Home Blog Page 1959

Mama G’s Dream Realized

Members of PaliHi's 2010 City Section championship team were the first to dive into the Maggie Gilbert Aquatic Center as part of the grand-opening ceremony on Sunday. Left to right: junior Tatiana Fields, 2010 graduate Hayley Hacker, junior Samantha Rosenbaum 2010 graduate Mia Svenson, senior Zoe Fullerton, senior Rachel Jaffe, junior Mara Silka, and senior Sabrina Giglio.
Members of PaliHi’s 2010 City Section championship team were the first to dive into the Maggie Gilbert Aquatic Center as part of the grand-opening ceremony on Sunday. Left to right: junior Tatiana Fields, 2010 graduate Hayley Hacker, junior Samantha Rosenbaum 2010 graduate Mia Svenson, senior Zoe Fullerton, senior Rachel Jaffe, junior Mara Silka, and senior Sabrina Giglio.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Looking blissful, Palisades High English teacher Rose Gilbert gestured at the newly completed Maggie Gilbert Aquatic Center and said, ‘The headline should be ‘Mama G’s Dream Come True.” ‘It took a long time for my dream to come true,’ Gilbert added, noting that she came up with the idea in 2005, a year after her daughter, Maggie, died. Gilbert, whose nickname is Mama G., donated more than $2 million for the $4.9-million aquatic center. She also gave the school a $750,000 loan. ‘This pool is not only for the school, it’s for the community,’ said Gilbert, a 92-year-old Pacific Palisades resident who has taught at PaliHi since it opened in 1961. She is teaching three Advanced Placement English classes this school year.   On Sunday morning, about 250 people celebrated the completion of the aquatic center at a grand-opening ceremony. Approximately 500 community members swam that afternoon.   The center will officially open to the public October 17, slightly more than two years after the project broke ground.   Earlier last week, there were fears that the community would not be allowed to swim on Sunday. On October 5, Interim Executive Director Michael Smith told the Palisadian-Post that the Los Angeles Unified School District’s Office of Environmental Health and Safety still needed to inspect and approve the aquatic center before the pool could be used for the opening celebration.   ’After extended conversations between LAUSD and PaliHi, we discovered that we had all the clearance we needed,’ Smith said Sunday.   During the ceremony, Norm Kulla, northern district director and senior counsel for L.A. City Councilman Bill Rosendahl, applauded Gilbert for her contributions to the high school and community, while noting that his wife, Superior Court Judge Katherine Mader, was one of her students as a member of the 1965 class.   PaliHi swim coach Maggie Nance acknowledged pool contractor Ben Lunsky of Sarlan Builders for doing the project at no profit, while Smith thanked all those who made significant financial donations. A plaque displaying the names of donors will be displayed inside the center.   During her speech, Gilbert paid tribute to her daughter, Maggie, who won a gold in the 100-meter freestyle at the 1958 Junior Olympics in Santa Monica.   ’I know Maggie is here in spirit,’ Gilbert said. ‘She was a great swimmer.’   After Gilbert cut the blue ribbon, members of the 2010 City Section girls championship team dove into the pool and swam a lap. The swimmers included 2010 graduates Hayley Hacker and Mia Svenson; seniors Zoe Fullerton, Rachel Jaffe and Sabrina Giglio; and juniors Mara Silka, Tatiana Fields and Samantha Rosenbaum.   In the background of all the jubilant activities, however, disgruntled neighbor David Helgeson blared rock ‘n’ roll music and sounded an air horn from his home directly across the street, making it difficult to hear the speakers.   ’I only feel that I am responding to years of abuse,’ Helgeson told the Palisadian-Post on Monday.   Helgeson has complained for years about the morning announcements over the school’s PA system waking him up and about the alarm system going off unexpectedly.   ’Literally, the whole high school ignores my calls,’ Helgeson said. ‘They have driven me insane.’   Smith responded that Helgeson has received return calls from school officials to discuss his concerns. As a courtesy, school officials e-mail all the neighbors, including Helgeson, to notify them of upcoming events at PaliHi and alarm system testing.   ’We don’t get multiple calls [from the neighbors]; we get calls from him,’ Smith said.   Helgeson is especially upset because the new pool is located so close to his home on the 800 block of Radcliffe Avenue. He asked PaliHi officials to install ambient lighting and a sound wall, neither of which was done.   PaliHi Operations Manager Maisha-Cole Perri said the school plans to place dimmer lights on the aquatic center’s buildings, which will be used in the mornings and evenings. Once installed, the stadium lights will be turned on only for swim meets. Smith told the Post that the possibility of a sound wall could be explored if more neighbors express interest.   Helgeson said Sunday’s event was not the first time he has made a racket as a form of protest. He and three other upset neighbors purchased air horns to blow whenever they think the high school is making too much noise. He blew his last month to protest the alarm system testing, and he plans to continue to use it.   The night before the grand opening, Helgeson also called the police on a vendor who was working late to install plaques recognizing donors for Sunday’s ceremony.   Helgeson said it was nearly 10 p.m. and the worker had turned on the pool’s stadium lights, which shine directly into his bedroom window. Plus, he didn’t think it was appropriate because the vendor had an elderly woman, a pregnant woman and a child with him.   Smith said that the vendor had promised the school that the plaques would be installed before the ceremony but the unexpected rainy weather earlier in the week prevented him from working. The vendor decided to work those hours to meet his obligation to the school, Smith said.   At the ceremony, Smith apologized to the donors that their plaques were not displayed.   In addition, ‘I apologize publicly to [the vendor] for the inappropriate behavior of a community member,’ Smith said.

PaliHi Pool Hours Are Now Posted

Starting October 17, the Maggie Gilbert Aquatic Center will be open to the public for swimming. Lap swimming will be from 5:30 to 7:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. There will be two lanes available in the competition pools in the mornings and evenings and four lanes in the afternoon. On Saturday, lap swimmers can use one lane of the competition pool from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. and five lanes from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. On Sunday, they will have access to five lanes from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Recreation swim will be from 4 to 6 p.m. in two lanes of the competition pool and 6 to 8:30 p.m. in the lesson pool Mondays through Fridays. On Saturdays, recreation swimmers can use three lanes from 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and the entire lesson pool from 2:30 to 5 p.m. On Sundays, they can enjoy five lanes from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. The cost will be $6 for adults, $4 for seniors 65 and older, $4 for students with identification cards from their respective schools, and $2 for children under 12. Residents can also rent a caba’a for a party during regular hours or the entire facility for a private party. PaliHi’s Aquatics Director Andrew Cervantes said he plans to contract with a vendor to offer water aerobics classes. He hopes to have those classes available in the next couple of months. Starting in January, community members will have the chance to participate in Pali Century Club, where residents will have one year to swim 100 miles. Everyone who signs up and reaches the goal will receive a Pali Century Club T-shirt and have his or her name displayed on a plaque at the pool.   Throughout the year, there will be Family Fun Days, when swimmers can participate in special games and activities. American Red Cross certification courses will also be available.   While the pool will be available for the community to enjoy, PaliHi school officials will also rent pool time to aquatic user groups to help pay for the upkeep and ongoing maintenance.   Waldorf School, Westside Aquatics, Team Santa Monica, Tower 26, Southern California Aquatics, have rented time in the pool.   Tower 26 and Southern California Aquatic are adult swim clubs that offer triathlon-based training and fitness courses, while Westside Aquatics and Team Santa Monica are competitive youth swim programs. Waldorf School will use the pool for their physical education classes.   The aquatic center’s schedule is available on the school’s Web site palihigh.enschool.org/mgac. Click on ‘We will be offering a variety of programs’ and pool hours.

Experts Debate Marijuana Initiative

The longer this November election buildup goes on, the more information and misinformation tumbles out in the news and in campaign slogans, making it increasingly difficult to understand the ballot initiatives. This was clearly the case going into the debate over legalizing marijuana (Proposition 19) that highlighted a forum sponsored by the Palisades Democratic Club at the Woman’s Club last Wednesday.   Although each of the nine ballot initiatives was adroitly explained, the position on each was decidedly from the Democratic Party point of view, except Prop.19, and afterwards there was still plenty to debate on both sides of the marijuana issue.   The formal debate was conducted between James Gray, a former Orange County Superior Court judge and former federal prosecutor, and John Redman, a 10-year veteran on drug policy and marijuana laws and executive director of Communities in Action, the statewide alcohol and drug prevention organization,   Prop. 19 would allow Californians over the age of 21 to possess marijuana for recreational use and permit them to grow pot in small residential spaces. It would also allow local governments to tax retail sales and production.   The adversaries did agree on one thing: drugs are ruining people’s lives. Gray laid out the grim reality. ‘Drugs are awash in this country,’ he said. ‘You can get drugs in prison, Charles Manson was selling drugs in prison. But, what we’re doing is not working.’   Gray, who encourages a ‘yes’ on Prop. 19, is more focused on the amount of money involved in drug-dealing being far more harmful than the drug itself. Proud of his support from a wide political spectrum’from the ACLU to the Young Republicans of Orange County’he notes that marijuana is the largest cash crop in the state, bigger than grapes. He argues that by legalizing and regulating marijuana for adults in the same manner that liquor and cigarettes are regulated, you take away revenue from juvenile groups’children selling to their peers.   Gray assured the audience that existing laws against selling drugs to minors and driving under the influence will be maintained. He also cited the support of the California NAACP, which states that African Americans are disproportionately affected by marijuana law enforcement and make up a high percentage of those serving jail time for marijuana-related offenses. On this issue, Redman was particularly cogent, stating that the two populations most affected by a change in drug policy would be youth and minority communities. ‘Minorities are against it [Prop. 19], because they know what’s going to happen. By legalizing marijuana, you will not eliminate juvenile gangs. Drug cartels deal drugs, weapons and home invasion,’ he said. Redman asserted that making marijuana available through Prop. 19 would increase drug use. ‘The top three drugs in this country are liquor, tobacco and prescription drugs,’ he said. ‘Marijuana is fourth, because it is not available, and there’s a stigma attached to it.’ He suggested that with higher use would come more need for drug treatment and prevention, but that in the United States, ‘we spend a lot of money on enforcement, but little on treatment and prevention.’ Furthermore, Prop. 19 doesn’t allow for easy testing. There is no way to prove the person is intoxicated, he said, adding, ‘marijuana addiction is skyrocketing.’ The argument for and against legalization pivots on the best guess about the future, and certainly if the initiative passes, the road map to its implementation is fraught with confusion. Redman stated that Prop.19 is a violation of federal law, adding that ‘It will be utter confusion. There will be a lot of cases in court because of all the different jurisdictions. It will be a hodgepodge without regulations, such as we have with food and alcohol regulation.’ Gray countered that ‘no city will be involved unless they opt in. There will be no advertising, no glamorizing.’

Former Resident John Sims, 68

John Elston Sims, a former resident of Pacific Palisades, passed away peacefully at home in Cordillera, Colorado, on October 6, surrounded by loved ones. He was 68.   Raised in Colorado and Alaska, John was a lover of life, country, travel, the outdoors and baseball. When he attended College State University, he was on the ski team.   He lived in Pacific Palisades and Santa Monica and worked as an attorney and real estate developer in Santa Monica for more than 30 years. He was a passionate golfer and valued his time and friendships at the Bel-Air Country Club and the Jonathan Club.   A true gentleman and man of honor, John was generous, kind, loving, compassionate and humorous. He retired to Cordillera to complete his hard-earned dream of spending his days skiing and enjoying the Colorado lifestyle. He never stopped giving of himself to make others happy, and he will be deeply missed by all who had the distinct privilege to know him.   John was preceded in death by his devoted mother, Ruth (Hubbard) Shuff, and his beloved stepfather, Les Shuff. He is survived by his wife, Kristin; children Alexandra (Sims) Brew, David Sims, Valerie Sims and Patrick Sims; stepchildren Ryan Shama and Lindsay (Shama) Olson; and seven adoring grandchildren.   In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be sent to the U.S. Navy Veterans Association.

Charles Totebusch, Jr., War Veteran, Oilman

Charles Regnier Totebusch, Jr., a resident of Pacific Palisades since 1972, died peacefully at home on October 9. He was 87. ‘   A veteran of World War II, Charles served with honors as a Graves Registration and Memorial Officer in Normandy, the Rhineland and Central Europe. After his discharge from the army in 1946 as a commissioned officer, he earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Southern Methodist University. ‘   Following graduation, in 1951, Charles joined Atlantic Refining Company (ARCO) as a landman. Throughout his long career with the company he moved from domestic to international exploration research, documenting and verifying ownership of property mineral rights in this country and abroad. He became chief negotiator for Europe and the Middle East before his retirement in 1987. Throughout his 37 years with ARCO, he did his best to make sure America stayed energy independent. ‘   In 1957, Charles married Betty Arneson (1928-1975) in Billings, Montana. Six years after Betty’s death he married Audrey Anne Naish (1933-1985) in London.   He is survived by two children from his first marriage, Joel Regnier Totebusch and Jean Totebusch-Lorentz of Seeley Lake, Montana; two grandchildren, Elizabeth Anne Lorentz and Eric Kelly Lorentz; and two sisters, Charlotte T. Whaley and Elizabeth T. Cannon of Dallas, Texas.   A memorial tribute with full military honors was held yesterday, October 13, at Westwood Village Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to VitasHopsice Charitable Fund, 16830 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 315, Encino, CA 91436. Visit www.vitascharityfund.org.

Kinsey Collection Opens at Smithsonian

Pacific Palisades residents Bernard and Shirley Kinsey with the catalog of their collection.
Pacific Palisades residents Bernard and Shirley Kinsey with the catalog of their collection.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

The first thing that caught Bernard Kinsey’s attention was a letter that a friend had found in his aunt’s attic. A slave document, as Kinsey now refers to it, the letter is about an enslaved African American man. ‘Holding it in my hand led me to want to find out more about the man,’ Kinsey says.   That was 15 years ago. Kinsey and his wife, Shirley, already had an art collection of paintings, sculpture, textiles and masks they found on their far and wide travels. But the letter set the Kinseys on a different kind of journey.   ’For the past 20 years our focus has been on discovering the stories of African Americans,’ Bernard says. The more than 100 historical records, rare books, letters, artifacts and images the Kinseys have acquired since then are tangible evidence of the people these items represent. ‘We have the stories and the collection to document them,’ Bernard says.   This week in Washington, D.C., ‘The Kinsey Collection: Shared Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey’ will be unveiled at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History. The collection has been away from the couple’s home in Pacific Palisades since 2006. The Smithsonian is the last stop on an extensive tour.   ’It’s pretty amazing,’ Bernard says. ‘What was in our wine cellar is now in the main gallery of the most visited museum in the world.’ He estimates that 2.5 million people will see the collection before it closes on May 1, 2011.   The Kinsey collection of African American art and artifacts ranges across some 500 years and includes works by many contemporary black artists. But the heart of it explores the African American experience in the 17th and 18th centuries.   It is not always an easy history to look at, but the Kinseys have uncovered bright rays of hope and inspiration. ‘Find out about your ancestors and it empowers you,’ Shirley says.   One of their major holdings is a book of poems by Phyllis Wheatley dated 1773, a first edition of the first book published by a former U.S. slave. Her references to God, religion and Greek mythology show Wheatley to be a devout and educated woman.   Several letters in the collection are particularly moving. In one, dated 1854, a white master regrets having to sell his 17-year-old chambermaid, Frances Crawford, and separate her from the rest of her family so that he can buy horses and build a stable.   The Kinseys tell such stories in the presentations they make at museums where their collection is exhibited. It is called, ‘What You Didn’t Learn in High School History,’ and it shows the range of human experiences that their holdings represent.   ’We don’t beat anybody up,’ Bernard says of the presentation, ‘but we don’t sugar-coat anything either. People take to it. At the core, we all want to know where we came from.’   Shackles from the mid-1800s tell one piece of the story. A book titled ‘A Gentleman of Color’ (2002) by Julie Winch tells a far less familiar piece of it. She writes about business entrepreneur James Forten, an African American born free in 1765 who owned a sail-making factory in Philadelphia. His workforce was a mix of black and white men with blacks supervising whites in some cases.   ’We’ve uncovered many stories of accomplishment,’ Kinsey says. ‘They show how our people overcame, not how they struggled.’   Building their extraordinary collection has had a permanent effect on the Kinseys. ‘It has transformed me,’ says Bernard, who is constantly reading and researching African American history. ‘We know so much more about our people than we did. We know who more of them are, how they lived, who they had for friends. There is no going back.’   Shirley Kinsey encourages school children to become the family historian. She started with their son, Khalil, a hip-hop artist in his young thirties.   ’Khalil had a ‘family history’ project to do when he was in third grade,’ she recalls. ‘We began delving into our family history and then expanded into our collective history.’   From then on, she made sure that Khalil’s history reports were about African Americans. ‘He asked why and I told him. ‘You need to know, and you need to tell other people so they’ll know,’ ‘ Shirley says.   While most of their collection is on tour, the Kinseys keep a few things close at hand. In the small room that used to be their wine cellar, Bernard takes a daguerreotype from its paper sleeve and looks at the image of a black Confederate soldier dressed in uniform. During the Civil War, this African American fought on the side that defended slavery.   ’A lot of people think there were no black Confederate soldiers,’ Bernard says, ‘but there were about 5,000.’   An oversize portfolio on display in the room flows with graceful handwriting. It is an inventory for an estate sale in 1604, beautiful to look at, bitter to read. Hundreds of nameless people are listed among the possessions, each identified by some distinctive physical marking. ‘Left arm rather crooked,’ one entry notes.   The Kinseys don’t dwell on their own personal stories of setback and victory, but things come up in conversation. They met in 1963 when they were both students at Florida A&M, the historically black university in Tallahassee. Shirley had just been released from jail, where she spent three days. She and other students had been arrested at a protest demonstration where they demanded that African Americans be allowed to sit on the first floor in movie theaters and eat at the lunch counter in Woolworth’s.   Bernard was at the jail with a campus group assisting people who had been arrested.   They met and four years later they married and moved to Los Angeles. A few years after that Bernard joined the Xerox Corporation. He worked there for 20 years and became a vice president before he left the company to launch his own consulting business. Shirley taught school in Compton and worked in training and development for Xerox.   They have always been active in the community. After the Los Angeles riots of 1992 Bernard was co-chair of ‘ReBuild L.A.’ and helped generate close to $400 million in investments for parts of the city in the greatest need of revitalization. The couple has been widely recognized for their philanthropic contributions.   The Kinseys were born before the desegregation movement and the Civil Rights Act of 1964, when it was still legal to deny blacks access to public facilities. ‘Fifty years after African Americans were still essentially enslaved, we’re here. The more we make our people’s story known, the better off everybody will be.’

Methodist Country Bazaar Offers Treasures and Food

Methodist Church parishioners display their Christmas quilt, from left, Elsie Muramatsu, Marjorie Buell, Wilma Gardner, Vicki Borland, Barbara Nagel.
Methodist Church parishioners display their Christmas quilt, from left, Elsie Muramatsu, Marjorie Buell, Wilma Gardner, Vicki Borland, Barbara Nagel.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

A wonderful array of handcrafted items will be on sale at the annual Country Bazaar on Thursday and Friday, October 21-22, at the Methodist Church, 801 Via de la Paz. The women of the church have been working for months to produce unique gifts and Christmas decorations.   An exquisite hand-crafted, cross-stitched quilt will be featured in the opportunity drawing, and a number of fine quilts and special items will be on the silent auction tables. The collectibles table will feature both antiques and jewelry.   Early-bird shoppers can come on Thursday, October 21 from 7 to 9 p.m. for $5 admission, which includes a selection of desserts and a beverage.   The Bazaar is open on Friday, October 22 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. with no admission charge. This day also features a gourmet luncheon for $15. It has gained such acclaim that there are two seatings this year: 11:15 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. For reservations (required) call 310-459-0334.   Proceeds from the bazaar help to support the church’s various philanthropies, including the Westside Food Bank, Treasure Island, an afterschool program for children, OPCC, the Homer Toberman House settlement house in San Pedro, and Heifer International.

Peter Golub Embraces Multiple Musical Tastes

Pacific Palisades composer Peter Golub debuts his Quintet for Oboe, Strings and Piano at Chamber Music Palisades concert on October 19.
Pacific Palisades composer Peter Golub debuts his Quintet for Oboe, Strings and Piano at Chamber Music Palisades concert on October 19.

Peter Golub’s protean interest in film, theater and music composition describes a man who admits to one character flaw: an inability to rule things out. So, along with nursing along film scores and a musical theater piece, Golub, a Pacific Palisades resident, spent the last four months composing a commissioned work for the opening concert by Chamber Music Palisades on October 19. His schizophrenic passion for both dramatic and concert music emerged early. Following a familiar route for accomplished musicians, the New York native, whose parents each played an instrument, started piano lessons at 6. In high school, he discovered drama and formed a troupe with a group of classmates who tackled plays by Pinter, Ionesco and Beckett.   Golub studied composition at Bennington College and later earned a doctorate at the Yale School of Music, where he was encouraged by the revered composer Toru Takemitsu to explore different forms of music and, more importantly, to rejoice in his multiple interests. Takemitsu, who was a visiting professor at Yale in the mid 1970s, also followed his artistic impulse in nonmusical art forms’painting, poetry, theater and film’and became a lifelong inspiration for his student.   ’He was really a down-to-earth guy, who was fun, loved jazz and encouraged us not to followed the modern European music [atonal] that was dominating music schools at the time,’ Golub says. ‘He advised us not to make music overcomplicated, and he didn’t see a dilemma over choosing film or theater.’   Golub followed his interest in dramatic music, finding an exciting niche in the New York theater world. He composed scores and worked with some of the most energetic and influential directors. He collaborated on several productions at La Mama, the experimental theater on the lower East Side, which Ellen Stewart founded in 1961 on the principle of developing new work, particularly musical collaborations. For 10 years, he was composer-in-residence at the Ridiculous Theatrical Company, Charles Ludlam’s brainchild, playfully mixing theatrical traditions and the avant-garde. In 1987, the New York theater world was heaped in tragedy when two giant talents Michael Bennett and Charles Ludlam died. Ludlam had been planning to direct Shakespeare’s ‘Titus Andronicus’ for Joe Papp’s Shakespeare in the Park. Despite his overwhelming grief, Papp, mourning the death of his friends and his own son, was more committed than ever to his enterprise. ‘Joe felt that he had to go on. His own son was dying, but he was a real fighter,’ Golub recalls.   With Ludlam’s death, Papp decided that he would direct ‘Henry IV, Part I’ himself and turned to Golub to write the music.   ’It was eventful working with Joe; nobody knew as much about Shakespeare as he,’ says Golub, while acknowledging Papp’s famed irascibility. ‘But I think his frustration came as a result of his difficulty in communicating his vision of how a scene should be played. Joe was good to writers and directors, giving young talent a chance.’   Golub’s New York period came to an end in 1996, when he arrived at a professional crossroads. He had been teaching composition both at Bennington and Reed, and was debating whether to stay in academia.   He had done a bit of film work in New York, so he took the leap to Los Angeles, moving with his wife Cristina and their son Phillip to the Marquez neighborhood. (Cristina plays piano and has recently taken up the cello. Phillip, now a senior at Crossroads, is following his own musical adventures in jazz, classical and composition. His humorous windwood quintet ‘Wood ‘n’ You’ debuted at Chamber Music Palisades in June. His younger brother Alejandro, 5, has started piano lessons with Palisadian Mary Ann Cummins.)   Over the last decade, Golub’s primary focus has been on film music. He has scored both fiction, such as ‘Frozen River’ and ‘American Gun,’ as well as documentaries, including ‘Wordplay,’ and ‘I.O.U.S.A.’ He is also wrote the score for the documentary ‘Countdown to Zero,’ about the escalating nuclear arms race. For last dozen years, he has also been the director of the Sundance Film Music Program, where he runs the yearly composers lab, an intensive, two-week workshop for aspiring film composers.   ’I like collaborative work on film,’ Golub says. ‘Each film calls for something from you that you might not have written on your own.’ But having said that, he admits that the process is intense and time- consuming. ‘In film, you have to please the director, and the way it is nowadays, you have to make a mockup of the score, because the director doesn’t read music. If successful, the composer-director relationship continues to grow to the point where you develop a vocabulary and a trust factor after you’ve been on a couple of dates together.’   In film, Golub is not the boss. Not so in a chamber piece. ‘You’re the director,’ he says. For the Chamber Music Palisades piece, he says that he flourished in the freedom. ‘Dee [Stevens] said ‘Write whatever you want,’ so I decided to write a piece for oboe and strings. I had always had this wish to write for the oboe,’ He notes that there is nothing in the literature that he knows of that uses this grouping.   The Quintet for Oboe, String Trio and Piano consists of three movements, the first two of which have the quality of moving from one kind of music to another, faster, slower, while the third is in the elegy mode.   ’When I’m writing, I listen to a lot of music, in this case Shostakovich, Britten, Prokofiev, but then I let the material lead me. I actually don’t know exactly what I’m doing. There’s this notion of anxiety of influences where you intentionally work against your training, and I think that in my case I was steering away from being overly formalistic. This piece is more intuitive; there are tonal elements, but the harmony comes and goes and there is also rhythm, pulse and melody. I believe in all that.’   Golub says that it was by playing chamber music that got him started writing. He continues to be impressed with the many chamber groups in Los Angeles. ‘I am impressed with the manner in which Dee Stevens and Susan Greenberg program the classical literature in with the commissioned work.’

CMP Opens Concert Season with Peter Golub Premiere

Chamber Music Palisades (CMP), launches its 14th season with the world premiere of Peter Golub’s Quintet for Oboe, String Trio and Piano, dual birthday tributes to Robert Schumann and Samuel Barber, and Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera’s ‘Impressiones de la Puna’ for flute and strings on Tuesday, October 19 at 8 p.m., at St. Matthews Church, 1031 Bienveneda.   The Lyris String Quartet’featuring Alyssa Park, violin, Shalini Vijayan, violin, Luke Maurer, viola, and Timothy Loo, cello’makes its series debut, performing with Anne Marie Gabriele, oboist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and CMP Co-Founders/Co-Artistic Directors Susan Greenberg, flute, and Delores Stevens, piano.’   KUSC announcer Alan Chapman provides commentary at each concert.   Opening with the Ginastera piece, CMP also offers birthday tributes to two classical music legends born 100 years apart in different corners of the world.’ Greenberg and Stevens present Barber’s ‘Songs for Flute and Piano’ to honor the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning American composer, who was born March 9, 1910.’ Celebrating the life and work of Schumann, born in Germany a century earlier on June 8, 1810, Stevens and the Lyris String Quartet perform Schumann’s ‘Piano Quintet, Op. 44.’   Golub’s ‘Quintet for Oboe, String Trio and Piano,’ commissioned by CMP, is the latest work in the eminent concert, ballet, film and stage composer’s considerable list of credits.'(See adjacent story.)   Series subscriptions are $90; single tickets are $30 at the door (students with ID are free). For tickets or a season brochure, call 310-463-4388 or visit www.cmpalisades.org.

Architect Sobesky Helps PaliHi Remodel an Office

Architect Eva Sobesky, a Pacific Palisades resident, voluntarily remodeled Palisades Charter High School's attendance office. The Booster Club donated $12,000 for office furniture, paint and other supplies.
Architect Eva Sobesky, a Pacific Palisades resident, voluntarily remodeled Palisades Charter High School’s attendance office. The Booster Club donated $12,000 for office furniture, paint and other supplies.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Palisades Charter High School’s attendance office looks brand new with a fresh coat of paint, new office furniture and additional storage space.   The facelift can be attributed to the pro-bono work of award-winning architect Eva Sobesky and the school’s Booster Club, which donated $12,000 for the project.   ’We wanted to help improve the appearance of the school,’ Booster Club President Dick Held told the Palisadian-Post.   PaliHi’s Director of Student Services Monica Iannessa approached the Booster Club this spring asking for money to remodel the office, and Nancy Fracchiolla recruited fellow parent Sobesky, owner of EIS Studio in Venice, to renovate and organize the space this summer.   ’I thought, ‘Let’s use the talent of our parents,” Fracchiolla said. ‘Eva did a great job.’   Sobesky, a Pacific Palisades resident, has a history of volunteering her time to beautify local schools. She redesigned the quad at Paul Revere Charter Middle School in 2007 and helped refurbish the library at Palisades Charter Elementary School in 2008.   ’Public schools never have any funding, so we have to make it our responsibility to help,’ said Sobesky, whose daughter Hannah is a junior at PaliHi and son Liam is a fifth grader at Palisades Elementary. Her husband, Todd Mathers, works as vice president of programming at DirecTV.   Sobesky earned her undergraduate degree in architecture from the University of Aachen, Germany and her master’s degree from the Southern California Institute of Architecture. Before opening her own studio in 2002, she spent 12 years working at Frank O. Gehry & Associates and helped design the Walt Disney Concert Hall and Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.   In 2005, the American Institute of Architecture designated a home that she designed as one of the four best residential projects in the Palisades/Brentwood area. She designed the home, located on Pintoresca Drive above the Bel-Air Bay Club, to emphasize the setting, which has great ocean and mountain views.   ’My big passion is to design for indoor and outdoor spaces as suitable to our climate and California lifestyle,’ said Sobesky, who has five employees at her studio.   To begin the PaliHi project, Sobesky took photographs of the original space, which she described as cluttered and unorganized.   ’I wanted to improve the flow of the place,’ Sobesky said, so the file cabinets were recoated the same gray color and grouped together. She hired carpenter Jason Czekala, owner of Czekala Cabinets in Topanga, to build a storage unit, side desks and bookshelves. Working at a highly discounted rate, Czekala also made a kitchenette for the staff and benches and tables for the reception area.   To brighten the room, the walls were painted white and the accent walls a light green and bluish/gray. Students’ artwork will be displayed and rotated throughout the school year.   The paints were purchased from A. Allbright Painting in Valencia and the new desks, file cabinets and ergonomic chairs from Haworth’s showroom in Santa Monica. Both companies offered reduced prices.   Sobesky’s intern Scott Sternard, a USC architecture student, helped with design, drafting, shop drawings and product research. Fracchiolla served as the point person on the project, acting as the liaison between Sobesky and PaliHi’s administration while dealing with the vendors on all the new furniture. Parent Christine Kang coordinated and helped clear the office for the new furniture and painting.   ’The office remodel has definitely improved our work experience,’ Iannessa said. ‘Students and parents have seating and functional areas to fill out notes and forms. Behind the counter, we have more workspace for filing documents. Because our space has more storage, we are able to find materials more easily. The colors on the newly painted walls and counters are soothing, which has created a better and cleaner environment in which to work. We are so thankful to our Booster Club; everyone has noticed the difference.’   While the office is vastly improved, Sobesky has some finishing touches that she would like to make and is working to raise more funds. She hopes to add desk organizers, partitions, chair mats and more shelving.   In addition, Sobesky and Fracchiolla are starting to raise money to remodel the school’s main office, the counseling office and the main hallway. Their goal is to complete the remodel by next summer ‘ just in time to kick off the school’s 50th anniversary celebration. ‘The look should support how great the school is,’ said Fracchiolla, whose children, John and Alice, attend PaliHi. Her husband, Chris, owns Baskin-Robbins on Swarthmore Avenue. Fracchiolla is organizing a comedy night (date to be announced), where PaliHi students will perform classic Saturday Night Live skits to raise money for the remodeling effort.   To donate, send checks to Palisades Charter High School’s 50th Beautification, Attn: Michael Smith, 15777 Bowdoin St., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272. Please indicate that the funds are for remodeling the offices and main hallway.