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Rim fire puts a dent in High Sierra wildlife habitat

Written By kolimtiga on Senin, 21 Oktober 2013 | 12.18

GROVELAND, Calif. — The Rim fire that scorched a huge swath of Sierra Nevada forests also severely altered the habitat that is home to several of California's rarest animals: the great gray owl, the Sierra Nevada red fox and the Pacific fisher.

The fire burned 257,000 acres of High Sierra wilderness straddling the Stanislaus National Forest and Yosemite National Park that harbors a geographically isolated and genetically distinct clan of roughly 200 great gray owls.

The blaze also came within 12 miles of 10 breeding pairs of the subspecies of red fox clinging to survival in the cold, steep slopes above the tree line, raising fears they could have been eaten by coyotes trying to escape the smoke and flames.

The existence of the foxes, which were thought to have been wiped out in the 1920s, was confirmed in 2010. They are currently under consideration for listing under the federal Endangered Species Act.

Federal wildlife biologists are also concerned about the loss of potential habitat for the Pacific fisher, a member of the weasel family. Pacific fishers, members of an isolated Southern Sierra group of about 500 individuals that live in dense old-growth forests south of Yosemite's Merced River, are under consideration for federal listing.

"In the Rim fire, only birds that could fly the farthest and animals that could run the fastest survived," said John Buckley, executive director of the nonprofit Central Sierra Environmental Resource Center. "It killed squirrels and bears. For animals of which only a handful exist, it could be especially tragic."

The exact toll on wildlife will not be known until biologists are allowed to survey severely burned areas, which, for safety reasons, could remain closed for more than a year, federal forest officials said.

Even without that information, federal agencies are developing post-fire management strategies such as reforestation and salvage logging projects to protect certain species from extinction. That effort has been interrupted by the federal government shutdown, which furloughed federal wildlife biologists.

Preliminary reports from the fire area indicate that the blaze destroyed or damaged dozens of nesting and roosting areas for spotted owls, goshawks and great gray owls — the largest owl in North America. They stand 2 feet tall and have a 5-foot wingspan, with piercing yellow eyes accented by large facial disks.

Roy Bridgman, wildlife biologist for the Stanislaus National Forest, said he "visited a great owl nest that had been around for 20 years and it was collapsed. For a species with a tiny population, any loss at all is a big hit."

On a recent weekday, however, John Keane, a U.S. Forest Service research wildlife ecologist, found a reason for cautious optimism at an expanse of lush meadowlands about 10 miles west of Yosemite where he has studied great gray owls for 15 years.

The meadows edged with 80-foot-tall cedars and ponderosa pines were spared by the fire, which began burning in August. Peering through binoculars and methodically scanning the treetops, Keane said, "If I had to put money on it, I'd say there are still owls here."

Future research will help determine whether enough of the owls survived in the region to sustain the state-endangered raptor.

Two months after the fire raged across one of the wildest areas in the state, rare and common animals alike continue searching for food and shelter in, as one resident put it, "patches of green, wherever they can find them."

Lill Mcleod, general store manager at Camp Mather, a tourist destination about a mile away from the meadowlands patrolled by great gray owls, said, "Starving animals including countless bobcats and at least four mountain lions have been coming after the squirrels and chipmunks in the camp."

"The heartbreaker," she added, "was a horribly injured, emaciated bear we found staggering along a road here. He couldn't see or hear or smell because his head was so badly burned. He had a broken paw and kept wiping his face in the dirt."

That bear, along with an injured cub found a few days later, was euthanized by California Department of Fish and Wildlife game wardens. Three other adult bears were found dead nearby, Mcleod said.

Local populations of bears, deer and other relatively common animals are expected to recover. But prospects for the black-backed woodpecker, a candidate for listing under the California Endangered Species Act, remain uncertain.

The woodpecker plays a key role in post-fire forest ecology by creating nesting holes in snags for other birds and mammals such as Western bluebirds and squirrels, environmentalists say. It is also threatened by the salvaging of burned trees.

Those competing interests are already playing out on fire-stripped slopes where the woodpeckers are feasting on wood-boring beetles that began swarming dead trees while they were still smoldering.

Beneath the woodpeckers, crews with chain saws and big-rig trucks were removing snags and salvaging timber from roads and utility corridors.

"We're looking for silver linings," Bridgman said with a sigh. "But we're caught between extremes."

louis.sahagun@latimes.com


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Budget battles could slow 2014 business travel spending, group warns

Spending on business travel is expected to surge in 2014, a sign of continuing confidence in the U.S. economy. But the rosy business outlook could be marred by further feuding in Washington that leads to another government shutdown.

The message of caution came from a survey released last week by the Global Business Travel Assn., the trade group in Virginia for corporate travel managers.

Based on business indicators, the group predicted $288.8 billion in spending in the U.S., which would be a 7.2% jump over 2013. It represents 459 million trips for the year, which would be a 1.6% increase from 2013.

During the depths of the recession, that number dropped to 434 million person-trips in 2009. The industry still has a long way to go to come near the high of 576 million business trips in 2000.

The study results were released a few days before Congress and the White House reached an agreement to settle a 16-day partial shutdown. But the budget deal is temporary, raising the chance of another deadlock in January or February that the business travel group fears could slow the nation's economic momentum.

"Another self-destructive U.S. government shutdown will absolutely have negative consequences for business travel and the economy as it would only further damage our country's reputation as a place to do business," said Michael McCormick, the travel group's executive director and operations chief. "It is critical to this country's future position as a leader in the global economy that our elected officials work to keep the U.S. open for business."

Nonstop flights from Dallas' Love Field sure to spark airfare battle

An airline battle is about to heat up in Texas as a result of a little-known law set to expire next year. The good news is that airline passengers should claim the spoils in the form of lower fares.

The so-called Wright Amendment, championed by then U.S. Rep. Jim Wright (D-Texas) in 1979, was intended to restrict airline traffic out of Dallas Love Field and direct more growth toward the then-fledgling Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. The legislation was supported by business interests in Dallas.

The amendment has had direct consequences for Southwest, which is headquartered at Love Field and operates one of its biggest hubs at the airport.

Over the years, many of the Wright Amendment's restrictions have phased out. The last limit prohibits nonstop flights from Love Field to 41 states, plus the District of Columbia.

Once the last restriction expires Oct. 13, 2014, Southwest is expected to add many new nonstops from Love Field, putting the low-cost airline in direct competition with American Airlines, based at nearby Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

"Where Southwest decides to take on American Airlines we are likely to see spirited competition and cheaper prices for both leisure and business travelers," said Rick Seaney, founder of the travel website Farecompare. "American Airlines will be very aggressive in keeping its lucrative business customers. Look for them to use price matching, loyalty miles, upgraded aircraft and increased flight frequencies."

Southwest can't wait for the Wright Amendment to expire.

In the lobby of its Love Field headquarters, the airline has installed a countdown clock that will reach zero Oct. 13. The slogan "Nonstop Love" is emblazoned on the clock.

"Southwest will bring our legendary fares to these new nonstops," said Southwest spokeswoman Whitney Eichinger. "Having Southwest in these nonstop markets will create competition and fares that will be good for consumers."

hugo.martin@latimes.com


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gala opens Annenberg Center in Beverly Hills

The event: The "Grand Inaugural Gala" to celebrate the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. Presented by Salvatore Ferragamo, the affair came with cocktails, a gala dinner, fashion show of the Italian designer's latest collection and the first-ever performance in the Center's 500-seat Bram Goldsmith Theater.

The setting: The brand new "Wallis," designed by architect Zoltan Pali of SPF:architects to incorporate the city's Italian Renaissance-style post office and temporarily house a pop-up Ferragamo boutique.

The show: Not to forget its post office past, "A Dream in an Envelope" had John Lithgow, Diane Lane and Kevin Spacey reading classic letters from Will Rogers, Martha Graham, Groucho Marx, Peter Tchaikovsky and Tennessee Williams. Onstage too were tap-dancing postmen; dancer Lil Buck; a beautifully executed pas de deux; and Terri White belting out "This Joint Is Jumpin.'"

"Why don't you give these birds the dough," said Lithgow, as he read Will Rogers' good-humored request for government funds to build the post office.

The glittery crowd: Wallis Annenberg and Jamie Tisch co-chaired the event, and although Brad Pitt and Robert Redford, the honorary co-chairs, did not attend, there was no shortage of star power.

"Brad is fighting zombies somewhere and Robert is lost at sea," said Tisch, referencing their recent movies, adding that the two asked her to "extend their deepest gratitude to Wallis for the creation of this wonderful center."

Celebrities abounded, as did business, social and cultural leaders, including, among others actors, Charlize Theron, Jodie Foster, Amy Adams, Nicole Richie, Joe Jonas, Jason Bateman, Courteney Cox, Evangeline Lilly, Demi Moore, Dev Patel, Freida Pinto, Chord Overstreet, Tim Robbins, Sidney Poitier, Gwen Stefani, Gavin Rossdale, Abbie Cornish, Geena Davis, Josh Duhamel and Dita Von Teese; Bram Goldsmith and Paula Kent Meehan, for whom the new theaters are named; Eva and Marc Stern, Lori and Michael Milken, Sherry Lansing, David Bohnett, Ron Burkle, Candy Spelling, Carolyn Powers, Deborah Borda, Ann Philbin, the night's speakers Ferruccio Ferragamo, Beverly Hills Mayor John Mirisch and the center's board chair, Jerry Magnin.

Quotes of note: "I don't have enough adjectives for this beautiful new auditorium," former California Gov. Gray Davis said.

The numbers: With tickets priced from $2,500 each and tables ranging up to $100,000, the celebration attracted 1,000 guests, enough to require two performances in the new theater.

image@latimes.com


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Milo & Olive's Erin Eastland plans a fruity fall

Written By kolimtiga on Minggu, 20 Oktober 2013 | 12.18

Erin Eastland, fan of microplanes and Broadway musicals, is the new executive chef at Santa Monica restaurant Milo & Olive, after a seven-year tenure at Cube Cafe on La Brea Avenue. Born in Syracuse, N.Y., Eastland graduated from Trinity College in Connecticut, then moved to New York, working as garde manger at restaurant Calle Ocho then cheese manager at Le Petite Chateau before earning her diploma at the French Culinary Institute. In 2005, Eastland moved to Los Angeles and eventually landed at Cube Cafe, overseeing the seasonal, regional Italian-inspired menu. At Milo & Olive, the menu spans wood-fired, free-range chicken meatballs, pastas such as spaghetti with Dungeness crab and Calabrian chile, and pork belly sausage pizza with escarole.

What's coming up next on your menu?

Persimmons, satsumas, blood oranges ....

Latest ingredient obsession?

Cauliflower — it seems to be flying off the shelves. We are currently doing it wood-fired with orange brown butter and sea salt.

The one piece of kitchen equipment you can't live without, other than your knives?

We need Microplanes. ... It's like a fight to get one, and when I buy a new one it's like Christmas.

Favorite kitchen soundtrack?

Mark Knopfler, Phish, Emmylou Harris, any Broadway musical, bluegrass, Snoop Dog, Grateful Dead.... Seriously, I am eclectic when it comes to music. I sang a cappella in college, so I love anything I can sing to.

What's your favorite breakfast? Breakfast burrito, hands down. Fig at Fairmont puts French fries in theirs. Everyone should do that 'cause it's delicious!

Milo & Olive, 2723 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, (310) 453-6776.

— Betty Hallock

betty.hallock@latimes.com


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

First AME's former pastor is troubled by church upheaval

In his final days as pastor of First African Methodist Episcopal Church, the Rev. Cecil L. "Chip" Murray compiled, copied and buried piles of records amassed over the 27 years he led the congregation.

The time capsule, he believed, would preserve his legacy and document the church's role as a force for positive change in South L.A.

But in the nine years since he retired, Murray has watched his hard work crumble under the leadership of his successor, the Rev. John J. Hunter, and his wife.

Allegations of financial mismanagement and sexual improprieties tarnished the church under the new minister. But it wasn't until Hunter was removed from the pulpit last year that the full scope of the church's troubles became clear.

A $13.5-million reserve was depleted and debts totaled more than $500,000. And some of the nine rental properties acquired as part of Murray's efforts to serve thousands of low-income residents now sit in disrepair, some infested with termites and mold.

The biggest blow to the congregation may be that the church no longer legally owns FAME Assistance Corp., the nonprofits established by Murray to help bring jobs, housing and corporate investment into riot-torn South Los Angeles.

Hunter's wife, Denise, quietly severed the relationship between the church and the nonprofits by filing corporate paperwork under her name. Under the church's constitution, oversight should have been transferred to the pastor who replaced Hunter, the Rev. J. Edgar Boyd.

"To see this even now just blows me away," Murray said. "How could you literally deprive ownership and put it in under your care?"

Over the summer, Murray and church officials met with a deputy from the state attorney general's office, which is looking into whether procedures were breached when the Hunters cut the church's ties with the nonprofit organizations, according to the church's attorney, Robert Silverman. State officials declined to confirm an investigation.

The church has filed several lawsuits trying to regain control of the nonprofits, which have seen revenue drop from $4.4 million in 2004 to $2.4 million in 2010, according to tax filings. As the legal battle ensues, the time capsule that Murray buried in a church wall and covered in concrete may end up being key evidence in First AME's lawsuits.

When the church and the Hunters parted ways, church officials allege, the Hunters took most of the church records and hid them. Without any documentation, First AME cannot show how the church and the nonprofits were intermingled.

Hunter, 56, who has since started his own ministry in Studio City, declined to comment for this story. He left First AME amid allegations of sexual harassment.

For almost a year, Murray also declined to speak publicly about the ongoing battle. Instead, he tried to remain in the background, worried that his words, which carry much weight in the African American community, might inflame the situation.

"I made it a point to not interfere because I'm no longer there and I don't want to exacerbate the problem," he said.

Murray, 84, left the pastorate in 2004 when he reached the denomination's mandatory retirement age. In the months after Hunter took the helm, Murray quietly stopped attending service.

He took a post at USC's Center for Religion and Civic Culture, where he continues the work he started at First AME of bringing economic growth to low-income neighborhoods.

Even now, a year after Hunter left, Murray is a rare guest at the hilltop church he built from 250 members to a congregation of 16,000.

Murray said he's been happy with Boyd's stewardship of First AME. But it's been difficult seeing so much upheaval.

By 1992, when the riots ripped through South L.A., First AME already had 40 outreach programs in place to assist the community with housing, child education and low-income loans.

The church also created a housing complex that catered to people with AIDS. It was named Eugene Thomas Manor after a relative of L.A. County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, who helped move the project forward.


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gala opens Annenberg Center in Beverly Hills

The event: The "Grand Inaugural Gala" to celebrate the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. Presented by Salvatore Ferragamo, the affair came with cocktails, a gala dinner, fashion show of the Italian designer's latest collection and the first-ever performance in the Center's 500-seat Bram Goldsmith Theater.

The setting: The brand new "Wallis," designed by architect Zoltan Pali of SPF:architects to incorporate the city's Italian Renaissance-style post office and temporarily house a pop-up Ferragamo boutique.

The show: Not to forget its post office past, "A Dream in an Envelope" had John Lithgow, Diane Lane and Kevin Spacey reading classic letters from Will Rogers, Martha Graham, Groucho Marx, Peter Tchaikovsky and Tennessee Williams. Onstage too were tap-dancing postmen; dancer Lil Buck; a beautifully executed pas de deux; and Terri White belting out "This Joint Is Jumpin.'"

"Why don't you give these birds the dough," said Lithgow, as he read Will Rogers' good-humored request for government funds to build the post office.

The glittery crowd: Wallis Annenberg and Jamie Tisch co-chaired the event, and although Brad Pitt and Robert Redford, the honorary co-chairs, did not attend, there was no shortage of star power.

"Brad is fighting zombies somewhere and Robert is lost at sea," said Tisch, referencing their recent movies, adding that the two asked her to "extend their deepest gratitude to Wallis for the creation of this wonderful center."

Celebrities abounded, as did business, social and cultural leaders, including, among others actors, Charlize Theron, Jodie Foster, Amy Adams, Nicole Richie, Joe Jonas, Jason Bateman, Courteney Cox, Evangeline Lilly, Demi Moore, Dev Patel, Freida Pinto, Chord Overstreet, Tim Robbins, Sidney Poitier, Gwen Stefani, Gavin Rossdale, Abbie Cornish, Geena Davis, Josh Duhamel and Dita Von Teese; Bram Goldsmith and Paula Kent Meehan, for whom the new theaters are named; Eva and Marc Stern, Lori and Michael Milken, Sherry Lansing, David Bohnett, Ron Burkle, Candy Spelling, Carolyn Powers, Deborah Borda, Ann Philbin, the night's speakers Ferruccio Ferragamo, Beverly Hills Mayor John Mirisch and the center's board chair, Jerry Magnin.

Quotes of note: "I don't have enough adjectives for this beautiful new auditorium," former California Gov. Gray Davis said.

The numbers: With tickets priced from $2,500 each and tables ranging up to $100,000, the celebration attracted 1,000 guests, enough to require two performances in the new theater.

image@latimes.com


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Counter Intelligence: Jonathan Gold reviews Terroni downtown

Written By kolimtiga on Sabtu, 19 Oktober 2013 | 12.18

New restaurants have been opening downtown in impressive numbers this year, important places, many of them, carved out of the grand Beaux-Arts spaces some of us forgot even existed in Los Angeles, fitted with elegant cocktail menus, equipped with culinary pedigrees. People have stopped complaining that all the good new restaurants are on the Westside and started complaining that all the good new restaurants are downtown — and a decade ago not even the most ardent advocate of Historic Core redevelopment could have predicted $150 omakase sushi on Main Street, or refined tasting-menu restaurants, or Italian kitchens finicky about the provenance of their buffalo mozzarella. Even with setbacks like the recent closing of the gastropub Parish, it is clear that valet parking is winning out over the SROs.

The latest reclamation project to hit the Historic Core district is Terroni, a vast new restaurant from the owners of the splendid, relatively modest pizzeria of the same name near the Farmers Market, occupying a lavish bank building built in 1924. Where the Beverly Boulevard place is low-key enough to include a foosball table as part of the décor, the downtown restaurant has soaring gilt ceilings and a glassed-in wine room. Where Italians sometimes outnumber Angelenos in the midtown Terroni, downtown is pretty monolingual.

PHOTOS: Inside Terroni

In Toronto, where the small chain is based, Terroni is famous for its idiosyncrasies, for its small insistence on maintaining its Southern Italian identity. In L.A., where some diners have nightmares about displeasing their sushi chefs, it's just another restaurant.

Still, the new Terroni appears almost as if the owners were checking the conventions of a postmodern Italian restaurant off a standard list. A movie screen that day in, day out shows nothing but Fellini's "La Dolce Vita"? Check. Taped Italian-language lessons in the bathrooms? Check. Tables numbered in Italian, a wall of hanging meats, and a chandelier that looks as if it were purchased at the estate sale of a Tuscan castle? It goes without saying.

The urban infatuation with Italian food has been going on for a long time in North America, the tropes are well-established, and the job of a smart designer is to position the clichés in a way that lets us know that he or she knows that we're in on the joke too. It's a delicate line between inlaying recipes on a dining room wall as kitsch and inlaying recipes as forward design — and the difference, I think, may be as small as the elegance of the font.

But nobody has ever questioned the solid virtues of the cooking at Terroni: the plates pairing sliced San Daniele prosciutto or cured duck with vegetables and creamy burrata cheese; the pleasant fried zucchini flowers stuffed with herbed ricotta or the stolid deep-fried rice cones called arancini; the pungent bresaola or the correct beef carpaccio plate. Some Italian restaurants may be curing more of their own meats by now, and others may have larger cheese selections, but the point is made.

The pastas are all made in house, and cooked a few seconds short of al dente, but you are generally better off sticking with Southern Italian classics like cavatelli alla Norma with fried eggplant, or spaghetti ca' muddica, like a pasta puttanesca enriched with breadcrumbs, than you are with Northern Italian-leaning pastas like tagliatelle in a dullish Bolognese ragù or bucatini in a wildly unbalanced Amatriciana sauce. (I really like the maccheroncini Geppetto with sausage and sharply bitter dandelion greens, and the vibrant spaghetti al limone with spinach and capers.)

Terroni was really early on the "no substitutions, no modifications" thing — I'm pretty sure staff at the Beverly Boulevard restaurant used to wear T-shirts with that legend printed on the front. In practice it didn't end up amounting to that much, although you were generally denied grated cheese if your waiter suspected you were about to put it on seafood pasta, and salads are served with good, spicy olive oil but no vinegar, which you are told is inappropriate.

But you are probably here for the pizza — crisp, hand-stretched, and relatively thin; big enough to serve as a main course for two or three; served as a standard Margherita with tomato, mozzarella and basil or topped with relatively imaginative combinations like the white mangiabbun with rapini and sausage; the Italia-Germana with mushrooms and ham; or the Santo Spirito with fresh marbles of mozzarella, cherry tomatoes and Sicilian anchovies. I like the unpronounceable c't mang, a white pizza with ripe, sliced pear, a bit of gorgonzola melted into the mozzarella, and transparent, honey-brushed slices of the smoky Italian ham called speck, like a cheese plate in the form of a pizza.

As at all proper Southern Italian pizzerias, the pies are delivered to the table intact, unbesmirched by the touch of a pizza wheel. Pre-cutting slices makes the crust cold or soggy, you are informed. And as fervently as you may complain about this in person or on Yelp, the kitchen is unlikely to change its mind.

jonathan.gold@latimes.com

Terroni

Solid Southern Italian cooking in a grand downtown space. But the restaurant still won't slice your pizza.

LOCATION

802 S. Spring St., Los Angeles, (213) 954-0300.

PRICES

Appetizers $6-$20; salads $7-$15; pastas $15-$20; pizzas $13-$19; desserts $7-$9.

DETAILS

Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday-Thursday; 11 a.m. to midnight Friday; 10 a.m. to midnight Saturday; 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday. Credit cards accepted. Full bar. Valet parking. Takeout.

RECOMMENDED DISHES

Spaghetti ca' muddica; maccheroncini Geppetto; pizza c't mang; bombolone alla crema.


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Milo & Olive's Erin Eastland plans a fruity fall

Erin Eastland, fan of microplanes and Broadway musicals, is the new executive chef at Santa Monica restaurant Milo & Olive, after a seven-year tenure at Cube Cafe on La Brea Avenue. Born in Syracuse, N.Y., Eastland graduated from Trinity College in Connecticut, then moved to New York, working as garde manger at restaurant Calle Ocho then cheese manager at Le Petite Chateau before earning her diploma at the French Culinary Institute. In 2005, Eastland moved to Los Angeles and eventually landed at Cube Cafe, overseeing the seasonal, regional Italian-inspired menu. At Milo & Olive, the menu spans wood-fired, free-range chicken meatballs, pastas such as spaghetti with Dungeness crab and Calabrian chile, and pork belly sausage pizza with escarole.

What's coming up next on your menu?

Persimmons, satsumas, blood oranges ....

Latest ingredient obsession?

Cauliflower — it seems to be flying off the shelves. We are currently doing it wood-fired with orange brown butter and sea salt.

The one piece of kitchen equipment you can't live without, other than your knives?

We need Microplanes. ... It's like a fight to get one, and when I buy a new one it's like Christmas.

Favorite kitchen soundtrack?

Mark Knopfler, Phish, Emmylou Harris, any Broadway musical, bluegrass, Snoop Dog, Grateful Dead.... Seriously, I am eclectic when it comes to music. I sang a cappella in college, so I love anything I can sing to.

What's your favorite breakfast? Breakfast burrito, hands down. Fig at Fairmont puts French fries in theirs. Everyone should do that 'cause it's delicious!

Milo & Olive, 2723 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, (310) 453-6776.

— Betty Hallock

betty.hallock@latimes.com


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gala opens Annenberg Center in Beverly Hills

The event: The "Grand Inaugural Gala" to celebrate the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. Presented by Salvatore Ferragamo, the affair came with cocktails, a gala dinner, fashion show of the Italian designer's latest collection and the first-ever performance in the Center's 500-seat Bram Goldsmith Theater.

The setting: The brand new "Wallis," designed by architect Zoltan Pali of SPF:architects to incorporate the city's Italian Renaissance-style post office and temporarily house a pop-up Ferragamo boutique.

The show: Not to forget its post office past, "A Dream in an Envelope" had John Lithgow, Diane Lane and Kevin Spacey reading classic letters from Will Rogers, Martha Graham, Groucho Marx, Peter Tchaikovsky and Tennessee Williams. Onstage too were tap-dancing postmen; dancer Lil Buck; a beautifully executed pas de deux; and Terri White belting out "This Joint Is Jumpin.'"

"Why don't you give these birds the dough," said Lithgow, as he read Will Rogers' good-humored request for government funds to build the post office.

The glittery crowd: Wallis Annenberg and Jamie Tisch co-chaired the event, and although Brad Pitt and Robert Redford, the honorary co-chairs, did not attend, there was no shortage of star power.

"Brad is fighting zombies somewhere and Robert is lost at sea," said Tisch, referencing their recent movies, adding that the two asked her to "extend their deepest gratitude to Wallis for the creation of this wonderful center."

Celebrities abounded, as did business, social and cultural leaders, including, among others actors, Charlize Theron, Jodie Foster, Amy Adams, Nicole Richie, Joe Jonas, Jason Bateman, Courteney Cox, Evangeline Lilly, Demi Moore, Dev Patel, Freida Pinto, Chord Overstreet, Tim Robbins, Sidney Poitier, Gwen Stefani, Gavin Rossdale, Abbie Cornish, Geena Davis, Josh Duhamel and Dita Von Teese; Bram Goldsmith and Paula Kent Meehan, for whom the new theaters are named; Eva and Marc Stern, Lori and Michael Milken, Sherry Lansing, David Bohnett, Ron Burkle, Candy Spelling, Carolyn Powers, Deborah Borda, Ann Philbin, the night's speakers Ferruccio Ferragamo, Beverly Hills Mayor John Mirisch and the center's board chair, Jerry Magnin.

Quotes of note: "I don't have enough adjectives for this beautiful new auditorium," former California Gov. Gray Davis said.

The numbers: With tickets priced from $2,500 each and tables ranging up to $100,000, the celebration attracted 1,000 guests, enough to require two performances in the new theater.

image@latimes.com


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

O.C. doctor gets 11 years in federal prison for selling prescriptions

Written By kolimtiga on Jumat, 18 Oktober 2013 | 12.18

An Orange County doctor who often saw patients at Starbucks coffeehouses was sentenced Thursday to 11 years in federal prison for selling prescriptions for highly abused medications to patients with no legitimate need for them.

"You abused the position," U.S. District Judge Andrew J. Guilford told Alvin Ming-Czech Yee before sentencing him. "People came to you for healing, and they came away worse for the experience."

Yee, 44, of Mission Viejo, pleaded guilty in April to seven counts of illegal distribution of a controlled substance by a practitioner.

Although Yee had reached a plea agreement with prosecutors and agreed to serve eight to 10 years in prison, the judge sentenced him to a longer term, saying Yee took advantage of a "position of trust and authority" and that the sentence needed to send a message to other doctors.

Authorities said Yee met patients at Starbucks stores throughout Orange County and that he charged as much as $600 for meetings in exchange for prescriptions for drugs such as OxyContin, Vicodin and Xanax. His examinations lasted about a minute and consisted of checking patients' blood pressure and pulses and asking them to bend over to touch their toes, they said.

A medical expert who reviewed Yee's practice for federal prosecutors called it "a front for drug dealing," according to a federal search warrant affidavit. Several area pharmacists refused to honor prescriptions written by Yee because of the large number and high dosages of narcotic prescriptions, court documents state.

Before the sentencing, Assistant U.S. Atty. Ann Luotto Wolf played video in court from undercover agents who posed as patients. In one video, the grind of a Starbucks espresso machine can be heard as Yee discusses which medications he will prescribe.

"These people are desperate," Yee said of his patients in one video, laughing.

Wolf said at least two patients in their early 20s died of drug overdoses after Yee prescribed drugs for them. Yee was not charged in their deaths.

Tammy Rosas, the mother of one of those patients, told the judge her son went through rehabilitation numerous times and that she contacted Yee to tell him her son was using the medications recreationally.

Rosas said her son — a 22-year-old lacrosse player who was being scouted by college recruiters — became addicted to prescription pills after having knee surgery. He died a few days after Yee wrote prescriptions for him, she said. When her son's photo was shown in court, Rosas sobbed.

Yee, who was arrested in October 2011 at his Irvine office, initially was charged with 56 counts of illegally distributing a controlled substance.

"I never dreamed that I would reach a stage where I would lose my privilege to practice medicine," Yee told the judge Thursday in a Santa Ana courtroom. "I'm truly sorry."

Yee, dressed in a black suit jacket and slacks, said he had been "profoundly embarrassed" and that many family members stopped talking to him because of the allegations.

In numerous letters filed with the court on Yee's behalf this week, several former patients described him as a caring, dedicated physician who answered their calls and emails between visits. One patient said she met Yee at a Huntington Beach Starbucks "because he was in the process of finding another office closer to his home base" and that the only way she was able to see him was to meet there. They met, she wrote, to discuss lab results.

"I personally found him to be a brilliant doctor with deep compassion and sincere intentions to helping people better their lives," she wrote.

Yee's mother, Trudy Yee, wrote that he "always wanted to be a doctor" and that she was surprised by the charges.

The judge asked Yee to surrender in January to begin serving his prison sentence.

hailey.branson@latimes.com


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