The Nob Hill Gazette is a regional monthly magazine founded in 1978 by San Francisco businessman and socialite Gardner Mein, who operated the title until 1986. The magazine, which provides a people-focused account of San Francisco culture, philanthropy and accomplishment, is home-delivered to San Francisco's most exclusive neighborhoods, including Pacific Heights , Nob Hill , Seacliff , Russian Hill , the Marina and others.
28-478: From 1986 until 2016, the magazine was owned and published by Lois Lehrman, the magazine's former advertising director and longtime fixture on the San Francisco social scene. The magazine flourished under Lehrman's ownership, becoming the publication-of-record for high-society gatherings and marquee charitable events in San Francisco with editor Merla Zellerbach at the helm for more than a decade. After 30 years at
56-471: A creative outlet by performing dramatic readings of plays. Merla's sister, Devera Kettner, was an actress (under the screen name Devera Burton), and her brother Sandor Burstein was a doctor. Merla Zellerbach took the last name of her first husband, Stephen Zellerbach (whose great-grandfather started the Zellerbach Paper Company in 1870, later known as Crown-Zellerbach Corporation ) and kept the name
84-466: A different subject each week. Composed primarily of quotes from locals (celebrities, socialites, politicians, and “every day folk”), she subtly explored and exposed truths about human nature. In the late 1960s, she appeared on a local ABC TV game show moderated by Jim Lange called "Oh My Word," in which panelists (Zellerbach, June Lockhart , Kathryn Ish , Scott Beach and Paul Speegle ) offered definitions of obscure words to contestants who had to guess
112-568: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . See tips for writing articles about magazines . Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page . Merla Zellerbach Merla Zellerbach , née Myrle Carmel Burstein, was born in San Francisco in 1930, the daughter of Rabbi Elliot M. and Lottie Burstein. While attending Stanford University , she met and soon thereafter married Stephen Zellerbach. They had one child, son Gary. Her literary, civic and philanthropic work began at
140-465: Is a small, extremely affluent gated neighborhood in San Francisco that was the first of the master-planned communities built in the western part of the city. It consists of 36 large lots laid out around a single privately owned street, also called Presidio Terrace, which takes the form of a two-way access street leading to a one-way elliptical cul-de-sac . Access is off Arguello Boulevard . Construction started in 1905, just south of and adjacent to
168-412: The 1906 San Francisco earthquake as prosperous families rebuilt outside the destroyed neighborhoods in the eastern part of the city. Presidio Terrace was originally marketed to white residents only. "There is only one spot in San Francisco where only Caucasians are permitted to buy or lease real estate or where they may reside. That place is Presidio Terrace", according to a 1906 brochure distributed by
196-528: The Presidio , a former army base that is now a part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area . Amenities unusual for residential developments of that time included electric street lights, underground utilities and roads designed for auto traffic. The neighborhood was developed by the firm of Baldwin & Howell, a leading San Francisco real estate development company. It thrived following
224-555: The 1990s aroused objections by neighbors. Many notable San Franciscans have lived in Presidio Terrace over the years, including San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto , Ms. Claribel Rapp and her first and second husbands, Messrs Elmer G. Beckstrom and the former Peruvian Ambassador to the United States Fernando Berckemeyer Pazos ,(30 Presidio Terrace), United States Congresswoman and first female Speaker of
252-1263: The Bay Area. After her death, she was the subject of increasing national exposure, public comments from Sen. Feinstein, Episcopal Bishop Bill Swing and many others, editorials, and a new legislative push in California to legalize “death with dignity.” 2015 - 21 HUNTINGTON COURT, Firefall Editions (hardcover); 2014 - THE A-LIST MURDERS, Firefall Editions (hardcover); 2013 - DYING TO DANCE, Firefall Editions (hardcover); 2012 - LOVE TO DIE FOR, Firefall Editions (hardcover); 2010 - THE MISSING MOTHER, Firefall Editions (hardcover); 2009 - MYSTERY OF THE MERMAID, Firefall Editions (hardcover); 2009 - SECRETS IN TIME, Firefall Editions (hardcover & paperback); 1990 - RITTENHOUSE SQUARE, Random House (hardcover), Doubleday Book Club, NY Times Recommended Reading List; 1989 - SUGAR, Ballantine; 1987 - LOVE THE GIVER, Ballantine; 1987 - CAVETT MANOR, Ballantine; 1986 - THE WILDES OF NOB HILL, Ballantine; 1961 - LOVE IN A DARK HOUSE; Doubleday. 1983 - The Type 1/Type 2 Allergy Relief Program ; Tarcher/Houghton-Mifflin (w/ Alan Scott Levin, MD) 1984 - Detox: A Successful & Supportive Program for Freeing Your Body from
280-2543: The Center Honors (WATCH)”; 2012 - Northern California chapter of the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation's Champion of Hope – Community Leader; 2010 - Compassion & Choices Hugh Gallagher Award; 2010 - Named “Literary Laureate” by The Friends of the San Francisco Public Library; 2007 - Mayor Gavin Newsom Proclamation of Merla Zellerbach Day, October 1; 2000 - California State Assembly Certificate of Recognition; 2000 - US Senate Certificate of Commendation; 2000-14: Listed (Marquis) Who's Who In America; Who's Who In Entertainment; 1999 - New York Times rave review for Rittenhouse Square; 1999 - Wellness.Books.com Reviewer's Choice Award (The Allergy Sourcebook); 1996 - Governor Pete Wilson commendation award; 1994 - Where Magazine International Achievement Award for Best Article Writing; 1983 - Mayor Dianne Feinstein Proclamation of Merla Zellerbach Day, November 1. Queen of SF Mardi Gras, chair Beaux Arts Ball, founder SF Sponsors, The Singles Organization; volunteer at Planned Parenthood, The American Friends Service Committee, The Red Cross; trustee Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, board member of Compassion & Choices. San Francisco's Grant Grammar School, Lowell High School (student body Vice President), Stanford University 1. Merla Zellerbach, S.F. writer and civic leader, dies San Francisco Chronicle, Saturday, December 27, 2014 by Leah Garchik 2. Merla Zellerbach's Career In High Society San Francisco Chronicle, Sunday, November 23, 2008 by Carolyne Zinko 3. Merla Zellerbach: A struggle to have 'death with dignity’ San Francisco Chronicle, Sunday, January 25, 2015 by Leah Garchik 4. 5. Happy Endings Stanford Magazine, November/December, 2012 by Elihu Blotnick 6. Merla-Zellerbach-Mysteries 7. Letters to editor, Celebrating life of Merla Zellerbach San Francisco Chronicle, January 31, 2015 8. Merla Zellerbach - author - (1930-2014) 9. Nob Hill Gazette 10. Town & Country Magazine 11. Miss Bigelow: Choices fundraiser shadowed by loss of Merla Zellerbach San Francisco Chronicle, February 26, 2015 by Catherine Bigelow 12. Why “Right-to-Die” Is 2016′s Most Consequential Bill, Calbuzz.com, March 20, 2015, editorial Presidio Terrace Presidio Terrace
308-615: The Coalition on Homelessness San Francisco, the Kidney Foundation, and a dozen more. Her death has taken on the focus of her most important cause later in life, the “Death with Dignity” movement, spearheaded by the non-profit group, Compassion and Choices. As an advocate and rallying point for this movement, to allow terminally ill patients to choose their time of death (under a strictly defined and controlled process), she generated considerable press and publicity and contributed greatly to
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#1732844417385336-1469: The Physical and Psychological Effects of: Chemical Pollutants, Junk Food Additives, Sugar, Nicotine, Drugs, Alcohol, Caffeine, Prescription and Nonprescription Medications, and Other Environmental Toxins ; Tarcher/Houghton-Mifflin (w/ Phyllis Saifer, MD) 1996 - The Allergy Sourcebook , Lowell House (Division of McGraw Hill) 1998 - The Allergy Sourcebook , 2nd Edition 2000 - The Allergy Sourcebook , 3rd Edition 1991 - THE STANFORD CENTURY; contributing author San Francisco, USA government declares November 2 as Merla Zellerbach Day. Cosmopolitan , Travel & Leisure , Reader's Digest , Prevention , Women's World , This Week , Saturday Evening Post , and others; 1989-99; Cover stories: SF Focus , Gentry , Nob Hill Gazette , Where Magazine; 1985-91; Featured articles (8) in Town & Country . Published Interviews included: Shirley Temple Black , Yves St. Laurent , Andy Warhol , Sen. Dianne Feinstein , Bob Hope , Hugh Hefner , Bennett Cerf , Joe Montana and Helen Gurley Brown . 9, 10 2007 – 2014; Editor Emerita and staff writer for Nob Hill Gazette 1995 - 2007; Editor, Nob Hill Gazette 1975-93; Enrichment Lecturer and writing instructor on cruise ships 1965-70; Panelist on ABC-TV's OH MY WORD, w/June Lockhart 1962-85; Featured columnist, MY FAIR CITY, S.F. Chronicle 2014 - Junior League “Women at
364-768: The annual Beaux Arts Ball, and was a board member of the San Francisco Art Institute, Patrons of Art & Music, the Muscular Dystrophy Association and the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. She was named the Northern California chapter of the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation's 2012 Champion of Hope, and in 2014, the Junior League honored her with their “Women at the Center Honors (WATCH)” award for her major impact on philanthropy and volunteerism in
392-516: The community, often in understated ways. "Whatever she's done, she's done it with integrity." Lois Lehrman, publisher of the Nob Hill Gazette, called Zellerbach "the consummate lady" and said it was invaluable to have someone around who knows San Francisco "backwards and forwards, from the inside out." Zellerbach died at age 84 in the Presidio Terrace house she occupied for 60 years. She
420-502: The couple as "bottom-feeding pirates attempting to extort and hold San Francisco residents hostage". In April 2018, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that the municipal government had failed to bill the homeowner's association for water used for irrigation of landscaping for 113 years. In the preceding ten years, the cost of the water was $ 59,548, and the homeowner's association promptly paid that amount. Temple Emanu-El
448-471: The developer. A 1948 Supreme Court case, Shelley v. Kraemer , which banned enforcement of racial covenants in housing, invalidated restrictions of this type nationwide. In 2015, as a result of delinquent non-payment of county property taxes by the homeowners association, a San Jose couple, Tina Lam and Michael Cheng, were able to purchase the street, sidewalks and all other “common ground", including garden islands and palm trees, for $ 90,000. The tax bill
476-783: The helm, Lehrman sold the title to San Francisco businessman Clint Reilly in 2016. The magazine was joined in the Clint Reilly Communications stable by Gentry Magazine in September, 2020, and the San Francisco Examiner and SF Weekly in December, 2020. Along with timely coverage of high-profile charitable and social events, the magazine features long-form interviews, profiles of local luminaries, stories on fashion , health , beauty , money , real estate , travel , food and wine . This local interest magazine article
504-403: The home of Merla's close friends Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Richard Blum , she married former Crown-Zellerbach executive and longtime Civil Service and Library Commissioner Lee Munson. They remained married until her death. Merla's father, Rabbi Elliot Burstein, led Congregation Beth Israel (now Beth Israel Judea) in San Francisco. Her mother, Lottie, helped out at her husband's temple and found
532-709: The killer, by sifting through the secrets of the A-list set she was born to. Zellerbach became involved in philanthropy in her early 20s, first as Queen of the Mardi Gras (a benefit for the Little Jim Club of Children's Hospital), later volunteering for Planned Parenthood , the American Cancer Society and the Red Cross . She founded SF Sponsors and Conard House , which helps people self-manage mental illness, co-chaired
560-469: The momentum embracing a change in the law. Merla Zellerbach attended San Francisco's Grant Grammar School, was vice president of the student body at Lowell High School, and studied psychology at Stanford University. Her marriage to Stephen Zellerbach ended after 18 years in an amicable divorce. Her second husband for 26 years was TV and radio commentator Fred Goerner, author of “The Search for Amelia Earhart .” He died of cancer in 1994. Four years later, at
588-499: The rest of her life, since she was known by it professionally. In the 1960s, diagnosed with breast cancer, she had a double mastectomy. Merla spoke about it openly, as well as being a longtime supporter of breast cancer research. Long time friend and philanthropist Roselyne "Cissie" Swig, whose late husband was chairman of the Fairmont Hotel Management Co., said Zellerbach has spent years doing good works for friends and
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#1732844417385616-626: The right meaning to win. She left The Chronicle in 1985 and a decade later joined the Nob Hill Gazette as Editor, staying until 2007. She also wrote its Let's Dish column that reported on the San Francisco social scene. The Friends of the San Francisco Public Library made her a literary laureate in 2010. At 80, she re-energized her career, launching a series of successful mystery novels. Her earlier books painted psychological portraits. The new Hallie Marsh Mystery series, however, reflected Merla's foremost concern: death as an injustice. In
644-448: The series, she established her own alter-ego. Hallie Marsh became an accidental detective after breast cancer led her to recreate herself. Surrounded by medical expertise and malfeasance, Hallie evolved novel by novel, as the mystery within began to reflect the mystery without, until she realizes her calling: to do good. After all, charity is large, public, and blessed; crime is small, secret, and destructive. Hallie persists in her search for
672-525: The street, the homeowners complained to San Francisco Board of Supervisors asking that the sale be voided. In addition the British Consulate, which has owned a house on the street as a consular residence since 2003, raised security concerns. On November 28, 2017, the Board of Supervisors voted 7–4 to reverse the sale, reverting ownership to the homeowners. After the vote, Supervisor Mark Farrell referred to
700-582: The time of her first marriage. By the time of her death on December 26, 2014, she authored 13 well reviewed novels and five self-help medical books, was a panelist for six years on the ABC TV show Oh My Word, and a columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle . Subsequently, she was Editor of the Nob Hill Gazette for twelve years. Charities she supported and/or worked for included Compassion and Choices,
728-475: Was being sent to 47 Kearny Street and the homeowners association blamed a defunct accountant but the owner of 47 Kearny street claimed that no such arrangement existed with the homeowner's association. "Handford Freund has never managed the Presidio Homeowners Association or whatever it may be named." Worried that the new property owners would charge them for parking in the 120 parking spaces on
756-503: Was built on an adjacent parcel on the northwest corner of Arguello Boulevard and Lake Street in 1925, and the Little Sisters of the Poor is also close by. Architectural styles in the neighborhood include Beaux-Arts , Mission Revival , and Tudor Revival . Julia Morgan designed an Italian Renaissance villa in Presidio Terrace in 1909. A plan to modernize the architecture of one house in
784-407: Was survived by her husband, the late Lee Munson, brother Sandor Burstein and his wife, Elizabeth, son Gary Zellerbach, daughter-in-law Linda Zellerbach, and two grandchildren, Laura and Randy Zellerbach. She was predeceased by her sister, Devera Kettner. Zellerbach's San Francisco Chronicle column, My Fair City, ran for 23 years, from 1962 to 1985. The columns were lighthearted and bright, focused on
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