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Obituaries

obituaries of death in l.a.

Obituaries

Obituaries for October 21 to October 27th.

Obituaries

Obituaries for October 12 – 20th, 2005

Obituaries

Obituaries for September 19th to 25th, 2005.

A Father’s Drive to Save His Daughter

George Smith hates to lose. A Harvard Business School graduate, Smith founded one of Southern California\’s largest, most prominent real estate investment banking firms and will receive an honorary doctorate from Tel Aviv University next week. Still, he smarts a little from a grievance endured at Hamilton High more than 50 years ago.

\”I graduated second in my class to a home economics major,\” said the 70-year-old real estate guru and father of four. \”She had one B in three years and I had two. My physics teacher graded me at a different level than anyone else because she knew I was going on to Cal Tech.\”

He holds no grudge. And this small injustice would help to fuel rather than blunt his drive to succeed, which has served Smith well in building a firm that exceeded $2 billion in commercial financing last year. He never imagined that he\’d also apply this indomitable will another way: in a fight to save his daughter\’s life.

Becca Smith was 5 years old in 1983 when she was diagnosed with Ataxia Telangiectasia (A-T), a rare, progressively degenerative neurological disease for which there is no cure. Children with A-T have difficulty walking and with balance, and are more susceptible to infection and certain cancers. Smith and his wife, Pam, were told that Becca was unlikely to reach her 20th birthday.

More Love and Lust From the Bible

\”The Song of Hannah\” as imagined by Etzioni-Halevy, tells the story of two women — Hannah and Peninah, Elkanah\’s other wife — and its chapters alternate between their two voices.

Obituaries

Obituaries, September 8th 2005

Obituaries

Bernard M. Shapiro who founded the El Caballero Country Club in Tarzana in 1957, died Aug. 26. He was 89.\n\nAfter playing golf at the Bel-Air Country Club in 1954, Shapiro wanted to join, but a friend told him he would not be welcome because he was Jewish, Shapiro told the Los Angeles Times in 1998.\n\nWith the help of a few friends, including supermarket owner Eugene Gelson, Shapiro built a member-owned country club that anyone was welcome to join.

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