Compton unions signal legal action
Transcription
Compton unions signal legal action
Serving Baldwin Hills, Carson, Central Los Angeles, Compton, Crenshaw, Gardena, Hawthorne, Inglewood, Lawndale, South Los Angeles, and Watts West Edition ANGELES MESA NEWS • TRIBUNE NEWS • SOUTHWEST TOPICS WAVE • SOUTHWEST WAVE • CENTRAL NEWS WAVE • INGLEWOOD/HAWTHORNE WAVE • SOUTHSIDE JOURNAL Vol. 94 • No. 32 New hopes raised at Marlton Square With demolition of city-owned property beginning at beleaguered Crenshaw District retail site, some envision a fresh start after decades of frustration. BY LEILONI DE GRUY STAFF WRITER CRENSHAW DISTRICT — After much delay, last Thursday marked the beginning of demolition of city-owned properties in Marlton Square. With Rep. Maxine Waters, Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard Parks and other officials on hand, a group of about two dozen people celebrated as an excavator destroyed one of a number of blighted buildings that have plagued the area. “The community has watched for nearly two decades, as Marlton fell into despair and became an eyesore, attracting a variety of problems like illegal dumping, arson and vandalism,” Parks said. “Today, we can finally turn the page on the problems of the past [and] begin a new chapter as we clear the way for future development.” Moving forward with the development of the 20-acre shopping center on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard has been a major priority for local elected officials, including former Mayor Tom Bradley, who sought to redevelop the property — then known as Santa Barbara Plaza — as far back as 1984, said Waters. She praised the work of See MARLTON SQUARE on page A5 Thursday, August 11, 2011 Copyright © 2011 25¢ www.wavenewspapers.com KEEPER OF HER OWN IMAGE Some may be uneasy about her portrayal of a stoic maid in “The Help,” but acclaimed actress Viola Davis “feel[s] the most revolutionary thing you can do is to humanize the Black woman.” BY OLU ALEMORU I STAFF WRITER n the much talked-about screen drama “The Help” — which paints an often harrowing, but ultimately dignified picture of the lives of Black maids in 1960s Mississippi — there may be some uneasiness for African-American audiences watching yet another cinematic treatment of the inhumanity visited upon their forebears during the civil rights era. Some of that angst was also felt by the film’s star, Viola Davis, before she signed on to portray the central character of Aibileen — a lifelong housekeeper who reluctantly agrees to share her true feelings about Southern racism at a time when doing so could easily be criminalized. Her hesitance was for good reason: ever since it was announced that Kathryn Stockett’s bestselling novel was being adapted for the screen, a number of Black cultural critics have expressed Touchstone Pictures displeasure at what they see as a familiar — and condescending In the film adaptation of the bestseller “The Help,” Viola Davis portrays a domestic servant in — Hollywood trope in its story of a White writer (portrayed by See DAVIS on page A8 1960s Mississippi who risks everything to share truths about Southern racism. Compton unions signal legal action Following controversial vote to order layoffs, attorneys for a coalition of city workers allege violations of state law by city officials. BY LEILONI DE GRUY STAFF WRITER COMPTON — City officials violated state laws during budget deliberations that led to the elimination of municipal jobs, the absorption of vacant positions and numerous demotions, according to a letter written by an attorney representing the Coalition of Compton Unions. The purpose of the letter, addressed to City Attorney Craig Cornwell and the City Council, was “to summarize what the coalition believes to be the principal legal defects of the council’s actions, and to demand that the city of Compton take immediate action to remedy the multiple violations of law,” said Anthony Segall, partner with the law firm of Rothner, Segall and Greenstone. The document details what the coalition — comprised of SEIU Local 721, the Compton Firefighters IAFF Local 2216 and AFSCME Locals 2325 and 3497 — sees as five separate violations of the law. It also requests public records, which Segall said have been previously requested and are relevant to the coalition’s representational duties. According to the letter, the city violated the Meyers-Milias Brown Act (MMBA), which guards against failures to meet and confer in good faith. “The city’s conduct, before and at the July 19 council meeting, Photo by Leiloni De Gruy has made a mockery of the bar- Members of the Coalition of Compton Unions protested outside City Hall last month before a budget See LAWSUIT on page A3 was approved that included a substantial reduction in the municipal workforce. Looking to succeed her boss, Lacey gives an opening statement on her campaign for D.A. N Courtesy photo ow I’d like to call to the stand Jackie Lacey, District Attorney Steve Cooley’s right-hand woman and his favored candidate to replace him, so she can testify as to why we, the voters, should give any credence to Cooley’s personal preference and elect her the next district attorney for the county of Los Angeles. In what was the longest interview I’ve ever had with a political candidate, I sat down with #PUUPN-JOF Betty Pleasant Lacey and asked her 10 questions which had been rolling around in my brain for some time. Her answer to this opening question pretty much colored everything else she had to say: BP: “You and Steve Cooley seem to have a mutual admiration thing going on. He pulled you out of obscurity and made you his ‘director of central operations’ after you supported him for DA in 2000, and you supported him over Kamala Harris for attorney general last year. You are videotaped introducing Cooley at his premature ‘victory’ party following that election at which you said: ‘Working for this man every day makes my heart glow. You want to please him.’ What is that statement all about? Are you in love with Cooley?” See BOTTOM LINE on page A3 Photo by Olu Alemoru Deputy District Attorney Jackie Lacey, who is running for the top job, answered questions at The Wave offices Aug. 5. Marlene Brand, who works as a mammographer, will be among the dozens of volunteers at a health fair this Saturday. Free South L.A. health fair aims to expose racial disparities Set for Saturday, event will offer medical screenings and information about inequality that affects health in AfricanAmerican communities. BY OLU ALEMORU STAFF WRITER In an effort to address the chronic shortage of local healthcare services and galvanize community voices on the issue, a free health fair with a strong advocacy component will be held Saturday in South Los Angeles. The Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West (SEIUUHW) and St. John’s Well Child & Family Center, located at 5701 S. Hoover St., have teamed up to stage the “Back to School the Healthy Way—South LA Summer Health Fair” from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event coincides with National Health Center Week — Aug. 7-13 — which celebrates the role of community health centers in improving the lives of more than 50 million people in low-income and minority comSee HEALTH FAIR on page A2 Wearing the pain Photo by Gary McCarthy Gerri Dunagan, whose son Tyrelle died while in custody as an inmate at Tehachapi State Prison, displays a tattooed tribute during an Aug. 5 news conference at which she called for an official investigation into his death. A2 Thursday, August 11, 2011 Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave Along for the ride with unseen heroes of history Photos by Gary McCarthy A replica of a burned Freedom Ride bus is among the exhibits at the Mayme Clayton Library and Museum in Culver City, with support from the Legislative Black Caucus and others. A new exhibit at the Mayme A. Clayton Library & Museum in Culver City pays tribute to L.A.’s role in Freedom Rides that boosted desegregation efforts. BY OLU ALEMORU STAFF WRITER The largely unheralded role of Los Angeles Freedom Riders during a push to desegregate the South is the focus of a new exhibit at the Mayme A. Clayton Library & Museum in Culver City. Entitled “Get on Board: Stories of the Los Angeles to Houston Freedom Ride,” it commemorates the 50th anniversary of the 1961 event, which was sponsored by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). The exhibition, which has the financial backing of the California Legislative Black Caucus, Shrangri-La Construction and Jensen & Partners, runs through Oct. 16 at the 4130 Overland Ave. location. On Monday, the museum’s executive director, Larry Earl Jr., and cultural arts consultant Monica M. Scott previewed the show for a small number of local journalists. “Last November we got a call from the California Legislative Black Caucus, who invited us to come and do an exhibition for them,” Earl explained. “[Initially], we were stumped for an idea, but we talked about it and the idea of doing something on the anniversary of the freedom rides came up. “Through our research we discovered there was one freedom ride that left L.A. headed to Houston, Texas, in order to meet up with other freedom riders in Jackson, Mississippi. They didn’t make it to Jackson, but their story is just as graphic and important as the others. Broken down into four headings — Awakening, Offering, Exceptionalism and Renewal — “Get on Board” tells the story The work of Los Angeles’ delegation of Freedom Riders, who risked their lives to fight segregation in the South, is highlighted at the Mayme A. Clayton Library & Museum. of the student activists, who on their arrival in Houston were arrested for unlawful assembly at Union Station Coffee House. Each of those sections is accompanied by a quote — for instance, these poignant words from Diane Nash Bevels: “Since my child will be a Black child, born in Mississippi, whether I am in jail or not, he will be born in prison. I believe that if I go to jail now it may help hasten that day when my child and all Health fair has activist component on this health fair in order to expand our outreach and talk about the importance of access to good healthcare.” He added: “We will have doctors, nurses and medical assistants on hand to deliver all kinds of high-quality services.” In light of the recent political brinkmanship in Washington over deficit reduction, Mangia makes no apology for the stated political aims. “We have to create a new advocacy infrastructure in South L.A. so patients who are under- and uninsured have a voice in the debate,” he argued. “We’re not going to stand for … partisan bickering, which essentially hurts our community’s health and allow a fringe group of the Republican Party, essentially the Tea Party, to set the agenda for the country.” HEALTH FAIR from page A1 munities. Staffed by SEIU and St. John’s volunteers, the fair will provide screenings for diabetes and heart problems, physicals, immunizations and nutritional advice. Children will be offered free vaccinations for the Tdap — combined Tetanus, Diptheria and Pertussis (whooping cough) shots — booster program, which students in grades 7 to 12 are required to obtain before starting school. A host of activities, including games and giveaways, will be provided for the younger attendees. As for the advocacy component, organizers from The Right To Health Committee will offer information on opportunities for healthcare access. The backdrop to the fair finds watchdogs like the Community Health Councils of Los Angeles reporting stark disparities in healthcare for AfricanAmericans — such as a 2.5 times greater incidence of infant mortality than Whites. African- FREE ADMISSION Cut Out This Coupon for Free Admission for 2 American women are 18 times more likely to be diagnosed with HIV and 10 times more likely to die of breast cancer. In addition, Black men are two times more likely to develop prostrate cancer. According to Dr. David Carlisle, director of the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development, it is estimated that 886,000 African-Americans died between 1991 and 2000 of diseases that could have been prevented had “equal healthcare been available.” “We have a very close relationship with SEIU and work closely in many initiatives,” explained Jim Mangia, St John’s president and CEO. “We came to a mutual agreement to put children will be free, not only on the day of their birth, but for all of their lives.” A collection of black-andwhite photographs, newspaper clippings, manuscripts and documents — many from the personal collection of the Freedom Riders — are used to illustrate the exhibition. Uniquely, the exhibit also features replicas of the Union Station Coffee Shop, the Houston Jail cell and a civil rights era voting booth. But perhaps the most dramatic piece is a replica of a freedom bus — created by film designers — that was bombed on March 20, 1961, when a group of Freedom Riders from Washington, D.C., entered Anniston, Alabama. “A mob basically attacked the bus, slashed the tires and someone threw a bomb inside while they were still on the bus,” Scott explained, noting that many of them wrote their last will and testaments before embarking on their journeys. “[Luckily] they were all able to Meanwhile, SEIU worker Marlene Brand, who has worked as a mammographer at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood, echoed those sentiments. “I will be volunteering on Saturday because I grew up in the community and live and work here,” she said. “More than half of our patients at St. Francis, a good 70 percent, are on Medicaid and Medicare, or some kind of public assistance health program.” Brand said that without free events like the fair, South L.A. residents won’t be able to get services such as breast screenings and access to medication for diabetes, heart disease and hypertension. 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For assistance, call Senior Care Services at (323) 451-2711 or (800) 326-9810 (Not affiliated with or endorsed by Medicare or any government agency) LJ Friedman, license #OG98672 Publisher Executive Editor Production Manager Circulation Director IT Director Wave West Edition Serving Baldwin Hills, Carson, Central Los Angeles, Compton, Crenshaw, Gardena, Hawthorne, Inglewood, Lawndale, South Los Angeles, and Watts Vol. 86 •• No. No.32?? Vol. 94 Subscription by mail in the state of California, $98 per year. Member of the California Publishers Association, California Free Press Association, National Association of Hispanic Publications, National Publishers Association. Wave Publications reserves the right to approve or reject any and all copy and assumes no responsibility for errors not of its own making. 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They sacrificed their lives and their physical and emotional health to accomplish their goals.” Apply: schneiderjobs.com/newjobs Call: 1-800-44-PRIDE Inglewood/Hawthorne/Garden a/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave Labor unions seek an injunction UNIONS from page A1 gaining process required by the MMBA,” it said. “For months, the coalition has been attempting to engage in meaningful negotiations about the effects of the proposed layoffs. Starting in early June, the coalition requested information necessary to the bargaining process and made a series of proposals to mitigate the need for and address the effects of layoffs.” The coalition’s most recent proposal on July 11, it continued, was in the form of a draft Letter of Agreement and proposed about $6.7 million in concessions in exchange for a freeze on layoffs in the current fiscal year. In an interview, AFSCME Local 3947 president Rose Downs said that talks between union representatives and City Manager Willie Norfleet’s team did not occur in time for effective negotiations on how concessions could prevent layoffs. Instead, she said, official discussions were few and far between, and were scheduled at times that required negotiators to miss work or use free time. Additionally, she told The Wave that once negotiations did commence, Norfleet and his team seemed determined to order layoffs no matter what concessions were put on the table. “The city’s response to the coalition’s efforts has been a flat refusal to bargain,” Segall said. “The city manager ignored the coalition’s communications, refused to respond to its information requests and made no counter-proposals. The events at the July 19 council meetings were a culmination of the city’s unlawful refusal to bargain. Instead of engaging in the meet and confer process as the MMBA requires, the city manager merely extracted the concessions from the coalition’s July 11 proposal and unilaterally placed them in a set of written amendments to the budget dis- Thursday, August 11, 2011 WAVE PUBLICATIONS tributed a few minutes before the council meeting began. The audacious lawlessness of this action no doubt contributed to the confusion — with serial votes, reconsiderations and revotes — that plagued the entire meeting.” Downs said that the concessions were a package deal, one that could not be broken up without a vote and ratification by union membership. They were contractual items, she said, and any changes would have had to be placed back on the bargaining table before the council A3 could legally vote to accept just some of them. Councilman Willie Jones, who opposed the budget and dismissal of city employees on three separate occasions, admitted during a late June meeting that he had approached Norfleet and his team with suggestions that they enlist experts to help pinpoint cost-saving measures, including consideration of early retirement and furloughs. After his requests were ignored, Jones said he sought experts on his own and presented the informaSee LAWSUIT on page A6 Cooley’s right hand makes her case to be elected District Attorney tity theft three times, her mother was victimized once, as has several others with whom she is acquainted. “All the deputies know how to handle identity theft cases, but I believe they should be pushed a lot more,” she said. BP: “You lived in Simi Valley until you decided to run for D.A. and then you moved into Los Angeles County in December to do so. Isn’t that the same kind of move you D.A. people prosecute other politicians for making? How is your move different from that of Sen. Rod Wright and Councilman Richard Alarcon, whom you indicted, while ignoring identical moves by Councilman Bernard Parks and City Attorney Carmen Trutanich? And what about the fact that Inglewood’s Judy Dunlap and Arnold Butler and former Supervisor Yvonne Burke [allegedly] never did live in the district they represented? Everybody knew it and you people did nothing about it.” JL: “Every day and every night, I am sleeping in Los Angeles County.” Lacey’s biography lists as her organizational leadership accomplishments during Cooley’s reign her “role in helping to establish the Alternative Sentencing Courts, heading various committees to enhance the enforcement of laws against graffiti, working with Central Operations to streamline the prosecution of all gang cases in Central Los Angeles, partnering with the Los Photo by Olu Alemoru A member of District Attorney Steve Cooley’s executive management team, Jackie Lacey hopes to succeed him. Angeles Rape Treatment Center to mandate assault training for juvenile court prosecutors and playing a role in establishing the first Animal Cruelty Prosecution Program in the D.A.’s office.” Her bio also states that, as a member of Cooley’s executive management team, “her responsibilities include regularly weighing-in on everything from high profile matters to whether the office will seek the death penalty in a particular murder case.” BP: “That being so, how did you weigh in on cases that jolted the Black community, such as the railroading of Mayor Roosevelt Dorn? The persecution of 17year-old Jeremy Marks? The indictment of Sen. Wright? The trial and acquittal of Inglewood school board member Trina Williams? The attempted murder charge and subsequent trial of Jasmin Askew and the overreach- ing imprisonment of her father, Najee Ali?” Lacey said the case against Dorn, an award-winning and highly respected former judge whom Cooley ultimately removed from his Inglewood mayorship, “did not come to a major case briefing involving me,” and she exhibited very little knowledge of what the Dorn matter was all about. She said she knew nothing about the heavy-handed prosecution (and ultimate acquittal) of Askew or how or why Ali — the Black community’s most widely known and omnipresent social activist — came to spend two years in prison. The Marks case, however, is a different story because that one was a cause célèbre and ignited international outrage. “We reviewed, reviewed and reviewed the Marks case,” Lacey said. “We listened and the good part of that story is that we listened very carefully. That’s how we reached a fair disposition on that case.” BP: “How did you weigh in on the war Cooley waged — and is still waging — against the union in your office? What about that injunction Judge Otis Wright slapped on Cooley to stop him from terrorizing union members, and what about that lawsuit the union has filed against Cooley and you?” Lacey prefers to characterize the brutal battle over unionization between Cooley and his deputy D.A.s as “growing pains,” stemming from Cooley’s disagreements with the head of the Association of Deputy District Attorneys and the contentious nature of lawyers. “Our relations with the union are the best they’ve ever been now that the union is affiliated with AFSCME,” Lacey said. “I think it’s a whole lot better now.” Nevertheless, the union is suing Lacey for anti-union activities, and pending the outcome of a complicated motion, she may be removed from the suit as a defendant because she is “the county of Los Angeles,” or she may be required to testify as a witness to it and explain why her testimony changed from one hearing on the matter to the next. And finally, on a personal note, Lacey has been a prosecutor for 26 years, including two years in the Santa Monica City Attorney’s Office. She tried more than 60 felony cases, the last being in the year 2000. She is married and has two children. She got her law degree from USC after earning her bachelor’s at UC Irvine. Lacey graduated from Dorsey High School in 1975, grew up in the Crenshaw District and volunteers one day each week talking to fifth graders about truancy, gangs, drugs, and the consequences of violating the law at Lorena Street School in Boyle Heights. I rest my case. Grandma’s Healthy Food STOP eating foods that kill you START EATING FOODS THAT MAKE YOU HEALTHY with Grandma’s Healthy & “Delicious” Food No hydrogenated oils, animal derivatives, refined sugars, chemicals, GMOs, gluten or dairy products Only ORGANIC Vegetables FREE DELIVERY to your home or office With minimum of 5 healthy meals for your daily use. Call (323) 290-1234 For This Week’s Menu 21151AO081111 BOTTOM LINE from page A1 JL: “I am not in love with him, but I have great admiration for him because he gave me a chance. You’re right — he did pull me out of obscurity and I had no managerial experience until Cooley promoted me. He believes everybody deserves a chance and when he became head deputy, he gave me the opportunity to prove myself, and my career took off because of it. I am grateful to Cooley.” Given that working for Cooley everyday makes Lacey’s heart glow, I inquired as to whether she has any criticisms about the way Cooley operates and what she would do differently if she is elected to succeed him. She has no criticisms of Cooley and for the most part, she plans to expand on what is already being implemented. Lacey is an avid proponent of the county’s Alternative Sentencing Courts, which mete out special kinds of justice to mental health, drugs, veterans and women’s re-entry law-breakers in an attempt to address the underlying causes of their criminality. “We only have one judge in the whole county handling the alternative sentencing cases and I want to expand that,” Lacey said. She also wants to expand the D.A. office’s prosecution of identity theft crimes, which she sees as a significant and growing problem in the county. Lacey said she has been a victim of iden- A4 Thursday, August 11, 2011 Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave L.A. City Council signs off on deal for $1.2 billion downtown stadium City Council President Eric Garcetti wants further talks on how city can benefit from revenue-sharing if developer exceeds profit expectations. BY RICHIE DUCHON CITY NEWS SERVICE Students exercise mural authority Courtesy photo Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas assists students from Children’s Defense Fund Freedom Schools in the painting of a mural Aug. 5 at the Martin Luther King Jr. Multi-Service Ambulatory Care Center (MACC). As part of the construction surrounding the reopening of the Martin Luther King Jr. Hospital, the students painted a portion of the 900 foot-long canvas that is currently a part of the walkway scaffolding. Photos by Gary McCarthy Blanket, the youngest son of the late pop star Michael Jackson, stands next to a piece of art drawn by his father Monday at Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. Jackson art donated to children’s hospital From City News Service Ten pieces of art drawn and signed by Michael Jackson were donated to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Monday, with the late King of Pop’s three children on hand for the occasion. The children — Prince, 14, Paris, 13, and Blanket, 9 — signed their names to some of the artwork, next to the name of their famous father. “You look at this, it makes you happy,” Jackson’s sister, La Toya, said during a ceremony at the hospital. “They’re whimsical, they’re magical and there’s just joy and peace. I know that when you see this and the kids see it, it will bring some type of joy to them, and at the same time I know it will bring joy to my brother as well.” She said Jackson would appre- ciate the artwork being placed in “a hospital like this that will help children and people everywhere.” The artwork was donated from the private collection of Brett Livingstone Strong, an artist and friend of the Jackson family. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Jackson’s mother, Katherine, were also on hand for the event. Mary Hart, a hospital trustee who helped arrange the donation with her husband, Burt Sugarman, hailed the presentation of the artwork, which will be displayed around the hospital’s new building. “To have the Jackson family here, to show a side of Michael Jackson here at Children’s Hospital that the world is totally unfamiliar with is incredibly exciting,” Hart said. Accompanied by their aunt LaToya (center), Prince Michael and Paris Jackson face the media after officially donating their father’s artwork. A non-binding agreement with developer Anschutz Entertainment Group to build a $1.2 billion NFL stadium, a new city convention hall and two parking structures on municipal land downtown easily won the backing Tuesday of the Los Angeles City Council. The stadium project includes the demolition and replacement of the 40-year-old West Hall of the Los Angeles Convention Center. AEG hopes to have the project adjacent to L.A. Live and Staples Center completed by the start of the 2016 football season. “This is a significant project for the future of our city, and it will bring football back to Los Angeles,” said Jan Perry, who chairs a council committee charged with vetting the stadium proposal. “But the most important thing is it will create jobs.” The agreement — which was approved on a 12-0 vote — “protects the general fund, leverages private investment to modernize our convention center, and guarantees that the event center is built without public funds,” added Perry, a 2013 mayoral candidate. Dozens of labor and business leaders packed the council chamber and urged the council to approve the agreement. Council members Tom LaBonge and Dennis Zine were absent, and former Councilwoman Janice Hahn’s seat remains vacant. The vote clears the way for AEG to begin arranging financing to pay for the stadium and to conclude an ongoing environmental impact report, which the developer hopes to have approved by May 2012. It also allows AEG to advance negotiations with the NFL to bring a football team or two to Los Angeles. An announcement is unlikely until after the Super Bowl in early 2012. “I feel like we’ve been handed a vote of confidence,” AEG President and CEO Tim Leiweke said. “Today was the best step we’ve taken to date to bring the NFL back to L.A., and I think it sends a very strong message to the NFL owners. “In 16 years we’ve never made it this far down the field,” he added. The approval marks a shift from a conversation about how the project will be funded to a debate over the finer points of the proposal, which could mean more or less cost to taxpayers. Those include how the city will mitigate traffic and whether or not AEG will share advertising revenue from an estimated 50,000 square feet of new billboard space. Councilman Mitchell Englander also said there has yet to be any discussion of new public safety personnel costs that would be required on football game days. Under the memorandum of understanding, AEG would pay for the football stadium and two new parking structures. The city would issue $275 million in taxexempt bonds to pay for the convention center, which will be built by AEG and designed by Populous, an international design firm. The bonds would be split. About 30 percent, or $80 million, would be paid directly by AEG and backed by L.A. Live and Staples Center, which AEG owns. The city could foreclose on the properties if AEG was unable to pay the bonds. The remaining $195 million in bonds would be paid from the city’s general fund. The MOU is structured to use about half of the new revenues generated by the project to repay the bond. Those revenues include rent to use the city’s land under the stadium, property taxes paid by AEG, parking taxes and a onetime construction tax. City Administrative Officer Miguel Santana, who helped negotiate the agreement, has called the revenue sources consistent and reliable. Any additional revenue would go back into the city’s general fund, which pays for basic city services like police, libraries and pothole repairs. A consultant chosen by the city and paid for by AEG, Conventions Sports & Leisure, predicted the project would generate about $210 million in new revenue for the city’s general fund over 30 years. The MOU also requires AEG to build the new convention hall and parking structures before it begins construction of the football stadium. The developer would also have to pay for any revenue lost by a decline or interruption of convention business because of the project. Leiweke said Philip Anschutz, who owns a majority stake in AEG’s parent company, would have to own a part of the football team for the project to be financially viable. He cited Staples Center as a model that works financially because Anschutz owns about 30 percent of the Lakers. Leiweke said Anschutz and AEG have been talking to NFL team owners for two years and are prepared to buy an entire team if necessary. “I believe instead of us pursuing the teams, we’re going to see a change now,” he said. “If a team is prepared to move here as early as next year, we’ll be ready.” The proposal would create about 6,320 permanent jobs and 14,000 temporary construction jobs over three years, Perry said. CSL studied the economic impacts of the proposal and predicted that more than half of the jobs would be in the service industry, including bars and restaurants. Another 385 advertising and 259 transit and ground transportation jobs would be permanent. Perry said new construction would be covered by a project labor agreement, which will ensure “we are putting local people back to work.” She added that a study of offsite job creation, which could include hotel workers and restaurant employees, has not yet been conducted. The general manager of the Los Angeles Convention Center, Pouria Abbassi, has said he anticipates the project will bring new conventions, but convention center business is hamstrung by a lack of hotel rooms downtown. The city needs at least 5,000 hotel rooms within one-half mile of the convention center to make it competitive with top convention centers in the country, but there are only about 1,700 rooms within that range, according to city officials. “The skeptic is no longer a skeptic,” said Councilman Bill Rosendahl, who had been the most reserved council member when it came to supporting the project. Rosendahl said he still wants to hear more discussion of possible revenue sharing from a new television contract once a football team arrives. Council President Eric Garcetti also asked about the city’s ability to negotiate revenue sharing if AEG makes more money off the stadium than predicted. CSL estimated that AEG would have a low 6.7 percent rate of return on its investment. “If we have reason to believe that they’re profiting on public land unnecessarily, then certainly we’re going to come back to you,” said Chief Legislative Analyst Gerry Miller, who has been the city’s lead negotiator in talks with AEG. Leiweke, however, shut the idea down and bristled at the suggestion of re-opening talks about any type of revenue sharing. “We have made it very clear that if (the city) ever wants to invest with us on the stadium, we’d be more than happy to include them in our rate of return,” he said. Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave Renewed focus on redeveloping Marlton Square MARLTON SQUARE from page A1 Parks; Christine Essel, CEO of Community Redevelopment Agency of Los Angeles; Kenneth Fearn, Chairman of the Board of Commissioners of the Redevelopment Agency; Douglas Guthrie, General Manager of the Los Angeles Housing Department; Richard Benbow, General Manager of the LA Community Development Department; and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). “I know that it took us a while to get here today. I was very disappointed when developer Capitol Vision Equities defaulted on its loan and then stopped work on this development,” Waters said. “The ensuing bankruptcy litigation left the families who live in this community in limbo. And it left Buckingham Place, which would have provided much needed housing for the elderly, incomplete.” According to city officials, the Buckingham Place Senior Apartments was the only segment of the originally planned mixed-use development project that commenced construction. The anticipated three-building complex with 180 apartment for low-income seniors saw the first of three phases begin, but work halted when at least three companies forced the property into involuntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy after developer Chris Hammond of Capital Vision Equities stopped making payments to the hired construction companies in May 2007. Currently, the building is over 90 percent complete; appliances, carpeting and cabinets are installed, but work remains to be done to the hallways, stairwells and trash facilities. The tumultuous history of Marlton Square dates back to 1984 when Bradley sought to turn the shopping center around. Former Los Angeles Lakerturned-real estate entrepreneur Magic Johnson won the negotiation rights in 1996, but after spending five years working through the City of Los Angeles’ planning and entitlement process, lost the battle when the development deal was given to Hammond’s firm. However, the development group was unable to carry out the project and defaulted in 2004. Adding further delay, Capital Vision’s bank went bankrupt two years later. According to city officials, Las Vegas-based USA Capital had loaned Capital Vision Equities $36 million to acquire approximately 50 parcels of land, but when USA Capital dissolved, it left behind over $962 million in assets and more than 6,000 investors. Unable to move forward while the properties were tied up in bankruptcy court, Parks said he spent half a decade trying to secure funding so that the Community Redevelopment Agency of Los Angeles (CRA/ LA) could purchase most of the remaining buildings. “If there’s one lesson to take away from the past decade, it’s the importance of attaining site control before undertaking a project of this magnitude,” Parks said. “It was unrealistic to expect a lone developer to negotiate with over 40 property owners and 300 tenants. This clearly demonstrates the important role of CRA/LA in assisting and nurturing private investment in our communities.” A breakthrough was not reached until late 2010, when a settlement agreement was reached, leaving one owner, Commercial Mortgage Managers, in control of roughly 80 percent of the total property, with nearly 20 percent of the land in the possession of CRA/ LA. Having the CRA/LA involved will speed up redevelopment, Parks said, because the agency will omit the need for a new developer to negotiate with multiple parties and aid the city in determining what will eventually be built on the site. The original vision included commercial retail stores, sit-down restaurants and condominiums. On Friday morning, shoppers and residents of the area expressed mixed emotions about the demolition, saying they are glad to see a step forward but are not convinced that developers or city officials will meet the timeline presented to the public. “I have lived in this area for over 30 years when this was the Santa Barbara Plaza. This used to be a place that I was proud of. It seems like every year Marlton Square has gone down,” said Tamika Johnson. “If you look, there are a number of vacant properties. They do nothing but bring down our property values and make those who have to walk by or drive by feel hopeless. It’s a shame because if you look at areas like Beverly Hills, the buildings are kept up and the streets are clean. The medians have flowers and grass. When you live somewhere like that you feel good about life and its possibilities. Now look at Marlton Square, you see noth- ing like what you would find in suburban areas. It does nothing for the [morale] of this community.” Jeffrey Holmes is delighted “that they are finally tearing down some of these buildings. They look ugly,” he said. “The paint is peeling, the grass and weeds are overgrown. There is nothing pleasant about this WAVE PUBLICATIONS place. For years I’ve been looking at these empty buildings.” Still, he wants to know: What’s next? “They promised for years that they would rebuild this area and nothing has happened for one reason or another,” Holmes added. “I hope they don’t tear down these buildings and leave the [rubble] behind for years until they find someone to come in and do something with it. We deserve better and want better.” Janet Taylor-Dupri didn’t Thursday, August 11, 2011 A5 know how to interpret the demolition, she said, adding that “it seems as though when something is torn down here it takes years for something to replace it. Sometimes we get better than what we had before, and sometimes we don’t. I think that newer, more modern buildings will really help this area and the community. We have all the construction going on with the mall. Why not have something that is just as nice?” A6 Thursday, August 11, 2011 Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave L O S A N G E L E S W A V EDITORIAL E GUEST EDITORIAL Fiscal recovery must focus on hard-hit minorities BY ANGELA GLOVER BLACKWELL ast month, the Center for American Progress highlighted the stark and disproportionate impact of the ongoing jobs crisis on people of color, with unemployment among Blacks reaching more than 16%, compared with more than 11% for Latinos and more than 8% for Whites. Simultaneously, poverty rates in communities of color remain at an all-time high, especially among children. More than one third of today’s AfricanAmerican and Latino youth under the age of 18 are growing up in poverty. When combined with the projected loss of more than a quarter of $1 trillion in black and Latino wealth between 2009 and 2012 due to the foreclosure crisis, what we’re left with is an entire generation of Americans living without the security of a decent living wage, quality education, affordable health care or home ownership. This is a crisis level that calls for comprehensive strategies concentrated on creating jobs now and making smart, sustainable investments that will stimulate growth and secure our nation’s economic future. Yet the Budget Control Act of 2011, signed into law this week after a lengthy, divisive debate in Congress, missed an important opportunity to address jobs and unemployment. Instead it focused on cuts that would erode funding for critical public investments and safety-net programs that offer much-needed support to America’s poor and working-class families. The bill specifically failed to mention two vital programs that will expire by year’s end: unemployment insurance and the 2% payroll holiday tax for the middle class. According to the Economic Policy Institute, failure to make these crucial extensions could: • Cost our economy close to 1 million jobs next year • Lead to $45 billion less in unemployment assistance for about 3.8 million unemployed workers who currently depend on it, which would result in $70 billion less in a 2012 economy and an estimated 528,000 fewer jobs • Decrease funding substantially for food stamps, Medicare and Pell Grants, and make a yet unnamed $900 billion in discretionary cuts to programs that many low-income people and communities of color heavily depend on for affordable access to healthy food, higher education and health care. It is deeply disappointing to see our leaders in Washington slashing services at the very moment they should be working tirelessly to maximize job growth and set the foundation for long-term economic prosperity, productivity and global competiveness, especially in communities hit first and worst by the recession. They are making a gamble with our nation’s future that we cannot afford. By 2042, people of color will be the majority in America; already the majority of youth under the age of 2 are of color. As the country’s demographic transformation continues accelerating, the framework we use to shape and develop future economic policies, particularly those affecting low-income peo- L CNN President Obama must insist on targeted initiatives if communities of color are to benefit from economic recovery. ple and people of color, must also evolve. Such a shift will lead to just and fair inclusion, elevating equity as the nation’s growth model. By recognizing the untapped potential that exists in these communities we can create targeted economic development policies at the local, regional and national levels that will spur job creation, foster new businesses and prepare low-income people and people of color to work in and grow new industries. Already, federal programs such as Youth Build and the Strong Cities, Strong Communities Initiative link low-wage workers and small-business owners in underserved areas to essential tools and resources that support meaningful employment, local innovation and entrepreneurship. And the Promise Neighborhoods Initiative, for which the Obama administration has allocated $30 million, will wrap poor children across America in education, health and social supports from the cradle to college to career, to ensure that our next generations are equipped to compete and succeed in the 21st-century economy. When it comes to maximizing job creation, the kinds of investments we make are also crucial. For every dollar invested in public transit, for example, our economy gains 31% more jobs than it would for the construction of new roads and highways. We must push for investments in transportation, infrastructure and regional economic development that will connect low-wage workers to jobs and set the foundation for sustained economic growth and competitiveness. Such investments include the establishment of a $30 billion National Infrastructure Bank, which would provide loans and grants to support individual projects and broader activities that will vastly improve our nation’s transportation systems. By intentionally focusing on equality, we can develop a robust, inclusive jobs agenda that will ensure no one gets left behind. But doing so will require bold action from decisive leaders, and a committed and engaged public to push them toward action that yields measurable, equitable results. Despite the debt-ceiling agreement’s myriad disappointments, we still have an opportunity to build a final budget that includes equitable solutions and policies to move our nation forward. We must seize it now before it’s too late. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Angela Grover Blackwell, who wrote this commentary for CNN. Photo by Nathan Keirn To cool the boiling Tea, Black voters need to heat up a Hot Chocolate Party BY GEORGE E. CURRY t is becoming increasingly clear that President Obama and Democrats need pressure from within the party to force them to stand their ground against the Tea Party insurrection in Congress. As was evident in the recent debt ceiling fiasco, conservative House Republicans have gravitated even farther to the right because of pressure from the Tea Party movement. Democrats are being towed along kicking and screaming. Well, screaming. That’s why there is an urgent need to form a Hot Chocolate Party to force Democrats to start acting like Democrats. Democrats control the White House and the Senate but they don’t act like the party in control. And that’s because they rarely control anything, including their own party members. The public agenda is being driven by the Tea Party, a small sect that has become so powerful that its members forced an embarrassed House Speaker John Boehner to withdraw his debt ceiling bill from the floor. To his credit, Boehner was smart enough to regroup and give the Tea Party what it wanted. To their discredit, President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid agreed to give the Tea Party zealots nearly everything they asked for. In the end, that still wasn’t enough to satisfy them. How did Democrats lose their way? President Obama, the titular head of the party, has usually adopted sensible public policy stances on such issues as the I public option in health care and letting the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy expire. In the face of withering Republican opposition, however, Obama has usually capitulated. For example, candidate Obama campaigned for universal health care. At the time, the U.S. was the only industrialized country in the world that did not provide universal health care. Many progressives wanted a single-payer plan similar to the one in Canada. With such a powerful health care lobby in Washington, there was little chance of achieving that goal. So they agreed to go along with the public option, a government health insurance agency that competes with private insurance companies. Thanks to a president eager to strike a deal with the Party of No, the public option was removed as an option before the legislation was passed and signed into law. This was the beginning of the end. Last December, Republicans pretended to oppose extending long-term unemployment benefits, a major goal of Democrats. But the quid pro quo was that Republicans would go along with the extension if Obama would agree to a 2-year extension of all Bush tax cuts. That was another time I wanted President Obama to call the GOP bluff, but apparently fighting is not in his DNA. With high unemployment in his native Ohio, Boehner could not afford to look into the eyes of jobless voters back home and tell them unemployment benefits should not be extended. But a deal was struck giving Obama the unemployment extension and allowing Boehner and his GOP comrades to protect the super rich. If the Hot Chocolate Party were in place, it could have insisted that the Bush tax cuts expire, something that would have cut the federal deficit by half. It also could have curtailed the practice of U.S. companies hiding most of their assets overseas to keep from paying corporate taxes and ending the public subsidizing vacation homes, private jets and boats for the upper class. As bad as past deals were, this deficit showdown was perhaps the worst example of Democrats being impotent. An angry Barack Obama acknowledged how bad the deal was after Boehner walked out of their deficit reduction talks and refused to return his telephone calls. Listen again to why Obama was angry: “Essentially, what we had offered Speaker Boehner was over a trillion dollars in cuts to discretionary spending, both domestic and defense,” Obama said in a July 22 news conference. “We then offered an additional $650 billion in cuts to entitlement programs – Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security.” Here’s the part that proved that the president was willing to give up too much: “We were offering a deal that called for as much discretionary savings as the Gang of Six [a panel Democratic and Republican lawmakers]. We were calling for taxes that were less than what the Gang of Six had proposed.” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was equally pathetic in trying to advance his deficit proposal. He said his bill did not require any new taxes, something he hoped would satisfy Republicans. It didn’t. Enough of these wimpy Democrats. When challenged by Republicans, they roll over early and often. Democrats roll over so easily that they should be renamed the Roth IRA Party. To let Democrats tell it, they roll over because they want what’s best for the country and avoiding default, for example, was achieved only because they were willing to give Tea Party fanatics what they wanted. Compromise is now a one-way street. It’s time to take another road. Let’s put the Hot Chocolate Party in the driver’s seat to say no to the Party of No. If they again threaten to drive the country in a ditch, to borrow a quote from President Obama, provide them with the directions. I suspect that once they realize Democrats won’t keep giving in to their empty threats, we will find out that they are not as crazy as they appear. Curry, former editor-inchief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him at www.twitter. com/currygeorge. Series of violations alleged in lawyer’s missive LAWSUIT from page A3 tion to staff; that effort was also unsuccessful. Calls to Cornwell and every member of the City Council were unreturned. According a council secretary, local lawmakers are in the midst of their August blackout period. However, both Cornwell and Councilwoman Yvonne Arceneaux expressed concerns last month that approval of the layoffs — coupled with the parsing of concessions and Norfleet’s presentation of lastminute amendments unseen by the public — could result in legal action. Nonetheless, the council approved the budget by a 32 vote, with supporters saying their hands were tied because the city was approaching a government shutdown. Without the passage of the budget to help close the city’s nearly $24 million deficit, City Treasurer Douglas Sanders could not legally write checks to pay the bills. As a result, the city was considering furloughing virtually all employees except emer- gency responders or those otherwise vital to operations. The letter from the coalition’s counsel also contends that the city violated the Ralph M. Brown Act, which governs meetings conducted by local legislative bodies and requires that in order for legislative action to be valid, the body must post an agenda with each item of business within at least 72 hours prior to the regular meeting. The City Council’s July 11 agenda included a memorandum on a proposed resolution to adopt the combined budget for fiscal year 2011-12 that differed substantially from the budget resolution actually presented at the meeting. “The secret budget amendments produced by the city manager and distributed to some (but apparently not all) of the council members immediately before the beginning of the meeting were not part of the agendized budget item,” said the letter. “This last-minute change is precisely the type of irregular practice prohibited by the Brown Act. It resulted in procedural chaos at the meeting and had the effect of denying interested members of the public the opportunity to participate in the proceedings to consider the new budget proposal.” In alleging a third violation, the letter states that layoffs were approved without regard to classifications and job families. The coalition claims city officials overlooked Section 1107 of the city charter, which requires that all layoffs be governed by seniority in service, in the reverse order of employment, when the city abolishes a position or reduces the number of employees in a given class of classified service. It also mandates that re-employment or reinstatement of positions at a later time must be in the reverse order of the layoffs. Because the city’s classification system is out of date, the layoffs negate the seniority rules laid out by the charter, according to Segall, who added that “we are informed that the process of assembling the list was not governed by neutral civil service principles, but by the desire to target particular individuals for layoff, including union officers and activists, based on unlawful and retaliatory motives.” In a related charge, the letter states that since at least 2007 the city has made a number of temporary or interim appointments to the Classified Service for terms that exceed the city’s appointment authority, which may violate the charter and the city’s personnel rules and regulations. With layoffs put into effect August 2, Segall warned the council that contracting out services provided by laid-off city employees would violate the civil service mandate set forth by the California Constitution and Article XI of the charter. At Wave press time on Wednesday evening, the coalition filed an unfair employment practice charge with the Public Employment Relations Board and is seeking an injunction to have the budget resolution declared null and void. Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave L O S A N G E L E S W A V VOICES 46 years after uprising in Watts, still paying a price for inequality’s legacy BY LYNEVA MOTTLEY t’s hard to believe that it has been 46 years since August 11, 1965, the day the Watts uprising began. I’ll never forget the fear that I felt watching the chaos unfold. I was shocked, but not surprised: you could feel the anger and frustration building up during that hot summer. The booming California economy was providing little opportunity for people of color. Public policy was benefiting the already fortunate and was leaving behind those who were already disadvantaged. In California, as in the rest of the country, African American and Latino families were reaching a boiling point that could not be contained any longer. Over the following two years there were a number of riots in Chicago, Newark, Detroit and elsewhere. Today in Watts — and across California — people are feeling that familiar anger bubbling up, as the gap between rich and poor grows ever wider. During this time it is important that we recall the lessons from that turbulent period in our nation’s past. Two years after the riots broke out, President Lyndon Johnson established The Kerner Commission to try to understand what happened and what could be done to prevent further occurrences. The resulting document, known as the Kerner Report, recommended that people from all walks of life have more equal access in four major areas: jobs, education, housing and services. Unfortunately, the inequality of 46 years ago is all too familiar today. To be sure, there have been areas of progress. The Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 outlawed discriminatory banking practices and redlining. This helped give millions of minority families like mine the opportunity to fulfill the American Dream through homeownership. I knew something was wrong a decade ago when my mailbox began to get filled on a daily I File photo A UPI photo from 1965 shows the level of destruction wrought by the Watts Riots. Forty-six years later, the author finds that the social inequality in the area persists in various forms. basis with offers that seemed too good to be true. The pamphlets were from realtors, brokers and lenders that were selling predatory loans. These subprime loans were designed to be more expensive products for highrisk borrowers, but turned out to be a chance for loan sharks to make a buck by pushing them on my elderly and minority neighbors, whether they needed them or not. One Wells Fargo loan officer recently testified publicly to the widespread practice of steering subprime loans, cynically referred to as “ghetto loans,” to borrowers with good credit. Wall Street securitized these loans and packaged them as good investments until the market’s inevitable collapse. According to a recent report, “Homewreckers,” the loss to homeowners, the property tax base, and local governments amounts to at least $650 billion. Meanwhile, bank CEOs continue to be absurdly compensated, with Chase’s Jamie Dimon earning $20.7 million and Wells Fargo’s John Stumpf earning $17.5 million in 2010. Of course, African American and Latino families have not fared nearly as well. A new report from the Pew Research Center finds that median household wealth in African American households declined 53% between 2005 and 2009 from $12,124 to $5,677. Wealth among Latinos fell even more dramatically during the period, from $18,359 to $6,325, a 66% decline. Many of us feel as frustrated today as we did in 1965. Yet, as was the case 46 years ago, there is an opportunity for elected officials and Wall Street to address the problems. Key among them is the growing number of mortgage holders who now owe more than their houses are worth. Today, 23% of homeowners are underwater, including as many as 35% of African American homeowners and 41% of Hispanic homeowners. It is a problem we can solve if we have the will to do so. We can actually fix the foreclosure crisis in California by writing down all underwater mortgages (2.1 million in the state) to market value. This would pump an annual $19.9 billion into the state economy and create 295,000 new jobs annually for 30 years. It would save Californians an average of $790 a month on mortgage payments and would dramatically reverse the loss of wealth in minority communities. I still believe in the American Dream. That’s why bank CEOs and elected officials owe a solution to devastated Black and Latino families in Watts and everyone who believe we all deserve a fair chance to pursue our dreams. Mottley, a resident of Watts for more than 50 years, is acting chair of the Watts chapter of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE). Among African-Americans, HIV infections remain at epidemic levels BY JONATHAN MERMIN SPECIAL TO CNN T his week, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the latest data on HIV in the United States, and it should give us all pause: 30 years into the epidemic, about 50,000 Americans still become infected with the virus each year. While that number is far too high, it has remained fairly steady for the past several years, the report found. As more people than ever before are living with HIV, there are more opportunities to transmit the virus. So the “steadiness” of new infections indicates that HIV prevention efforts are helping to avert a resurgence. Given what we know about HIV prevention efforts from the 1980s until today, the situation with HIV in this country could have been far worse than it already is. But behind the stable number of new infections lies some troubling warning signs. If the number of people living with HIV continues to grow by tens of thousands each year, the stability in new infections will be short-lived. In fact, the new HIV incidence data show that infections are already rising among one specific group of Americans: gay and bisexual men younger than 30. In this group, there was an alarming 48% increase among young African-American gay and bisexual men. A new generation of men must be reached urgently so that they can learn how to protect themselves from HIV. Clearly, swift action is also needed to ensure that similar increases do not emerge in other populations. Yet HIV prevention isn’t woven into the fabric of our lives as it should be and once was, given that the disease is still incurable and deadly. In fact, studies show that less than half of Americans have ever been tested for HIV. In the absence of major new resources for HIV prevention, our remaining option is clear: Get more out of every HIV prevention dollar we have. We have a clear way forward. For the first time, we have a National HIV/AIDS Strategy, led by the White House. It comprehensively addresses HIV prevention, treatment and care. Announced in July 2010, the strategy directs federal, state and local efforts toward the prevention activities that will have the greatest effect. It puts top priority on geographic areas and populations where HIV is most heavily concentrated and emphasizes reducing disparities in HIV that persist among many groups. To carry out the plan, we have more tools available to prevent HIV than ever. Recent landmark clinical trials by CDC and others have shown that medicines used to treat HIV can also help prevent infection among those who are HIV-negative. And another major study showed that treating HIV-infected individuals early on dramatically reduces the risk of transmitting the virus to others, underscoring the importance of HIV testing, access to care and the effect it can have on reducing the number of new infections. There are many questions to answer about the real-world use of these approaches — about cost, feasibility and acceptability. But that doesn’t mean the prevention cupboard is bare until we figure it out. Routine HIV testing ensures that people know whether they are infected, so they can take steps to protect themselves and their partners. Condom distribution programs can help reduce HIV transmission in heavily effected communities. And, behaviorchange programs can reduce the frequency of unprotected sex and drug use among people living with or at risk for HIV. Our task as a nation is to find the best combination of approaches for the populations at greatest risk and deploy them on a scale large enough to achieve greater reductions in new HIV infections — an approach the CDC calls “highimpact prevention.” The CDC recently took major steps to reach those at greatest risk and bolster prevention efforts in communities where they are most needed with its latest HIV prevention funding opportunity for state and local health departments. This effort is the CDC’s single largest investment in HIV prevention, nearly $360 million — almost half of CDC’s HIV prevention budget — and aims to ensure that HIV prevention resources more closely match the geography of the epidemic. It also provides new guidance on the most effective prevention strategies. But success against HIV will require more than smart use of financial resources. We also need to overcome complacency about the disease, which surveys show is at an all-time high, since many Americans falsely believe the scourge of the epidemic is behind us. Thankfully, however, we are seeing growing leadership and momentum behind the response to HIV in many of the communities that are hardest hit, where HIV has unfortunately remained an all too familiar threat. Many African-American and Latino leaders, gay organizations, faith leaders and public officials are beginning to reprioritize efforts to respond to HIV, helping to bring the disease out in the open where it belongs. As a nation, we must join these leaders to remind all Americans that the epidemic has not left us and that success in ending the worst epidemic of our time will require all of us. We are at a pivotal point. With a new national vision guiding HIV prevention and more prevention tools at our disposal than ever before, we hope to mark the beginning of new trend: a diminishing number of HIV infections year after year, and a new era, in which a steady stream of new infections for a preventable and deadly disease is no longer acceptable or inevitable. Mermin is the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention. WAVE PUBLICATIONS Thursday, August 11, 2011 A7 E The Soulvine By Betty Pleasant IT’S THE CITY’S TURN — The state and congressional redistricting process is nearing an acrimonious conclusion, the county redistricting is moving right along, so now appointments are being made to the citizens redistricting commission that will revamp administrative boundaries for the city of Los Angeles. The 21-member commission is due to be completely established by Aug. 17. Most of the appointers have made their selections and we can only assume that within the next six days, those who have not made up their minds will have done so, lest this process start off by lagging behind. The city of Los Angeles Redistricting Commission is to be composed of three appointees by the mayor; one by the city attorney; one by the city controller; two by the City Council president, and one each by the remaining 14 members of the City Council. These are the appointees to date: Estela Lopez, CD 1; Alejandra Arce, CD 3; Grover McKean, CD 4; Jose Cornejo, CD 6; Michael Trujillo, CD 7; Robert Kadota, CD 11; Ken Sampson, CD 12; Antonio Sanchez, CD 14 and Jerry Gaines, CD 15. Council President Eric Garcetti, who represents CD 13, has appointed Jackie Dupont-Walker and Robert Ahn, and Controller Wendy Greuel has appointed Helen B. Kim. The full commission is scheduled to begin meeting in September and is expected to complete the redistricting process and report to the City Council on its work in March, after which the council is required to adopt a redistricting plan by July 1, 2012. Oh, and somebody must redraw lines for the Los Angeles Unified School District. I don’t know who. The fun never stops, does it? COPS! — The brutal beating death of Kelly Thomas by a swarm of Fullerton police officers last month has led to a revelation that should have occurred to us many years ago: that the investigation of possible crimes by law enforcement should not be conducted by the District Attorney’s Office, as such a probe would be a conflict of interest. Sure it would, and it took Thomas’ killing for the obvious and overlooked to be firmly asserted and hopefully acted upon. Whenever a cop or a sheriff’s deputy kills or hurts a person — or does anything questionable, for that matter — it is the D.A.’s office which determines whether the law enforcement official did anything wrong. But, in response of the multiple cop killing of the homeless and mentally ill Thomas, Hector Villagra, executive director of the ACLU of Southern California, decried the Orange County D.A.’s usual investigation, and stated: “Because the District Attorney’s Office relies on the testimony of police officers to convict suspected criminals, having the same agency investigate officers for possibly breaking the law presents a conflict of interest.” Of course it does! Whether it’s a good cop or a bad cop, it’s still a conflict of interest and we all know how the D.A. — when it comes to the general public --- hates a conflict of interest. Think of the number of people of all ages in the Southland who have been killed by cops during your lifetime. Now think of the number of cops who have been charged with a crime for having done so. You can’t think of any, can you? That doesn’t seem right, does it? Villagra hit the nail squarely on the head, and he added in a subsequent interview, “You should have to take [the investigation] to another level of government because the public needs to have real confidence that the investigation is being done objectively.” I’m going to send the ACLU some money. And here in Los Angeles, 10 LAPD officers filed a lawsuit against the police department in Superior Court last week alleging they’re being penalized for not meeting their traffic ticket quotas!! Traffic ticket quotas are illegal under state law!! I’m going to talk to their attorneys, and Chief Charlie Beck, you need to talk to us. TROUBLE IN PARADISE — The members of Paradise Baptist Church are on the warpath against their pastor, the Rev. A.D. Iverson, over the church’ s finances that are so seriously strained that Iverson has felt the need to fire the church entire five-person staff make other cuts, but has done nothing to reduce his $16,000-a-month salary. The members have requested and/or demanded meetings with Iverson to deal with their financial concerns and he has ignored them. The members took their problems to the District Attorney’s Office, which referred them to a police investigator who is already handling the financial shenanigans occurring in two other Black churches. The officer added Paradise to his caseload. The members will meet Sunday in the church to plan further action whether Iverson is present or not, and, lest a 2nd Baptist Church-type incident arises, the police department has been apprised of the meeting and is said to be prepared to ensure that an orderly gathering takes place. THIS AND THAT — The residents and allies of Watts will hold a media event Thursday at 1 p.m. to reflect upon the 46th anniversary of the Watts Riots and to announce a job creation proposal. The event will be held at the Watts Towers, 1727 E. 107th St., and will feature speakers who will recall where they were and how they felt when the riots broke out, relate how far we’ve come since that day and speculate as to where we need to go. Forty-six years, huh?! The lawsuit of Mitrice Richardson’s parents against the county of Los Angeles for the Sheriff Department’s negligence in her death goes to court Friday. A mandatory settlement hearing will begin at 8:30 a.m. in Superior Court, with a 9:30 a.m. summary judgement hearing scheduled, at which the judge will determine whether the evidence of negligence is sufficient for the matter to go to trial. AND FINALLY — I’m going to be away for a while. I don’t know for how long, but, like MacArthur, I shall return. I am going to have eye surgery Monday because — in the redundancy of my people — I am blind and I cannot see. Specifically, my right eye doesn’t work at all and my left eye is nothing to write home about. I’ll be back as soon as I can see how to get here. In the meantime, Fight on!! A8 Thursday, August 11, 2011 WAVE PUBLICATIONS Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave L O S A N G E L E S W A V E ENTERTAINMENT QUESTIONS & ANSWERS: AMEL LARRIEUX ‘It has to come from a place of love and kindness’ with the level of fame and the things that I do or do not have. I am glad that I can make a living doing what I love, but still go into Target and go shopping. Blisslife Records Amel Larriuex, who rose to fame as a member of Groove Theory, does not rule out a reunion of the 1990s group. BY LEILONI DE GRUY STAFF WRITER W ith the 24th Annual Long Beach Jazz Festival set to kick off Aug. 12, singer Amel Larrieux is in New York revving up her voice for Saturday’s performance. The sultry songstress and songwriter, who embarked upon a solo career in 1999, will present work both old and new — offering selections that will remind the audience of her days with the 1990s hit R&B group Groove Theory, and delivering new music in the form of songs off her forthcoming album “Ice Cream Every Day,” which she says will be released early next year. In an interview Larrieux spoke to The Wave about the festival, her new album, persistent rumors about the possible rebirth of Groove Theory and lessons learned after more than a decade in the music industry. How have you been preparing for your performance at the festival? I am having a couple of days of rehearsal for the festival that is coming up. It’s great. I love rehearsing. It’s a time to have fun and be free. ... I will get there the day before. I prepare by doing yoga and meditation. I vocalize and do funny sounding things that sound weird to the average person. What are your hopes and feelings about performing at the jazz festival? To put it bluntly, I want to give people their money’s worth. I am a person who loves to hear good music, and I want to have a good time when I go. I want to be able to enjoy myself and sing along. I want the performer who I am watching to look like they love what they are doing, so I try to give that. ... I’m going to do new stuff from the album — or new to whoever hasn’t come to any of my shows in the last six months or who doesn’t go on YouTube and watch me. [Laughing] The new stuff ends up there pretty quick. The new songs that I am doing haven’t been released yet. … I know what resonates with the public, so I always try to do the songs that I know people want to hear. What inspired you to begin singing and songwriting? I’m not really sure. I feel like it’s one of those mysteries. A lot of artists might talk about how they just end up doing the thing they do. They don’t really know how they do it or why they do it. To this day, I am lucky that I can write a song. I always think I am not going to write another song, then ideas pop into my head. I don’t remember when it was, a point where I was writing and singing and that was going to be my thing, but I do know that I had a pretty defining moment in high school. As a freshman I went to a performing arts high school in Philadelphia, where I sung in a choir with about 100 kids who were super talented and had amazing, strong voices. It resonated with me, that feeling of the vibration of their voices and singing with them, feeling and hearing music around me. I’ve continued to be involved with music and have had it as a part of my life since that time. But I didn’t set out to be a star. I got lucky and things fell into my lap. A number of artists talk about their struggles in the music industry, did you ever waver or think to yourself, “I don’t want to be a part of this anymore?” No, because I think it’s the only thing I can do. [Laughing] It’s not always easy. If you have any insecurities or self-esteem issues, it’s not a natural or normal thing to be watched and judged. When you write your own songs and you sing them, you really bare your soul and put yourself on the line. But I feel like this comes so naturally to me, that I feel like I’m cheating because this is the thing that I do and I love it. I’ve been doing it since I was little. It feels second nature to me. There are times when I am tired and don’t want to sing, but then I will get on stage and I start singing, the audience interacts and the band and the music feels so right that I forget that I have a fever of 102. I’m so lucky I can do this for a living. How do you deal with rejection and the music industry trying to mold you into what they believe is a successful artist? Luckily that stopped happening years ago for me because I’ve been in the industry for so long and also because I pretty much set a precedent about who I am and what I will and wont do. I didn’t waiver from that. Now I am at the point where there really is no question about it. Since I am an independent artist — I am on a label that is run by my husband — I don’t have to worry about that at all. But, it took time. Everything for me is all about seasoning and time. I could say I am lucky, but I’ve been around a while and I’ve continued to do what I do. I haven’t gone into another field. This is all I do besides being a mom and a wife. ... I think people have accepted that this is who I am and I don’t have a lot of conflict in that area any more. You rose to fame in the mid1990s. How would you say the music industry has changed since then? The fact that the Internet is so important to the sale of your music and just the instant gratification when it comes to wanting a song right now. You don’t have to buy a full album, you can just buy one single. YouTube allows so many people to get exposed to the public, so that the public feels that they have more of a say in who gets to be a star or who gets to have notoriety. It has taken some of the leverage away from major labels and even the quote-unquote stars. It has sort of leveled the playing field a little bit. Every generation will tell you “this changed and that changed” [or] “when I was doing music this is how it was,” but I understand that there is an evolution. The industry is always changing and is always different. There is always something to look back on and say, “Well, that was better.” But I don’t look backward or forward. I look to the moment, to the now. Groove Theory was on a high, with the group’s debut album certified gold and singles on the R&B charts. What caused you to embark upon a solo career? Natural progression. My time was done with that and I was ready to move on. Do you regret that decision? No. I am so happy with how my career has gone. I wouldn’t have it any other way. I am glad There have been rumors that Groove Theory is working on another album. Talk to me about that. It’s always possible. We did a few gigs last year in Tokyo before the horrible tsunami. We have no problem performing together, that is super easy. It’s all about timing and getting each other to buckle down. I’m in the mixing stages of my new album and we are on different coasts. It’s always hard, but we’ve been friends since around ‘92 and it was Bryce Wilson who actually introduced me to my husband so they’ve been friends longer than we have. It’s always possible. It is just a matter of timing. You never know. I will never say never. It could happen. Artists never know how their music will be received by audiences, what are your feelings about releasing this next album? I never talk about my next album. I am so excited about this album. I feel this is the most complete body of work I’ve done and the most cohesive in my mind. It’s more coming from a personal level. ... I feel like I finally came into my own with this. It’s very true to who I am and reflective of where I am in my 38 years of living, where I am in my writing and in my voice. ... It’s always a crap shoot. You never know how it will be received. This is one of the most unnatural things I have known in my life — to make something, put something out and then have to hope that people like it too. But, I love it. That’s why I take my time to put stuff out. I won’t put something out that I don’t feel really good about. I would be a slave to everybody else if I did what they wanted me to. I don’t think I would be happy and it would probably reflect in my music. ... I tour as much as I can because that’s where I get most of my seasoning — on the road. I stay out there regardless of whether I have a new album out or not. Give us a snapshot about what we can expect to hear on the new album. It’s up[beat]. I am very influenced, and so is my producer [and husband] Laru, by so many genres of music that we will never do an album that sounds like one thing. But it’s — for a lack of a better word — soulful, from a deep place within. It’s also very up and emotes a lot of up emotions. It reflects what I’m reaching for in my life, which is a place of enlightenment. ... Even in the slower songs, there is kind of a reaching. You’ve done some humanitarian work over the years and have helped raised proceeds for the Enough Project, which seeks to protect and empower the Republic of Congo’s women who have been raped or abused. Tell me about that. I kind of feel likes it’s a sham that I am doing what I do and that I am not doing more to help the world, so I will jump at any opportunity to do charity work or any giving back. When I was little I wanted to work for the Peace Corp. It is so rewarding. The last thing I was involved in was recording a song that they used of mine for the Enough Project...Because I had been following what was going on and the person that started that organization had written a number of books, when I got to be involved it was one of the highlights in my career. It softens you and it makes you remember that it’s not just you, that you are not doing music just for you. It makes you realize that you are part of a world community and that there are people out there who need you. When you do these things, it has to come from a place of love and kindness. New Line Cinema Tony Todd, who has more than 150 film credits to his name, is a fixture in the “Final Destination” horror franchise. Death becomes him “Final Destination” veteran Tony Todd returns for the fifth installment in the franchise — but you still can’t ask about the origins of his character. BY STACEY K. BORAGE SPECIAL TO THE WAVE W ith “Final Destination 5” set to be released in theaters Friday, fans of the series will instantly recognize actor Tony Todd as one of the few constants in the hit horror franchise. He returns in the role of Bludworth — the mysterious coroner who, due to unexplained knowledge in his possession, helps once-unsuspecting victims navigate the merciless terrain laid out by Death. “I think he’s not what he seems to be,” Todd said in an interview last week. “It’s interesting because everyone I talk to has a different sense of who he is.” Since there has never been a concrete explanation on the Bludworth-Death connection, Todd had to rely on his own instincts to develop the character. In an attempt to gain added insight, he spoke with writer Jeff Reddick and producer Craig Perry — to no avail. “I made some very specific human choices because you can’t play a billboard, you have to be human, you have to be grounded,” he said. “So trust me, if it’s ever revealed, it’ll be a shock and no one will ever [see it coming].” His history with the franchise seems to have earned him a measure of respect among colleagues. Actress Emma Bell said Todd is a “legend” in the “Final Destination” universe; cast member Nicholas D’Agosto agrees, saying his presence adds an element of fear to the scene. “When Tony came on set, it was sort of like the movie became real,” D’Agosto said. “We’d be in the middle of a shoot and you sort of forget what’s going on until Tony walks in and it’s like, ‘Wait a second — we’re all going to die.’” Todd is no stranger to the horror industry; he’s best known for roles in “Night of the Living Dead” and “Candyman.” With more than 150 film credits to his name, he says making horror flicks is all fun and games — until he is forced to submit to airport security. “They know they recognize you from somewhere but they can’t place it. They say, ‘Isn’t that guy who tried to bomb San Francisco?’ So they take me into a room and they strip me down. I kid you not, [this happened] just yesterday,” he said, laughing. “They say, ‘I’m really sorry, but I like your work.’ I feel so violated.” ••• With a new cast and director on board for the latest installment in the horror franchise, “Final Destination 5” is adding more than 3D effects in its bid to lure audiences to its story of a group of people trying — mostly in vain — to beat Death at its own game. “The beauty of this [movie] is it’s the first time where the characters can actually change the outcome of the events,” said director Steven Quale. “If you kill someone else, then you can get their life — whereas, before, all the characters are waiting to die as the movie goes. There’s no conflict or tension or drama.” Although each “Final Destination” sequel has arrived on screen with a slight variation on the concept — the first sequel, for example, dealt with the ripple effect of death by indirectly connecting a new set of characters to the original ones — Quale’s main concern at the helm was avoiding what he called plotline “fatigue.” To that end, he watched all four previous movies back-to-back, and put himself in a fan’s shoes to determine what resonated and what didn’t. “I felt [the fourth movie] wasn’t up to the level of some of the earlier ‘FD’ movies, and there were three things I said I was going to do with this movie [when I came on board],” said Quale. “One, we’ve got to visually raise the bar and make it stunning with 3D; two, we have to inject the humor into it; and the third part was we have to really concentrate on the casting.” While this may be Quale’s feature directorial debut, he’s no stranger to a movie set or 3D productions: he’s been assistant director to James Cameron on several movies, including “Avatar,” “Titanic” and “Terminator 2.” “We were fortunate enough that Steve had done ‘Avatar’ and was James Cameron’s righthand man,” said actor Courtney B. Vance, who plays one of the survivors of a suspension bridge collapse. Added cast member PJ Byrne, who plays a slimy and dishonest character in the movie: “One thing you have to consider is that in theater you have to have big movements, just like in tennis, because people are 300 feet in front of you. And when you do TV or movies, it’s like ping-pong and its closer to your face. But when you’re doing 3D, it’s a little tighter. If a hair is off, [the camera] can’t focus properly.” While Quale and crew worked to create a fresh story, audiences can also expect tie-ins to the original movie as well. As the director sees it, it’s as if the franchise is showing appreciation to its fans for sticking by the concept and allowing the creative forces to “figure it out and do it right,” he said, teasing at the notion of yet another FD in the works. “There are other stories,” said Quale. “There are other things that we could do with this franchise that we’ve been talking about. We’ve had such a great time making this one, and the response has been so positive; it only fuels your creativity.” Creativity is one motivation, but in Hollywood, profit is also a driving force. By that measure, “Final Destination” may have not yet reached its peak: The fourth installment grossed $66 million — which, according to the Internet Movie Database, makes it the most successful of the franchise. “We all worked extremely hard to make the fourth film, and it didn’t turn out exactly like we had hoped, no movie ever does,” said Quale. “But it was successful enough that it gave us the opportunity to re-address the balance with this one.” VIOLA DAVIS ON ‘THE HELP’ DAVIS from page A1 Emma Stone) who helps liberate the spirit of mistreated domestic servants by enlisting their help to write a book about their experiences. Davis, who scored a 2009 Academy Award nomination for her work in “Doubt,” understood that the story would be viewed through that lens — and that she could be the target of some wrath by those who find roles like Aibileen to be demeaning. “There was a lot of negotiation on my part … I asked myself, ‘Do I want to play a character that could be viewed as so subservient?’ But behind the nodding … the pain, I think she was ultimately a liberated woman,” she explained during a recent question-and-answer session with entertainment journalists. “She was able to break out of all that to pursue a goal and a dream to speak out. That’s really interesting when you have someone risking their lives, because not a lot of people do that. They might risk their paycheck or a couple of hours of their time — but risking your life, I think that’s pretty courageous.” Indeed, courage is a recurring theme in the movie. Whether in the story of Aibileen (whose life is torn apart by a single, cruelly dismissive act of racism) or the dauntless Minny (portrayed by Octavia Spencer, she exacts a particularly distasteful form of revenge on one of her tormentors), the film leaves no question about the fortitude it took for generations of Black domestic workers to not only work long hours cooking and cleaning for White families paying less than minimum wage, but to also care deeply for the children in those families — often at the expense of their own offspring. It was this complexity that drew the Julliard-trained Davis — a master of the slow onscreen burn — to the part. Nuances aside, the versatile performer still bristles at the pressures faced by Black actors, who are often expected to pass on roles that cultural gatekeepers don’t view are sufficiently uplifting. The winner of a 2010 Tony Award for the role of Rose Maxson in a revival of August Wilson’s “Fences,” Davis first won widespread attention for her role as a crack-addicted mother in Denzel Washington’s 2002 directorial debut, “Antwone Fisher.” She also won raves for playing a serial killer on the NBC series “Law & Order: Criminal Intent,” but not everyone has been happy with her choices. “I’ve had backlash playing a serial killer … Anthony Hopkins didn’t, but I did,” said Davis, who was raised in Central Falls, Rhode Island. “I feel the most revolutionary thing you can do is to humanize the Black woman. I don’t believe that if Jodie Foster, Meryl Streep or any of the fabulous Caucasian actresses were sitting in front of you right now anyone would ask them why they did that role.” She added: “They would just look at the role … the complexities of it. Listen, Jodie [Foster] got an Oscar for ‘The Accused’ where she’s in a bar and is raped by several men. Meryl played a character who may or may not have murdered a child she says was killed by a dingo — and people say that was the most extraordinary role she’s been given. But me, as an actress, I can’t be certain things.” Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave L O S A N G E L E S W A V SPORTS E WAVE PUBLICATIONS Thursday, August 11, 2011 A9 Jgfikj Robinson makes impression in debut B r i e f s GENERAL Olympic gold medalist Rafer Johnson returns to his alma mater, UCLA, as a special assistant to athletic director Dan Guerrero. Johnson will work primarily in the areas of alumni outreach, student development and representing the athletic department at alumni and donor functions. “Rafer represents all that is great about UCLA athletics,” Guerrero said. “During his days at UCLA, he was an outstanding scholar, president of the student body and a two-sport performer in track and field and basketball. He is an Olympic champion and has spent most of his adult life in the service of others, as illustrated by his commitment to the Special Olympics. It is a thrill to have Rafer on our staff.” Johnson held the world record in the decathlon and won a silver medal in the event during the 1956 Olympics while attending UCLA. In 1960, he earned a gold medal in the decathlon at the 1960 Olympic Games by defeating Bruin teammate C.K. Yang in a memorable finish in Rome. Johnson earned the Sullivan Award as nation’s top amateur athlete that year. TRACK Cal State L.A.’s Justina Sadauskaite has been named to the United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association’s Division II All-Academic team. To qualify, a grade point average above 3.25 and an NCAA automatic or provisional qualifying mark as an individual or as part of a relay team in either the indoor or outdoor track and field seasons is required. Sadauskaite had a provisional qualifying mark of 2:13.95 in the 800 during the outdoor season. She also had a provisional qualifying time of 2:15.05 in indoor track. She was also academic AllAmerican in cross country. TENNIS Cal State L.A. alumnus and tennis legend Billie Jean King has been inducted into the Southern California Tennis Association Hall of Fame. King, who attended Cal State L.A. from 1961-64, won a record 39 Grand Slam titles during her playing career and was responsible for establishing the Women’s Tennis Association, World Team Tennis and the Women’s Sports Foundation. BASKETBALL Kaila Turner, a guard out of Pasadena’s Maranatha High School, has signed to play basketball at Cal State L.A. The second-team All-CIF selection averaged 19 points and 7.9 rebounds per game as a senior. “Kaila is a rising basketball player,” Cal State L.A. coach Janell Jones said. “She is an extremely hard worker and competitor. Her drive to be successful will guide her to a productive career.” BASKETBALL Mayum Jenkins, a transfer from Youngstown State, has signed with Cal State L.A.’s women’s basketball program. The Monrovia High School grad played in 58 games, starting 16, during her two seasons at Youngstown State. The guard averaged 3.8 points and 2.9 rebounds per game as a freshman and 3.7 points and 2.5 rebounds as a sophomore. Last season she was second in the Horizon League in steals with 62, the fifth best total for a sophomore in program history. “Maryum is a great competitor who has a knack for grabbing rebounds and loose balls,” Cal State L.A. coach Janell Jones said. “She has a great feel for the game and loves to get after it on the defensive end of the floor. She will bring instant toughness to our team.” WATER POLO The Whittier College trio of Xenia Castillo (El Rancho High School), Mattie Winkler and Katrina Thoreson have earned honorable mention on the Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches All-American team. Castillo, a senior attacker, had 29 goals, 20 assists, 113 drawn ejections and 38 steals. BY RON GUILD STAFF WRITER Trayvon Robinson around the bases. All it took for Trayvon Robinson to get rid of the nervousness that comes from one making his big league debut was to make the catch of a lifetime. Even more calming influences would come for the product of Crenshaw High School and the Los Angeles RBI program, who was playing his first weekend in the Major Leagues. Just a week after being involved in a three-team, multi-player deal at the trading deadline that sent the Dodgers farmhand first to the sprints Boston Red Sox, then to the Seattle Mariners, Robinson debuted in left field for the Mariners Friday against the Angels in Anaheim. There’s nothing like getting your first base hit off a potential Cy Young Award winner, as he did with an opposite field single off the Angels’ Jered Weaver. But it was ‘the catch,’ the No. 1 play on Sports Center that night, that really caught the eye of everybody and helped make the rest of the weekend easier for the 23-year-old left fielder. “I was nervous,” Robinson admitted of his debut. “But I kind of settled down after the catch.” He added he’s never made a better one in his life. In the seventh inning, Torii Hunter drove a ball down the left field line that seemed destined to be a two-run home run. Robinson, shading Hunter to the gap, raced hard towards the corner. Just as he neared the fence, he leaped, partly falling into the stands before backhanding the ball. After showing the umpire he had caught the ball, he turned and retrieved his cap that had fallen into the stands from a fan. Weaver struck him out looking in his first time up, but Robinson came back with a single to left the next at bat. “I was just trying to stay on the ball because he has pinpoint control,” Robinson said of the Angels’ ace. “I just wanted to make sure I hit a strike.” That baseball, he said, will go to his mother, who supported him all through his rise to the big leagues. A day later, the switch hitter got another big league “first” when he launched an oppositefield home run off Tyler Chatwood in the seventh inning of a 5-1 Mariners’ victory. While rounding second, Robinson stopped, not sure if the ball had bounced over or cleared the fence on the fly. See TRAYVON on page A12 Utes look locally for grid talent BY RON GUILD STAFF WRITER Photo by Genevieve Ross Los Angeles RBI pitcher and MVP Megan Reiner, right, celebrates with teammates after defeating Santo Domingo RBI, 3-0 in the RBI World Series softball championship Sunday at Jane Sage Cowles Stadium at the University of Minnesota. L.A. repeats as RBI champ BY RON GUILD STAFF WRITER Megan Reiner pitched a threehitter with nine strikeouts to lead Los Angeles to a 3-0 victory over Santo Domingo Sunday in the championship game to give L.A. its second consecutive Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities World Series softball title. L.A., which went undefeated during the tournament at the University of Minnesota, joins Atlanta as the only RBI programs to win consecutive titles. Atlanta’s string went from 2001-07. As winner of the title, L.A. was awarded the Dolly Vardens Trophy, named for an all-black women’s team formed in Philadelphia in 1867. Reiner, from Marshall High School, walked only one batter in the performance that earned her championship game MVP honors. At the plate, she was 1-for-3 with a run scored. Shortstop Loren Williams, a Crenshaw grad, went 2-for-3 with two stolen bases and Westchester product Shanel Tolbert drove in a run. L.A. scored one run in the bottom of the second and two in the sixth off Santo Domingo pitcher Rosauris Perez, who allowed three hits. L.A. went 9-0, outscoring the Photo by Genevieve Ross See RBI on page A12 A Santo Domingo player slides into second during the RBI World Series final. UCLA’s Jones is on Hendricks watch list Wave Staff UCLA’s Datone Jones is among the list of 35 preseason candidates for the Ted Hendricks Defensive End of the Year Award. The junior out of Compton High School missed all of last season after suffering a foot injury in fall camp. He was also on the 2010 preseason watch list after a solid 2009 season in which he started all 13 games. He was third on the team with 4.0 sacks and tied for 22nd in the Pac-10 and fourth on the team with 11.0 tackles for loss. Juniors Wes Horton and Nick Perry of USC are also on the list. Horton recorded 29 tackles, including 5.5 for loss, and four sacks a year ago. He started six games a year ago, then missed spring drills while rehabbing a foot injury. Perry had 25 tackles, including 7.5 for loss, and four sacks in 2010. The award in its 10th season is named in honor of college football’s first three-time first-team All-American. As a defensive end at Miami, Hendricks used his agility, height and reach to block passes and kicks, force interceptions and pressure quarterbacks and running backs. He roamed the front line, read plays and blitzed on impulse, completely transforming the way the defensive end position was played. His 15-year professional career saw him play 215 consecutive games, play for four Super Bowl winners and make eight Pro Bowls. He was inducted into the College and Pro Football Halls of Fame. New Husky leader Keith Price, the Compton native and St. John Bosco High product, is the first starting quarterback on a regular basis other than Jake Locker at Washington since 2007. The redshirt sophomore did get one start, however, last season against Oregon when Locker was hurt. Locker, the eighth overall pick in the NFL draft, is now in training camp with the Tennessee Titans. Price is downplaying the significance of a new face at the position. “I just play. I don’t think too much about it,” Price said. “I’m just playing football. That’s it. “You know, Jake’s a hard worker, and just watching him being around here he was always making the team better. Now I have to run the show, which was different for me. But it was fun. You accept new roles every year, and I accept the role. I’m ready.” The move to the Pac-12 has had a huge impact already for the Utah football program. Utes coach Kyle Whittingham referred to “a big spike in recruiting” once it was learned the school would be joining the conference. “Within 12 days of the announcement, we had seven verbal commitments,” he said at Pac-12 football media day. Utah has developed a reputation in recent years as a BCS buster while playing in the Mountain West Conference. Whittingham noted that fact. “Week in and week out, you have to bring your “A” game,” he said of the move to the Pac-12. “We did fairly well going against BCS schools the last eight years on a sporadic basis. “We’ve got to be ready now, but I feel we’ve recruited well the last few years. I think we’ve got the players and that the roster is pretty solid.” The Utes have done it in the past by recruiting extensively in California. This year is no exception. Among Whittingham’s incoming recruits is East L.A. College and L.A. Wilson High School product Anthony Denham, a JC All-American wide receiver who goes 6-foot-4, 231 pounds. However, Denham, expected to contend for a starting spot, is out indefinitely with a hamstring injury. His status is uncertain for the Sept. 1 opener against Montana State. The Utes then face USC at the Coliseum Sept. 10. Another recruit with local connections is John White, a JC AllAmerican tailback out of L.A Harbor College. Already in the program is Reggie Dunn, a former Verbum Dei High and Compton College standout who is projected to start at a wide receiver spot and be one of the conference’s top kick return specialists. A year ago, Dunn, a junior with 4.32 speed in the 40, caught four passes for 70 yards as a backup receiver (he started two games), but was more dangerous returning kickoffs, averaging 29.6 yards on 12 returns, including a 100-yard runback for a touchdown against Iowa State. The starting quarterback for the Utes is another Californian, Jordan Wynn out of Oceanside. Even the coaching staff has California ties since Whittingham hired Norm Chow, who had stints at USC and UCLA, as offensive coordinator. Assistant Tim Davis was offensive line coach at USC from 2002-04. “We brought Norm Chow in to install more of a pro-style attack,” Whittingham said. “Jordan Wynn is more suited to that because that’s what he did in high school.” A10 Thursday, August 11, 2011 LEGAL NOTICES BUSINESS NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR POLICE PERMIT Notice is hereby given that application has been made to the Board of Police Commissioners for a permit to conduct a Massage Business. NAME OF APPLICANT: HAPPY RELAX INC. DOING BUSINESS AS: HAPPY RELAX LOCATED AT: 10873 W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90064 Any person desiring to protest the issuance of this permit shall make a written protest before August 25, 2011 to the: LOS ANGELES POLICE COMMISSION 100 West 1st Street Los Angeles, CA 90012-4112 Upon receipt of written protests, protesting persons will be notified of date, time and place for hearing. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2149473# SOUTHWEST WAVE CIVIL ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME Case No. BS132547 Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles Petition of: Jeremiah La Ron Eubanks by his mother Jo Anne Eubanks for Change of Name TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Jeremiah La Ron Eubanks by his mother Jo Anne Eubanks filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Jeremiah La Ron Eubanks to Jeremiah La Ron Morgan The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Notice of Hearing: Date: September 2, 2011, Time: 9:00 a.m., Dept.: 1A, Room: 548 The address of the court is 111 N. Hill Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012 A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Southwest Wave Date: June 28, 2011 Matthew C. St. George Commissioner of the Superior Court 7/21, 7/28, 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2139394# SOUTHWEST WAVE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAMES STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME File No. 2011076126 Current File No.: 20101335349 Date Filed: 10/14/2010 1. Red Flag, 2. Red Flag Supply, 622 N. La Brea Ave., Inglewood, CA 90302 Registered Owner(s): Aaron D. Morris, 1905 N. Curson Pl., Los Angeles, CA 90046 Business was conducted by: an Individual. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) S/ Aaron D. Morris, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles County on August 4, 2011. 8/11, 8/18, 8/25, 9/1/11 WWA-2154163# INGLEWOOD/HAWTHORNE WAVE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2011069708 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: GS Casters, 6425 Alondra Blvd., Paramount, CA 90723, County of Los Angeles Registered owner(s): Tae In Chung, 364 Smokeridge Terrace, Anaheim, CA 92807 This business is conducted by an individual The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) S/ Tae In Chung, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles on July 22, 2011 NOTICE-In accordance with Subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except, as provided in Subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or common law (See Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions Code). Original 8/4, 8/11, 8/18, 8/25/11 WWA-2147981# SOUTHSIDE JOURNAL FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2011069409 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Phalanx Protective Services, 3781 E. 11th St., Apt. 202, Long Beach, CA 90804, County of Los Angeles. Registered owner(s): Anthony Rodriguez, 3781 E. 11th St., Apt. 202, Long Beach, CA 90804. This business is conducted by an individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) S/ Anthony Rodriguez, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles on July 22, 2011. NOTICE-In accordance with Subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except, as provided in Subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or common law (See Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions Code). Original 7/28, 8/4, 8/11, 8/18/11 WWA-2145052# SOUTHWEST WAVE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2011066485 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Brighter Day Investigations, 879 W. 190th Street, Gardena, CA 90248, County of Los Angeles 335 East Albertoni St., Carson, CA 90248 Registered owner(s): Miles Houze, 335 East Albertoni St., Carson, CA 90746 This business is conducted by an Individual The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) S/ Miles Houze, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles on July 18, 2011 NOTICE-In accordance with Subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except, as provided in Subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or common law (See Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions Code). Original 7/28, 8/4, 8/11, 8/18/11 WWA-2144590# SOUTHWEST WAVE lead abatement, site demolition, excavation and backfilling, utility services, hydronic piping vault, concrete foundation, concrete forming and placing, structural steel framing, misc metals, rough carpentry, single-ply fully adhered roofing, thermal and moisture protection, flashing and sheet metal, fireproofing, fire stopping, sealants, metal doors and frames, storefronts, curtain wall, finish hardware, windows, architectural finishes, toilet partitions and accessories, miscellaneous specialties, queuing system, audiovisual cabling and equipment and related equipment mounts, window treatments, and demountable glass partitions; and HVAC, fire sprinklers, plumbing, electrical, fire alarm, communication and data cabling, photovoltaic (PV) and building information systems. To view in person: Build LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 810, Los Angeles, California 90017, 213-996-2249 “Construction Look-Ahead”: The District will provide one (1) complete set of Bidding Documents to each Bidder, free of charge, for pick-up upon at least eight (8) hours notice to Universal Reprographics at any of the above-stated Universal Reprographics locations. Bidder may arrange, at Bidder’s own expense, for document delivery and additional sets by contacting Universal Reprographics at one of the abovestated Universal Reprographics locations. College: Los Angeles Valley College Project Name: MAPA Tree Removal Replanting Project Number.: 38V.5801.02 Project Estimate: $124,000.00 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2011066236 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Anna Meliksetian Gallery, 1270 S. Burnside Ave. #5, Los Angeles, CA 90019 Registered owner(s): Anna Meliksetian, 1270 S. Burnside Ave. #5, Los Angeles, CA 90019 This business is conducted by an Individual The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) S/ Anna Meliksetian, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles on July 18, 2011 NOTICE-In accordance with Subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except, as provided in Subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or common law (See Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions Code). Original 7/28, 8/4, 8/11, 8/18/11 WWA-2144588# SOUTHWEST WAVE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2011059612 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Surgery Center of South Bay, 23500 Madison Street, Torrance, CA 90505, County of LA 20 Burton Hills Blvd., #500 - L&C, Neshville, TN 37215 Registered owner(s): Torrance CA Multi Specially ASC LLC, Tennessee, 20 Burton Hills Blvd. #500, Nashville, TN 37215 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 02/07/2005 I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) S/ Christopher Kelly, Esq., Vice President - Legal This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles on July 7, 2011 NOTICE-In accordance with Subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except, as provided in Subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or common law (See Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions Code). Original 7/21, 7/28, 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2141087# SOUTHWEST WAVE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2011062037 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Omni Foods, Inc., 304 West Century Blvd., Los Angeles, California 90008, County of Los Angeles, 4130 Mount Vernon Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90003 Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: AI #ON: 3353574 Registered owner(s): Omni Foods, Inc., California, 4130 Mount Vernon Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90003 This business is conducted by a Corporation The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on n/a I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) Omni Foods, Inc., S/ Ronson C. Smothers, President This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles on July 12, 2011 NOTICE-In accordance with Subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except, as provided in Subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or common law (See Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions Code). Original 7/21, 7/28, 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2140753# SOUTHWEST WAVE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2011068902 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: MiMi’s Natural, 3650 W. Martin Luther King Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90008-1775, County of LA. 3601 N. Lincoln Ave., Altadena, CA 91001 Registered owner(s): Michelle Lockert, 3601 N. Lincoln Ave., Altadena, CA 91001 This business is conducted by an individual The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime.) S/ Michelle Lockert, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Los Angeles on July 21, 2011 NOTICE-In accordance with Subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the County Clerk, except, as provided in Subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or common law (See Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions Code). Original 7/28, 8/4, 8/11, 8/18/11 WWA-2139303# SOUTHWEST WAVE GOVERNMENT $35,300.000 BIDDING OPPORTUNITY WITH LACCD The Los Angeles Community Colleges have embarked on an extensive Sustainable Building Program to address much-needed campus improvements for educational and support facilities for its nine community colleges. For future bidding opportunities please visit the website www.build-laccd.org under “Contracting and Bidding Site” then click “Construction Look-Ahead”: NOTICE TO BIDDERS College: Los Angeles City College Project Name: New Student Services Building and Modernization of Holmes Hall Project Number: SSB11C.7134.05/31C.5134.02/ 31C.5134.05 HH01C.6110.03/11C.7110.03/ 31C.5110.03 Project Estimate: $34,000,000.- $35,300,000. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Los Angeles Community College District (“District”) invites sealed bids for the following public works projects (“Work”): 1. Work consists of the demolition of the existing Learning Resource Center Building (approximately 65,000 GSF) and construction of a new three story steel brace frame Student Services Building and related site work. Work includes, but is not limited to: exterior and interior building demolition, asbestos and 2. Work consists of Modernization of Holmes Hall. Work includes: Abatement of select materials, Door Replacement, Ceiling & Lighting upgrades, HVAC Central Air upgrade, & Interior Finishes to Classrooms & Offices, New elevator and structural modifications. Bids shall be prepared in conformance with the Instructions to Bidders and other Bidding Documents. Bids must be received, by either hand delivery or mail, at BuildLACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017, no later than the Bid Closing Deadline of 10:00 a.m. on September 8 , 2011, to be thereafter on said date and at said location publicly opened and read aloud. The Bidder assumes full and sole responsibility for timely receipt of its Bid. Bidding Documents will be available to Bidders on and after August 17, 2011, at the following locations: For document pick up: Universal Reprographics (District’s reprographics service) at any of the following Three (3) locations: 1) Universal Reprographics Incorporated, Los Angeles Branch, 2706 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, California 90057 Tel: 213-365-7750. 2) West Los Angeles Branch, 2043 Pontius Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90025 Tel: 310-477-2900. 3) Robertson Branch, 1444-B S. Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, 310-205-5242. To order or view online: http://www.build-laccd. org/, Contracting and Bidding Site, Universal Reprographics Online Plan Room Link. To view in person: Harris and Associates, 855 N. Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90029, Telephone: (323) 953-4000 ext 3087. The District will provide one (1) complete set of Bidding Documents to each Bidder, free of charge, for pick-up upon at least eight (8) hours notice to Universal Reprographics at any of the above-stated Universal Reprographics locations. Bidder may arrange, at Bidder’s own expense, for document delivery and additional sets by contacting Universal Reprographics at one of the above-stated locations. A Mandatory Pre-Bid Conference will be conducted on August 17, 2011 commencing promptly at 9:00 a.m. at the Faculty and Staff Center, Los Angeles City College, 855 North Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90029. Attendance at the Pre-Bid Conference is required as a condition of bidding, unless the Bidder is a “Local, Small or Emerging Business”, as defined in the District’s Policy on Local, Small and Emerging Businesses, Board Rule 7103.17 (a copy of which is available for review on the District’s Website), and Bidder submits an affidavit as required by said Board Rule. Sign language services are available for the Pre-Bid Conference upon written request received by Build-LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017 or by Fax at 213-996-2534 at least three (3) business days prior to the day of the Pre-Bid Conference. The Bidder to whom a contract for the Work is awarded by the District shall be required to furnish Performance and Payment Bonds as provided in the Instructions to Bidders. The Bidder to whom a contract for the Work is awarded by the District is required to hold at the time of submitting its Bid and Award a contracting license of the following classification(s): B - General Contractor In addition, Bidder is required to hold, or designate in its Designation of Subcontractors a Subcontractor that holds, the certification(s) required by Applicable Laws to perform the following work: ASB and Hazmat Certification Pursuant to Labor Code Section 1771.7, this Project will not be subject to the District’s approved Labor Compliance Program, initially approved July 19, 2004. For questions or assistance concerning the Labor Compliance Program, Veronica Martinez, (213) 996-2581, 915 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017. The District hasentered into a Project Labor Agreement that is applicable to this Project. For questions or assistance concerning the Project Labor Agreement (if applicable), contact Veronica Martinez, (213) 996-2581, 915 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017. The Bidder to whom a contract for the Work is awarded by the District shall comply with the provisions of the California Labor Code, as well as the District’s Project Labor Agreement (if applicable) and the District’s Labor Compliance Program (if applicable, including, without limitation, the obligation to pay the general prevailing rates of wages in the locality in which the Work is to be performed in accordance with, without limitation, Sections 1773.1, 1774, 1775 and 1776 of the California Labor Code and the obligation to comply with Section 1777.5 of the California Labor Code governing employment of apprentices. Copies of the prevailing rates of per diem wages are on file at the District’s principal office at 915 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017, and are available to any interested party on request. Substitution of securities for any moneys withheld by District to ensure performance under any contract awarded by the District for the Work shall be permitted as required by Section 22300 of the California Public Contract Code. Bidders are notified of the District’s Surety Bond Program. For further information regarding enrollment eligibility and program services contact Paulette Williams, Merriweather & Williams, at 213-258-3000. Capitalized terms used herein shall have the meanings assigned to them as set forth in Article 1 of the Instructions to Bidders. Questions shall be directed to: Denise Briggs Build-LACCD Sustainable Building Program Managers E-mail: [email protected] or via Phone: (213) 996-2247 or Fax: (213) 996-2534 Contractors interested in obtaining information on upcoming LACCD projects; see www.build-laccd. org (Contracting and Bidding Site) 8/11/11 WWA-2153513# SOUTHWEST WAVE BIDDING OPPORTUNITY WITH LACCD The Los Angeles Community Colleges have embarked on an extensive building program funded by Proposition A/AA to address muchneeded campus improvements for educational and support facilities for its nine community colleges. For future bidding opportunities please visit the website www.build-laccd.org under “Contracting and Bidding Site” then click “Construction Look-Ahead”: NOTICE TO BIDDERS College: District Wide Project Name: Master Agreement for Purchase of Live Plants and Supplies Project Number: 40J.J55.05 Bid Number: 101 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Los Angeles Community College District (“District”) invites sealed bids for the following: This is a competitive bid for the purchase by the Los Angeles Community College District of the following Live Plants and Supplies, for its colleges throughout the Los Angeles area. The items to be procured are broken down for the purposes of bidding into one (1) Bid Category and consist of Live Plants and Supplies. Bids shall be prepared in conformance with the Instructions to Bidders using the forms included in the Bidding Documents. All Bids must be received at Build LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Ste 810, Los Angeles, California 90017, by either hand delivery or mail, no later than September 9, 2011 @ 2:00 PM to be thereafter on said date and at said location publicly opened and read aloud. The Bidder assumes full and sole responsibility for timely receipt of its Bid, the Bid Security and any other documents required to be submitted with the Bid. Bidding Documents including Instruction to Bidders and other documents, if any, will be available to Bidders on and after August 4, 2011, at the following locations: For document pick up: Universal Reprographics Incorporated, Los Angeles Branch, 2706 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, California 90057 Tel: 213-3657750 , West Los Angeles Branch, 2043 Ponitius Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90025 Tel: 310-477-2900, Robertson Branch, 1444-B S. Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, 310-205-5242. To order or view online: http://build-laccd. org/, Contracting and Bidding Site, Universal Reprographics Online Plan Room Link. For advertising information There will be a mandatory Phone Pre-Bid Conference August 18 @1:00 PM Information for conference line will be included in the Bid Documents. Questions shall be directed to: Paul Spear Sustainable Building Program Managers [email protected] [Contractors interested in obtaining information on upcoming LACCD projects; see build-laccd.org (Contracting and Bidding Site)] 8/11/11 WWA-2152754# SOUTHWEST WAVE BIDDING OPPORTUNITY WITH LACCD The Los Angeles Community Colleges have embarked on an extensive building program funded by Proposition A/AA to address muchneeded campus improvements for educational and support facilities for its nine community colleges. For future bidding opportunities please visit the website www.build-laccd.org under “Contracting and Bidding Site” then click “Construction Look-Ahead”: NOTICE TO BIDDERS College: District Wide Project Name: Master Agreement for Purchase of Lockers Project Number: 40J.J55.05 Bid Number: 104 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Los Angeles Community College District (“District”) invites sealed bids for the following: This is a competitive bid for the purchase by the Los Angeles Community College District of the following Lockers, for its colleges throughout the Los Angeles area. The items to be procured are broken down for the purposes of bidding into one (1) Bid Category and consist of Phenolic Lockers, Weapons Lockers, and Services. Bids shall be prepared in conformance with the Instructions to Bidders using the forms included in the Bidding Documents. All Bids must be received at Build LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Ste 810, Los Angeles, California 90017, by either hand delivery or mail, no later than September 8, 2011 @ 2:00 PM to be thereafter on said date and at said location publicly opened and read aloud. The Bidder assumes full and sole responsibility for timely receipt of its Bid, the Bid Security and any other documents required to be submitted with the Bid. Bidding Documents including Instruction to Bidders and other documents, if any, will be available to Bidders on and after August 03, 2011, at the following locations: For document pick up: Universal Reprographics Incorporated, Los Angeles Branch, 2706 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, California 90057 Tel: 213-3657750 , West Los Angeles Branch, 2043 Ponitius Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90025 Tel: 310-477-2900, Robertson Branch, 1444-B S. Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, 310-205-5242. To order or view online: http://build-laccd. org/, Contracting and Bidding Site, Universal Reprographics Online Plan Room Link. To view in person: Build LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 810, Los Angeles, California 90017, 213- 996-2249 The District will provide one (1) complete set of Bidding Documents to each Bidder, free of charge, for pick-up upon at least eight (8) hours notice to Universal Reprographics at any of the above-stated Universal Reprographics locations. Bidder may arrange, at Bidder’s own expense, for document delivery and additional sets by contacting Universal Reprographics at one of the abovestated Universal Reprographics locations. There will be a mandatory Phone Pre-Bid Conference August 16, 2011 @ 10:00 AM Information for conference line will be included in the Bid Documents. Questions shall be directed to: Paul Spear Sustainable Building Program Managers [email protected] [Contractors interested in obtaining information on upcoming LACCD projects; see build-laccd.org (Contracting and Bidding Site)] 8/11/11 WWA-2150506# SOUTHWEST WAVE BIDDING OPPORTUNITY WITH LACCD The Los Angeles Community Colleges have embarked on an extensive building program funded by Proposition A/AA to address muchneeded campus improvements for educational and support facilities for its nine community colleges. For future bidding opportunities please visit the website www.build-laccd.org under “Contracting and Bidding Site” then click “Construction Look-Ahead”: NOTICE TO BIDDERS College: District Wide Project Name: Master Agreement for Purchase of Apple Computer Equipment Project Number: 40J.J55.05 Bid Number: 103 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Los Angeles Community College District (“District”) invites sealed bids for the following: This is a competitive bid for the purchase by the Los Angeles Community College District of the following Apple Computer Equipment, for its colleges throughout the Los Angeles area. The items to be procured are broken down for the purposes of bidding into one (1) Bid Category and consist of Desktop Computers, Laptop Computers, Tablet Computers, Computer Peripherals/Apple, Software Programs and Additional Services. Bids shall be prepared in conformance with the Instructions to Bidders using the forms included in the Bidding Documents. All Bids must be received at Build LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Ste 810, Los Angeles, California 90017, by either hand delivery or mail, no later than September 8, 2011 @ 1:00 PM to be thereafter on said date and at said location publicly opened and read aloud. The Bidder assumes full and sole responsibility for timely receipt of its Bid, the Bid Security and any other documents required to be submitted with the Bid. Bidding Documents including Instruction to Bidders and other documents, if any, will be available to Bidders on and after August 3, 2011, at the following locations: For document pick up: Universal Reprographics Incorporated, Los Angeles Branch, 2706 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, California 90057 Tel: 213-3657750 , West Los Angeles Branch, 2043 Ponitius Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90025 Tel: 310-477-2900, Robertson Branch, 1444-B S. Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, 310-205-5242. To order or view online: http://build-laccd. org/, Contracting and Bidding Site, Universal Reprographics Online Plan Room Link. To view in person: Build LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 810, Los Angeles, California 90017, 213- 996-2249 The District will provide one (1) complete set of Bidding Documents to each Bidder, free of charge, for pick-up upon at least eight (8) hours notice to Universal Reprographics at any of the above-stated Universal Reprographics locations. Bidder may arrange, at Bidder’s own expense, for document delivery and additional sets by contacting Universal Reprographics at one of the abovestated Universal Reprographics locations. LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE TO BIDDERS / NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Los Angeles Community College District (“District”) invites sealed bids for the following public works project (“Work”): Work consists of the following scope: There are 62 mature trees of various types located on the site of the new MAPA building that need to be excavated, boxed and removed for offsite transplantation prior to construction. According to LAVC’s EIR, these trees may not be disturbed during the nesting season (February 1 - September 1). Hence, the trees must be removed prior to February 1st. 2012 The Campus desires to award each tree separately to the lowest, responsible bidder(s) who can transplant them to an appropriate offsite location prior to the site being cleared for the construction of the MAPA building. Bids shall be prepared in conformance with the Instructions to Bidders and other Bidding Documents. Bids must be received, by either hand delivery or mail, at BuildLACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017, no later than the Bid Closing Deadline of 9:00 a.m. on September 1, 2011, to be thereafter on said date and at said location publicly opened and read aloud. The Bidder assumes full and sole responsibility for timely receipt of its Bid. Bidding Documents will be available to Bidders on and after August 8, 2011, at the following locations: For document pick up: Universal Reprographics (District’s reprographics service) at any of the following Three (3) locations: 1) Universal Reprographics Incorporated, Los Angeles Branch, 2706 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, California 90057 Tel: 213-365-7750 2) West Los Angeles Branch, 2043 Pontius Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90025 Tel: 310-477-2900 3) Robertson Branch, 1444-B S. Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, 310-205-5242 To order or view online: http://www.build-laccd. org/, Contracting and Bidding Site, Universal Reprographics Online Plan Room Link. To view in person: Yang Management, 5800 Fulton Avenue, Valley Glen, CA 91401, Telephone: (818) 756-0959. The District will provide one (1) complete set of Bidding Documents to each Bidder, free of charge, for pick-up upon at least eight (8) hours notice to Universal Reprographics at any of the above-stated Universal Reprographics locations. Bidder may arrange, at Bidder’s own expense, for document delivery and additional sets by contacting Universal Reprographics at one of the above-stated locations. A mandatory Pre-Bid Conference will be conducted on August, 15’th, 2011, commencing promptly at 10:00 a.m. at Yang Management, 5800 Fulton Avenue, Valley Glen, CA 91401, Telephone: (818) 756-0959. Attendance at the Pre-Bid Conference is required as a condition of bidding, unless the Bidder is a “Local, Small or Emerging Business”, as defined in the District’s Policy on Local, Small and Emerging Businesses, Board Rule 7103.17 (a copy of which is available for review on the District’s Website), and Bidder submits an affidavit as required by said Board Rule. Sign language services are available for the Pre-Bid Conference upon written request received by Build-LACCD, 915 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017 or by Fax at 213-9962534 at least three (3) business days prior to the day of the Pre-Bid Conference. The Bidder to whom a contract for the Work is awarded by the District shall be required to furnish Performance and Payment Bonds as provided in the Instructions to Bidders. The Bidder to whom a contract for the Work is awarded by the District is required to hold at the time of submitting its Bid and Award a contracting license of the following classification(s): D-49 Tree Service or C-27 Landscaping Contractor. In addition, Bidder is required to hold, or designate in its Designation of Subcontractors a Subcontractor that holds, the certification(s) required by Applicable Laws to perform the following work: N/A. Pursuant to Labor Code Section 1771.7, this Project Will not be subject to the District’s approved Labor Compliance Program, initially approved July 19, 2004. For questions or assistance concerning the Labor Compliance Program, Veronica Martinez, (213) 996-2581, 915 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017.. The District Hasentered into a Project Labor Agreement that is applicable to this Project. For questions or assistance concerning the Project Labor Agreement (if applicable), contact Veronica Martinez, (213) 996-2581, 915 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017. The Bidder to whom a contract for the Work is awarded by the District shall comply with the provisions of the California Labor Code, as well as the District’s Project Labor Agreement (if applicable) and the District’s Labor Compliance Program (if applicable, including, without limitation, the obligation to pay the general prevailing rates of wages in the locality in which the Work is to be performed in accordance with, without limitation, Sections 1773.1, 1774, 1775 and 1776 of the California Labor Code and the obligation to comply with Section 1777.5 of the California Labor Code governing employment of apprentices. Copies of the prevailing rates of per diem wages are on file at the District’s principal office at 915 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 810, Los Angeles, CA 90017, and are available to any interested party on request. Substitution of securities for any moneys withheld by District to ensure performance under any contract awarded by the District for the Work shall be permitted as required by Section 22300 of the California Public Contract Code. Bidders are notified of the District’s Surety Bond Program. For further information regarding enrollment eligibility and program services contact Paulette Williams, Merriweather & Williams, at 213-258-3000. Capitalized terms used herein shall have the meanings assigned to them as set forth in Article 1 of the Instructions to Bidders. Questions shall be directed to: Daniel Robb Build-LACCD Sustainable Building Program Managers E-mail: [email protected] or via Phone: (213) 996-2589 or Fax: (213) 996-2534 [Contractors interested in obtaining information on upcoming LACCD projects; see www.buildlaccd.org (Contracting and Bidding Site)] 8/11/11 WWA-2149914# SOUTHWEST WAVE REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (RFP #7555) 2011 CONTINUUM OF CARE HOMELESS ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles invites proposals from qualified organizations interested in providing supportive services with assisted housing through the Section 8 Continuum of Care Homeless Assistance Programs. Copy of the RFP may be obtained beginning August 1, 2011 via http://www.hacla.org/ps/ or call (213) 252-5405 or 252-1832. Proposals will be accepted at 2600 Wilshire Blvd., #3100, Los Angeles, CA 90057, until 2:00 P.M. August 26, 2011. 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2147368# SOUTHWEST WAVE INVITATION FOR BIDS (IFB) 7790 RANGES The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles invites your firm to submit a bid to sell ranges to the Authority. There will be a mandatory Phone Pre-Bid Conference August 16, 2011 @ 11:00 AM Information for conference line will be included in the Bid Documents. Copies of the IFB may be downloaded at www. hacla.org/ncg. Bids will be accepted at 2600 Wilshire Blvd., #3100 Los Angeles, CA 90057 until 1:30 P.M., local time August 26, 2011. Questions shall be directed to: INVITATION FOR BIDS (IFB) 7792 REFRIGERATORS Paul Spear Sustainable Building Program Managers [email protected] [Contractors interested in obtaining information on upcoming LACCD projects; see build-laccd.org (Contracting and Bidding Site)] 8/11/11 WWA-2150486# SOUTHWEST WAVE $124,000.00 BIDDING OPPORTUNITY WITH LACCD The Los Angeles Community Colleges have embarked on an extensive Sustainable Building Program to address much-needed campus improvements for educational and support facilities for its nine community colleges. For future bidding opportunities please visit the website www.build-laccd.org under “Contracting and Bidding Site” then click call (323) The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles invites your firm to submit a bid to sell refrigerators to the Authority. Copies of the IFB may be downloaded at www. hacla.org/ncg. Bids will be accepted at 2600 Wilshire Blvd., #3100 Los Angeles, CA 90057 until 2:30 P.M., local time August 26, 2011. 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2147102# SOUTHWEST WAVE INVITATION FOR BIDS (IFB) No. 1711 THE RE-ROOFING OF SIXTY (60) BUILDINGS AT RANCHO SAN PEDRO HOUSING DEVELOPMENT LOCATED AT 275 W. 1ST STREET, SAN PEDRO, CA 90731. The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles invites vendors to submit firm fixed price bids for the re-roofing of sixty (60) buildings for Rancho San Pedro housing development located at 275 W. 1st Street, San Pedro, CA 90731. Copies of the IFB may be downloaded from the internet at www.hacla.org/cgs. Bids will be accepted at 2600 Wilshire Blvd., #3100, Los Angeles, CA 90057 until 2:00 p.m. (local time), August 24, 2011. 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2147048# SOUTHWEST WAVE CITATION FREEDOM FROM PARENTAL CUSTODY AND CONTROL (ABANDONMENT RE: ADOPTION) CASE NO. J-236288 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN BERNARDINO IN THE MATTER OF MALEE CLARISA SANCHEZ; A Minor. A Person who shall be declared free from the custody and control of her parents. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, To Father, JORGE HERRERA, AKA GORGE HERRERA, AKA GORGE HERNANDEZ HERRERA and to all persons claiming to be the father or mother of said minor person above named. By order of this Court you are hereby cited and advised that you may appear before the Judge Presiding in Department J-6 of the Juvenile Division of the above-entitled court located at 860 East Gilbert Street, San Bernardino, California 92415-0955 of the above-entitled court on SEPTEMBER 21, 2011, at 8:30 a.m. of that day, then and there to show cause, if any you have, why said person should not be declared free from the control of her parents according to the petition on file herein. If the Court finds that the interest of the minor requires her protection, the Court shall appoint counsel to represent the minor. Such counsel shall be appointed whether or not the minor is able to afford counsel. If you appear without counsel and are unable to afford counsel, the Court shall appoint counsel for you if you request appointed counsel. The purpose of this action, to free the minor from the custody of her parent(s), is to permit the adoption of said minor to a suitable adopting parent. The Court may continue these proceedings, not to exceed thirty (30) days, as necessary to appoint counsel and enable counsel to become familiar with these proceedings. Given under my hand and seal of the Superior Court of the County of San Bernardino, State of California, this 8th; day of July, 2011. COUNTY CLERK By Rosa Cervantes, Deputy 7/21, 7/28, 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2139725# CENTRAL NEWS WAVE PUBLIC NOTICE The waiting list for the Lomita Manor public housing program will close effective August 11, 2011 at 8:00 a.m. Due to the amount of applicants currently on the waiting list, the average wait time is excessive; therefore the waiting list will be closed. If you have family or know someone who has not placed their name on the Lomita Manor waiting list and they wish to do so, please have them register online at www.hacola.org Interested persons may also call (323) 838-5074 or (800) 731-4663. The waiting list will reopen in the future and a public notice will be issued at that time. 7/14, 7/21, 7/28, 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2134608# SOUTHWEST WAVE PROBATE NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: EDDIE RUTH LEE CASE NO. BP129533 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the WILL or estate, or both of EDDIE RUTH LEE. A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by ANTHONY L. HILL in the Superior Court of California, County of LOS ANGELES. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that ANTHONY L. HILL be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act . (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: 08/10/11 at 8:30AM in Dept. 9 located at 111 N. HILL ST., LOS ANGELES, CA 90012 IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Probate Code section 9100. The time for filing claims will not expire before four months from the hearing date noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. In Pro Per Petitioner ANTHONY L. HILL 10000 PALOMA STREET LOS ANGELES CA 90002 7/28, 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2143311# SOUTHWEST WAVE PUBLIC AUCTION/ SALES NOTICE OF PUBLIC LIEN SALE US STORAGE CENTERS 820 INDUSTRIAL AVE INGLEWOOD, CA 90302 (310) 677-2544 In accordance with the provisions of the California Self-Storage Facility Act, Section 21700, et seq. of the Business and Professions Code of the State of California the undersigned will be sold at public auction on AUG 23, 2011 at 11:00am General household goods, tools, office & business equipment, electronics, instruments, appliances, furniture, sporting goods, apparel, collectibles & antiques, and / or miscellaneous items stored at 820 Industrial Avenue, Inglewood, CA 90302, County of Los Angeles, by the following persons; EMOGENE JACKSON, CHRISTOPHER LEE MENTEER, ANTHONY USHER a.k.a. ANTHONY THOMAS USHER, , RODERICK BROOKS, BEVERLY JOHNSON, TANYKA ALEXANDER a.k.a. TANYKA NICOLE STOKES ALEXANDER, SHANA SHERE SLAUGHTER, SAMMIE PINKNEY ,a.k.a. SAM PINKNEY a.k.a. SAMMIE L. PINKNEY JR.,DAVID CARLOS PEREZ, JUSTIN REID a.k.a. JUSTIN DANA REID, LYDIA MARIE MURRAY-CHOTRONNAPAD,THERON PAIGE CHRISTOPHER, TANICIA LETICIA RODRIGUEZ, WILLIAM HUMBERTO CONTRERAS, CLIVE O. PHILLIP a.k.a. CLIVE PHILLIP OTTLEY, DIANA EVANS, CYNTHIA MARSHALL, DAWN CHERI FARRELL, LYZETTA LYNN SUMMERVILLE, JOHN DELANO INGRAM, DEJONE CYIARK, DONNIE HAYES HILL, REBECCA ANN DEARWATKINS , Larwence L. Williams a.k.a. Larwence L. Williams Jr. a.k.a. Lawrence Williams L. Jr, ANNETTE CHRISTINE VASQUEZ, . Property is sold on an “AS IS BASIS”. There is a refundable $40 cleaning deposit on all units. Sale is subject to cancellation. Auctioneer is: American Auctioneers Dan Dotson & Associates, California State Bond #FS863-20-14, (800) 8387653. 8/4, 8/11/11 WWA-2150016# INGLEWOOD/HAWTHORNE WAVE 556 5720 West Wave Classified WAVE PUBLICATIONS Thursday, August 11, 2011 A11 CLASSIFIED To Place An Ad Call: L.A. 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Perfect for SCHOOLS & INSTRUCTIONS Homesite or Development. from City & Ski 1300 Minutes Area. Dunn Properties, LTD. 1-702-878-5000. ALLIED HEALTH CAREER www.DunnPropertiesLtd.com training - Attend college (Cal-SCAN) 100% online. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. BATH TUB REPAIR/REFINISH SCHEV certified. Call 8004100 481-9409. www.CenturaOnline.com (Cal-SCAN) Drivers: Back by popular demand, run the 11 Western States! WEEKLY HOME TIME. The BEST jobs getting even better! Call Knight today. . 1-800-414-9569. www.DriveKnight.com (CalSCAN) ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 888-210-5162 ATTN: COMPUTER WORK. www.Centura.us.com (CalSCAN) Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to $1,500 Part Time to $7,500/mo. Full Time. Train- HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! ing provided. www.KTRGlo- Graduate in 4 weeks! 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(310) 478-1091 Downey 11440 Old River School Rd #8 1BD/1BA 1pkng Space + Lndy $695/mo LA 6521 S. Avalon 3bd/2ba w/ 2pkng Spaces + Lndy Facility $995/mo Downey 7411 Arnett #6 3BD/2BA w/ pkng space + Lndy Room $1195/mo LA 2917 W. 62nd St 2br/2ba 1pkng gar & Indy hk-ups $1195 LA 12229 Vermont 8 br 5.5ba $3795 (House) LA 1036 S. Normandie #9 3bd/2ba w/1pkng + Lndy Facility $1295/mo LA 1032 S. Normandie #203 2bd/2ba W/1pkng + Lndy Facility $995/each LA 1032 S. Normandie #101 2bd/2ba w/ 2pkng + Lndy Facility $1195/mo LA 1032 S. Normandie #103 2bd/2ba w/ 2pkng + Lndy Facility $1095/mo LA 1032 S. Normandie #104 2bd/2ba w/ 2pkng + Lndy Facility $1145/mo 1ST Month's Free Rent No Section 8 Program 3 Bdrm 3 Ba Townhouse. 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Alondra $1050/m. 310-764-4408 *Large 1BD 1BA Apt* new paint,carpet,mini blinds, South LA near Normandie 323-290-1155 FOR RENT 1 & 2 bdm Pico/Crenshaw 1, 2 & 3 bdm Venice/4th Ave 1Bdm Cimmaron/Adams 1 & 2 bdm USC area 1 & 2 bdm 48th/Crenshaw 1, 2, & 3 bdm Inglewood Call 323-938-7467 2 Bdrm La Brea Area New crpt, Laundry, Sec 8 OK $1100/m, Sec 8 $1250/m + Security Deposit Call: (323) 294-4375 2bd Beautiful Xtra Lrg TwnHse. huge walk in closet hd wd flrs, granite, oak kit, patio, pkg No Sec 8. Rent neg 323-304-2109 1BD & 2bd avail Crenshaw & Adams. Redec w/New crpt, Stv/fridge. Sec. bldg. Sec 8 OK 323 934-5666 1bd Fairfax/Pico. Beautiful extra Lrg. Hd wd flrs, granite & oak kit, prkg. No Sec 8. 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Non Sec 8 (323) 735-0879 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 SPACIOUS SGL’S, 1 & 2BD APT FOR RENT Near Western/Adams & 110th/Vermont Prices $775-950/m NO Sec 8! Please call (323) 735-1315 For more information 657AO081111 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 1BD APT FOR RENT Seniors preferred Sec 8 OK, $895/m + $895 dep. covered prking, wsh hk up (323) 854-8153 (323) 573-7038 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 Clean one bedroom apartment. Unit includes full-size kitchen, tile floor bathroom and walk-in closets. Close to 105 & 110 freeway interchange and MTA transit hub. Full size refrigerator & stove are in unit. $945/mo & $945/sec. Credit & Eviction check $20.00. 11827 S. Fig. Units #5, 6, & 10. Open house Aug. 13th & 14th 10am – 3pm. For appl. and more info. call (323)291-5202. 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Now Only $49.99 Plus 3 Free Gifts & right-tothe-door delivery in a reusable cooler, Order Today. 1888-461-3486 and mention code 45069KZH or www.OmahaSteaks.com/value38 (Cal-SCAN) APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 661AO081111 OPPORTUNITIES 1010 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 6005 659AO081111 EMPLOYMENT HANDYMAN 4315 MISC. FOR SALE 581AO081111 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES 1010 EMPLOYMENT SELL YOUR RV FAST! Online at RVT.com Millions of RV Shoppers. Thousands of RVs SOLD - Serving RV traders since 1999. www.RVT.com or Call 888347-7570. (Cal-SCAN) A12 Thursday, August 11, 2011 Inglewood/Hawthorne/Gardena/Lawndale Wave • Southwest Wave/Southwest Topics/Angeles Mesa & Tribune • Central News/Southside Journal/Compton/Carson/Wilmington Wave Lozano awarded scholarship Wave Staff Photo by Genevieve Ross Cerritos College softball standout Jessica Lozano has been awarded a scholarship in the name of former Falcon coach Nancy Kelly. The scholarship, which began in 2003, goes towards purchasing books and supplies after transferring to a four-year university. Lozano will be attending Cumberland University, an NAIA school located 30 miles east of Nashville, Tenn. The recipient must have played two years of softball at Cerritos, as well as submitted a personal statement, and transcripts and a letter of recommendation from at least one of their professors. Lozano, the South Coast Conference pitcher of the year after going 30-8 with a 2.46 ERA for a Falcon team that reached the Super Regionals, was not expecting to be the recipient. “I was really surprised and happy when coach Kelly contacted me to let me know I would be getting the scholarship,” the graduate of Banning High School said. “I knew that the scholarship was available, but I never thought I would get it. Kodee Murray (current coach) gave the sophomores a flier with all of the requirements and I went ahead Los Angeles pitcher Megan Reiner delivers a pitch during the RBI World Series final. and did everything it asked.” She will now be playing for a Cumberland program that was 31-27 overall and 17-15 in the Trans South Conference. “I had been getting recruited by Cumberland (along with outfielders Natalie Garcia and Aina I’aulualo) through most of the season and they decided to come out to see me pitch at the Super Regional,” Lozano said. “I knew coach (Heather) Stanfill was watching me pitch and was really depressed because of my back injury. I wanted to do so well and was afraid she might not be interested if I didn’t do well. She didn’t know about my back injury until after the first game, but I guess she liked how I battled through it and didn’t let it keep me from doing what I had to do.” As a freshman at Cerritos, Lozano was 6-4 with two saves and a 2.08 ERA as the number two pitcher behind ace Hillary PerezAshley, who would go 33-2 and be named the state’s pitcher of the year for a second consecutive season. She overcame a nagging back injury in the postseason during the Super Regionals to lead the Falcons through four games before being eliminated. “I knew what I was capable of doing and just waited for my turn,” Lozano said. “I came to Cerritos because it has a reputation of being a very good program and I knew that if I continued to work hard, that time would come for me. I’m really happy I decided to come to Cerritos because it was such a great experience. I didn’t get to go where I wanted to after high school (Cal State Northridge), but I wouldn’t trade coming to Cerritos.” She went 29-3 as a senior at Banning, earning All-City honors. Lozano, a biology major, is looking forward to the four-year college experience that awaits her. “I’ve always been dependent on my parents and now this will be my first experience away from them,” she said. “I’m excited to experience the dorm life, which not everyone gets to do, and look forward to the opportunity to become more independent. “My parents are helping me with the move and then it’s up to me to be on my own and do what I’ve always wanted to do. This is a great opportunity for me, and receiving the scholarship really helps make things a little easier with everything that’s going on. But I’m excited for the opportunity.” Reiner pitches shutout in final Trayvon makes highlight-reel grab RBI continued from page A9 opposition 71-5, during the tournament. The roster included Westchester’s Leesa Harris, Arianna Smith, Tolbert, Breea Jamerson, Monica Cartwright and Anasia Stinson. The softball championship airs on the MLB Network and MLB. com, the official web site of Major League Baseball, at 9 a.m. August 21. The baseball portion of the RBI World Series began Wednesday. The junior and senior championship games are scheduled for Aug. 14 at Target Field, home of the Minnesota Twins. National champ Carson High School shortstop Darian Tautalafua helped the Southern California Athletics win the Premier Girls Fastpitch National Championship over the weekend, hitting a tiebreaking three-run homer in the semifinals and driving in a game-tying run in the final. The senior-to-be at Carson hit a tie-breaking three-run home run in the semifinals and drove in the game-tying run in the title game. The Long Beach State commit has now won four national championships — at the 12-andunder level, two last summer at the 16-and-under level (ASA and Premier) and the current title. This spring she led Carson to the first City Section title in program history by hitting 15 homers. Her 35 career round-trippers are a school record. Tautalafua enjoyed a banner season, in which she won Marine League MVP, All-Wave Newspapers and All-City honors. Carson catcher Brittany Moeai, the Wave Newspapers Player of the Year the past two seasons, helped the Orange County Bat Busters place third. Moeai, also a senior-to-be, has committed to UCLA. TRAYVON continued from page A9 “I thought maybe it was a ground-rule double,” Robinson, who continued his tour around the bases after umpire Jerry Meals signalled it was a homer, said. “He said he thought it might have bounced over,” Seattle manager Eric Wedge said with a chuckle. “He had his head down and running and that’s good. Those are all good things. He’ll know in time when he hits it out of the ballpark. We won’t have to worry about that.” Wedge liked what he saw from his young prospect. “He’s been impressive here,” Wedge said. “He’s really made an immediate impact on our club. He has some weapons.” As for his overall impressions of the weekend, Robinson said, “When I first got here, I was really nervous. After the first game, I realized it was the same game, just a lot more people watching. That’s what a lot of the players told me.” He admitted to being shocked at the news that the Dodgers had traded him. At Albuquerque, he had 26 home runs for the Dodgers’ Triple-A franchise, leading many to believe he was going to be called up to the big club in Sep- tember. “I was disappointed, sad because I wanted to play in front of my mother,” he said. Robinson, a 10th-round pick in 2005 of the Dodgers out of Crenshaw, is looking forward to making more of an impression the final two months of the season for the Mariners. “I just want to keep playing hard and learn, to keep asking questions of the older players,” he said.