Ex-La Habra High teacher charged with indecency for acts 30 years ago in Illinois, prosecutors say

A retired La Habra High School teacher was charged Friday with one count of misdemeanor indecency dating back more than 30 years when he taught at a Chicago-area junior high.

The charge against Charles T. Ritz III, who was hired at La Habra High School a year after being forced to resign from Lake Bluff Junior High in 1985, follows a nearly year-long investigation by the Lake County State’s Attorney’s Office. More than 50 witnesses from California to Florida were interviewed on incidents dating back to the late 1970s, according to Lake County spokeswoman Cynthia Vargas.

“When we launched this investigation 11 months ago, we knew it would present challenges because of the amount of time that had elapsed between the incidents and when we learned of them,” Lake Bluff Chief of Police David Belmonte said in a statement. “But those challenges did not diminish our resolve to investigate the matter and work on behalf of the victims and our entire community so we could learn as much as we could about the disturbing allegations and do whatever we could to hold responsible parties strictly accountable.”

Vargas said Ritz would be extradited to Lake County from Orange County.

Ex-Lake Bluff student John Bollman has alleged Ritz wooed students with beer and pornography while he was a teacher there. School documents obtained by The Orange County Register said Ritz made “sexual advances” toward students.

Ritz, who in May 2016 left his math teaching position at La Habra High, could not be reached for comment. At the time of his retirement, there was no record of a local complaint against him at Fullerton Joint Union High School District, where he recently served as a union president.

Sources close to the Lake County State’s Attorney’s case say La Habra police for months have been interviewing Ritz’s former students from Orange County.

Lake County officials said the statute of limitations there might have been waived by Ritz when he left Illinois. Records with Lake Bluff School District 65 in Illinois show Ritz resigned in September 1985, the same day he was notified by the school board about a formal hearing to consider his termination for “unacceptable behavior by a teacher of this school district toward its students.”

Ritz started a teaching position in Orange County in September 1986.

It is unclear whether the Fullerton district inquired with Lake Bluff about Ritz’s work history. Documents show that Lake Bluff school officials failed to disclose the accusations against Ritz when contacted by a separate district decades ago.

13.05.2017No comments
BMC’s Brent Bookwalter ready to step up in Amgen Tour of California

Brent Bookwalter has paid his dues.

He is in his 10th year with BMC Racing Team and is finally ready to challenge the world’s top cyclists.

“Throughout my career, more often than not, I’ve been a team worker and sacrificed for team results,” he said. “I have been happy and proud to be able to do that.

“Racing the Amgen Tour of California, the Tour (de France) and the Giro (d’Italia), I’ve been fortunate to work with a lot of successful leaders. I learned a lot from them. I’ve been taking a lot of mental notes over the years. And although I still relish a role of working for others, I can now also see myself as a closer.”

Bookwalter, 33, will be competing in his fifth Amgen Tour of California, which begins Sunday in Sacramento. The seven-day race comes to Southern California on Wednesday and concludes May 20 in downtown Pasadena.

Last year, the American finished a career-best third in the race.

“I’ve really grown with the team and the team has grown with me,” he said. “When I came to the team 10 years ago, we were just growing and I was not ready for (Grand Tour events). It’s been nice to grow together and see the changes over the years. Now, we’re among the tops in our sport and competing against the best riders in the world.”

BMC, which has been one of the staples of the Amgen Tour, won the ATOC team title last year, the second time the American-owned team has won the crown. Bookwalter’s teammate, Rohan Dennis, finished second to winner Julian Alaphillipe of France. Bookwalter, who lives in Asheville, N.C., when not in Europe, finished 43 seconds behind Alaphillipe.
His previous best finish in the event was 15th in 2011. He competed in the Giro d’Italia in 2014 and 2015, which runs concurrently with the ATOC.

Last year, Bookwalter placed an impressive fourth in the Thousand Oaks-to-Santa Barbara stage, which finished atop the steep Gibraltar Road above Santa Barbara. He came back to finish fourth the next day, from Morro Bay to Laguna Seca. He finished fifth in the Folsom time trial.

“That was one of the first times I put pressure on myself to step up and lead the team,” he said. “I’m looking forward to the whole week. Last year I had somewhat of a breakthrough performance in helping lead the team.”

The team, including Beijing Olympics road racing gold medalist Sam Sanchez of Spain, has been training this past week in Big Bear, snow earlier this week and all.

But can Bookwalter become the fifth American, and the first since teammate Tejay van Garderen in 2013, to win the ATOC?

Alaphillipe had knee surgery Thursday and will not be able to ride for two weeks. Dennis dropped out of the Giro after a Stage 4 crash, but was complaining of non-crash related symptoms. Van Garderen is also in the Giro.

Peter Sagan, who won the ATOC in 2015 and has more stage victories than any other rider, and Andrew Taslansky, who was fourth last year, return. Taylor Phinney, Alexander Kristoff, Ian Boswell, John Degenkolb, Miguel Ángel López and Lawson Craddock are all expected to race.

The ATOC field maight be the strongest in its 12-year history because the UCI, the sport’s governing body, has elevated the race to a WorldTour event.

“That only makes this even more of a hotly contested event go to a higher level,” Bookwalter said. “This is probably the deepest field. There are high stakes and these WorldTour races count for a lot in team rankings and dollars. This year’s point structure, with all riders fighting for the top 30, 40 positions, it definitely heats up the competition.”

Bookwalter heads into Sunday coming off some of his best career results. He took fourth two weeks ago in the Tour de Yorkshire in England and in March won the Volta a Catalunya time trial stage. His first tour victory was the Tour of Utah in 2015.

He said it is unlikely he will compete in his fifth Tour de France this year, although it is not out of the question. After racing the ATOC last year, he finished 117th in France.
But not racing in cycling’s most prestigious event does not faze him.

“It’s not looking like I’ll be there,” he said. “I have a full season of other races.

“The Tour de France is a love-hate thing. I’ve been part of it four times and they are among my proudest moments. But at the same time, that event takes a month, making it really all-consuming and extremely stressful and dangerous. It’s sort of good to cycle on and off years. I’m one of those guys that I do not define myself by the Tour.”

For Bookwalter to win the ATOC, he said it may likely come down to back-to-back Southern California stages: Stage 5 from Ontario to Mount Baldy and the Big Bear time trial the following day.

“I’m not saying it’s the cure-all because there are always twists,” he said of the race’s final stages. “We have a roster with a lot of world-class sprinters and you don’t know whether a win will be by a finish. It always will be unpredictable.

“But the last couple of stages in Southern California will shake it up.”

AMGEN TOUR OF CALIFORNIA

When: Sunday to May 20

Sunday: Sacramento

Monday: Modesto to San Jose

Tuesday: Pismo Beach to Morro Bay

Wednesday: Santa Barbara to Santa Clarita

Thursday: Ontario to Mount Baldy

May 19: Big Bear time trial

May 20: Wrightwood to Pasadena

TV: NBCSN

Info: http://amgentourofcalifornia.com/stages

13.05.2017No comments
Boxing: Look for Gennady Golovkin to stop Canelo Alvarez in entertaining fight

Finally, the Gennady Golovkin-Canelo Alvarez middleweight title fight has been made for Sept. 16. But will it be a dud, like another highly anticipated fight that took much longer to make?

Not according to Alvarez’s promoter.

“We have two great warriors here,” Oscar De La Hoya said upon announcing the fight inside the ring following Alvarez’s shutout victory over Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. on Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. “This is the most anticipated fight right next to Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. The difference is this fight is going to have a lot of action, nonstop action.”

It’s rare, but we agree with De La Hoya. It’s hard to imagine this fight not being terrific, as opposed to the 2015 yawn-fest produced by Mayweather and Pacquiao.

Golovkin (37-0, 33 KOs), the unified middleweight champion, is a knockout machine who can box and cut off the ring with the best of them. He has a granite chin, too. Since he does get hit, that adds intrigue.

Alvarez also can take a heck of a punch, has plenty of power and is a better boxer than some might think. And you know he wants to shut up all of those who thought he might never fight Golovkin after he put him off for a year.

“I’m very happy that this fight is finally here, the one that a lot of you said would never be made,” Alvarez said, looking out at the large group of reporters.

Yup, all the ingredients are there for a good one. We’ll be surprised if it’s not. It should be competitive, unlike Alvarez’s victory over Chavez, who had nothing to offer.

As the interested parties fielded questions late Saturday from reporters who had just finished writing about Alvarez-Chavez, one wanted to know what Golovkin’s trainer thought about Alvarez’s dominant victory.

Abel Sanchez gave perhaps the most significant response of the news conference.

“I think Canelo displayed great boxing skills,” said Sanchez, of West Covina. “But he’s not going to have Chavez in front of him, it’s going to be Gennady Golovkin.”

This is true, and Alvarez is going to find out the hard way what that means. Alvarez (49-1-1, 34 KOs) is a fine fighter, but the feeling here is Golovkin, 35, is practically an immovable object. And he’s outstanding at moving them.

Alvarez, 26, will make a respectable showing for the first half of the fight. But if he engages Golovkin enough, Alvarez will be stopped inside the distance in the second half.
Golovkin knows nothing will come easy, though.

“It’s a difficult fight for both of us,” the champion said.

Again, true enough. But the beast that is Golovkin will prevail in a fight worthy of a rematch.

HBO pay-per-view will televise the fight, whose site is still to be determined.

Speaking of HBO pay-per-view, reports have surfaced saying Saturday’s Alvarez-Chavez bout will exceed a million buys. It’s too bad so many paid for such a lousy fight.

That won’t be the case with Alvarez-Golovkin.

If you care, HBO on Saturday night will replay Alvarez-Chavez.

RUSSELL JR. VS. ESCANDON

At 5-foot-4 1/2, world champion Gary Russell Jr. is somewhat short for a featherweight. Two of the other champions – Leo Santa Cruz and Lee Selby – are 5-7 1/2 and 5-8 1/2, respectively.

But when Russell (27-1, 16 KOs) steps into the ring May 20 to defend his title against Oscar Escandon (25-2, 17 KOs) at MGM National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Md. (on Showtime), he’ll be facing someone much shorter than himself. His Colombian opponent is just 5-1 1/2.

“I haven’t fought anyone as short as him, but that’s the purpose of training camp,” said Russell, of Capitol Heights, Md. “We bring people in who have a similar style to Escandon. We’ve gotten great work in and I feel prepared.”

One thing’s for sure: Russell doesn’t expect to have to look for Escandon. That’s the way Russell likes it.

“It’s easier against a more aggressive guy,” he said. “It’s hard to go after someone who is retreating. He’s going to bring it right into my face.”

Russell’s younger brothers – super bantamweight Gary Antonio Russell and junior welterweight Gary Antuanne Russell – will also appear on the card in separate non-televised bouts.

ETC.

Diego De La Hoya (17-0, 9 KOs) of Mexicali on May 18 will put his undefeated record on the line when he takes on Erik Ruiz (16-6-1, 6 KOs) of Oxnard in the super bantamweight main event from Casino Del Sol in Tucson (on ESPN2). De La Hoya – cousin of Oscar De La Hoya – is ranked as high as No. 6 in the world by one governing body. … Terence Crawford (30-0, 21 KOs) on May 20 will defend his two junior welterweight titles when he tangles with Felix Diaz (19-1, 9 KOs) of the Dominican Republic at Madison Square Garden in New York City (on HBO).

13.05.2017No comments
Why it matters that Southern California is having a late spring

Spring arrived later and is lasting longer in Southern California this year due to wet and cool weather. The rest of the nation has experienced a drastically different weather pattern.

Our late spring

Even before Punxutawaney Phil came out of his groundhog home on Feb. 2, there were signs across the country that spring was coming soon. Phil might want to get another job because he predicted another six weeks of winter — a prediction that was obviously wrong. And, sure enough, by the time of spring equinox, March 20, most of the country was in full-blown spring. Curiously, Southern California wasn’t. Here’s a look at how early spring hit in much of the continental United States, and some history, and what it all means.

spring in the u.s. mapPhenology is the study of key seasonal changes in plants and animals from year to year — such as flowering, emergence of insects and migration of birds — especially their timing and relationship with weather and climate.

Fourteen states have had record warm temperatures from January through April.

14 states2017 versus 2012
The onset of spring in the Midwest was earlier than usual this year but not as early as in 2012. March 2012 broke numerous records for warm temperatures and early flowering in the U.S., but 2017 could be even warmer with earlier flowering.

2012-and-2017
This map shows the Spring Leaf Index in 2017 compared with 2012. Southern California is nearly a month behind the index average.

earlyWHY IT MATTERS

A few wet days ruining your weekend plans to go to the beach might seem minor, but there are more important factors scientists monitor the seasons for.
Health impacts: Early-season disease carriers such as ticks and mosquitoes, and an earlier, longer and more vigorous pollen season.
Agriculture: A longer growing season can result in increased yields for some crops, risky because of the higher likelihood of plant damage caused by late frosts or summer drought.
Pollination: Bees, birds and butterflies rely on the seasonal change to trigger migration. If their migrations change the crops can have smaller yeilds and the species can be depleted.
Increased fire hazard: The hills are green and lush now, but will have a larger than normal underbrush in the drier summer months. Forests already have a large amount of dead trees after five years of drought.

lilacsBecome a springcaster

Whether you’re an amateur or professional naturalist you can participate in a national, online program called Nature’s Notebook. The program observes plants and animals and generates long-term phenology data. A common need is for people to monitor lilacs.

How to sign up
1. Identify one or more common lilac plants on your property to monitor.

2. Join Nature’s Notebook online or with the app. usanpn.org/natures_notebook

3. Sign up to receive the common lilac campaign messaging. You will receive messages approximately every 4-6 weeks during the growing season, providing early results, encouragement, observation tips, interesting links and campaign-specific opportunities.

4. Observe your plant(s). Report what you see (yes/no/not sure) on your plant periodically following the instructions for common lilacs. People are encouraged people to observe plant(s) 2-4 times a week, especially in the spring, but any observations are welcome.

5. Report observations. Periodically log into the Nature’s Notebook account or enter observations directly by Android or iPhone smartphone and tablet apps.

An example of a data calendar from Nature’s Notebook:

calendar

 

Sources: USA National Phenology Network, U.S. Geological Survey, NOAA

13.05.2017No comments
Dior RTW Resort 2018

For Maria Grazia Chiuri’s first cruise collection for Dior, the house created no less than a “Wizard of Oz” moment. Toto, we’re not in Los Angeles anymore.
Technically the show wasn’t in L.A. — it was in Calabasas, the tony suburb in the Valley with famous residents such as the Kardashians. But when guests arrived at the actual venue, shuttled by a military grade supply of SUVs up a dirt mountain road in the Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space Preserve, and then by a smaller fleet of Gators, they might have thought they were on safari in the desert hills. The only thing “Hollywood” about the location in the Santa Monica Mountains was that it resembled a big-budget movie set, strewn with retro trailers and modernist tents pitched around piles of pillows, benches and woven carpets. Waiters kept the Moët flowing. Two hot air balloons floating in the background bore the words “Dior Sauvage,” as did a sign erected on a hilltop yonder in a nod to the iconic Hollywood sign.
To see the celebrities in the front row, click here.
To see the scene backstage, click here.
“I was happy to find the location — it was not so easy,” said Chiuri in the understatement of

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Balenciaga to Open First-Floor Brand Takeovers at Colette

GUEST HOUSE: Balenciaga recently revamped its Rue Saint-Honoré store, a few doors down the same Paris street from Colette. Now Balenciaga is kicking off a series of monthlong brand takeovers of the first floor of the landmark concept store.
For its guest slot — scheduled to run June 19 to Aug. 5, with a custom-made design under the artistic direction of its creative director Demna Gvasalia — Balenciaga is to present its men’s fall collection, an exclusive women’s collection and limited-edition products specially designed for the event. Other surprises are in store, according to Colette, with the Kering-owned brand also due to stage an artistic installation in the floor’s gallery space. Only the store’s Beauty Box space will remain unchanged.
Gvasalia, whose design ethos is based around “enhancing, underlining and re-presenting that which already exists in a new light,” in March unveiled a new design concept for Balenciaga’s Rue Saint-Honoré flagship based on a clothing warehouse, with industrial conveyor rails similar to those in the brand’s production headquarters in Italy, ceilings covered in aluminum foil, and long, aluminum tables for accessories.
Following in Balenciaga’s footsteps, meanwhile, will be Les Vacances de Lucien, offering a selection of designs from brands represented by Paris-based Lucien Pagès’ namesake public relations agency, which will take over the space from

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Photographer, Artist Charles Sheeler’s Rarely Seen Textiles Featured in Exhibit

WHAT’S OLD IS NEW: Recognized as he was as a fashion photographer and artist, Charles Sheeler also dabbled in textile design and now those seldom-seen items are being shown at the James A. Michener Art Museum.
Chief curator Kirsten Jensen said, “There was this brief period in the Thirties when a number of modern artists — Stuart Davis, Edward Steichen — were designing textiles and this was not unique to America. A number of European ones were, too. There was a real interest in applying modernism to textile design.
In 1933, Sheeler delved into textiles after he had ended his five-year run shooting for Condé Nast in 1931. Around that time, he wrote to his patron Louise Arensberg that he was designing fabrics for women’s sportswear, Jensen said. The Doylestown, Pa., exhibition features some of his knit fabrics as well as his woven cotton and linen samples. The textiles have not been exhibited since 1939 when Sheeler had a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art (for which his friend William Carlos Williams wrote the catalogue). During a visit in Connecticut, Sheeler showed them to another pal Marcel Duchamp who “really loved them,” Jensen said. “It’s significant that the Museum of Modern Art included

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Bella Hadid x Chrome Hearts Makes London Debut at Selfridges

LONDON — Bella Hadid’s popular line for Chrome Hearts is making its U.K. debut with an exclusive introduction at Selfridges.
To mark the launch the model joined longtime friend and musician Jesse Jo Stark and her mother Laurie, Chrome Hearts’ co-owner, at the British department store on Oxford Street.
“This is such a beautiful space and the [accessories department] is brand new, it’s a new entrance to the store so it’s perfect, not only for my collection, but for Chrome Hearts as a whole. It all comes together,” said Hadid, who has been a frequent Selfridges visitor as of late, having also launched her new Dior mascara campaign in the store two weeks ago.
Chrome Hearts has its own shops-in-shop in Selfridges’ new accessories department adjacent to Gucci, Valentino and Balenciaga. It features both the Chrome Hearts x Bella collection, which was created as a collaboration between Jesse Jo and Hadid, and the brand’s core jewelry, handbag and ready-to-wear ranges.
For her part, Laurie Stark said that she was drawn to the boldness of a big London launch. “From there, the whole world can follow,” she said, highlighting plans to continue expanding in markets such as L.A. and Tokyo.
Each launch will highlight new pieces in

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Études Launches ‘Smiling Sun’ Capsule

KEEP ON SMILING: French collective Études is taking a political stand with a new unisex capsule named after and inspired by the iconic “Smiling Sun” logo. Created in 1975 and designed by Danish activist Anne Lund, the logo became a symbol of the anti-nuclear power movement and was translated into 50 languages.
Described by Études cofounders Aurélien Arbet and Jérémie Egry as “a collection celebrating the anti-nuclear movement that embodies the new generation’s environmental consciousness,” the capsule supports the nuclear power phase-out movement and features the logo revisited as patches and prints on denim, caps, T-shirts and sweatshirts. It grew out of a sprinkling of looks that featured in the brand’s spring 2017 show.
So far Germany, Belgium, Spain and Switzerland are the only countries to have committed to a nuclear power phase-out, following in the footsteps of Italy, which closed its last reactors in 1990 following the Chernobyl accident, as the first and only country in the world to do so.
The Smiling Sun capsule will enter the brand’s Paris store on May 18 as well e-commerce site Ssense.com, with other points of sale to be confirmed.

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