It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood...
Skater girl
Skate-dancer Kasil does the splits while roller-skating along the Santa Monica bike path on Saturday, February 9, 2008.
Old friends
Sisterly love
Sisters hold hands while walking along the shoreline at Santa Monica beach on Saturday, February 9, 2008.
Fresh from the farm
Jason Chamberlin, 26, from Wong Farms, gives out free samples of hydroponic grown tomatoes at Santa Monica's Downtown Farmers Market on Saturday, January, 26, 2008.
Cafe Monsieur Marcel
People eat lunch outdoors at Cafe Monsieur Marcel at the Third Street Promenade on Friday, February 8, 2008. Cafe Monsieur Marcel specializes in gourmet and specialty cheeses, wine tasting and deli items.
Pack run
Ink Well
1) Santa Monica City Manager Lamont Ewell speaks during a commemorative plaque dedication on Thursday, February 7, 2008 - unveiling of a monument marking a section of beach near Bay Street that was once referred to as the "Ink Well" 5) Troopers Lennister K. Williams, 70, and James Cooper, 85, both veteran Buffalo Soldiers, reminisce during the ceremony on Thursday. 6) Historian Alison Rose Jefferson, who wrote the 'Ink Well,' speaks during the ceremony. The plaque reads:
“The Ink Well”
A Place of Celebration and Pain
The beach near this site between Bay and Bicknell Streets, known by some as the Ink Well, was an important gathering place for African-Americans long after racial restrictions on public beaches were abandoned in 1927.
“African-American groups from Santa Monica, Venice and Los Angeles, as early as the 1920s to the end of the Jim Crow era in the 1950s, preferred to enjoy the sun and surf here because they encountered less racial harassment than at other Southland beaches.
“In the 1940s, Nick Gabaldon, a Santa Monica High School student and the first documented black surfer, taught himself how to surf here.'