Los Angeles Times - 26.11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

LATIMES.COM TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2019B


latimes.com/placeobituary

Michael Leeroy Brockman, age 74,
of Westport, CT, passedawayMonday,
October 14, 2019 at Brigham and
Women’s Hospital in Boston. Born
August 7, 1945 in Orlando, FL, the
son of the late Sula, a homemaker,
and Holmes Brockman, an air traffic
controller, he was raised in Central
Florida and graduated from Edgewater
High School in1963. Michael
entered the U.S. Army and became
an educator and nuclear weapons
specialist. He graduated from the
University of Central Florida in 1975.
Michael worked as Road Test Editor
at Motor Trend Magazine while living
in Los Angeles. He began racing
professionally in 1979 and competed
in events such as the 24 Hours of
Daytona and the 24 Hours of Le Mans.
He went on to work as an actor &
stuntman in films such as Harry & Son
(1984), Fat Man And Little Boy (1989),
RoadtoPerdition (2002) among
others. Michael moved to Connecticut
and had two children Keleigh (b. 1996)
and Spencer (b. 2000). He lived and
worked in CT until his passing, and
was currently the owner of Mazda of
Milford. In addition to his parents he
was predeceased by his sister, Suzanne
Brockman Bunce. A celebration of
Michael’s life will be held on Sunday,
December 8th, from 2:00 p.m. to 6:
p.m. at his dealership 915 Boston Post
Rd in Milford CT. If you would like to
attend please contact his children or
email [email protected]. In
lieu of flowers, friends may consider
a contribution in Michael’s memory
to the Boggy Creek Gang Camp,
30500 Brantley Branch Rd., Eustis, FL,


  1. For information or to offer an
    online condolence please visit http://www.
    SpearFuneralHome.com


BROCKMAN, Michael
Leeroy

June 24, 1924 - November 21, 2019

ARATA, Kiyoshi


Resident of Huntington Beach.
Kiyo passed away peacefully at
the age of 95. He was born in Fresno.
During WWII he served in the Army’s
740th Tank Battalion in Europe. He
worked for 25 years at McDonnell
Douglas. He enjoyed attending family
events, travel, and he continued his
regimen of lifting weights and working
out daily until the age of 94. He was
preceded in death by his parents
Goichi and Fude Arata and siblings
Eva Nakamura, Fusaye Nakamoto,
Masaye Nagatani, Takeko Nakashima,
and Joe Arata. He is survived by many
nieces and nephews. Interment is
private. For anyone interested in
making a charitable contribution in
Kiyo’s memory, the family requests
that donations can be made to the
Japanese American National Museum
(JANM) in Los Angeles.

AGUILAR, Gabriel


Service were held on 11/21/2019,
at 10:00 AM.
Armstrong Family Mortuary

OBITUARY NOTICES


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Always loved
Always remembered

February 19, 1950 - November 27, 2012

Anthony W. Rogers


In Memoriam

Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Simi Valley 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

ZIEVE, Stanley


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

SZNEER, Isabelle


Miyoko Violet Imazu, age 87, passed
away on October 26, 2019.
She is survived by husband Roy
Kazuo Imazu, 4 children, and 9
grandchildren. Also was predeceased
by sister Kiku Yoshida and survived by
brother Hiro (Tommy) Uyeda.
Special thanks to caregivers Tessie,
Magda, Lucky and Jazmin.
Memorial service and burial for
immediate family was previously held
on November 9th. Public Celebration
of Life service will be on Saturday,
November 30th at 10:00 am at
Crossway Church of the San Fernando
Valley, 9610 Haddon Ave, Pacoima, CA
91331.
Family requests casual or “Aloha”
attire.
In lieu of flowers, donations can
be made to San Fernando Valley
Japanese American Community Center
(SFVJACC), 12953 Branford St. Arleta,
CA 91331.
http://www.fukuimortuary.com
213-626-

IMAZU, Miyoko Violet


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

GOLDMAN, Feny


July 18, 1928 - November 7, 2019

ELSHOFF, Eldred “Cal”


Eldred “Cal” Elshoff, 91, born on
July 18, 1928 in New Knoxville, Ohio,
passedawaypeacefully in his home on
November 7, 2019. He was preceded
in death by his wife, Irene, on March
4, 2019, and by his granddaughter,
Marisa, in 2004.
A rosary will be said for Cal at St.
Bede Church on Friday, November 29 at
7:30pm. A Mass of Christian Burial will
be celebrated at 9:30am on Saturday,
November 30, also at St. Bede Church.
Burial will follow at San Fernando M
Please visit http://www.cabotandsonsfh.
com forfurther informationand
details.

December 23, 1936 - November 17, 2019

BURTIS, Carol Ann


Carol will be greatly missed for her
unique sense of humor and immense
care for others. She is survived by her 3
children Glenn, Lauren and Chris.
Services will be held at 12 noon
on 12/02/2019 at Riverside National
Cemetery where she will join her
husband Stanley Burtis.

rived in Los Angeles in 1925,
the year before his son was
born, and began building.
The father and son, indi-
vidually and in collabora-
tion, executed hundreds of
houses and civic projects.
Many of them received lau-
rels from the American In-
stitute of Architects, were
designated as landmarks,
and made alluring motion-
picture cameos — as Rich-
ard Neutra’s 1929 Lovell
Health House (the first
steel-frame dwelling in the
United States) did in the
1997 movie “Hollywood Con-
fidential.”
Between them, Richard
and Dion Neutra exerted
their influence upon the
built environment and visu-
al aesthetics of Los Angeles
for nearly a century.
The lithe and airy struc-
tures were executed in a pal-
ette of no-nonsense glass,
steel, concrete and wood —
gleaming and seemingly
machine-made. At once ele-
gant and breezy, and articu-
lating Southern Califor-
nians’ desire for an indoor-
outdoor lifestyle, Neutra
architecture achieved global
renown as a symbol of Los
Angeles, much like the mu-
sic of Brian Wilson, the art of
Ed Ruscha and the novels of
Raymond Chandler.
Dion Neutra continued
the practice after his father’s
death, completing buildings
of his own, such as the Hunt-
ington Beach Central Li-
brary and Cultural Center,
declared “magnificent” by
The Times when it opened in



  1. With its soothing,
    earth-toned interiors, copi-
    ous plantings and water fea-
    tures, the facility has the
    feeling of a futuristic pavilion
    sprouting from a botanical
    garden. It remains a vibrant
    focal point of the community
    and, despite some altera-
    tions over time, is arguably
    the younger Neutra’s most
    significant project.
    But the architect was
    perhaps best known for his
    work as an aggressive and
    sometimes prickly steward
    of the Neutra legacy. He
    campaigned vigorously for
    the preservation of modern-
    ist buildings, including his
    father’s Cyclorama Center


at Gettysburg National Mili-
tary Park, a 1962 visitor facil-
ity that the National Park
Service earmarked for dem-
olition in the 1990s.
That battle dragged on
for more than a decade and
generated national head-
lines as architectural histori-
ans, architects, and fans of
modernism fought Civil War
historians, reenactors and
the National Park Service to
a standstill. Neutra helped
collect thousands of letters
in defense of the structure,
including one from Frank
Gehry, who wrote that Neu-
tra’s building “reflects the
highest ideals of his own
time, and deserves the high-
est appreciation of ours.”
The stalemate was broken in
2013, when the Cyclorama
Center — once deemed eligi-
ble for the National Register
of Historic Places and listed
as “endangered” by the
World Monuments Fund —
was demolished.
In Southern California’s
overheated real estate mar-
ket, Neutra houses can carry
outsize price tags, evidence

of their significance and de-
sirability. Even so, an alarm-
ing number of them have
been bought as tear-downs.
“There should be a national
will to save these buildings,”
Neutra told The Times in


  1. “It shouldn’t have to be
    a one-man crusade.”
    Dion Neutra was born in
    Los Angeles on Oct. 8, 1926.
    “My dad started me drawing
    when I was 11,” Neutra re-
    called in 2001. By 1944, Dion
    Neutra, then a 17-year-old
    high school junior, was iden-
    tified by the Magazine of
    Architecture as a collabora-
    tor with his famous father.
    After service in the U.S.
    Navy during World War II,
    Neutra pursued his archi-
    tecture studies at USC,
    graduating in 1950. Neutra
    then went to work in his fa-
    ther’s firm. Accolades came
    quickly: an Honor Award
    from the American Institute
    of Architects in 1954, fol-
    lowed by an AIA Merit
    Award the following year.
    Father and son worked
    together through the 1950s
    amid patches of turbulence.


In 1961, Dion Neutra de-
scribed “frustration, resent-
ment and distortion” in the
relationship. After a brief
split, they were again joined
in practice from 1965 until
Richard Neutra’s death in


  1. “Artistically,” his
    mother said, “they got along
    very well.”
    Some of the tactics the
    younger Neutra employed in
    the name of preservation
    verged on guerrilla theater.
    In the summer of 2004, he
    turned up at the Cyclorama
    Center in Gettysburg with a
    length of heavy chain, dem-
    onstrating how he would at-
    tach himself to the building
    if and when a demolition
    squad arrived. “I’ll confront
    the bulldozers and say,
    ‘Take me with the building,
    gentlemen,’ ” he proclaimed,
    as battlefield tourists and
    broadcast news teams gath-
    ered to watch.
    After the Cyclorama
    Center was demolished, the
    ground where it had stood
    for 51 years was groomed in
    emulation of the battlefield
    terrain of 1863. The aging


Neutra did not, in the end,
chain himself to the build-
ing.
The loss was also person-
al. “They become part of who
you are,” he said of the build-
ings he and his father cre-
ated. “So to take one of those
down is like cutting off part
of my arm.”
In the early 2000s, after
Neutra architecture, and all
things midcentury modern,
had swung back into vogue,
Neutra allowed the licensing
of a limited number of Neu-
tra designs — a typeface, fur-
niture, house numbers — to
House Industries.
Asking prices for Neutra
homes were on the rise. Neu-
tra found that they had now
become fetish objects. He

also discovered that the
avowed Neutra fans who
bought them often had little
interest in collaborating
with him on restorations, in-
terpreting his overtures as
meddlesome or his inten-
tions as worryingly purist.
“We keep getting people hav-
ing theirinterpretation of
‘what Neutra would have
wanted,’ ” he bristled, “when
Neutra is around to be
asked.”
Neutra maintained a stu-
dio in his Silver Lake home,
the Reunion House, de-
signed by his father in 1950.
From there, he served as
executive consultant and
project director of the Neu-
tra Institute for Survival
Through Design, a nonprofit
established in 1962 to ad-
vance modernist and eco-
logical principles, and wrote
several books, including a
self-published memoir in


  1. The nearby Neutra Of-
    fice Building, at 2379 Glen-
    dale Blvd., was added to the
    National Register of His-
    toric Places in 2004.
    Neutra’s final project was
    a house in Honduras for the
    younger of his two sons, Nick
    Neutra, completed in 2018
    and the subject of a 2017 doc-
    umentary short, “Neutra in
    Roatan.” In addition to his
    sons and brother, he is sur-
    vived by his wife, Lynn
    Smart Neutra; two grand-
    children; one great-grand-
    child; and two stepchildren
    from a previous marriage.
    Preserving architecture
    as he did, Neutra admitted,
    involved risks of its own. “My
    wife gives me hell because
    I’ve kept the original 1950s
    Case toilet that doesn’t flush
    right,” the architect said of
    his own house. “ ‘Listen,’ I
    tell her. ‘This is the toilet
    that Richard Neutra sat on
    — I’m not getting rid of it.’ ”


Rozzo is a special
correspondent.

DION NEUTRA, 1926 - 2019


Son was a link to architectural titans


[Neutra,from B1]


Wally SkalijLos Angeles Times
GLOBALLY RENOWNED
Neutra, shown near his Silver Lake home, campaigned vigorously for the preservation of modernist build-
ings, including his father’s Cyclorama Center at Gettysburg National Military Park. It ultimately was razed.

OAKLAND — A former
Bay Area tour operator
agreed Monday to plead
guilty to serving as an unreg-
istered agent for China in ex-
change for a possible re-
duced prison sentence.
Xuehua Edward Peng
agreed in court to a four-year
prison term and a fine of
$30,000 in a plea deal negoti-
ated with prosecutors after
they charged him with being
an illegal foreign agent who
delivered U.S. national secu-
rity information to officials
in China.
U.S. District Judge Hay-
wood S. Gilliam Jr., however,
declined to accept the plea
deal until sentencing, which
is scheduled for March.
Peng, 57, a naturalized
U.S. citizen, has been in fed-
eral custody since late Sep-


tember, when he was ar-
rested at his Hayward resi-
dence to the surprise of
neighbors, who knew him as
a nice person with a taste for
luxury cars.
On Monday, he appeared
in red inmate garb and
spoke through a Mandarin
interpreter. He told the
judge that he understood
the terms of the agreement
and that he was guilty. It did
not appear that he had fam-
ily or other supporters in the
room.
Prosecutors said Peng,
under orders from a handler
in China, left cash in hotel
rooms in exchange for classi-
fied national security infor-
mation on small electronic
storage devices.
The U.S. was never at risk
because the information left
for Peng was provided by an
FBI double agent who had
also been approached for
spy work by the Chinese gov-
ernment but decided to in-
form the U.S. government
instead, prosecutors have
said.
In the plea agreement,
Peng said he was ap-

proached by a state security
official with China during a
business trip in 2015 and
agreed to collect and deliver
information. He made six
trips between 2015 and 2018,
leaving as much as $20,000 in
envelopes at a time.
“I was never informed of
the contents of these devices
and at no time learned what
information was stored on
them,” Peng said in the plea
agreement.
Peng was paid “at least
$30,000 for the acts” he per-
formed as a courier, accord-
ing to the agreement. Com-
munications were done by
telephone at first and then
by the encrypted chat plat-
form WeChat.
A seventh drop sched-
uled for August 2019 was de-
layed. Peng was arrested the
next month.
Daniel Olmos, one of
Peng’s attorneys, declined
to comment after the hear-
ing. “The plea speaks for it-
self,” he said.
If convicted at trial, Peng
could face a maximum of 10
years in prison and a
$250,000 fine.

Investigators described
him as a sightseeing op-
erator in the San Francisco
area for Chinese visitors and
students. Public records list
Peng as president of U.S.
Tour and Travel in San
Francisco, but no website for
the company was found.
Peng entered the country
in 2001 on a temporary busi-
ness visa.
He became a lawful per-
manent resident in 2006 fol-
lowing his marriage and was
naturalized in September
2012.
He has a background in
mechanical engineering and
is licensed in California as an
acupuncturist.
A magistrate judge de-
nied his earlier request for a
free federal lawyer, saying he
had too many assets, and re-
fused to let him out on bail
given that he had an apart-
ment and a mistress in
China.
FBI Director Christo-
pher A. Wray has said China
poses a more serious coun-
terintelligence threat to the
U.S. than any other country,
including Russia.

Man says he served as agent for China


In plea deal in court,


former tour operator


in Bay Area agrees to


prison term and fine.


associated press


Engine teams were em-
bedded in neighborhoods to
defend homes in the fire’s
path, and bulldozers and
hand crews were at work
throughout the night dig-
ging into the dirt to create
containment lines around
the perimeter of the blaze.
Mandatory evacuations
were ordered for a large
swath of land about five
miles wide, including the
area of Highway 154 east to
Ontare Road and from Foot-
hill Road to the top of Ca-
mino Cielo. An evacuation
warning was issued for the
area north of Foothill Road
and from Ontare Road east
to Gibraltar Road.
There was no informa-
tion available Monday eve-
ning about whether any
homes have burned, said
Capt. Daniel Bertucelli, a
Santa Barbara County Fire


Department public informa-
tion officer.
“We’re going to fight fire
throughout the night, and
tomorrow when the sun
comes up, we’ll get a better
understanding of what sort
of damage we have,” Bertu-

celli said.
Winds were expected to
increase, especially at
higher elevations, until
about 1 a.m., with some
areas of the Santa Ynez
Mountains expected to see
gusts of up to 65 mph, ac-

cording to the weather serv-
ice.
Bertucelli said that as he
was driving 55 mph down
Highway 154 earlier in the
evening, the fire was keeping
up with him, growing along-
side the roadway. Once he
reached lower elevations,
the wind was much lighter.
The fire burned through
dense, old brush in an area
that hadn’t burned since the
Painted Cave fire in 1990. It
was also dry Monday, with
relative humidity reported
at 14% in the hills where the
fire was burning.
Meteorologists were fore-
casting a decrease in wind
through the early morning
hours Tuesday, and the area
was expected to see rain
Tuesday afternoon or eve-
ning.
“Hopefully Mother Na-
ture will help us out tomor-
row,” Bertucelli said.

Fire threatens homes above Santa Barbara


A BULLDOZER builds a fire line downhill from
Camino Cielo in Santa Barbara County on Monday.

Mike EliasonSanta Barbara County Fire Department

[Fire,from B1]

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