the benefit of pitching behind Schwartz, meaning he has already seen opposing batters by the time he faces them’not on the mound, but from the dugout. ‘I’ll make mental notes of who their strong hitters are and what they tend to do. It’s like being able to use Cliffs notes on a test.’ Strassner has done his homework thus far this season, one of the reasons the Dolphins are off to their fast league start. A portent of things to come was his two-hit shutout against Brentwood early in the season, when he faced 23 batters in seven innings’only two over the minimum. At the plate, short stop Dylan Cohen has flourished since joining the lineup, batting a team-high .476. Right behind are designated hitter Alex Thompson, third baseman Manny Perez and right fielder Kevin Seto (all at .429) and second baseman Matt Skolnik at .405. Pali’s other head coach, Kelly Loftus, said hard work and chemistry have been the keys to the team’s success thus far: ‘When you practice hard you get good results and these guys come out and work hard for three hours every day. This team has a lot of harmony. These guys like each other and want each other to succeed.’ Swimming In their final Marine League dual meet of the season, the Dolphins came away with three out of four victories against Venice. Pali’s frosh/soph boys and girls teams and the boys varsity team all won, but the varsity girls suffered their first defeat. Still, Cara Davidoff continued to dominate her events, clocking 1:00.64 to beat defending City champion Nicole O’Keefe in the 100 Butterfly. Freshman Patrice Dodd won both the 100 freestyle and 100 backstroke and sophomore Ted Tomlinson won the 500 Freestyle in a personal-best 5:41. Pali coach Maggie Nance moved four swimmers up top varsity from the frosh/soph squad for yesterday’s league championships’Ashley Baele, Alex Ehrgott, Jody Herman and Julie Wynn. Track & Field Several runners gave notable performances at last Saturday’s Rotary Meet at Birmingham High. Freshman Angela Perry Spahn was fourth in her division of the two-mile in 12:34’a personal record by 42 seconds. Riza Lim won her heat in the 800 meters in a personal-best 2:34, Unique Shanklin ran the event in 2:39 and Elaine Roepke finished in 2:42.9. Tamara Adams ran season-bests in the 100 hurdles (18.4) and 300 hurdles (53.8). For the boys, Jeff Fujimoto ran 18:03 in the 110 high hurdles and Eric Milne ran the two-mile in a personal-best 12:10. In Friday’s dual meet against University, Pali’s frosh/soph girls won 77-27, the frosh/soph boys won 59-45, the varsity girls won 68-50 and the varsity boys lost 80-30. Kristabel Doebel-Hickok remained undefeated in dual meets this season in the 800 meters, winning in 2:42. Boys Volleyball For two games, it looked like Palisades’ hope of sharing the Western League title might be realized. But in the end host University was again too much, defeating the Dolphins 21-25, 20-25, 25-11, 25-16, 15-12 to clinch the league championship. Nash Petrovic had 11 kills for Palisades (8-4, 6-3), which traveled to Venice for its league finale Monday. Boys Tennis Palisades completed a season of domination in the Western League with a 7-0 victory at Venice. Even without No. 1 player Chris Ko in the lineup, the Dolphins won easily over the second-place Gondos. Ben Tom won 6-1, 6-1 at No. 1 singles and Sepehr Safii won by the same score at No. 4 singles. Taylor Robinson and Stephen Surjue won 6-1, 6-3 at No. 1 doubles for Pali. The Dolphins won all 70 matches and all 140 total sets they played in league this season and virtually assured themselves a top three seed in the City playoffs.
Bernice Park, 95; a Generous Palisades Cultural Arts Patron
Bernice Park, a longtime Palisadian, philanthropist and cultural arts guardian angel, died peacefully in her sleep on April 24. She was 95. ‘Throughout her long and fruitful life, Bernice gave graciously and with love without request for recognition and most often without restrictions on use,’ said Eva Holberg, her close friend and neighbor. Park was born on May 24, 1908 in Heppner, Oregon. Very early in life she showed a talent and love for piano performance, and eventually received a bachelor’s degree in music and a master’s degree in fine arts from the University of Oregon, which she called ‘a family school.’ Her parents both taught there. While she never became a professional pianist, she shared her talents with many organizations to which she belonged. In 1928, she married Donald K. Park, who later was the coach of the swim team at UCLA. Their son, Donald K. Park II, is a retired university professor who lives in Fort Collins, Colorado. In 1958, Park’s married life came to an abrupt end when she was widowed at the age of 50. A strong advocate of education, Park served as associate director of continuing education in engineering and mathematics at UCLA for 26 years. She was also past president of the Westwood Women’s Bruin Club and one of the founders and past president of the Plato Society at UCLA. After retiring from UCLA in the mid-1970s, Park turned to Pacific Palisades community affairs. She became a member of the Historical Society, where she served as president for two years, including the year when the society published ‘Pacific Palisades: From the Mountains to the Sea,’ written by her longtime friends Betty Lou Young and Randy Young. With her generous contributions she supported the ambitious mural on Temescal Canyon Road, the Palisades Library Fund and the Swarthmore Walk of Pride with a tree donation. Her great love of cats led her to contribute to groups supporting their well being and rescue. She also believed in supporting less fortunate people in need of funds for education, to establish a business or other urgent needs. One beneficiary of her largesse was the brother of an employee at Emerson-LaMay Cleaners who couldn’t afford the fees at UCLA. Bernice paid for his education, and after he graduated he found a good job in finance, and never forgot her kindness, taking her to lunch whenever he was in town. He said that when he ‘gets ahead,’ he will set up a scholarship in her name. One of Park’s most significant contributions to the community was her generosity to the establishing of Theatre Palisades. She was a member of the early fundraising planning committee and was successful in cajoling major contributions from local organizations. In addition to raising money to help build Pierson Playhouse, she also had the foresight to help establish an endowment fund for theatre operations. She was honored by Theatre Palisades in 1997 with the Lelah T. Pierson Award. In 1999, Park was honored by the Palisades Chamber of Commerce for her long and meritorious service to the community. A year later, she received the Community Service Award from the Palisades Community Council, given to individuals who demonstrate long-term and continuing service in one of more areas of the community. Park’s first love was and continued to be music. She played the piano as long as she was physically able. She supported the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Metropolitan Opera in New York and the Palisades Symphony until the end of her life, and was very interested in the local symphony’s programs and Young Artist Award competitions. Palisades Symphony will dedicate the performance of Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis on Sunday, May 2 to her memory. A familiar figure in the Village with her snow-white hair and perky walk until just a few months ago, Park said in a 1992 interview with the Palisadian-Post that she felt grateful for what life had given her. ‘I have never been hungry or cold, I have had superior opportunities and I can be active in all the things I enjoy. I hope others will follow my lead in supporting our local performing arts.’ Contributions in Bernice Park’s memory may be sent to Palisades Symphony, P.O. Box 214, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272. A memorial celebration of her life will be held at the Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford, on Friday, April 30 at 5:30 p.m.
Rose Huff, 89; Ran Palisades Drug Store with Her Husband
Rose Estelle Huff, who with her husband ran Pacific Palisades Drug Store in the heart of the Village from the late 1940s into the early 1970s, died on April 19 at Santa Monica-UCLA Hospital. She was 89. Born on December 19, 1914, in Buffalo, New York, Rose moved to California with her family in 1925. They came ‘overland’ in a touring car and settled in what is now West Hollywood. Growing up in Hollywood’s ‘Golden Years,’ Rose remembered working at Bell & Howell when Lucy and Desi would come in ranting and dramatically carrying on. Or the time Ronald Reagan gently educated her on the logistics of the switchboard when she was an operator and had disconnected a few of his calls. As a student at Belmont High, Rose knew she would live in the Palisades someday. She said she had a premonition in the 1920s when she had a photo taken at the beach with her boyfriend, showing the upper Bel-Air Bay Club in the background. Twenty years later, she and her husband Bob Huff (whom she married in 1936), built a home above the club on Arno Way, where she lived for 60 years. At their popular drug store (where Starbucks and Littlebits are now located), the Huffs maintained a family-oriented business that drew merchants and residents alike for gifts, cosmetic or pharmacy items, or merely to have lunch at the counter. Rose instigated the store’s ‘Fondue Day,’ when customers shopping on Friday were offered free fondue and wine. Active in the Assistance League of Southern California for 40 years, Rose was also a member of the Riviera Country Club since the 1950s. Known for her ‘joie de vivre,’ Rose wore a charm around her neck that read, ‘Live, Love and Laugh.’ She was always available for those who needed her, and her funny stories and antics will be remembered by the many who entered her large circle of friends and acquaintances, either to stay at her home when they needed a place to stay or to simply ‘hang out’ and party with her. Rose’s focus was her family and friends, many of whom called her ‘Gramma Rose’ or just ‘G-Rose.’ The grandaughter of her best friend, Ernie McKimson, used to refer to Rose and Ernie as Ethel and Lucy, the crazy, laughing pair. She had recently told her daughter, Georgeann, ‘Please don’t be sad or carry on when I’m gone. I’ve had a wonderful life, dear. I wouldn’t have changed a thing!’ Rose was predeceased by her husband in 1991. She is survived by her daughter, Georgeann Erskine of Topanga; granddaughter Nami Gabbard (husband Josh) of Topanga; great-grandson Ozzie Maddox Gabbard; sister Betty Abendschein (husband Irving) of Palm Desert; and nieces Janice Boe Perry and Ann Edwards. Services will be held today at 10:30 a.m. at the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine on Sunset, followed by an informal gathering at Mrs. Huff’s home in the Palisades.
Services May 1 for Frank Atha III, 77
Frank Perry Atha III, a resident of Pacific Palisades since 1951, died on April 21 in Santa Monica. He was 77. Born in 1926 in Kansas City, Missouri, Frank attended Missouri Military Academy. He earned a degree in electrical engineering from Purdue University in 1948; a few days after graduation, he moved to Southern California, where he went to work at McDonnell-Douglas as a design engineer in aerospace. For several years, Frank was chief engineer at Transco. He worked at MicroMetals until he retired in 1982 at age 55. A member of the Santa Monica Yacht Club, Frank enjoyed sailing, and his favorite yachting experience was the long cruise he made from Florida through the Panama Canal to Los Angeles. He was also a member of the Los Angeles Computer Society. Frank is survived by his wife, Roberta Atha; sons Thomas and Randall; brothers Warren and David; grandchildren Steven, Frank and Jessica; nephew Keith Auck and nieces Lianne Auck and Susan Balazhi. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, May 1 at 2 p.m. in The Little Chapel of the Dawn at Gates, Kingsley, Gates in Santa Monica. Interment will be private.