Los Angeles Times - 16.11.2019

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Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

KREMEN, Samuel

Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

KANE, Judy

Age 81, passed away on November
12, 2019. Predeceased by his beloved
wife, Rhoda Iwai and brother,
Shiro Iwai; he is survived by his
children, Tami Iwai-Matsuda, Stacey
(Daniel) Ishimaru, and Kent Iwai;
grandchildren, Craig Matsuda, and
Lauren and Cory Ishimaru; siblings,
Kazuo (Cary), Setsuko and Michio Iwai;
he is also survived by nieces, nephews
and other relatives.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday, December 4, 11:00 a.m.
at Hompa Hongwanji Buddhist Temple
815 E. First St. in Los Angeles.
http://www.fukuimortuary.com
213-626-

IWAI, Seiji

September 19, 1956 - November 8, 2019

GROSSBLATT TODD, Bonnie

Our beloved Bonnie lost her valiant
battle against cancer on November 8.
She is survived by her husband of 20
years, Randy Todd; her mother, Gloria
Grossblatt; her sisters, Lynn Burr and
Julie Etherington, and her nephews,
Alex Burr, Jeffrey Burr and Joseph
Grossblatt. She will forever be in our
hearts.

Erika Esther Glousman (“Mutti”),
born in 1930 in Zeitz, Germany, died
peacefully in her sleep at age 89 in
Los Angeles, California. A Holocaust
survivor, Erika, rediscovered life’s
beauty in Haifa, Israel, where she
met the love of her life, Michael
Glousman, at the age of 15. After
serving in the Israeli army, Michael
and Erika immigrated to Los Angeles,
California, where they soon married,
had three beautiful children, and
continued their whirlwind romance
together for the next sixty-eight
years. Between serving as a docent
at the Museum of Tolerance to baking
bittersweet chocolate torts and lemon
cakes for her family, Erika always
triumphed over adversity by finding
the beauty and sweetness around her.
A shining light has gone out that will
never be replaced, but will always be
remembered. Erika will be greatly
missed by her adoring husband,
Michael Glousman, her children,
Sharon and Ken Lodin and Ronald and
Marci Glousman, her grandchildren,
Melissa and Devin Arbiter, Lindsay
and Adam Rapaport, Brandon
Glousman, Rachel Lodin, Courtney
Lodin, and Brooke Lodin, and her
great-grandchildren Dylan and Oliver
Arbiter and Emma Rapaport. In lieu
of flowers, contributions can be made
to Hadassah Southern California or the
Museum of Tolerance.

GLOUSMAN, Erika

OBITUARY


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November 26, 1928 - November 13, 2019

KREMEN, Dr. Samuel

Dr. Samuel Kremen, devoted father,
grandfather, andbrother, passed
away peacefully on November 13,


  1. For 50 years, Sam was the chief
    pathologist at West Hills Hospital in
    the San Fernando Valley.
    Sam was born on November 26,
    1928, in Chicago, Illinois, to Reva
    Applebaum and Boris Kremen. A
    child of the depression, he attended
    UniversityofIllinoisbothasan
    undergraduate and for medical school.
    He married his high school sweetheart,
    Anita Bavnick, and they moved to Los
    Angeles after he finished his medical
    degree in 1953. Sam worked as a
    pathologist until retirement at 84
    years old.
    Sam served his community with his
    medical expertise and generous spirit.
    He was a pioneer in computerizing
    blood tests, helping to make medical
    testing more efficient and less
    expensive.
    A founding member of Temple
    Ramah in Northridge (now Ramat
    Zion), Sam was president of his
    congregation and actively involved
    in many aspects of Jewish life in Los
    Angeles. Shortly after the “Watts Riots”
    of 1968, Sam was a leader in an effort
    to build cross-cultural exchange in Los
    Angeles. Sam and Anita supported the
    West Valley Jewish Community Center,
    where they established a library, and
    the American Jewish University. Sam
    wasaspiritedsupporteroftheStateof
    Israel from its creation.
    SamservedontheBoardofthe
    Oakwood School, attended by his four
    children and all six grandchildren.
    In the 1970s, he taught physiology
    at Oakwood, inspiring some of his
    students to pursue medical careers.
    Sam loved people and they
    loved himback.Charismaticand
    opinionated, he loved to engage in
    Talmudic dialogue on almost any issue



  • political, religious, or sociological.
    Sam was warm, engaging, and a
    powerful voice for his family and
    community.
    Samuel Kremen is survived by three
    children, Ruth Kremen (Paul Adler),
    Robin Kremen, and Paul Kremen; and
    by his six grandchildren, Laura Adler,
    Solomon Adler, David Adler, Rebecca
    Kremen, Hayden Kremen, and Arlo
    Kremen.
    Donations in Sam’s memory can be
    made to the Alzheimer’s Association or
    the New Israel Fund


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August 8, 1954 - October 25, 2019

MAKITA, Victoria Katsuko

Victoria Katsuko Makita, born on
August 8, 1954, raised in Lynwood and
resident of Rolling Hills, passed away
with her family and friends by her side
on October 25, 2019.
She is survived by her mother, Dr.
Sue Makita; her sister, Jane Karatsu;
and her cousins, Linda Nobori
(Dean), Dr. Wesley Terasaki (Barb),
Stanley Terasaki (Nancy), Dr. Rodney
Terasaki (Beth), Carey Terasaki, Cathy
Thompson (Jim) and Dr. Tom Hirose.
She is also survived by her nephew,
Matt Karatsu and niece, Kimi Karatsu;
her brother-in-law, Michael Karatsu;
her husband, Nelson Delano; her
friend, Linda Rapp and many other
relatives and friends.
Funeral services will be held
November 23rd Saturday at 11 AM at
Mission Valley Free Methodist Church
at 1201 S. San Gabriel Blvd, San
Gabriel. Burial will follow at Rose Hills.
Business casual or Hawaiian attire
http://www.fukuimortuary.com
(213) 626-

June 12, 1943 - November 4, 2019

LISTA, Corinne June

Corinne June Lista
passed away peacefully
in the company of her
family after a brief illness
with lung cancer.
Corinne attended Hollywood High
School and worked 40 years for
Anthem Blue Cross in Woodland Hills,
CA; reluctantly retiring in 2010. Family
and friends were Corinne’s passion and
delight.
She is survived by her brother,
James, and her daughters, Diane (wife
of Michael) and Tracy (wife of Blake).
Corinne adored her grandchildren,
Thomas and Amanda, who were her
greatest joy. Her immense love will be
greatly missed.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be
made to Camp Ronald McDonald for
Good Times.

Cathy Ellen Marks, loving wife,
mother, daughter and sister. Born
April 13, 1960 and passed away
November 13, 2019. Survived by
husband Randy, son Jared, daughter
Alexandra, mother Marlene Berman
and sister Susan Grossblatt.
A celebration of her life will be held
on Sunday, November 17 at 12:30 pm
at Mount Sinai in Simi Valley.

MARKS, Cathy Ellen

July 28, 1929 - November 13, 2019

MARELLA, Frank John

Frank passed away peacefully of
natural causes at 90 in Glendora,
California. He was born in Lincoln
Heights, the Little Italy of Old Los
Angeles to Anthony Joseph and Anna
Cecilia (Tucci). He is survived by
loving wife Shirley of 70 years, their
five children: Tony (Stephanie), Steve
(Cheri), Dino, Teresa (David), and
Sheri (Gordon); grandchildren Travis,
Camille, Claire and Cecilia; great-
grandchildren Ava, Ireland and Rowen,
and sister Joy. He was predeceased
by his parents, brother Leonard and
son-in-law Doug.
He was known as Babe in the family
because of all the other “Frank’s” (seven
Francesco’s), he was a loving husband,
great dedicated Dad and Nanu. He
was raised during the Depression,
tempered by a war and became a great
historian of World War ll. Hardworking,
he was a self-taught machinist
by trade, specializing in aircraft
components and precision tooling,
and with partners, owning a business
in the ‘70s. He was a loyal alumnus of
Cathedral High School (class of ‘47)
and a champion welterweight on the
boxing team; asked no quarter, gave
no quarter.
Frank was tough, could be stubborn
and born with a chip on his shoulder
but also very warm, kind, loyal and
generous to his family and friends.
Not much for small talk but his smile
and eyes said it all. Proud of his Italian
heritage and forever a diehard Notre
Dame football fan, remembering
when the old teams had many players
of immigrant stock, especially Italians
(of course), Poles and Slavs. Dad
would almost go into a textbook
depression for a couple of days when
they lost, especially a big game.
Then he would snap out of it and say
“Ah, who cares when you have family
around!” He loved having us around;
especially at the holidays and frequent
get-togethers. He enjoyed fishing
off the local ocean piers, cherished
the (almost) annual vacation week
at Huntington Lake (since 1969)
with “The Boys”: his sons, grandson,
brother, uncle and nephews.
Honoring his request, there will be
no services.

Always On Our Minds and
Forever In Our Hearts

Con Amore, La Tua Famiglia

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TWO side by side cemetery lots in
highly desired area in Forest Lawn
Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills,
Los Angeles. Interment spaces 1 and
2, Lot 2387, Section Enduring Faith.
$30,000.00. Phone 253-858-

Cemetery Lots/Crypts

Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

RUBIN, M.D., Herbert M.

May 6, 1921 - November 13, 2019

RUBIN, Herbert Martin,
M.D.

A remarkable man in so many ways.
A child of the Great Depression, a World
War II veteran, a devoted Physician for
over 60 years, and a loving husband,
father, grandfather, and friend. He
will be missed more than he could ever
imagine.
Funeral services will be held on
Sunday, November 17th at 2 pm at
Mount Sinai Hollywood Hills Cemetery.

Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

RAMESH, Kamran

Helen Julie Novodor, born March 21,
1942, died on November 9, 2019. She is
survived by her only child Adina (Ron)
Holland and her beloved grandsons,
Matthew and Eli. She was preceded
in death by her parents, Robert and
Shirley Erenberg, many aunts, uncles
and her cousin. She was a member of
the Red Hat Society of both Southern
and Northern California.
Memorial service will be held on
Sunday, November 17, 11:00 a.m. at
Hillside Memorial Park.

NOVODOR, Helen Julie

posal could have some ben-
efits, speeding up construc-
tion of housing projects in
“appropriate” locations. But
he also warned it could give
City Hall the ability to by-
pass the public on more con-
troversial sites.
“There has to be power
given to the public to weigh
in on which areas are appro-
priate,” said Close, whose
group represents 1,
households. “There are
many areas that are appro-
priate. There are other areas
that are not. Single-family
neighborhoods are not.”
Pete White, executive di-
rector of the skid row advo-
cacy group Los Angeles
Community Action Net-
work, said empowering the
mayor could allow council
members who face angry op-
position to homeless proj-
ects to avoid responsibility
by saying, “It wasn’t me, it
was the mayor.”
White said the proposal
could backfire, however, by
making L.A.’s mayor the
lone target for such opposi-
tion across the city. That
kind of pressure could cause
a mayor to cave on the need
for more housing, he said.
Under the proposal, the
mayor’s emergency powers
would need to be renewed on
an annual basis. Ryu and his
colleagues said they also
want the city attorney to
determine whether giving
Garcetti such powers would
require voter approval or
state legislation.
Earlier this year, city and
county elected officials
pressed Gov. Gavin Newsom
to declare a state of emer-
gency on homelessness in
California, a move that has
been billed as a way of free-
ing up state and federal
funds.
Newsom has already
signed a package of legisla-
tion that, among other
things, exempts from envi-
ronmental review homeless
housing and shelter projects
in the city of L.A. that receive
funding from certain public
sources.
The push to give Garcetti
more power is not the only
new attempt at City Hall at
addressing the crisis.
In another proposal in-
troduced Friday, Council-
man Paul Koretz called for


the city to explore setting up
designated sites for “well-
managed” homeless en-
campments that could in-
clude bathrooms, outreach
and security.
Koretz touted a similar
effort in Modesto, which has
established an outdoor
emergency shelter where
people live in tents. Doing
so, he said, would provide a
safer place for people to
sleep while shelters and
housing are still being built.
Ideas that once might
have seemed unthinkable
“may be what we need to get
at least a temporary handle
on this crisis,” Koretz said.
UCLA professor of law
emeritus Gary Blasi said he
was glad to see L.A. leaders
coming to grips with the idea
that “we are going to have a
large number of residents
who do not have access to
regular housing for some
years.” In light of that, Blasi
said, it makes sense to help
people “survive in dignity in
whatever arrangements can
be provided.”
Some homeless advo-
cates said they worry that
Koretz’s proposal could lead
to a crackdown on other
sidewalk encampments.
Jane Nguyen, a member of
the homeless outreach
group Ktown for All, said she
fears it would be used to
“criminalize people who
don’t want to go into that
type of sanctioned encamp-
ment.”
LaToya Young, who had
set up her tent near City Hall
on Friday, said she is eager to
get into housing but is un-
easy about going to a central
campground where she may
encounter “strange men.”
“I’ve been harassed on
the streets,” Young said. “I
don’t want to be around peo-
ple like that. Around this
area, I feel safe.”
City-sanctioned home-
less encampments could
also face opposition from
neighborhood groups.
Travis Binen, a member of
the group Venice United,
said such campgrounds
would “make whatever
area they put it in more
dangerous.”
“Why not give them beds
and showers and toilets out-
side the city, where it makes
economic sense?” the Venice
resident argued.

Housing plan


aims to cut red


tape for sites


[Housing,from B1]


T


he last remaining
survivor of the Hin-
denburg disaster,
Werner Gustav
Doehner, has died at age 90.
Doehner, who died Nov. 8
at a hospital in Laconia,
N.H., was the only person
left of the 62 passengers and
crew who survived the May
6, 1937, fire that killed his fa-
ther, sister and 34 others. He
was 8 at the time.
“He did not talk about it,”
said his son Bernie Doehner.
“It was definitely a repressed
memory. He lost his sister,
he lost his dad.”
As the 80th anniversary
of the disaster approached
in 2017, Werner Doehner said
that he and his parents, old-
er brother and sister were re-
turning to Mexico City from
a vacation in Germany on
the 804-foot-long zeppelin to
Lakehurst Naval Air Station
in New Jersey..
As the Hindenburg ar-
rived, flames began to flicker
on top of the ship. Hydrogen,
exposed to air, fueled an in-
ferno.


“Suddenly, the air was on
fire,” Werner Doehner re-
called.
He said his mother threw
him and his brother out of
the ship before she left too.
They suffered burns. He
was in the hospital for three
months before going to a
hospital in New York City in
August for skin grafts.
The U.S. Commerce De-
partment determined the
accident was caused by a
leak of the hydrogen that
kept the airship aloft. It
mixed with air, causing a
fire. “The theory that a
brush discharge ignited
such mixture appears most
probable,” the department’s
report said.
Werner Doehner was
born in Darmstadt, Ger-
many, and grew up in Mexico
City.
In 1984, he moved to the
United States to work for
General Electric as an elec-
trical engineer, according to
his obituary. He also worked
in Ecuador and Mexico. He
retired from New England
Electric System in Westbor-
ough, Mass., in 1999.

WERNER DOEHNER


Last of 62 to survive


Hindenburg disaster


associated press


Associated Press

TRAGIC LOSS
Werner Doehner was 8 when his father and sister
died after the Hindenburg caught fire in 1937.

basis. “Hi, Nita,” people
called out as they saw me.
Some pulled me in for hugs.
The same thing was hap-
pening everywhere I looked.
And by the time the trays
of oysters and stuffed mush-
rooms were empty, people
were deep into sharing their
stories.
I had met Brian Whit-
more, who told me he’d been
in the shelter three weeks
after “self-destruction” in
the form of drinking had
cost him the job he’d held for
17 years as an Albertsons
grocery clerk. And David
Foster, 61, who said he’d had
a good career for 25 years in
medical billing, collection
and coding before losing his
job four years ago because of
pain that made it necessary
for him to take a lot of
breaks, which was belatedly
diagnosed as spinal sten-
osis. Reeta Johnson, 47, had
lived on a Fullerton bench
for more than four years
before she got to the shelter.
“When it comes to being
homeless, it’s about not
having support,” she told
me. She said she’d had very
little from anyone her whole
life.
I have written quite a bit
about my feeling that we as
a society need to grow our
compassion and empathy
for those who do not have
homes. I believe that doing
so can help us mobilize
more effectively to tackle
the enormous, growing and
complex crisis of homeless-
ness.
That of course, front and
center, means putting pres-
sure on politicians — who
have the greatest power to
effect change — and de-
manding that they come up
with plans and money to
provide services and treat-
ment and many different
forms of housing as effi-
ciently and quickly as pos-
sible.
It also means persuading
our fellow citizens to make
room in their hearts and in
their own neighborhoods for
the housing and other infra-
structure we’ll have to pro-
vide to start making a dent.
It is partly in this second
sphere, I think, that efforts
like the King’s Table can
nudge. But the dinners also
are about something
deeper.
They’re about straight-
forward, human-to-human
offerings of encouragement,
help and hope. Because not
everything can come from a
government program.
That organizer I just

mentioned? His name is
Lambert Lo — and he and
his wife, Line (pronounced
Lynn), who live in Santa
Ana, began these dinners
for the homeless five years
ago. They’ve been held at
churches and businesses
and have just recently
branched out into homes.
The model has even spread
abroad.
The name the couple
gave the effort expresses
how they want the dinners
to feel.
“When you think of a
king, you think of abun-
dance and the finest and
royalty,” Lo told me. “We
want everyone at the King’s
Table to be treated like
royalty.”
Lo said he thinks of the
dinners as a “doorway” to
lasting friendships and
stronger support systems
and sometimes to very
concrete assistance.
In the house, I met an
example of this in John
Park, the chef of Toast
Kitchen & Bakery in Costa
Mesa, and a member of his
crew, Clarence Williams.
Williams met Park when he
was a guest at a King’s
Table dinner a year ago.
Now he’s working for him
and recently found housing.
Lo, 43, was dressed this
early November evening in
an elegant casual style. He
wore a black T-shirt, black
pants, pristinely white
Nikes without socks. He
looked like the celebrity surf
instructor he is. Over the
years, he has coaxed big
names, including Bill Mur-
ray and the late Steve Jobs,
onto the waves.
But year after year, he

told me, his outreach work
to the homeless and the
poor has taken over more
and more of his life. In Feb-
ruary, he began running the
compassion ministries for
his church, Vineyard
Anaheim, which has a big
food pantry set up like a
supermarket and describes
its mission as “stepping into
the story of God for the sake
of the city.”
Half of the 30 people
seated at the King’s Table
itself were from the Ana-
heim shelter. The other half
were volunteers, who on this
night mostly came from the
church.
I walked around eaves-
dropping on complicated
stories involving addiction
and abuse and hardship,
words of encouragement,
laughter, exchanges of
emails and phone numbers.
And as adults ate, chil-
dren ran around the yard,
squealing and playing.
Volunteers are encouraged
to bring them.
“Homeless people, they
so often see parents pulling
their kids out of the way as
they walk down the road.
Here, the kids are smiling.
They’re welcoming. They
get to remember when it
was normal,” Lo said. “This
is not a feed. Feeding the
homeless, that’s not new.
What’s new is sitting to-
gether and being together
as a family.”
By the time the dinner —
which featured not just one
but two desserts — was
over, a lot of people at the
table were acting as if they’d
known each other for years.
Lo urged anyone who
wanted to come up and tell

his or her story. Foster did.
So did Johnson, who also
sang a spiritual song she
said had given her suste-
nance on that park bench
for so long.
And everyone who spoke
was then encircled by the
crowd, with people opening
their arms and offering
prayers and blessings.
When I had first arrived
at the Villa Park home of
Sean and Jessica Ward, I
couldn’t stop gazing at the
home next door, which
looked like a plantation
house. A multi-tiered foun-
tain burbled away in the
front garden. A sparkling
chandelier lit the portico.
There are so many ways
in which a dinner for the
poor in a neighborhood for
the rich could feel wrong —
only somehow here it mostly
didn’t at all. The strength of
the welcome, the extraordi-
nary warmth was a big part
of that.
Johnson told me after
the evening that she had
just one slight note. The
dinner was outside in the
garden. Guests used the
facilities in a small cottage
next to the pool.
“I love the idea of going to
somebody’s house,” she told
me.
“But I would love it even
more if you would invite me
in and show me around.”
Still, she said, the open-
hearted generosity felt to
her rare and “really, really
nice.”
As for Lo, he said he
hoped my account of the
dinner might convey a sim-
ple message: “You can’t do
everything, but you can do
something.”

Fine dining with a mission


[City Beat, from B1]

ORGANIZER LAMBERT LO watches guests at the King’s Table event. Lo sees
the dinners as a “doorway” to lasting friendships and stronger support systems.

Francine OrrLos Angeles Times
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