Posts Tagged ‘ time ’

Letter to the Editor: Demand for Tutors Reflects Poorly on City Schools

November 5, 2011

Dear Editor,  Regarding the Nov. 8 school board election ; why has there been so little discussion of why Beverly Hills parents have to spend so much money hiring tutors to teach their children? During a recent KBEV broadcast of a Q & A session with the school board candidates, one parent exclaimed she was “paying tutors up the wazoo!” From my own observations, a shockingly high number of BHUSD students have tutors, even in kindergarten. Why? From what I hear on the “parents grapevine,” it’s because our children are not being taught the necessary academic material or not taught it well enough, so concerned parents hire tutors. Besides being expensive for parents, this need for tutors indicates something is wrong with the district’s administration, teaching and curriculum. One way to uncover what is wrong is for a simple (and anonymous) survey to be sent to every BHUSD parent asking them about their use of tutors for their children. The survey will help inform school administrators about teaching quality and curriculum weaknesses. And it will clarify who is teaching our children and what. I further believe such a survey will reveal that the curriculum in B.H. schools is weak and often confusing. (Has the school board tried to understand the current third grade math curriculum?)  Too many Beverly Hills parents are falsely comforted by the district’s high end API scores. BHUSD’s 2010 average API score was 891 out of a possible 1,000. API scores, however, are not always an accurate gauge of a school’s quality. API scores don’t, for example, account for factors such as wealth. In wealthy areas like Beverly Hills, all parents speak English and so can communicate easily with teachers and can read their children’s school work.  Our parents are focused on education and have the time to help their children, such as supervising their homework. Most importantly, Beverly Hills parents can afford to hire tutors. Compare these circumstances to a less-wealthy immigrant area, where the parents don’t speak English, don’t understand the school system, are working two or three jobs so cannot help with their child’s homework and cannot afford to hire tutors.  If Beverly Hills parents were to stop hiring tutors or spending so many hours “supervising” their children’s homework, Beverly Hills schools’ API scores would collapse.  Now is the time for parents to learn why the use of tutors is so rife in the district. Until that happens, local parents will be paying dearly for tutors and our children won’t be receiving the education they deserve to get—at their school. Scott McConnell BHUSD Parent  Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . See the original post: Letter to the Editor: Demand for Tutors Reflects Poorly on City Schools

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Regret & Redemption For Former Mr. Jelly Belly

October 30, 2011

COVINA, Calif. — He’s the Willie Wonka of this small suburban town east of Los Angeles, the rotund man in the T-shirt and shorts who joyfully takes just about anybody who walks through the door on a tour of his tiny candy factory. But David Klein was once much more. The confectioner, who these days makes a comfortable living selling various chewy, crunchy concoctions with funny names like Candy Barf and Zombie Heart (the latter squirts strawberry-flavored “blood” when you bite into it), was once at the center of a sweet-tooth revolution. He was Mr. Jelly Belly. In 1976 Klein launched the gourmet jelly bean craze when he improbably envisioned that people would be willing to pay 10 or 20 times more for jelly beans if they simply tasted better, came in scores of natural flavors and had a clever name. Then, with only $800 in hand, he somehow talked a small, family-run candy company in the San Francisco Bay area into going into business with him. The result was the Jelly Belly, a precociously flavorful little gob of sugar, syrup and corn starch that quickly became the favored treat of millions, including President Ronald Reagan. And Klein, a one-time nut distributor who had begun selling his creation in just one candy store, was the gourmet bean’s mascot. Decked out in a Jelly Belly-bejeweled top hat and a matching white cowboy suit, he was everywhere in the late 1970s. He was photographed for People magazine sitting in a bathtub filled with Jelly Bellys, some stuck to his hairy chest, others lodged between his toes. He dropped by TV programs like “The Mike Douglas Show” to trade quips with the host and cajole the celebrity guests into sampling his new flavors. Then, for reasons Klein still has trouble coming to terms with, he and his partner sold their interest in the Jelly Belly name in 1980 for $4.8 million. He collected his half of the money in monthly installments over 20 years, and he faded into obscurity. “I went from hero to zero in about 60 seconds,” the usually upbeat candy maker says morosely when the subject is raised. “I was Mr. Jelly Belly for four years. And then …,” his voice trail off. While Jelly Bellys were being passed around the table at Reagan administration Cabinet meetings and carried into outer space by astronauts in the 1980s, Klein was trying in vain to come up with another big thing. He brought out a version of sugar-free salt water taffy. He tried to hit it big with sour licorice until more well-heeled competitors squeezed him out. He pioneered gross-out candy with a chocolate bar shaped to look like – well – you get the idea. It never caught on. Through it all, he moped about his and his late partner’s decision to sell their 50-50 interest in Jelly Belly to the Herman Goelitz Candy Company, which renamed itself the Jelly Belly Candy Company. “It caused a lot of pain in the family,” says his son, Bert Klein, who produced the documentary “Candyman: The David Klein Story.” So much so that his son, a veteran Hollywood film animator, says that as a child he stopped telling people his father had ever been Mr. Jelly Belly. It was too painful and most people didn’t believe him anyway. Now, with another holiday candy season upon us, Klein is back and hoping, at age 65, to regain the mojo that once made him the talk of the candy world. His company, Can You Imagine That!, is working with Leaf Brands in developing a new treat called Farts. (Yes, you read that right.) Leaf, which created Milk Duds, plans to have Farts in stores by Christmas, and when it does Klein predicts they will make people forget all about Nerds, a similar looking but crunchier candy. Then there is Dave’s Signature Beyond Gourmet jelly beans. They will mark Klein’s return to the candy bean business with such exotic flavors as ginger, jalapeno and bacon. He’s predicting they will also make people wonder what they ever saw in Jelly Belly, a company with which his relations have grown increasingly acrimonious over the years. Klein has long maintained that Jelly Belly’s chairman, Herman G. Rowland Sr., bullied him into selling out at a rock-bottom price so he could have the Jelly Belly empire all to himself. It’s an allegation Rowland emphatically denies. “I loved Dave,” Rowland said recently from his office in Fairfield, before quickly adding he wanted to make sure his listener had heard him correctly: He had said “loved,” not “love.” Still, Rowland chuckles often when he recalls the heady, early days of Jelly Belly and the promotional schemes Klein would come up with. He acknowledges it was Klein’s idea to call the candy Jelly Belly, a name Rowland didn’t think much of at the time. He thought even less of the portly Klein’s decision to be photographed naked in a bathtub full of jelly beans. “When I saw that thing, I went, `Oh my God, this is the end of Jelly Belly. No one will ever want to eat one,’” he recalls with a laugh. “Well, I was wrong.” He only pressed to buy Klein out, he says, after learning he had given his late partner half of his Jelly Belly distribution business and his partner in turn had trademarked the product’s name. He realized then, Rowland said, that if he didn’t buy Jelly Belly the name could be taken to any other candy maker. Meanwhile, Jelly Belly had become so popular that the small company Rowland’s great-grandfather had founded in 1869 was struggling to keep up with production while spending money to expand so it could make more Jelly Bellys, which it sold only through Klein. “Now maybe he doesn’t know these things or maybe he doesn’t remember them,” Rowland said. “But I protected his a– completely.” Klein, for his part, says he does understand. But then he thinks again of those days when he’d put on his Mr. Jelly Belly costume and go on television. And he becomes wistful and wishes he’d never relinquished the name. If he hadn’t he figures he’d still be Mr. Jelly Belly. “Col. Sanders created a product and when he sold it he was still Col. Sanders,” Klein says earnestly. “His picture was still on the buckets and everything.” Originally posted here: Regret & Redemption For Former Mr. Jelly Belly

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Anti-Choicers Attempt to Put Parental Notification Initiatives on the Ballot AGAIN

October 27, 2011
Anti-Choicers Attempt to Put Parental Notification Initiatives on the Ballot AGAIN

There’s an election coming up, and you know what that means — it’s time to waste Californian’s time and money by forcing us to consider initiatives that we’ve already voted on! This time around, if anti-choicers have their way, we are going to vote for the fourth time since 2005 on parental notification for minors seeking an abortion. more › View original post here: Anti-Choicers Attempt to Put Parental Notification Initiatives on the Ballot AGAIN

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Occupy L.A. Protesters Will Not Back Down

October 27, 2011
Occupy L.A. Protesters Will Not Back Down

Occupy protesters and followers are questioning whether or not Los Angeles will face similar rioting as the Occupy Wall Street and Occupy Oakland movements. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who has supported the movement from day one, and at least one other councilman – Bill Rosendahl – are losing patience and feel that the time has come for occupiers to pack up camp and create a new tent city elsewhere. more › More: Occupy L.A. Protesters Will Not Back Down

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Blackbeard’s Cannon Raised from N.C. Shipwreck

October 27, 2011
Blackbeard’s Cannon Raised from N.C. Shipwreck

History’s most infamous pirate scuttled the ship in 1718. Photo Credit: AP Continue reading here: Blackbeard’s Cannon Raised from N.C. Shipwreck

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Georgia Van Cuylenburg: How I Coped With Losing All Of My Hair — At 21

October 27, 2011

Most little girls have a very special connection to their hair. When I was growing up in Australa, I was always trying to make it the best hair it could be, and sometimes I got it a little wrong. The day before the first grade photo I decided I didn’t want bangs, so I took the scissors to them. In fifth grade I shaved my eyebrows off and told my Mother they fell out. And in 6th grade I decided an under-cut was a good idea … wrong!! By the time I was 16, my hair was down to the small of my back, and my natural golden highlights were the envy of all the girls in my class. Body image issues plagued me in high school, but the one thing I loved about my appearance was my hair. When I was 18 I got asked to be a hair model by a famous hair salon, and my hair became even more the thing that I identified as ME. I was now officially “the girl with the great hair.” Three years later, my “great hair” and I were working in L.A. I told jokes, did TV and film, often on shows for children , helping them believe in their own ‘magic.’ I loved my new life. Then one typical Wednesday, as I stood in the shower, I watched as hundreds of my ‘great hairs’ washed down my body. As I rubbed the shampoo through my hair, clumps fell out in my hands. I was too scared to get out of the shower because I didn’t know what I would see in the mirror. When I finally did look at myself I could see spots of bare scalp peering through my hair. As I brushed and brushed I watched my clear white sink fill up with hair. I remember seeing myself in the mirror and holding back the tears. That day my life changed forever. I told myself that there must be a reason why this was happening. I shouldn’t waste my time feeling sorry for myself, I should just find out why. Over the next year I put myself through dose after dose of steroid and cortisone injections. I had the most horrific form of acupuncture imaginable. I ate every food, supplement and vitamin that you find when you Google ‘hair loss.’ But all the doctors I had visited were right: I had Alopecia Areata, an autoimmune disease where the body rejects its hair. There is no cure. That first year I hid my Alopecia Areata. The few people who knew insisted that I should keep it a secret because no one would hire me. I wore a terrible wig that looked and felt like straw. It was so bad that I always wore a hat. (Believe me, a Californian summer spent in a wig and hat, on top of an ointment that creates constant ‘sunburn’ on your head, is a very painful and sweaty affair.) I couldn’t work in front of the camera because I couldn’t take my hat off. I wouldn’t let men get too near because I couldn’t work out how to explain why, no matter how many items of clothing came off, the hat had to stay on. That was probably the toughest year of my life. I knew something had to change. I had lost so much of myself. I was no longer the girl with the great hair, and lying all the time was exhausting. I have never been one to avoid the truth. My work involved encouraging children to love themselves … just as they were. Yet here I was hiding who I really was. It was that realization that changed everything for me. I decided to stop seeing my Alopecia Areata as a burden, but rather as an amazing gift. I had always wanted children to feel that I really understood when they spoke about being different or alone. And now I had a big ‘signpost’ on my head that said “I GET IT!!!” I started sharing my story with children, and I could feel an amazing change in the way they responded to me. When I started working on a documentary about the experience, kids and adults from all around the world emailed me and shared their stories. It wasn’t just Alopecians; people with all sorts of ‘secrets’ started confiding in me. Almost everyone I met had a secret to share with me. Because I was standing before them saying, “this is me,” they felt they could do the same. And very slowly, I learned to trust I was good enough as I was, that it was the essential me that people -responded to — with or without hair. Not every moment of honesty has been joyful. Dating in particular has been rough. I now tell every guy on the first date. I don’t want to go a second date with someone who sees me only as ‘the girl with no hair.’ I’d rather wait for a man who can see the strong person I have become because I have no hair. Alopecia Areata has become my Man Meter. Over the last three years my hair has come and gone. Sometimes I have it and sometimes I don’t. I now have a cabinet full of wigs, but most days I prefer just to wear the hair I have. I am very excited about the progress being made towards a cure for Alopecia Areata, and I hope one day it is found. But I can’t say that I wish I never had it because of what it has brought to my life. Without my Alopecia Areata, I never would have seen the difference that being honest about yourself can make in the lives of others. I never would have met so many truly beautiful people and through them learned that I am beautiful, too. I never would have really believed that something I thought was a tragedy could fill my life with purpose. Today I have about three quarters of my hair. I don’t have any bangs because half an inch is missing at the front. I also don’t have any eyebrows. All the hair is missing at the back too, so I once again have a fierce ‘under-cut’ … and this time I’m okay with it. WATCH: Read the original: Georgia Van Cuylenburg: How I Coped With Losing All Of My Hair — At 21

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A rower’s story

October 27, 2011
A rower’s story

http://www.youtube.com/v/WuHGYQGOTGk?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata Bridget Leire of Thousand Oaks La Reina has become top college prospect in rowing Read this article: A rower’s story

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Suspect Arrested in Beverly Hills Homicide

October 27, 2011

A deceased woman was found by Beverly Hills police in a home on the 100 block of South Hamilton Drive at 1:48 p.m. Wednesday. Officers came to the residence to conduct a welfare check and discovered a 58-year-old female who was apparently the victim of a homicide, according to a statement released by Lt. Mark Rosen of the Beverly Hills Police Department . A preliminary investigation revealed that the victim likely knew the suspect and a person of interest was soon detained at a nearby office building. That person was ultimately arrested on suspicion of homicide and booked into the Beverly Hills Jail. No other outstanding suspects are wanted at this time. The identity of the victim has not been released. Stay tuned with Patch for more information about this developing story. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . Read more: Suspect Arrested in Beverly Hills Homicide

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Defense Tries To Put Jackson Doctor In Positive Light

October 26, 2011

By ANTHONY McCARTNEY, Associated Press LOS ANGELES — After weeks of hearing prosecutors and witnesses cast the physician charged in Michael Jackson’s death as a bad doctor, defense attorneys will shift the case to some of Dr. Conrad Murray’s positive traits as the case nears its close. Murray’s defense team plans to call up to five character witnesses Wednesday who will likely speak about the Houston-based cardiologist’s care and life-saving abilities. The attorneys did not name the witnesses, but they are expected to be Murray’s patients. The flurry of character witnesses come as defense attorneys wind down their case. They told a judge Tuesday that after the character witnesses, they will only call two experts to try to counter prosecution experts who said Murray acted recklessly by giving Jackson the anesthetic propofol as a sleep aid. Defense attorneys could rest their case Thursday. They have already called nine witnesses, including a doctor and nurse practitioner who treated Jackson but refused his requests to help him obtain either an intravenous sleep aid or propofol. Murray, 58, has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter. He faces up to four years behind bars and the loss of his medical license if convicted. His attorneys contend Jackson was desperate for sleep and gave himself the fatal dose of propofol when his doctor left the room. They attempted to argue that Jackson would have been indebted to concert promoter AEG Live for nearly $40 million if his shows were canceled, but a judge blocked any mention of the figure to the jury Tuesday. Instead, jurors heard from two witnesses who knew Jackson and described their interactions with the singer in the months before his death. Nurse Cherilyn Lee testified about trying to help Jackson gain more energy in early 2009 to prepare for rehearsals for his planned series of comeback concerts. She said the singer complained he couldn’t sleep, and on Easter Sunday asked her to help him obtain Diprivan, a brand name for propofol. Lee, at times tearful, said she initially didn’t know about the drug. But after asking a doctor about it and reading a reference guide, Lee said she tried to convince Jackson it was too dangerous to use in his bedroom. “He told me that doctors have told him it was safe,” Lee testified of Jackson’s request for the anesthetic. “I said no doctor is going to do this in your house.” The singer, however, insisted that he would be safe as long as someone monitored him, she said. By Murray’s own admission, he left Jackson’s bedside on the morning of his death. When he returned, Jackson was unresponsive, according to his interview with police two days after Jackson’s death on June 25, 2009. The physician said he only left Jackson’s bedside for two minutes, although his own attorneys have suggested it might have been longer. Phone records show Murray made or received several calls in the hour before Murray summoned help. Lee acknowledged that she told detectives that she had told Jackson, “No one who cared or had your best interest at heart would give you this.” After refusing to help Jackson obtain propofol, she never saw the singer again. Another defense witness, AEG Live President and CEO Randy Phillips, said Jackson appeared to have total confidence in Murray during meetings in early June, just a weeks before the “This Is It” concerts were to debut in London. Jackson had missed some rehearsals and there were complaints from the show’s choreographer that the singer didn’t seem focused. A meeting was convened to discuss Jackson’s health, and Murray reassured Phillips and others that the singer was healthy and would be able to perform. “It was very obvious that Michael had great trust” in Murray, Phillips said. Phillips said he attended Jackson’s final rehearsal and was impressed. “I had goose bumps,” he said, adding that wasn’t a typical reaction. “I am as cynical as you can be about this business.” After the rehearsal, Phillips said he walked Jackson to his vehicle, which was waiting to take him to the rented mansion. “He said, `You got me here. Now I’m ready. I can take it from here,’” Phillips recounted. By the time Jackson and security arrived at the home, Murray had already arrived at the house and was waiting to help the singer get to sleep. Read more here: Defense Tries To Put Jackson Doctor In Positive Light

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Bilak Loses Two Endorsements After Debate Scheduling Controversy

October 22, 2011

Board of Education candidate Frances Bilak has lost two important endorsements since Patch reported Oct. 20 that an election debate had been canceled after Bilak emailed the Beverly Hills High School student who was organizing the event, claiming that she would contact local media and synagogues of his decision to hold the event during the Sabbath. Councilwoman Lili Bosse , who won every district in the city when she ran for election earlier this year, pulled her endorsement of Bilak after reading the Patch story. Planning Commissioner Brian Rosenstein also withdrew his endorsement of Bilak several hours after Bosse made her decision public on Patch. Bilak is one of four candidates running for three board seats in the Nov. 8 election. “The Last Word: The Last Election Debate” had been planned for 6 p.m. on Nov. 4, four days before the election. It was organized by Max Schwartz, a BHHS senior who hosts a talk show on KBEV6, the high school’s student television station.  Bilak, like her competitors Brian Goldberg , Lewis Hall and Noah Margo , had agreed to participate in the debate. But when she realized the debate time conflicted with the Sabbath, she asked Schwartz to change the date or time. Although he tried to reschedule the event, Schwartz was unable to do so.  In an Oct. 17 email to Schwartz, Bilak said that said she was “deeply disappointed” by his decision to keep the debate at its original date and time. “I will be letting the newspapers know tomorrow as well as the synagogues know of your decision,” she wrote. “I had told them that I believed you would respect the Sabbath and everyone’s decision to have dinner with their families on the Sabbath.”  The debate was subsequently canceled. “When I read your Patch story, it broke my heart, particularly because Max Schwartz is an exemplary student and member of our community,” Bosse told Patch. “[Bilak] really crossed the line when she said, ‘I am going to let the synagogues and the media know,’ as though what he was doing was religiously motivated. It felt like bullying behavior, it was cruel and that is when I wrote her an email letting her know of my decision.”  In Bosse’s comment to the Oct. 20 article, she asked that the candidate remove the councilwoman’s name from Bilak’s marketing materials for the remainder of the campaign unless the candidate made a public apology to Schwartz. Bosse said Friday that Bilak’s comments on Patch, in which she apologized to Schwatz, did not constitute a public apology and that her decision to withdraw support for Bilak was now final. “It is one thing to get frustrated with fellow adults, but with kids—the children of this district—the number one thing you have to have is compassion,” Bosse said. “I am sure she has learned a lot from this experience. It has been a lesson for all of us who take endorsements seriously.” Bosse noted that she originally had planned to avoid making endorsements in the Nov. 8 race. But when Margo decided to join as a write-in candidate, Bosse changed her mind because she said she knew how difficult a write-in campaigns can be and she believed Margo would make a good board member. At that point she decided to also endorse Bilak and incumbent Goldberg. Bosse still strongly supports Margo and Goldberg. Planning Commissioner Brian Rosenstein came to a similar conclusion after Patch alerted him to the fact that Bilak was promoting his endorsement in media advertisements. Like Bosse, he has also endorsed Goldberg and Margo. “I had assumed by tonight [Oct. 20] that I would have seen, or that you would have made, a public apology for the comments made to Max,” Rosenstein wrote in email to sent Bilak at 8:47 p.m. on Oct. 20. “What I saw on Patch was basically an ‘I’m sorry you feel that way’ message from you. That is not what I consider an apology and is not what Max and his family deserves or this community will find to be good enough.” Rosenstein posted his entire email to Bilak on Patch about an hour later at 9:52 p.m. At the time of this story’s publication, Bosse is still listed on Bilak’s website as being a supporter. Mayor Barry Brucker, who also endorsed Bilak, has not indicated that he plans to withdraw his support. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . Originally posted here: Bilak Loses Two Endorsements After Debate Scheduling Controversy

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Raw Police Video