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Respect, please

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I was present Monday evening at Malibu City Council when Herb Broking issued a personal attack against Councilmember Sharon Barovsky. I feel compelled to write this letter even though I do not like to recognize or respond to extreme and inappropriate negativity. Herb, I enjoy your company on the tennis court and have always believed you cared deeply for Malibu and worked hard to protect our quality of life; however, I cannot understand what would motivate such a destructive comment. Sharon Barovsky has spent decades working for Malibu! Most of us simply read the local newspapers and enjoy our simple life in this rural seaside community. Sharon Barovsky works many hours of every day and every evening (and has done so for many years) to help ensure that the Malibu of tomorrow will be like the Malibu of yesterday. She deserves better and you know better. Please — let’s treat one another with respect! I promise you this is the most effective way to get business done.

Richard H. Carrigan

Governor speaks out against executions

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Illinois Gov. George Ryan, keynote speaker at the Malibu Bar Association’s annual dinner meeting, explained to a packed house of lawyers and judges last Thursday why he declared a moratorium on executions in Illinois. It began, he said, with the case of a man who spent 17 years on death row for a murder he didn’t commit.

Anthony Porter, who has an IQ of 60, always insisted he was innocent but no one believed him. He came within two days of being executed. A group of journalism and law students from Northwestern University investigated the case as a class project and uncovered evidence that exonerated him. He was freed, and ultimately someone else confessed to the crime. Later investigations by the students and the Chicago Tribune uncovered a variety of questionable convictions.

Since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1975 by the U.S. Supreme Court, 12 men have been executed in Illinois. Another 13 on death row were exonerated as the result of investigations by the students and the press. Ryan said he began to have serious doubts about the extent to which he could rely on the convictions of some of those on death row. There appeared to be “no justice in the justice system,” he said.

Ryan, who was a pharmacist before going to the Illinois State Legislature, had supported the death penalty and voted for it when he was a representative. He said he believed assurances from police and prosecutors that there were many checks and balances in place, that the system worked, that all the cases on death row had been thoroughly reviewed and that all the people awaiting execution were guilty. However, the student and newspaper investigations gave him serious doubts.

He told the group that it’s different when you’re governor, because it’s your signature on the death warrants that allow executions to go forward. He ultimately balked because he was no longer certain that the system was either fair or just. After declaring the moratorium, he impaneled a special group to examine the issue and report back to him. Ryan decided that during the investigation, which has no closing date, no one would be executed in Illinois as long as he was governor.

Recently, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader-Ginsberg indicated she thought a moratorium might be called for in other states, as well, because of the questionable quality of the legal representation provided to those accused of capital crimes in those states.

After Ryan spoke, Malibu Mayor Tom Hasse made a honorary presentation to the governor. Hasse is an Illinois native and was raised in a town close to Ryan’s hometown.

Martin Sheen reads tribute to honoree Judge Mira

The Armand Arabian Judge of the Year award, which is the Malibu Bar Association’s highest honor, was given to Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Lawrence Mira, presiding judge of the Malibu Judicial District. The award is named after retired state Supreme Court Justice Armand Arabian, who was in attendance and made the presentation to Mira.

Actor Martin Sheen, who plays President Josiah Bartlett on the popular TV show “West Wing,” read a touching tribute letter to Mira from his son actor Charlie Sheen. Charlie Sheen said Mira helped him overcome his drug problems.

Richard Coleman was named Lawyer of the Year and Judge Alan Haber, presiding judge of the West District of L.A. Superior Court, received the Friend of the Malibu Bar award. Haber swore in the new officers and board for 2001. The new officers are David Ogden, president; Dick Coleman, vice president; and Steve Ameche, secretary-treasurer. The new board members are Kathy Greco, Patrick McNicholas, Matthew McNicholas, Dale Schaeffer, Todd Sloan, Ronald Stackler, Carolyn Wallace and Executive Director Doreen Consol.

Bullies in Malibu

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It happened at Columbine, Santana High and most recently at Bishop Neumann in Williamsport, Penn. — ordinary teens snapped violently after years of teasing and bullying by their classmates.

“These schools are not from other nations. They’re not poor people’s schools,” said Kathy McTaggart, coordinator of school and community partnership at the Santa Monica-Malibu School District, to parents, teachers and students gathered at Malibu High School for a conference addressing bullying at school. “These are schools just like ours. The important thing is that we can all walk away from the experience smarter.”

The March 27 meeting included presentations from Irene Ramos, vice principal of MHS; Phyllis Steinberg, an expert in conflict resolution; child psychologist Roy Ettenger; and Scott Robinson, director of the Boys and Girls Club at Malibu. Also included in the evening’s lineup were two victims of bullying from Malibu High.

“A lot of people respond to bullying with fear, and the fear is constant,” said ninth-grader Dylan Ross, about his own experiences. “But what I feel [when bullied] is not fear but anger. I’m angry with the person and I’m angry with myself. I feel as if I did something wrong.”

Two years ago Ross was harassed by some older classmates at the high school.

“I didn’t know what I had done to provoke them. They were pushing me around, calling me names. What could I do? They were stronger than me and I was afraid I would get in trouble if I started fighting with them.” When the bullies stole his shoe, Ross tried to retaliate by mocking the students in a drama class improvisation, but their threatening glances after the class finally led him to report the incident. An hour before the teens were due to meet school authorities, Ross was beaten.

After three hours of mediation, Ross was sentenced to a “Saturday School” for yelling profanities. The bullies got detention.

“The traditional disciplinary structure just calls for Band-Aids,” complained Steinberg. “Saturday School or detention just solves the problem for a moment. What is needed is an overall movement towards peace.”

Ettenger was struck by Ross’ self-reproach.

“It’s very common for people in victim positions to blame themselves. That’s why it’s important for parents to have good lines of communication with their kids and find out what’s going on. Children don’t want to admit that they are being bullied, because they don’t want to appear weak in front of their parents.”

When MHS seventh-grader Chelsea Sherwood was bullied by a group of girls, she began cutting herself.

“What really happens is that people get bullied to the point that they can’t take it anymore. It hurts so badly after a while that it’s like a burning. All you feel is hurt. People don’t always resort to guns. They also resort to hurting themselves instead of other people.”

The bullying left Sherwood depressed and physically ill.

“She didn’t want to get up in the morning and her academic grades were going down,” said Diana, Chelsea’s mother.

Some of the signs Ettenger says parents should watch for are shyness, anxiety, poor academic achievement, threatened or attempted suicide, unwillingness to go to school or taking different routes to school. Victims might also come home without having eaten, with no money or with ruined clothes or books.

“There is nothing more important in their education than feeling safe at school,” said Ettenger, “because if they don’t feel safe, they’re not going to learn.”

Through programs like the Boys and Girls Club, Smart Moves and student mentor programs, children in Malibu are offered the safe havens necessary to a productive environment.

In the Mentor Program, for example, high school students like 10th-grader Sophie Stern are trained to be mediators for middle school kids.

“The mediators are there to act as guides to help through the process of solving in a calm, peaceful and secure place,” said Stern. “Not only does the experience help solve problems right there but it teaches students how to communicate effectively so that they can solve future problems on their own. It makes the students feel empowered with a sense of self.”

The Boys and Girls Club of Malibu also empowers children by offering leadership programs in nontraditional ways.

“There are good students who make it into the student council and things like that, but there are also kids who might never get to be a leader or get that sense of success,” said Boys and Girls Club director Robinson. “At the center we create clubs by asking the students what hobbies they have. When some kids came and said they were getting into trouble because they were playing this Magic card game, for example, we decided to start a Magic card game club with officers and meetings.

“Often kids who are not doing well academically lose their self-esteem and they become bullies,” he continued. “The programs we offer give students the opportunity to be successful in other areas beyond academics. We’re trying to build the ‘whole child’ here.”

Hallelujah! The good old days are back

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You just can’t imagine what a burden it is to a journalist to sit through endless council meetings, listening to the members reasonably debate important public issues and politely disagree with each other. Even after they vote, the sheer tedium of getting quotes like, “Well, I guess we just didn’t see it the same way” begins to wear on your nerves.

We long for the old days when they used to give us quotes like, “That dirty land-raping, condo-loving, citified pustule of corruption won’t be happy until the entire town is covered with concrete and ill-conceived projects, and destroys our way of life, poisons our water, maims our children, kills the dolphins –” Well, you get the idea.

But I’m happy to report that the good old days may be making a comeback.

It began innocently enough with a letter to the editor of an unnamed publication, by our old friend, mayor, and frequent opponent Walt Keller. Several people had told me they thought he had gone on to his greater reward, or that he was elder-hostelling his way around the globe and was no longer part of the local scene, which shows how little they know about Walt. My first thought on seeing the letter was, “Well, he’s just tired of sitting around the house, and he’s getting on Lucile’s nerves and looking for a little excitement” — forgetting recent history, when a letter to the editor by Walt usually announced the beginning of a political offensive.

Then this past Monday night at the City Council meeting, Herb Broking — a longtime, card-carrying member of the Walt Keller/Carolyn Van Horn axis, and formerly if not presently Van Horn’s No. 1 squeeze — rose during the public comment period to make a personal attack on Councilmember Sharon Barovsky. Barovsky, incidentally, has only a two-year term and is up for reelection in 2002.

Recently, the environmentalists have some new faces, like Ozzie Silna, Marcia Hanscom, and former council candidate Robert Roy Van de Hoek plus the Malibu Coastal Land Conservancy with a reasonable, rational attitude–“Can’t we work together? Can we get a bond issue for open space?”

People were beginning to say, “Well, maybe Malibu is changing. Maybe it’s finally growing up. Maybe there really are some new ideas and new faces on the scene.”

But when Broking got up to speak, it looked like the old team of Keller and Van Horn, Jo Ruggles and Efrom Fader and several others wanted to come out of exile and retake their role in the Malibu pantheon of leaders, having nursed their wounds from their overwhelming 2-1 defeat in the election before last. Their manner was as ever — combative.

Barovsky’s apparent “crime” was related to the Keller/Van Horn side’s most hated of creatures, their personal Darth Vader: in their rather strangely warped perception, what they see as the all-powerful and Machiavellian — albeit diminutive — interim city manager, Christi Hogin, who in June will switch jobs and become city attorney again. Barovsky’s crime was that she wants to keep Hogin, which greatly displeased the old guard.

Last time around, they hated Hogin enough to try and harass her into quitting in disgust. When that didn’t work, they (Keller and Van Horn, with Hasse as the third vote) finally forked over $227,000 in city cash to get her to go. They did this upon the advice of their very expensive lawyer from Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, who I’m sure explained to them that when cities do sneaky, slimy, underhanded and cruel things to employees, it’s not called politics, it’s called harassment — which in a court of law can get very, very expensive, particularly when there’s a whole group of people eager to testify how nasty they’ve been. So they did the more prudent thing and paid her off and called it a voluntary leaving. Now Broking wants to call it a firing, but it’s hard to describe a parting that gives anyone two years’ salary as a firing.

The really interesting part of all this is that, if Keller and Van Horn are looking to make a comeback, it’s not so clear that the new crowd (led by the same old Gil Segal) is so anxious to see them return. The old gang comes with considerable baggage, and if the Green movement in Malibu is to take on a more reasonable face it obviously has to sit down at the table with those with whom it disagrees. But sitting down at the table with their opponents has never been Keller and Van Horn’s strong suit.

So the politics of Malibu are heating up again. It was sort of a two-party system before, and it may turn out to be more like a parliamentary system with all types of interests — school people, ballfield people, passive recreation people, wetlanders, greenies and developers making shifting alliances. It certainly promises to be interesting.

MALIBU SEEN

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Plastic seal stomachs?

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After the wild overnight storm let up Saturday, going out for a fabulous long sunny walk on the Point (with spaces for cars to park!) was great.

However, I was reminded yet again that I’ve wanted to write and point out how futile and dangerous it is to use the new woven plastic sandbags at the beach. There were at least five large khaki-green ones distributed amongst the rocks and down onto the shore. Since it’s a wild and unbuilt-upon public beach, they’d obviously floated, sand-filled and all, down from Broad Beach or wherever they’d been piled in the first place.

I’ve noticed this phenomenon at my own stretch of sand — enormous black ones looking like misshapen seals languishing at 5-foot intervals, unraveling white ones trapped under algae-covered stones. Besides the fact of their ineffectuality — watching your money bob down the seafoam instead of saving your land from a watery end must be vexing indeed — the biggest problem with them is their arrival in the ocean proper. Seals think they’re squid, eat them and die. As do plastic bags from the grocery store, their indigestible material clogs the digestive system and, without a surgical intervention, that’s the end of that mammal!

I would like to propose to the City Council that public works along the sea be banned from using them. Mountain roads are one thing, but creekbeds and stormdrains which lead to the open sea should be limited to practical burlap. And, please, residents: be aware that this is not a good use of petroleum products … demand that your contractors use the older hemp version.

Beate Nilsen,

a 40-year lover of the ‘Bu

3 modest proposals

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The following letter was sent to the Malibu Planning Commission in lieu of public comment, which was not allowed at the April 2 meeting.

Subject: Civic Center Guidelines.

The Malibu Township Council urges the Commission to postpone further consideration of the guidelines proposed for discussion tonight, or any Civic Center development guidelines, pending completion and evaluation of a Cumulative Environmental Impact Analysis, as required by state law, encompassing all potential development in the Civic Center. MTC believes that a Cumulative Environmental Impact Analysis evaluating the capacity of the environment to absorb development, in conjuction with an EIR evaluating the impact of the development on the environment, will provide the information currently lacking that is necessary to prepare realistic and achievable guidelines.

With all constraints on development identified and evaluated, the planning process can commence prioritizing community needs for playing fields, parks, community building, wetlands, and other open space. After these paramount community needs have been addressed, the task of specifiying the extent and description of commercial development for each Civic Center property consistent with community needs, the capacity of the infrastructure and environment to sustain the impact, and the rural character of the community can be undertaken.

MTC reminds this Commission that although the City Attorney and staff claim these proposed guidelines have no legal effect, a draft ordinance following approval by this Commission and the City Council would have a legal effect leading to a change in the General Plan and IZO and require an EIR. Adopting at this time these seemingly development-friendly guidelines of shared wastewater treatment plants, city-provided roadway and intersection reconfiguration and improvements, easing of design standards, intensification of permitted uses, etc., would imply approval, and would act immediately to drive up the value of the Civic Center properties. The effect would significantly conflict with the efforts by bond measure, or other funding means, to acquire portions of the Civic Center land the community sorely needs for public purposes.

MTC is concerned that these guidelines will not guide the future and serve the needs of this environmentally blessed community that so overwhelmingly endorsed the values and spirit so strongly expressed in the General Plan Vision, “Malibu is a unique land and marine environment and residential community whose citizens have historically evidenced commitment to sacrifice urban and suburban conveniences in order to protect that environment and lifestyle,” and the General Plan Mission Statement, “Malibu will maintain its rural character by establishing programs and policies that avoid suburbanization and commercialization of its natural and cultural resources.”

In addition, from the Economic Plan prepared by Applied Development Economics in April 2000 and approved unanimously by the City Council, “A significant segment of Malibu’s citizens wanting the Civic Center area to remain as open space … [the] City should commission a study of all tools that can be used to protect the area as open space [i.e., down-zoning propery, acquisition, etc.] and implementing the study’s recommendations.”

It is quite a departure from these lofty ideals to be considering proposed guidelines tonight which appear to be designed to facilitate and support the addition of new, predominantly commercial development that almost quadruples the existing commercial development in the Civic Center, resulting in an astounding potential total build-out of about 1,200,000 square feet without due regard to known environmental constraints.

For these reasons MTC requests that the Planning Commission recommend to the City Council the following:

1. That it drop consideration of these excessive growth-inducing guidelines.

2. That it do nothing at this time which would conflict with efforts of Malibu citizens and others, by bond initiative or other means, to raise funds for acquisition of land for playing fields, parks, open space, or other community needs.

3. That guidelines for development in the Civic Center be considered only after completion of a Cumulative Environmental Impact Analysis of all properties in the Civic Center and a preliminary determination by the council of the extent of development which might be permitted each property owner.

Efrom Fader

President of MTC

No faith in faith-based charities

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Re: Faith-based charity. In this instance, the politicians are doing the wrong thing for the right reasons. Charities are indeed, as history and experience have proven, the best safety net. As the publisher of this paper pointed out they are more efficient and caring. Government welfare is at best a destructive failure as the numerous destroyed families, multiple generations of children having children, people who know nothing better than a life of government dependency, special-interest leaders whose political and economic existence depends on the largesse of government money, and a parasitic bureaucracy that only wants to perpetuate itself, not actually solve any poverty. Where President Bush and the Republicans have it wrong is that government is not the one to fund such private charities. With government money comes government control and that naturally raises the specter of separation of church and state. Do we support the varied religions with state money? Would religions submit to government control to get government money? Does this violate the First Amendment: “Government shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion”? As we have seen throughout history, the best way to destroy freedom of religion is to have the government fund it.

The real point that is usually missed by voters is that politicians want to have control. I am a Libertarian and am well aware of this. As long as Washington controls the money whether by grants to faith-based charity or money put into welfare programs, politicians are the ones that you have to come to, if you want more money, changes in policy or power. They are not really concerned about the elimination of poverty or human suffering otherwise welfare programs as the failures they are would have been gone a long time ago. They only use these issues to retain power and stay in office. Bush wants to please the religious right by instituting charity as a safety net, all well and good, but he still retains power and control by using government money, in other words our tax dollars. It is a way of buying votes from his constituency like the liberal Democrats buy votes with the welfare programs for theirs and that is the bottom line for any of these politicians whether they are Republican or Democrat. Staying in office, staying in power, controlling the money and making sure that voters come to them, well that is the real reason behind all of this.

Charities are indeed the way to go, but Bush and also the Democrats will not do it the way it should be done. If the Republicans really wanted charities to do it, this is the way it would happen. The politicians would return tax money to the people, then take money out of their own wallets and give that money to the private charity or faith-based charity of their choice and encourage all Americans to do the same. That is the way a Libertarian would do it. As long as voters keep electing Republicans and Democrats the perversion of charitable giving and the destruction of freedoms written in the Constitution will continue and this society will suffer even more as a result.

Charles Black

State Senate candidate, Libertarian Party

Is state powerless to resolve this mess?

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It is clear we won’t be getting much in the way of leadership from our guv, Dithering Davis, whose management style could be described most kindly as glacial. In the nine months since the power price crunch hit San Diego, he has been in denial, apparently wedded to the if-I-do-nothing-it-won’t-be-my-fault theory of governing.

Did he really think this mess would go away on its own? Did he think he could save his political backside by reminding voters that his Republican predecessor signed deregulation into law? Not any more, sir.

An instant replay:

It’s December, and Davis blasts the feds for rejecting his bid for a regional price cap on wholesale rates in favor of a temporary cap while ordering an overhaul of the state’s wacky electricity market.

Then he spends about $3 billion buying electricity for the utilities, which say they are going belly up. Next he tries to broker a deal to buy the transmission lines to give utility companies enough money to pay the billions they owe to power generators. None of this solves the real problem. Californians use more power than they produce.

Obvious answer: Use less while you figure out how to produce more. Politicians can’t take this tack because it angers their big donors and frustrates voters.

The new power plants under construction belong to out-of-state companies. Hey, they know a good thing when they see it. The plants will use natural gas, also in short supply and getting costlier every day. Could it be these same guys own the natural gas wells?

Meanwhile, existing co-generation plants sit idle because they haven’t been paid for deliveries to the utilities since last fall. Wind generating plants in Tehachapi are often off production, not because the wind doesn’t blow, but because transmission lines aren’t adequate to handle the load. And negotiations to buy the existing lines have bogged down over whether the state can buy the land beneath them or just the lines.

All the while Davis swears he will not allow rate increases to consumers and businesses. When the state Public Utilities Commission orders a hefty hike March 27, our fearless leader leaves PUC President Loretta Lynch out to dry, “distancing himself” from the rate-hike decision. Puhleeze.

Davis spent billions of taxpayers’ money to shore up the state’s utilities, saying the state can’t allow the lights to go out. Why couldn’t he have spent the money buying back the power plants from the Texans and building new transmission lines? And maybe funding construction of new plants that use alternative energy sources. We seem to have more than enough wind in Sacramento to give the state power independence.

In his much heralded address to the state Thursday, with deer-in-the-headlights delivery, he reversed every position he had held until Wednesday. He says, with a straight face, rate hikes are now good, conservation is now good, out-of-state power generators are still bad and federal regulators are worse for not cracking down on those dirty price gougers. This is a plan? What does he expect? The feds work for Dubya. The power generators are Texans. Duh!

The next day debt-ridden PG&E files for bankruptcy, notwithstanding the $2.5 billion cash it has on hand, but not before paying its own managers more than $50 million in bonuses. Aren’t these the same folks who took the billions they got from selling their power plants a few years ago and paid it to the parent company’s shareholders? Is this whole thing a giant shell game? Whose money is it? Where is it? Better not wait for our guv to produce the answers.

MALIBU SEEN

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Entertainment Writer

DUDE, WHERE’S MY LIMO?

Oscar lovely Hilary Swank and her actor hubby Chad Lowe ditched the stretch stuff at this year’s Independent Spirit Awards in Santa Monica. The celeb couple showed their independent spirit by arriving on mountain bikes (with Hilary in white chiffon and heels, no less!). The event, kind of a kicked-back Oscar bash, honored films produced outside the studio system.

“Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” picked up trophies for Best Feature, Best Director and Best Supporting Female. Best Actress gold went to Ellen Burstyn for “Requiem for a Dream,” while Javier Bardem of “Before Night Falls'” took home the prize for Best Actor.

On the fashion front it was a mixed bag, with stars like Willem Dafoe, Marcia Gay Harden, Geoffrey Rush, Holly Hunter and Joan Allen sporting everything from beaded gowns to blue jeans.

“Pink Flamingo” John Waters served as master of ceremonies. The very independent filmmaker urged actors and directors to push the limits, be daring and most of all, be edgy — “Not washing your hair,” he mused, “is not enough.”

SINGING THE BLUE

American songwriters were given a grand old salute by the Music Center’s Fraternity of Friends and the Blue Ribbon. Hundreds of music lovers packed the Mark Taper Forum for a special performance called “The Writer, the Singer, the Song.”

Academy Award-winning lyricist Hal David put together an audience-wowing program which featured works by Jimmy Webb, Mike Stoller, Cy Coleman and Marilyn and Alan Bergman.

Webb penned many of rhinestone cowboy Glen Campbell’s top tunes such as “Wichita Lineman,” “Galveston” and “By the Time I Get to Phoenix.” Webb says the secret to his success is all in the wrist. “I’d throw a dart at a map of the United States and wherever it landed, I’d write a song about it.”

The evening was a trip down memory lane as Bergman took the stage for “The Windmills of Your Mind,” followed by David with “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again” and Leiber & Stoller’s “Humphrey Bogart.” An all-star cast headlined the show, including songbird Rosemary Clooney, womanly Helen Reddy, Larry Gatlin, Maureen McGovern, and Dionne Warwick.

STYLE FILE

Local mom and supermodel Cindy Crawford and hubby Rande Gerber were among the A-list celebs who were spicing things up at this year’s Tribute to Style at the Barker Hanger. The annual fundraiser, sponsored by the Entertainment Industry Foundation, benefits arts education programs for children and featured a gourmet dinner and silent auction as well as a sea of stars, Hollywood heavyweights and assorted schmoozers. They were elbow-to-elbow with the likes of Jennifer Lopez, Elizabeth Hurley, Kelsey Grammer and Catherine Zeta-Jones.

Salsa sensation Marc Anthony provided the evening’s hot, hot musical entertainment. The singing, swinging machine told the crowd that the cause has a very special place in his heart. “I am a product of programs that are made possible by foundations and events like this. It’s a symbol that anything is possible.”