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Preferential Parking Debate Highlights Council Agenda

The four main agenda items on tonight’s Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting at 7 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real, include: 1. Parking: The board will decide whether it should support or oppose the proposed preferential district for streets adjacent to the business district and the Palisades Recreation Center. A color-coded map showing all the impacted streets is now on display in the library. A mandated L.A. Department of Transportation public hearing on the district has been scheduled for Monday, September 27 at 7 p.m. in Mort’s Oak Room (see related story and map, page 4). 2. ‘Mystery pond’ report: Daniel Hackney of the L.A. Bureau of Sanitation, who is coordinating city, county and regional government response, will discuss the problem at PCH and Chautauqua, as well as other ‘dry weather’ storm-drain issues. 3. Inclusionary Housing: A report by Gil Dembo and Don Scott on the Garcetti-Reyes proposal being considered by the L.A. City Council which would require developers building new housing to offer a number of housing units to be sold or rented to people of low-and moderate-income in the same project. According to the Los Angeles Business Journal (September 6), a City Council committee hearing on Garcetti-Reyes will be held later this month, and a ‘revised ordinance could come back to the council by early next year. Any ordinance passed would likely be phased in starting in 2006.’ 4. Cancellation of Commuter Express Route 430, the bus line linking Pacific Palisades and downtown Los Angeles: A report by the council’s transportation advisor Steve Lantz on possible further action. The public is invited. For more information about the Community Council, visit www.pp90272.org.

Renaissance Academy Delays Opening Day

On Tuesday, Renaissance Academy Charter High School principal Paul McGlothlin wrote a letter to Renaissance students and families informing them that the first day of regular classes at the 881 Alma Real building would be delayed until Monday, September 13. School had been scheduled to start yesterday. ‘I used to joke that the paint would still be wet on opening day, and as it turns out it will be,’ McGlothlin wrote in his letter. ‘We have made this decision to avoid exposing our community to very unpleasant fumes and to allow the Alma Real facility to thoroughly air out.’ The letter, posted on the school’s Web site (www.rahigh.org), also updated 10th, 11th and 12th grade students who will be taking classes at SMC that those courses will begin as planned on Friday, September 10. Yesterday morning, RA teachers Susan Caggiano (English) and John Kannofsky (visual arts and technology) stood in front of the Alma Real building to meet the handful of students who had not been informed about the opening day delay. Caggiano handed out a printed version of the letter on the Web site. Parent volunteer Joe Sheppard, whose two teens will be attending Renaissance, stood at the park entrance to meet students headed to school. ‘We tried to call everyone and we sent a mass e-mail [about the delay],’ said Kannofsky, who greeted 10th grader Thomas Kaesln walking towards the school with his aunt at 8:45 a.m. A Topanga resident, Kaesln said, ‘According to the principal, the first day was today,’ and he hadn’t checked the Web site or gotten a call telling him otherwise. Palisadian Jacqueline Steinberg, an 11th grader transferring from the Archer School, also showed up with her mother, Joy, on Wednesday, thinking it was the first day of school. Instead, she spent the morning touring the Alma Real school facilities with architecture and environmental science teacher Stephanie Besch. Though McGlothlin announced on the Web site that ‘construction has been completed,’ the school still looked like a construction site as workers in the downstairs classroom area secured bathroom and light fixtures. One of the floors had not been laid and paint cans, tools and ladders cluttered the floor. The facilities were not yet furnished. Upstairs, RA teachers looked for a room to hold a meeting in the also unfurnished administration offices/conference rooms’some carpeted and some with hardwood floors. The area smelled strongly of paint as contractors and workers continued to work despite all the people passing through. McGlothlin assured students and families that ‘this delay will not affect the overall instructional program. We are simply treating Wednesday and Thursday as staff development, or student free days.’ Students who showed up yesterday were instructed to check the Web site to find out about transportation plans for Friday, when they will travel by school bus from the Alma Real campus to SMC’s Stewart St. campus for 9 a.m. classes. They will return to RA by bus at 2 p.m. that afternoon.

Revere Raises Funds for Major Rehab

This rendering shows the planned renovation of the Paul Revere library, part of the school's current fundraising campaign. Rendering: T. Scott MacGillivray, AIA.
This rendering shows the planned renovation of the Paul Revere library, part of the school’s current fundraising campaign. Rendering: T. Scott MacGillivray, AIA.

By MARILYN HAESE CEREGHINO Special to the Palisadian-Post A fall campaign at Paul Revere Middle School aims to raise $200,000 in funds for renovating the school library and making significant campus improvements. The ball got rolling when a private citizen donated a $100,000 matching grant to improve facilities and the PRIDE booster club, PTA and the school administration together also donated $100,000. The fundraising campaign is now going out to parents and friends in the community in hopes to double this initial amount and make a ‘Revere Renaissance’ a reality. ‘Everyone has always agreed that our middle school is situated on a beautiful campus,’ said parent volunteer Scott MacGillivray, ‘but it’s 50 years old this year and it’s time to make it a more vital center of learning.’ MacGillivray, a West L.A. architect who is PRIDE’s vice president overseeing fundraising, is a veteran of teaming up with other parents for school improvements that have included creating playgrounds and a new library at Kenter Charter Elementary School in Brentwood and the complete rebuilding of the Brentwood Science Magnet’s outdoor campus. Targeted for updating is Revere’s sizable but outdated library. ‘This is a nice-sized library, but it needs to be comfortable and attractive for students to spend more time in it. Most of all, it needs the right resources, such as books, computers and reference materials,’ said MacGillivray, who is providing his architectural services pro bono. Efforts are currently underway to redo the library from floor to ceiling. Plans for furnishings include replacing the cumbersome rows of work tables currently there with reading clusters of comfortable chairs, smaller work space areas, new high efficiency lighting for better illumination, card catalog computers, indoor trees, new carpeting, a new color scheme, artwork and a large, glass entry door. Also planned for installation are wireless docking ports for more computers and laptops, and a new book club room and listening lab. Plans for updating the library’s operations include the procurement of more books, a review of teachers’ needs, and a repositioning of the circulation desk and check-out procedure, including bar coding of books and elimination of the entry turnstile. In addition, plans are underway to build a separate teachers’ library stocked with books, CDs, DVD and videos for faculty to share. Also on the library committee’s ‘wish list’ is the creation of an adjacent outdoor ‘Reading Garden’ to be entered from the library through a glass-wall entry, with seating areas, arbors and shade. Elsewhere on campus, slated improvements include a boot-camp style ‘Obstacle Course’ as well as benches and outdoor seating areas, trellises and landscaping for the eighth grade quad. Additionally, a new stage curtain, theater lights and a thrust stage are scheduled upgrades for Town Hall. The school district has also allocated funds for a new sound system in the 900-seat auditorium which will help support, among other activities, the school’s orchestra and choir programs plus the new drama program. ‘This new effort is expected to raise the school stakeholders’ consciousness of the possibilities that exist for our kids in the public school system,’ MacGillivray said. A resurgence at the middle school began last year with the installation of a new administration, led by principal Art Copper, and an increased level of parental involvement and fundraising support. Last year’s ‘Ride the Wave’ campaign resulted in more than $200,000 in parent donations and grants. Residents should look for information in the Palisadian-Post in upcoming weeks regarding an open forum meeting at the Paul Revere library. Community Match Donations can be made out to ‘PRIDE-MATCH,’ and mailed to Paul Revere Middle School, 1450 Allenford, Los Angeles, CA 90049. Contact: Scott MacGillivray at 479-1974 or at TSMAIA@aol.com or e-mail Marilyn Haese Cereghino at: haese@haesewood.com.

Bel-Air Bay Club Wins Beach Volleyball Title

By JIMMY DUNNE Special to the Palisadian-Post It was a perfect end-of-summer Sunday on the beach at Bel-Air Bay Club, where 75 juniors from the Beach Club, Jonathan Club and Bel-Air Bay Club battled it out for the Conference Volleyball Championships two weeks ago at Will Rogers State Beach. Bel-Air Bay Club handily won the title with 22 team wins. The Beach Club finished second with 11 wins and the Jonathan Club was third with five wins. Bel-Air Bay Club won the 14-and-under and 16-and-under Divisions while the Beach Club took first-place in the 12s and 18s. ‘What really struck me more than the kids’ incredible ability was the smiles on their faces and how they acted,’ Beach Club coach Roland Sunga said. ‘I never saw one kid question a call the whole day.’ Juniors’ ages spanned from 10 to 18 and competition was open to both boys and girls. Rock music blared across the beach, moms and dads cheered on the participants and kids had fun with their best friends, culminating with a barbecue on the beach. ‘I look forward to this event all summer long,’ said Meg Norton of the Jonathan Club, who proudly captured ‘Most Improved Player’ honors in the Conference. One of the most celebrated awards of the afternoon went to Madison Wojciechowski, who earned the coveted Linda Hanley Award for exemplifying true character during competition. The award honors Palisades resident Linda Hanley, one of the greatest women’s beach volleyball players of all time, who expressed her passion, love of life and respect for others throughout a stellar pro career. ‘The reason Bel-Air Bay Club’s coaches Greg and Clark Porter are so successful is because they really have a good relationship with so many of the volleyball kids at the club,’ Athletic Director Jason Sandoval said. Huey Wilton of the Beach Club was the Conference’s Most Valuable Player for his dominance in the 18s Division while Peter Eichler, Claire Kannan, Rusty Barneson and Kelly Irvin also earned accolades for their standout play. ‘Hughie Wilton is a force to be reckoned with in beach volleyball. He may very well be the next Karch Kiraly,’ said Roland Sunga, who was named co-Coach of the Year along with Rick Kinnan of the Beach Club. Rows and rows of parents, friends and kids lined the beach breathing in the last moments of a great summer. ‘Is this a great day in Southern California, or what?’ said Cindy Simon as she cheered on daughter Lulu from her beach chair. ‘It’s competitive, and you really want to win’but that’s really not what this day is about,’ Henry Elder said. ‘There’s a spirit in this event that’s not like any other volleyball tournament.’ As the kids sat at picnic tables, they watched the sun melt into the Pacific Oceran and contemplated the upcoming school year, which, for many, began the next day. ‘I’m beaching it with my best friends, I won a trophy today, and I don’t have any homework when I go home,’ said Jessie Kybartas of the Bel-Air Bay Club. ‘What’s better than that?’

Football Opens Friday at Sylmar

The Palisades High varsity football team kicks off its season tomorrow night in unfamiliar territory and against an unfamiliar opponent. The Dolphins travel north to Sylmar for a game against a school they have not played since 1970. Both teams start the season under new leadership. Athletic director Leo Castro will be Palisades’ fourth head coach in the past five years. He replaces Jason Blatt, who compiled a 9-13 record over two seasons. For the Spartans, London Woodfin takes over for longtime coach Jeff Engilman, who built the program into a perennial City Section power. ‘Even with a new quarterback and a new coach, we expect Sylmar to be just as good as it’s always been,’ Castro said. ‘They are physical, they have good athletes and it’ll be a real test for us. It’s going to be a tough game for sure.’ Pali was 4-7 last season, finished fourth in the Western League and lost to El Camino Real in the first round of the Invitational playoffs. The Spartans are trying to reload from a 9-3-1 season in which they won the Valley Mission League title and advanced to the semifinals of the City championship playoffs before losing to top-seeded Venice. Friday’s game will feature two of the top wide receivers in the City Section: C.J. Gable of Sylmar and Pali’s Brandon Bryant. Daniel Vasquez and John Austin will share the quarterback duties for Sylmar while senior Dylan Cohen returns for his second season as the starting quarterback and kicker for Palisades. The teams shared two common opponents last year, each beating Narbonne and Van Nuys. The frosh/soph game begins at 4 p.m. and the varsity game will follow at 7 p.m. Friday at Sylmar High. Directions to Sylmar High: Take the 405 Freeway North for 16 miles, then merge onto I-5 North. Merge onto the 210 Freeway (towards Pasadena), exit at Polk Street. Turn right onto Polk Street and drive half a mile before turning left onto Bordon Avenue. The school is at 13050 Borden Avenue.

Savoring Tee Time

Palisadian Colette Rosenberg has qualified for the U.S. Women's Mid-Amateur Golf Championships, which begin tomorrow in Tennessee.
Palisadian Colette Rosenberg has qualified for the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur Golf Championships, which begin tomorrow in Tennessee.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Although being a devoted wife and mother takes first priority in her life, Palisadian Colette Rosenberg still makes time every week for her number one hobby. In between driving her three boys to and from school, cooking dinner and cleaning house, she sneaks in a round or two of golf at Riviera Country Club and that devotion has taken her places she’s never been before. Rosenberg recently qualified for the United States Women’s Mid-Amateur Championships, which begin tomorrow at Holston Hills Country Club in Knoxville, Tennessee. For a few days, she can take a break from being a mom and test her strokes against 129 other players from across the country at one of the most beautiful courses in America—and she embraces every opportunity. ‘This is the 10th time I’ve made it,’ says Rosenberg, who shot a 79 at Rancho Santa Fe Golf Club to finish fourth in Southern California, one stroke behind the first-place trio. ‘I’m not real happy with my score’I should shoot a 74 on that course’but I’ll take it.’ Only the top 16 golfers from Southern California make the national cut and Rosenberg will be joined in Tennessee by two fellow members from Riviera, where she and her husband Joey have been members for 23 years. In fact, she has won the club championship there eight times. ‘I love Riviera and it definitely gets me prepared for other events,’ says Rosenberg, whose personal-best on her home course is a 1-under par 70. ‘I don’t mind the narrow fairways and deep bunkers because I know if I can play consistently well there, I can shoot a low score anywhere.’ Even at 43, Rosenberg routinely competes against and beats players 15 to 20 years younger than her. Part of the reason for her success is experience. Rosenberg has learned a lot since first picking up a club at the age of 14. Growing up in Aiea, a village near Pearl Harbor on Oahu, she quickly grew to love the game and eventually made the team at the University of Hawaii. ‘I have played on a lot of different courses and they set up some pretty nice ones for the amateur championships,’ says Rosenberg, a zero handicapper who cites putting as the strongest aspect of her game. ‘But Riviera is where I play the most and it’s definitely my favorite.’ Riviera is Rosenberg’s first choice not only because of its hallowed greens and close proximity to her home near Bienvenida, but also for a sentimental reason: it’s where she and Joey first met. ‘I was working in the pro shop at the time and he used to come by to play all the time,’ she recalls. ‘We still try to play together once a week, but with our busy schedules we play on our own a lot more.’ The Mid-Amateur field starts at 130 players and only the top 64 advance to Sunday’s match play format, in which the player with the lowest score faces the player with the highest score head-to-head. The farthest Rosenberg has ever advanced is the round of 16 at Tacoma Country Club in Washington seven years ago. ‘I actually prefer match play much more,’ Rosenberg admits. ‘In stroke play, every shot counts, but in match play you only have to worry about one person. And if you have a bad hole, you only lose one point no matter what.’ Rosenberg has only hit one hole in one in her life, but she remembers the time and place vividly. It happened on September 26, 1999, at Riviera’s famous fourth hole (236 yards), considered by many experts, including golfing legend Ben Hogan, to be the most difficult par 3 in America. ‘It was my oldest son Dustin’s 10th birthday and he, my husband and I all played a round,’ Rosenberg says, laughing. ‘I used my driver from the white tee and I hit it straight down the fairway but I didn’t see it go in. When I approached the hole I still couldn’t see it so I asked Dustin where my ball was and he said it was in the cup. I thought I had hit it over the green!’ There was even more significance to that particular family outing. ‘Joey’s drive landed on the green and he made birdie and Dustin laid up, chipped onto the green and made his putt. So we scored 1-2-3 on that hole.’ Now 14, Dustin played PPBA and AYSO in the Palisades and is now starting at quarterback and safety on Loyola High’s freshman football team. Rosenberg’s other two kids, Darren (12) and Dawson (9) both attend Calvary Christian School. Darren has made the Pali Rec League’s all-star basketball team while Dawson, a third-grader, made the PPBA Pinto Division all-star travel team. Joey was the quarterback at Granada Hills High under John Newman (who later coached John Elway) and played catcher at UCLA. Rosenberg flew to Knoxville Tuesday with longtime friend Sandra Nakagaki, who shot an 83 and finished tied for seventh in SoCal. ‘We grew up together,’ Rosenberg says of Nakagaki, who lives in Culver City. ‘She works in the pro shop at Riviera and I’ve known her for 28 years. We were even teammates at Hawaii.’ The defending Riviera Club champion, Akemi Khaiatt of Huntington Beach, tied for first at the SoCal regional tournament, one stroke ahead of Rosenberg. ‘I think it says a lot for our club that three players qualified for the championships. Hopefully, one of us can bring home the winner’s trophy this year.’ No prize money is involved in amateur golf tournaments, but competing nevertheless allows Rosenberg to travel all over the country and play some of the nation’s most beautiful courses. So far, her hobby has brought her to Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington, Georgia and now Tennessee. She has also played amateur events on various courses throughout the Southland, including San Diego, Newport Beach, Rancho Park and Mission Hills. ‘Golf is a sport you can play and enjoy your whole life,’ Rosenberg says. ‘I savor every chance I get to play these events. It’s fun to challenge yourself and keep trying to get better.’

Dr. Columbus D. McAlpin, 61; Pediatric Surgeon and Comforter

We have been blessed to have in our midst a distinguished and prominent surgeon, Dr. Columbus D. McAlpin. A gentleman of extraordinary achievements and success and extremely high personal ethical standards, McAlpin passed away on Friday, September 3. He was 61. McAlpin was the former Director of Pediatric Surgery at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles. He was also on the medical staffs of Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, Childrens Hospital of Long Beach, King Drew Medical Center, Centinela Hospital, Santa Monica/ UCLA Hospital, Saint John’s Hospital and California Hospital. His brilliant surgical career spanned over 30 years and focused on healing and saving the lives of tens of thousands of children. McAlpin was born on August 11, 1943 in Los Angeles and attended Cathedral High School, where he served as student body president. Unknown to many, McAlpin turned down a UCLA football scholarship. Instead, he worked his way through UCLA so that he could focus on his undergraduate premedical studies and fulfill his dream of attending medical school. He accomplished all of this, while helping to parent and financially support his three younger siblings, due to his mother’s early death. McAlpin graduated at the top of his class from Howard University Medical School, Alpha Omega Alpha. He was also voted president of his graduating medical class. He completed his general surgical residency at Harbor UCLA Medical Center and his pediatric surgical residency at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles. He distinguished himself as the chief pediatric resident at Childrens Hospital. He was the second African American to obtain certification by the American Board of Pediatric Surgery. He held academic positions at USC Medical Center and Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School. He received countless honors and awards during his prestigious career, most notably the coveted Golden Apple Award presented to the most outstanding faculty member and voted on by the chief resident and residents of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. He and his family have been residents of Pacific Palisades for 15 years. ‘He walked among us as a common man: not flashy, not ostentatious, but humble and gentle with a twinkle in his eye and always a smile on his face,’ said family friend Brenda Miller. However, he was far from common. It was a unique experience to encounter a man such as McAlpin, whose miraculous touch healed so many. His calm and reassuring demeanor instilled immediate comfort and confidence, especially when fragile lives were at risk. McAlpin could not stroll in any community without being greeted by a former patient or parent, eager to extend a grateful hug. In spite of his demanding professional schedule, he placed the highest priority on his family. He never missed a special musical performance, sports event or any occasion honoring his family. His family was clearly an important priority in his life. He was dearly loved and will be tremendously missed. He is survived by two children, Marcus, 11, a 6th grader at John Thomas Dye, and Lauren, 15, a sophomore at Marlborough; his wife Rochelle; and four of his siblings, Lola McAlpin Grant, Leonard, Jerome and Christina McAlpin. His sister Veronica was recently deceased. A funeral Mass will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, September 11, at Corpus Christi Church, 887 Toyopa Dr. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Columbus McAlpin, M.D. Fund, which will underwrite a room at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in McAlpin’s name, and contribute to the McAlpin children’s college education, 2341 Veteran Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90064.

Theater Review

‘Dinner With Friends’: A Little Noshing, But No Meal

Marriage is a platform on which partners erect a structure of expectation and experience held together by tradition, children and sex. Or, put another way, marriage could be a dance where each holds the other tight, neither knowing the steps. These assessments might very well paraphrase playwright Donald Margulies’ ‘Dinner with Friends,’ the 2000 Pulitzer Prize-winning play which opened Friday night at Pierson Playhouse for a six-week run. In this Theatre Palisades production, directed by Hope Villanueva, Margulies’ lacerating examination of marriage is meant to elicit uncomfortable audience reaction, and it does. Anybody who is married or has been involved in a long-term relationship will recognize the terrain. Two couples’Karen (Alexandra Raines) and Gabe (Josh Matthies), Beth (Elizabeth Laird) and Tom (Sean Spence)’have been friends for a decade, sharing vacations, child-rearing activities and the easygoing conversations friends enjoy. This comfortable foursome suddenly is rocked out of equilibrium when in the first act Beth reveals while at Karen and Gabe’s for dinner that Tom has left her for another woman. Suddenly, this family, as Karen refers to their friendship, is shaken up. Through many conversations’Karen with Gabe, Karen and Beth, Gabe and Tom, and most painfully Tom and Beth’playwright Margulies finally gets to the nut of the drama. Towards the end of the second act, Gabe and Tom meet in a bar for a drink and talk. Tom explains that his new partner, Nancy, is everything Beth was not. The sex is easy and comfortable, she’s 100 percent there, she listens. Gabe’s response voices the truth we all come to realize as we grow up and gain wisdom, while mourning the loss of the aphrodisiac of new love. ‘We spend our youths unconscious,’ says Gabe, wisfully reflecting on the passage of time. In a marriage, you make mistakes, ‘but the key is to say, made a mistake, too bad, you have to live with it. The key is to resist chucking it all.’ This play stings more than it provokes reflection. The dialogue is closer to overheard cell phone conversation than the poetic irony of Ibsen. While the actors must relish this script because of its dense dialogue, it remains, like nervous noshing, far from a nourishing meal. The most revealing conversations occur between the two women and the two men because each bears some psychological truth. In the second act after Beth’s breakup, she excoriates Karen for her condescending role in their friendship. Beth has found a new love, David, and despite Karen’s caution, she feels confident and strong and set on this relationship. She observes that Karen is uncomfortable with Beth’s newfound strength. ‘I think you love it when I’m a mess,’ Beth says. ‘You got to be Miss Perfect. How was I supposed to compete with that?’ For her part, Karen reveals that she always considered Beth and Tom to be ‘family.’ Her own biological family, she remarks, was a mess, and she couldn’t get far enough away from them. To which Beth replies, ‘The family you’ve chosen is just as screwed up as the family you were born into.’ We’re all so vulnerable, so fragile, the playwright seems to be saying. We try our best, we make mistakes, we hurt one another. ‘Some of us will right the course, others blow up our homes and some take up piano,’ says Gabe, in pondering the trajectory of a marriage. Director Villanueva skillfully guides the actors through the scenes with clarity and a varied emotional tone. The actors are commendable, with particular praise for Elizabeth Laird (Beth), who so successfully conveys the roller coaster of emotions from crushing sadness and disappointment to rage and fear. Kudos to lighting and set designer Jenna Coulombe for successfully differentiating outside, inside and the passage of time, including a flashback at the beginning of Act II that finds the couples nine years earlier, when Karen and Gabe introduced Tom and Beth. ‘Dinner with Friends’ continues at Pierson Playhouse Friday and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. through October 3. For tickets contact 454-1970.

Waldrep Gets Inside Music

For Mark Waldrep, the magic of music making lies in the way sound is recorded and produced. Sitting in his West Hollywood studio, the Palisadian audio engineer and producer says he believes his new DVD-Audio recordings sound better than live performances, and he presses ‘play’ to prove it. The pure sound of Willie Nelson and songwriter Paul Williams (Barbara Streisand’s ‘Evergreen’ and Karen Carpenter’s ‘Close to You’) singing ‘Rainbow Connection’ fills the room as if the musicians were performing right there, spontaneously deciding who sings each line. ‘This took two takes,’ says Waldrep, founder of AIX Records. ‘It just breaks me up every time I hear it.’ Having worked on behalf of musicians, singers and record labels for nearly 30 years, Waldrep is grateful for the new technologies that have allowed him to develop his newest productions’DVD-Audio/Video discs that include ‘audiophile quality music’ with 5.1 channel surround mixes (the method used in the film industry primarily for sound effects), multiple camera angle video, biographical texts and/or photos from sessions or artists. Some of the recordings have interviews with the musicians or special-interest segments such as a guitar lesson or backstage jam. AIX records an entire record in a single, four- to six-hour period in a live hall without an audience. Most of the music has been recorded in the Colburn School for Performing Arts’ Zipper Hall in Downtown L.A. ‘I love being inside music, not with people clapping,’ says Waldrep, who left his home state of Michigan in 1974 ‘to be a rock star’ in Los Angeles. When playing in a band didn’t work out, he took some classes at SMC before continuing his education at CSUN, Cal Arts and UCLA. Because the DVD-Audio/Video recordings are done in a short amount of time, usually with only two takes per tune, the musicians ‘have to be skilled enough and have been performing long enough to deliver great music in a single session,’ Waldrep says. ‘There’s no going back and fixing mistakes.’ He also wants to record bands who are ‘fun to work with and interested in what we’re doing,’ since AIX’s recording methodology is nontraditional. For example, Waldrep recently recorded a Christmas album with five musicians, including former Wings guitarist Laurence Juber and Waldrep’s favorite pianist, Jim Cox. ‘They had never played the songs together, and the DVD captures that sense of newness,’ says Waldrep, who directs the recordings with about a six-person crew. ‘The biggest high I had was working with Willie Nelson and Paul Williams on ‘Rainbow Connection’,’ he says. ‘The air became rarified because here was this icon [Nelson] taking direction from me.’ When Waldrep played two initial mixes of the recording for Paul Williams, he said the hall-of-fame songwriter looked at him and said ‘I get it, after 30 years,’ meaning that Williams finally understood what music could sound like and the magic of creating that sound. Waldrep strives for those moments that are ‘the reason people should be making records.’ AIX preserves the feeling of real-time music-making by avoiding techniques commonly used to produce recordings, such as dynamics compression, equalization, artificial reverberation and mono miking techniques. Waldrep points out that the use of stereo pairs of microphones for each instrument allows him to create a sound in which ‘the speakers disappear.’ The result is a recording that is 50 percent as loud as a normal commercial release, Waldrep says. ‘It’s quieter than anything you’ll hear on the radio, and as pure and natural an experience as you can create with technology.’ The DVD-Audio/Video discs are ‘my own creative visions,’ says Waldrep, whose company was born as the first DVD-Audio record label dedicated to new high-resolution releases. ‘It’s a pretty personal thing I’m doing.’ Over the years, he has researched, acquired and utilized state-of-the-art equipment, including a $400,000 Euphonix System 5 digital mixing console. ‘There’s been a little bit of debt along the way,’ he says, but admits that the 35 completed DVD-Audio/Video discs were ‘phenomenally less expensive’ to produce because he owns his equipment. His small company consists of four former students at Cal State Dominguez Hills, where Waldrep teaches digital media arts courses three days a week. ‘Music has an intangible ability to get in here,’ says Waldrep, putting his hand over his heart. ‘That’s what it’s always done for me.’ Waldrep has lived in the Palisades for four years with his wife, Mona, and their three kids, Kari, 20, Christopher, 18 and Michael, 16. Kari attends UC Santa Cruz and Michael is in the Highly Gifted Magnet program at North Hollywood High School. Christopher, a recent PaliHi graduate, is a member of the band Half Nelson. For more information about AIX Records, visit www.aixrecords.com or contact Mark Waldrep directly at mwaldrep@aixrecords.com or (323) 655-4116, ext. 102.

Knowing Einstein

Palisadian Jack Rosenberg was a personal friend of Einstein's. They met in Princeton in 1949 on Einstein's 70th birthday and were friends until Einstein's death in 1955.
Palisadian Jack Rosenberg was a personal friend of Einstein’s. They met in Princeton in 1949 on Einstein’s 70th birthday and were friends until Einstein’s death in 1955.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Palisadian Jack Rosenberg thinks he may be the only personal friend of Albert Einstein still alive. They first met in 1949, on Einstein’s 70th birthday, when Rosenberg was a 31-year-old electrical engineer at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, and Einstein was a world-renowned member of the faculty. Rosenberg was working for mathematician John Von Neumann designing what would be the first central processing unit for the first digital computer. A music fan, Rosenberg had developed sophisticated audio equipment for his own personal use, which attracted the interest of mathematicians at the Institute, who asked him to build them similar systems. Professor Erwin Panofsky, a good friend of Einstein’s, heard about this music system and asked Rosenberg to make one for Einstein as a 70th birthday gift. Rosenberg did, and it was the start of a friendship. Between late 1949 and 1951 they saw each other once a month. Even after Rosenberg moved away, he visited once or twice a year until Einstein’s death in 1955. On the occasion of the Skirball Cultural Center’s upcoming Einstein exhibit, which will run from September 14 to May 29, Rosenberg shared with the Palisadian-Post his personal memories of Einstein. Rosenberg grew up in New Jersey, the son of Russian parents who were interested in classical music. He studied engineering at MIT, and was on a troop ship in the Pacific heading towards invading Japan during World War II when the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This led Rosenberg to an interest in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and his first job at Princeton, working with some physics professors. After that he began work on the Johnniac, the world’s first digital computer, named after its inventor, John Von Neumann. It was while working there at the Institute of Advanced Studies, through his love of music, that Rosenberg met Einstein. Born in Germany, Einstein was 26 when he had what he called his ‘annus mirabilis’ in 1905. He published four papers (including his famous E=MC2 formula) that revolutionized present concepts of time and space, energy and matter, and that same year he received his Ph.D. from Zurich University, all while working at the Swiss Patent Office. He was a professor of theoretical physics in Prague and Zurich, and later in Berlin and received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1921. He joined the Institute in 1933. By the time Rosenberg met him, Einstein was a world-famous figure who spent a lot of time thinking about philosophical interests other than science. That’s what Einstein discussed with Rosenberg and his wife, Frances (who died 10 years ago). ‘I was absolutely bewildered in his presence. I was tongue-tied,’ said Rosenberg of meeting Einstein. ‘He had a lot of humility; none of the other scientists I had ever met had this. He was a man who had nothing to prove.’ Rosenberg entered Einstein’s house surreptitiously several times to set up the audio system to play FM music over the radio. One time he installed a roof antenna, and several other times he was let in by Einstein’s longtime secretary, Helen Dukas. High-fidelity audio was not commercially available at this time. Einstein was fascinated when Rosenberg brought in the three pieces of furniture’the speaker, the FM receiver and the amplifier’that made up his surprise gift. J. Robert Oppenheimer, who had worked on the Manhattan Project, was head of the Institute at the time, and came with Rosenberg to greet Einstein on his birthday. ‘Einstein said, ‘You’re not allowed to go in there,’ when I headed to his study,’ Rosenberg recalls. ‘I said, ‘Please, you’ll understand later.” Once he learned about the surprise gift, Einstein, an amateur violinist, had a look of pleasure on his face. ‘What could I do to repay you?’ he asked. Rosenberg asked for permission to take his picture, which he granted. Rosenberg was thrilled to have met Einstein, and thought that would be the end of their association. But a month later he received a personal note from Einstein, thanking him for the ‘singing bird’ as he called his music system, on which he enjoyed Mozart’s ‘The Magic Flute.’ Several months later, professor Panofsky called, asking Rosenberg how Einstein could thank him once again for building the music system. Rosenberg asked if he could record Einstein’s voice on a recording system he had in his home. The recording device was not portable, so Einstein would have to come to the small apartment where Jack and Frances lived. In October 1949, the Rosenbergs had their interview with Einstein, who said he would answer all questions, but requested that the recording be only for their private use, and would not be made public. The Rosenbergs asked Einstein questions for half an hour, about world affairs, what he thought about the atomic bomb, his political ideas, and his favorite music. In his autobiography now in progress, Rosenberg describes Einstein’s answers as ‘shockingly candid. Many were so direct and surprising they left no room for further inquiry on that subject.’ When asked about whether he agreed we had to drop atomic bomb on Japan, Einstein said that he didn’t agree. He believed there there had been secret peace negotiations going on with Japan and they would have surrendered before the bombs were dropped. Two weeks later, Einstein’s secretary called saying that Einstein would like to have the Rosenbergs over for tea and cookies. This time, Einstein asked the questions. ‘I’m interested in what young Americans think about,’ he said. Although Jack and Frances protested that they weren’t typical young Americans, the first interview lasted two hours, and they visited once a month for the next year and a half, until they moved from Princeton. Einstein became a mentor and advisor, and was the motivating force behind the couple’s move from Princeton, claiming it was a closed society where people couldn’t speak freely. Only this year, at a lecture Rosenberg attended at Caltech, did he learn why Einstein felt that way. Caltech professor Diana Kormos Buchwald, editor of Einstein’s collected papers, explained that Dr. Abraham Flexner, head of the institute through 1939, had forbidden Einstein from speaking about his opinions publicly. Eventually, Rosenberg switched employers, and after leaving Princeton, got a job with GE in Syracuse, New York. He moved to the Palisades in 1954 to work for a subsidiary of General Dynamics. He later learned that mathematicians from Los Alamos were using the computer he worked on at the Institute for Advanced Studies to develop the hydrogen bomb. ‘I felt I had dirtied my hands,’ says Rosenberg. ‘When I mentioned it to Einstein in 1953, he said ‘I thought that was what they used it for. I thought they would find a way to design the hydrogen bomb. I feel that instead of making the U.S. more secure, this weapon has made us less secure.’ Sure enough, in the year after the U.S. exploded it, the Soviet Union also exploded its hydrogen bomb. So Einstein was right, there was no security.’ Einstein passed away in 1955 at 76, of a rupture of the aortic aneurysm. Living in the Palisades at the time, the Rosenbergs wept when they heard the news. ‘Einstein got criticism from both scientists and laypeople that he should stop spending time on political matters and world matters, and completely devote himself to science,’ Rosenberg says. ‘Even though he couldn’t solve the world’s political problems he felt he had to think about them, and when he thought about a subject, he thought about it more thoroughly than anyone else I ever met.’