Good Times Weekly March 6-12, 2019

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GoodTimes.SC SantaCruz.com

3.6.19

BULLY PULPIT

With allegations of bad behavior against two councilmembers, has Santa Cruz City Hall gone toxic? BY JACOB PIERCE p20


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INSIDE Volume 44, No.49 March 6-12, 2019

SHADES OF NATURAL Not every CBD product is created equal P11

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GETTING SERIOUS UCSC program takes a different approach to designing video games P14

PUSH AND POL City Hall’s communication breakdown P20

Opinion 4 News 14 Cover Story 20 A&E 26 Events 32

Film 44 Dining 48 Risa’s Stars 52 Classifieds 53

Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal. Good Times is free of charge, limited to one copy per issue per person. Entire contents copyrighted © 2019 Nuz, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form is prohibited without publisher’s written permission. Good Times is printed at a LEED-certified facility. Good Times office: 107 Dakota Ave., Santa Cruz, CA 95060

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FEATURES

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OPINION

EDITOR’S NOTE Longtime locals may be getting déjà vu at recent Santa Cruz City Council meetings. Tensions are running high, and divisiveness is approaching peak levels—in other words, it’s how the political climate gets around here every time homeless issues rise to the top of the agenda. It’s been that way for at least as long as I’ve been in Santa Cruz. Things got particularly nasty in the mid-’90s, in the wake of the Loma Prieta earthquake, and again in 2000, then again in 2002 … actually, I can remember more years it was bad than years it wasn’t. The discourse has often gotten extremely uncivil. So is there any

LETTERS

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

WHAT IT TAKES TO DECARBONIZE

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Re: "Spin Vogue" (GT, 2/27): Offshore wind in the Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary? We don’t have to destroy the environment to “save” it if we emulate Sweden, France and Finland—countries that decarbonized decades ago, thanks to nuclear power. Instead, we emulate Germany, which—after spending hundreds of billions on wind and solar while closing nuclear plants—has failed to reduce CO2 emissions for 10 years straight. Contrary to popular belief, civilian nuclear power and its waste have hurt no one in the United States. Worldwide, civilian nuclear power accidents have killed less people than are killed every single day by pollution from burning coal. We need nuclear power and renewables. Read, for example, the new book A Bright Future: How Some Countries Have Solved Climate Change and the Rest Can Follow. Our existence depends on everyone understanding what it really takes to decarbonize. STEPHEN WILLIAMS | SANTA CRUZ

FAITH RESTORED I must respond to the absurd comments of

difference now, as the Ross Camp and overnight parking on Delaware Avenue become only the most highprofile issues splintering the current debate? Perhaps, as we have just witnessed the city’s mayor call out other councilmembers for what some say is sexist and inappropriate behavior, bringing what was once mainly backroom scuffling into the light of public debate. In this week’s cover story, Jacob Pierce takes a closer look at that debate, bringing in perspectives from everyone involved to examine the question of where the lines of acceptable behavior should be drawn in our city government. We can only hope the push to take such issues seriously will improve the situation not only now, while #MeToo and bullying are trending issues, but also every year this comes up again in the future.

PHOTO CONTEST WHAT THE SHELL A hummingbird nest in Watsonville. Photograph by Robert Gomez.

Submit to photos@goodtimes.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250 dpi.

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Marji Schoeneman (Letters, 2/27). I also live in Watsonville, Marji. I live in the retirement community of Pajaro Village. One might think that older folks just love Trump and all his behaviors. Think again! There is little respect left in my community for Trump. His disgusting, racist, misogynist, xenophobic behaviors were well outlined by our former secretary of state Madeleine Albright. No, there was not one miniscule amount of respect for Trump in the article. And if you watched the Michael Cohen hearing on Wednesday, Feb. 27, you know why. As I went door to door when I ran for city council in District 7, many voters wanted to know if I was a Democrat, and if I would help remove Donald Trump if elected. I replied every time in the affirmative. Fortunately, my two opponents were Democrats and have similar views to mine regarding Trump. Even though I did not win, I was struck by the anger, outrage and disgust with this POTUS. It reinforced my faith in the people of Watsonville. I resolved to do all that I can to remove him legally from office. Thank you, Good Times, for your timely article regarding a true feminist leader from my generation. God bless Madeleine Albright. You go, girl! STEVE TRUJILLO | WATSONVILLE

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GOOD IDEA

GOOD WORK

JUST BIKE THAT

BIGGER AND BETTER

Bike Santa Cruz County is looking for a leader with a vision for local transportation that’s sustainable and forward-looking, and who has the credentials to walk the walk. Current Executive Director Janneke Strause has announced plans to pursue a graduate degree in community and regional planning after implementing a new strategic plan. In less than three years under Strause, the organization expanded the youthoriented Earn-a-Bike program, increased its budget by 30 percent, incorporated as a nonprofit, and moved to a larger office. For information about the opening, visit bikesantacruzcounty.org.

On Saturday, the Santa Cruz County Parkinson’s Group held the “My Life is Bigger Than Parkinson’s” symposium at Twin Lakes Church in Aptos. Filled to capacity, the free conference brought together an impressive slate of speakers that laid out the latest developments in scientific research and emerging technologies and treatments to attendees. One thing that was abundantly clear was the wide range of resources available in Santa Cruz County to people with Parkinson’s. To tap into them, check out easepd.org.

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LOCAL TALK

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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of March 6 ARIES Mar21–Apr19 Genius inventor Thomas Edison rebelled against sleep, which he regarded as wasteful. He tried to limit his time in bed to four hours per night so he would have more time to work during his waking hours. Genius scientist Albert Einstein had a different approach. He preferred 10 hours of sleep per night, and liked to steal naps during the day, too. In my astrological opinion, Aries, you’re in a phase when it makes more sense to imitate Einstein than Edison. Important learning and transformation are happening in your dreams. Give your nightly adventures maximum opportunity to work their magic in your behalf.

TAURUS Apr20–May20 The Danish flag has a red background emblazoned with an asymmetrical white cross. It was a national symbol of power as early as the 14th century, and may have first emerged during a critical military struggle that established the Danish empire in 1219. No other country in the world has a flag with such an ancient origin. But if Denmark's Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, who’s a Taurus, came to me and asked me for advice, I would urge him to break with custom and design a new flag— maybe something with a spiral rainbow or a psychedelic tree. I’ll suggest an even more expansive idea to you, Taurus: create fresh traditions in every area of your life!

GEMINI May21–June20 On June 7, 1988, Gemini musician Bob Dylan launched what has come to be known as the Never Ending Tour. It’s still going. In the past 30-plus years, he has performed almost 3,000 shows on every continent except Antarctica. In 2018 alone, at the age of 77, he did 84 gigs. He’s living proof that not every Gemini is flaky and averse to commitment. Even if you yourself have flirted with flightiness in the past, I doubt you will do so in the next five weeks. On the contrary. I expect you’ll be a paragon of persistence, doggedness and stamina.

CANCER Jun21–Jul22 The otters at a marine park in Miura City, Japan are friendly to human visitors. There are holes in the glass walls of their enclosures through which they reach out to shake people’s hands with their webbed paws. I think you need experiences akin to that in the coming weeks. Your mental and spiritual health will thrive to the degree that you seek closer contact with animals. It’s a favorable time to nurture your instinctual intelligence and absorb influences from the natural world. For extra credit, tune in to and celebrate your own animal qualities.

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

LE0 Jul23–Aug22

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Between 1977 and 1992, civil war raged in Mozambique. Combatants planted thousands of land mines that have remained dangerous long after the conflict ended. In recent years, a new ally has emerged in the quest to address the problem: rats that are trained to find the hidden explosives so that human colleagues can defuse them. The expert sniffers don’t weigh enough to detonate the mines, so they’re ideal to play the role of saviors. I foresee a metaphorically comparable development in your future, Leo. You’ll get help and support from a surprising or seemingly unlikely source.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Imagine a stairway that leads nowhere; as you ascend, you realize that at the top is not a door or a hallway, but a wall. I suspect that lately you may have been dealing with a metaphorical version of an anomaly like this. But I also predict that in the coming weeks some magic will transpire that will change everything. It’s like you’ll find a button on the wall that when pushed opens a previously imperceptible door. Somehow, you’ll gain entrance through an apparent obstruction.

LIBRA Sep23–Oct 22 Not all of the classic works of great literature are entertaining. According to one survey of editors, writers, and librarians, Goethe’s Faust, Melville’s Moby Dick, and

Cervantes’ Don Quixote are among the most boring masterpieces ever written. But most experts agree that they’re still valuable to read. In that spirit, and in accordance with astrological omens, I urge you to commune with other dull-but-meaningful things. Seek out low-key but rich offerings. Be aware that unexciting people and situations may offer clues and catalysts that you need.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 Many of you Scorpios regard secrecy as a skill worth cultivating. It serves your urge to gather and manage power. You’re aware that information is a valuable commodity, so you guard it carefully and share it sparingly. This predilection sometimes makes you seem understated, even shy. Your hesitancy to express too much of your knowledge and feelings may influence people to underestimate the intensity that seethes within you. Having said all that, I’ll now predict that you’ll show the world who you are with more dazzle and flamboyance in the coming weeks. It’ll be interesting to see how you do that as you also try to heed your rule that information is power.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 Sagittarian actress and producer Deborra-Lee Furness has been married to megastar actor Hugh Jackman for 23 years. Their wedding rings are inscribed with a motto that blends Sanskrit and English, “Om paramar to the mainamar.” Hugh and Deborah-Lee say it means, “We dedicate our union to a greater source.” In resonance with current astrological omens, I invite you to engage in a similar gesture with an important person in your life. Now is a marvelous time to deepen and sanctify your relationship by pledging yourselves to a higher purpose or beautiful collaboration or sublime mutual quest.

CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 In 1997, a supercomputer named Deep Blue won six chess matches against Chess Grand Master Gary Kasparov. In 2016, an Artificial Intelligence (AI) device called AlphaGo squared off against human champion Lee Sodol in a best-of-five series of the Chinese board game Go. AlphaGo crushed Sodol, four games to one. But there is at least one cerebral game in which human intelligence still reigns supreme: the card game known as bridge. No AI has as yet beat the best bridge players. I bring this to your attention, Capricorn, because I am sure that in the coming weeks, no AI could out-think and out-strategize you as you navigate your way through life’s tests and challenges. You’ll be smarter than ever. P.S.: I’m guessing your acumen will be extra soulful, as well.

AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 At regular intervals, a hot stream of boiling water shoots up out of the Earth and into the sky in Wyoming’s Yellowstone National Park. It’s a geyser called Old Faithful. The steamy surge can reach a height of 185 feet and last for 5 minutes. When white settlers first discovered this natural phenomenon in the 19th century, some of them used it as a laundry. Between blasts, they’d place their dirty clothes in Old Faithful’s aperture. When the scalding flare erupted, it provided all the necessary cleansing. I’d love to see you attempt a metaphorically similar feat, Aquarius: harness a natural force for a practical purpose, or a primal power for an earthly task.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 Who was the model for Leonardo da Vinci’s iconic painting Mona Lisa? Many scholars think it was Italian noblewoman Lisa del Giocondo. Leonardo wanted her to feel comfortable during the long hours she sat for him, so he hired musicians to play for her and people with mellifluous voices to read her stories. He built a musical fountain for her to gaze upon and a white Persian cat to cuddle. If it were within my power, I would arrange something similar for you in the coming weeks. Why? Because I’d love to see you be calmed and soothed for a concentrated period of time; to feel perfectly at ease, at home in the world, surrounded by beautiful influences you love. In my opinion, you need and deserve such a break from the everyday frenzy.

Homework: Think of the last person you cursed, if only with a hateful thought © Copyright 2019 if not an actual spell. Now send them a free-hearted blessing.


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OPINION

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FACT FROM FAKE NEWS?

Want reliable, energetic and wise advice on your move?

Talk to Scarlett and Daniel Wolford!

The UN’s latest climate report claims we have 12 years to dramatically transform our economy and lifestyles to preserve the stable climate human civilization has depended on for millenia. We need a massive mobilization of every sector of society on par with what science and justice demand. Local activist groups have already taken the initiative, but we need more people across a wider spectrum of backgrounds to speak up. We need the parents of young children too young to speak for themselves and local high

school and college students to demand action. These are the futures most jeopardized. A Green New Deal will keep Americans safe from climate change and create millions of green jobs. It is common sense policy that is overwhelmingly popular with American people, regardless of political party or where they live. ANGELA BARROS | SANTA CRUZ

CORRECTION In last week’s news story “Spin Vogue,” GT reported the incorrect name for the proposed Castle Wind project in Morro Bay. We regret the error.

LETTERS POLICY

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WELLNESS

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rom Willie Nelson’s infused coffee beans to mascara and dog treats, CBD is the latest buzzy product that brands are promoting as the next big cure-all. But is the hempor cannabis-derived substance officially known as “cannabidiol” a new form of snake oil, or can CBD really cure us of our 2019 ailments? When cannabis first became legal in California, I went to a local dispensary in hopes of finding a topical CBD cream, as suggested

by a friend to help relieve wrist pain. A clerk handed me a tiny, $60 pot of orange-flavored cream. Any non-orange types? “No, that’s the only one we have right now—it’s flying off the shelves.” There was a massive warning label saying something about cancer and birth defects. Oh great, that makes me feel good. This stuff reeked of sickly sweet concentrated orange, like the worst-flavored Starburst. It was sticky, and it didn’t absorb or rub

in, so all I could do was apply, plug my nose and wait for it to soak in. I didn’t want to be a believer, but it actually did help. Unlike tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), CBD is non-psychoactive, but it’s still known for medicinal aid. From relieving post-New Year’s workout soreness to more serious medical conditions such as multiple sclerosis and seizures, CBD converts position the stuff as something of a miracle elixir. “The science is becoming more

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

Cosmetics, coffee, dog treats—is CBD a cure-all or 2019’s snake oil? BY GEORGIA JOHNSON

and more recognized, and as we lift layers of prohibition, we will be able to see a lot more of that research being done,” says Pat Malo, executive director of GreenTrade Santa Cruz, a local cannabis-industry organization. “From the medical cannabis community, we have seen so many people come through and say the topical use has made the difference for their arthritis and skin conditions.” CBD options have expanded since my orange-scented ordeal. There are edible CBD gummies, hemp oils and terpenes, not to mention the fancy face lotions and creams available from big-name brands like Kiehl’s, which you don’t need to buy at a dispensary. According to a recent Fortune article based on Cowen and Co. analysis, nearly 7 percent of Americans use CBD, setting the stage for a market worth of around $16 billion by 2025. Alissa Maya Meredith is one local small business owner who’s ventured into the wide world of CBD with her company Akasha Apothecary. With her love of gardening and background in cannabis farming, Maya Meredith created Akasha Apothecary’s CBD products to relieve and heal in a more holistic, natural way—that also smells good. “I wanted people to know what mainstream products actually do to their skin. I used ‘natural’ products and had an adverse reaction, and so who do you call? The 800 number? Or email Johnson & Johnson?” she says. “You are just another number on a list of people who have had similar experiences. That’s scary.” Maya Meredith has a garden in the Santa Cruz Mountains where she grows and harvests ingredients for her products, which vary based on what’s in season. She sells her body butter, oils, bath soaks and more in local businesses, including Estrella Collective and Om Gallery. Because her products contain less than .3 percent THC, they do not need to be sold exclusively in a dispensary. She is also starting to offer CBD massages, and hopes to eventually 12> open her own local brick-

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“The unregulated products that are available in some places are not U.S.-grown. The quality of that isn’t necessarily the same as locally grown CBD in the medical dispensaries and stores. The purity—what it might be contaminated with—is unknown for a lot of non-U.S.-sourced products that are popping up in unregulated places or the internet.” -ALISSA MAYA MEREDITH <11 and-mortar wellness space. Having tried her body butter and salves, I can say that the local sourcing and herbs makes all the difference when it comes to feel and smell— let alone relief for sore joints and visible improvement of skin blemishes and scarring. Maya Meredith says that in the last few years, she’s seen people become a lot more open to experimenting with CBD, including numerous clients who have bought products for grandparents who may have viewed CBD’s association with cannabis as a stigma in the past. But this wide-reaching adoption also means there are CBD products out there that aren’t necessarily the best quality. There are CBD pills and candies for sale in gas stations, beauty salons and all corners of the internet, many sourced from overseas and unregulated. Buyers don’t always know what, or how much, they’re getting. “The unregulated products that are available in some places are not U.S.-grown. The quality of that isn’t necessarily the same as locally grown CBD in the medical dispensaries and stores,” Malo says. “The purity—what it might be contaminated with—is unknown for a lot of non-U.S.-sourced products that are popping up in unregulated places or the internet.” A recent study by the National Center for Biotechnology

Information found that nearly 70 percent of CBD products purchased online were inaccurately labelled. It’s because of this unknown that small businesses like Akasha Apothecary are combating mass production with local, organic ingredients. Maya Meredith believes that some people are probably experimenting with their own usage based on word of mouth, since CBD still isn’t tested in the same way that pharmaceuticals are. The Food and Drug Administration has approved only one drug containing CBD, Epidiolex, prescribed for treating seizures. The National Institutes of Health lists more than 500 ongoing and complete CBD-based studies, many of which have shown promise to help relieve epilepsy, opioid addiction, arthritis, and many other ailments. While government labs and regulators debate where to go from here, CBD entrepreneurs like Maya Meredith are optimistic about the future. “Santa Cruz is blessed in that we have so many amazing holistic and alternative medicines such as CBD and cannabis products,” she says. “I love creating products that are from the Earth that truly help people.” For more information about Akasha Apothecary, visit akashaapothecary.com.


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NEWS CAMP OF APPROVAL Santa Cruz City Council extends life of homeless camp behind Ross store, but doesn’t declare new emergency or lift parking ban

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

BY JACOB PIERCE

14

Amy Lebichuck, a social worker for Santa Cruz County, has made a point of getting more involved in local politics over the past couple months. To a newcomer, it’s a strange scene. She told the Santa Cruz City Council on the night of Tuesday, Feb. 26 that she was, “really disturbed to see the two polarized camps” that showed up to weigh in on homeless issues that evening. “I see folks who are really concerned about safety, and I see folks who are really concerned about social justice issues and human rights,” Lebichuck said. “We all want the same things. As a woman, I want to feel safe walking around town at night.” Lebichuck implored homeless advocates in the room to be patient, telling them that progress could not happen overnight. She challenged those who have opposed the city’s homeless camp plans to show an openness toward trying out different programs that might alleviate the pain of those living outside and in their cars. At a meeting that stretched until 1 a.m., the council ultimately voted to extend the life of the Gateway Plaza encampment, sometimes known as the Ross camp, where dozens of tents have clustered near the San Lorenzo Riverwalk. The camp now will stay open until the city assembles alternative services and new shelter options. The change in direction was decided by a 4-3 vote, with the support of Vice Mayor Justin Cummings, Councilmember Drew Glover, Councilmember Sandy Brown, and Councilmember Chris Krohn. The council had previously signaled that it would close the Gateway encampment by March 15. Cummings said he’s heard from community members that even if the camp is not perfect, it does provide a home base for those in need. “This year has been exceptionally wet and cold, and if we didn’t have this type of shelter, we may have actually been dealing with more deaths from people getting hypothermia,” said Cummings, who visits the camp a few times a week. >18

SCREENING CALLS Professor Sri Kurniawan has been working for more than 10 years on “serious games” at UCSC, which just launched a program so popular that it’s already growing. PHOTO: JIM MACKENZIE/UCSC.

Elevating Their Game New UCSC master’s program trains students to create games for improving health and education BY ALISHA GREEN

A

s a butterfly floats around the screen of a virtual reality headset, the woman wearing the device moves her arms to control a protective crystal ball, keeping the butterfly’s wings dry from the coming rain. If it sounds like a futuristic game, that’s because it is. But the player’s real-world movements also double as physical therapy. This is just one scenario playing out on the UCSC campus that highlights the intersection of gaming and more serious endeavors, like rehabilitation for stroke survivors or people with other physical impairments. While the

repetitiveness of regular physical therapy can come to feel like a chore, using a game to engage people in that therapy can spark a new excitement in them, says Sri Kurniawan, a computational media professor at UCSC. This type of game falls under a broader category known as “serious games,” or games designed with a primary purpose other than entertainment. While the games may still be entertaining, that playfulness engages the player in ultimately achieving some other goal. Those who learned to type on a keyboard with “Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing,” studied geography

while investigating fictional crimes in “Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?” or navigated logic-based puzzles with blue, grape-shaped characters in “Zoombinis” are already familiar with some of the early serious games that emerged in the education space in the ’80s and ’90s. Serious games are also designed to guide users through workplace training, educate them on social and political issues, and help them improve their health and well-being. Students will be learning how to develop the next generations of such projects in the new UCSC master’s program on serious games launching this fall. The program joins one >16


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graduate-level and two undergraduatelevel game-design programs already offered by UCSC, which are ranked among the top in the country by the Princeton Review. The new serious games graduate program is the first of its kind in the U.S. The existing graduate program focuses more on developing games for entertainment. The new offering is in response to growing interest in serious games among faculty and students in recent years. Among academics, there’s

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It’s an opportunity for students to be in a more relatable environment, too. A student who wanted to design serious games could feel like the odd person out among peers focused on entertainment games, Whitehead says, since they’re not always as engaged in mainstream gamer culture or familiar with the design references to entertainment games. There’s already been such a positive response to the new program that UCSC is reopening its admission window. The program will be based >18

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significant interest in the potential to apply games “outside of the realm of mere entertainment” and use them to tackle societal challenges such as education and health, says Jim Whitehead, professor and chair of computational media at UCSC. “We are in this really fortunate position where a lot of schools that are starting to get into games are just initially trying to cover the bases, but we have the ability and luxury now to dive in and get really specialized and to have a degree program as focused as serious games,” he says.

In the era of debates over a Green New Deal, environmentally friendly California is due for an overhaul on reducing, reusing and recycling. The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors joined a call last month to support the creation of a statewide recycling commission that would make recommendations on addressing the cratering market for recyclable materials. And on Thursday, March 7, the local Integrated Waste Management Local Task Force will consider an ambitious agenda for tackling a range of plastic pollution problems—cigarette butts, plastic water bottles, microfibers—at the Watsonville City Council Chambers. On a larger scale, California’s city and county governments have officially gotten word that they have less than three years to implement curbside pick-up programs for compostable food scraps in order to meet the state’s greenhouse gas reduction targets. Government leaders around the state don’t have much of an idea how they’re going to implement that on the current timeline. Meanwhile, piles of

compostable cutlery and takeout containers are going to the dump everyday, due to the lack of any local curbside organics collection—as GT reported last year—and the amount of trash that Santa Cruz County residents are sending to the landfill is trending upward. In a liberal community where environmentalists fight over every yard of road widening, there has been relative silence on compostable scraps offgassing methane and carbon dioxide as local dumps fill up ahead of schedule. While Santa Cruz may be ahead of what many other California governments are doing, the county’s task force nonetheless has its work cut out for it. Godspeed, guys. It would be cliché to say that talk is cheap, but idle chit chat in this department is worth about as much as a used to-go container at a regional recycling facility. So yeah, absolutely worthless.

ASSEMBLY LINE County Supervisor Zach Friend is participating in the third Saving Democracy event, which is happening Thursday, March 21 at Cabrillo College, to talk bipartisanship and smart governance.

This is, of course, the same Zach Friend who makes frequent appearances on Fox News—and occasionally on other cable news networks—chiming in as a former Obama campaign spokesperson, serving up inoffensive sound bites and defending liberal values. Not to be outdone, Ryan Coonerty, one of Friend’s fellow supervisors, launched a podcast this past September. His show, “An Honorable Profession,” is going strong, with the supervisor interviewing politicians from around the country about running for office and government issues. Coonerty has interviewed everyone from Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf to South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, now a presidential candidate. What a clever way to learn the tricks of the trade! Nuz is not here to judge political climbers. We just want to state that it’s steadily gotten more obvious that these two ambitious rising stars are raising their profiles while they think hard about running for higher office— something that those who know the two of them personally will tell you in conversation, anyway. However, according to Nuz’s super-speculative crystal ball, the next rung on the political ladder may not open up for several years.

Congress doesn’t have term limits, and U.S. Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-Carmel) is only a couple of years into his legislative career. State Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel) is about to get termed out, although the popular former Resources Secretary John Laird is running for that spot. We hate to make anyone sound like a shoo-in, but it would be difficult for any Democrat on the planet (literally, any Dem not named Barack Obama) to give Laird a run for his money in this district. And Laird could hypothetically hold the seat through 2028. If nothing changes, the next opening might not come up until 2024, when Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) would term out. That’s still five years away, which could amount to a lot of podcast episodes and cable news interviews in the meantime. Of course, many things could happen between now and then. More would-be candidates will emerge over the next halfdecade, including some from Monterey County, but the new media landscape is already getting awfully crowded for any of you other strapping young hopefuls out there looking to carve out a niche. Maybe try Snapchat?


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NEWS ELEVATING THEIR GAME <16

AVENUE QUEUE Activists line up to show support or opposition to a plan to lift a Delaware Avenue parking ban. PHOTO: CEBE LOOMIS

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

CAMP OF APPROVAL <14

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Homeless advocates in the audience cheered the decision, which came despite concerns about public safety from neighbors and nearby businesses, as well as law enforcement officials, who said that the camp’s layout can make emergencyresponse efforts challenging. The council took four other votes that evening, including one to ask city staff to come back on March 12 with a complete list of possible locations for transitional encampments and safe parking programs. It directed staff to share information with the county, encouraging maximum collaboration between the two governments. Additionally, the council chose to ask staff for information on how its chosen direction works within the framework of the city charter. A proposal from Glover to establish a state of homeless emergency failed 5-2, with only Glover and Krohn supporting it. The impact of Glover’s suggested declaration was unclear, and it overlapped with a shelter crisis designation that was already in place. The council didn’t vote on a proposal from Glover to lift an overnight parking ban on Delaware Avenue. Many Westside neighbors came out against that idea, some of them holding up signs

that said “Don’t Trash Natural Bridges” and “Vote No on Delaware.” Krohn and Councilmember Donna Meyers both said they opposed the change. The meeting had a huge turnout, with two long lines wrapping around City Hall. In addition to homeless supporters and public safety advocates, the meeting drew immigration activists ready to talk about a recent raid, and union reps eager to talk contracts. Then there were supporters of Mayor Martine Watkins and of Councilmember Drew Glover, after the mayor had called Glover out for alleged sexism and bullying (see page 20) two weeks earlier. Voting didn’t begin until nearly midnight. The councilmembers piled one vote on after another. A few councilmembers introduced carefully wordsmithed amendments to try and improve on one another’s motions. As the pace of deliberation picked up, the members kept asking one another for clarification, and at one point, the council had two overlapping motions on the floor concurrently, prompting confusion about which should be withdrawn. Members of the council and staff looked quizzically at one another. During public comment, impassioned remarks veered away from the policies in play, as homeless individuals shared stories

about what it’s like to be homeless while pregnant or homeless as a parent. The mother of an 8-year-old said she suffers from Asperger Syndrome and doesn’t qualify for any mental health services. She worries that she may slip into her fifth bout of homelessness if her landlord raises her rent. Michael Spadafora, who owns Java Junction coffee house in Gateway Plaza, says the encampment has taken a toll on businesses around the corner. Petsmart employees have had their tires slashed and their cars broken into, he says. Spadafora says he feels bad for everyone living in the camp and would prefer a transitional encampment with a zero-tolerance policy. Nonetheless, he adds that he’s had to close his bathroom after repeated thrashings, and says that Ross has been hiring additional security guards and loss-prevention employees as well. “Those stores lose $500-1,000 a day through theft,” he says. “All of our employees are afraid to park in our lot. They’re afraid to go to work. They’re afraid that the customer they’re dealing with at the counter is gonna throw coffee on them. Does somebody have an answer why we’re the ones that have to deal with this? None of you do. The police officers do when they come, but it takes them 15 minutes to get there.”

at UCSC’s Silicon Valley Campus in Santa Clara, and span five academic quarters. Classes will cover game design, game technology, integrating subject-matter knowledge, measuring the efficacy of games, effective teamwork, and career planning. Students will also complete a capstone project. The five-quarter structure means students will finish around late March of their second year. That’s a good time for them to start looking for jobs in the games industry, Whitehead says, since it’s often when game companies ramp up hiring for new projects. They’ll enter what’s projected to be a rapidly growing industry, too. The worldwide market for game-based learning products and services is expected to reach $17 billion by 2023, according to research company Metaari. While the official track dedicated to serious games is new, UCSC faculty are familiar with the field. Kurniawan’s career includes more than 10 years working in serious games. She joined UCSC in 2007 with a focus on assistive technology, or software targeted toward helping people with disabilities. But soon after arriving on campus, she says she was contacted by medical professionals across the state about developing more playful ways to help people with disabilities perform daily tasks. Ideas ranged from games for rehabilitation of stroke survivors to games that would offer social-emotional learning for people with autism. “Gradually we moved into serious games at a time that the phrase was not commonly known,” Kurniawan says. One of the most important parts of developing serious games, like the “Project Butterfly” virtual reality game for stroke survivors, is drawing on the knowledge of people who understand the game’s real-world goal and what it takes to achieve it. In “Project Butterfly’s” case, that means talking to the patients, caregivers and medical professionals who all interact with the game. “Game designers and software application designers sometimes don’t really understand the importance, or even the type of outcomes that are


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desired,” Kurniawan says. The games are also usually meant to complement more conventional ways of performing a task, Kurniawan adds, so it’s important for designers to understand how the game ties into other activities. Some of the new master’s program courses will be aimed at training students to understand how to appropriately and accurately get user input. Students will not necessarily need a technical background to join the program, Kurniawan says. Faculty envision that students from different domains who want to understand more about games will enroll along with game designers who already understand the basics of games, but want to focus that knowledge on social good. The program’s speakers will include people from various backgrounds. Another aspect of serious games that’s more specialized than the rest of the gaming industry is evaluating outcomes, says Michael John, a teaching professor of computational media at UCSC. He was in the commercial games industry for more than 20 years before joining UCSC about four years ago. Measuring the effects of serious games is very difficult, John says. Usually, it involves looking at people who’ve played the game and people who haven’t and seeing how they differ. The “holy grail” of measuring outcomes in serious games, though, is that the game itself can report on a player’s progress, John says. With that challenging task in front of them, students will come out of the master’s program with an empirical mindset for developing games, or creating user experiences more broadly, then measuring their effectiveness. One of the most exciting things about teaching in existing gaming programs at UCSC is seeing the novelty of deas student are already bringing to serious games, John says. They often want to create games about political situations that are important to them, for example, or other personally relatable topics like women’s rights or understanding wildfire risks. They believe games can change the world, John says. Now it’s officially game on—for the greater good.

19


MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

20

CRINGE MOVEMENT

Allegations of bullying, sexism and Trumpian tactics rattle Santa Cruz City Hall and the local political scene BY JACOB PIERCE


GRITTY COUNCIL Mayor Martine Watkins (center) called

out councilmembers Chris Krohn and Drew Glover (third and fourth from left) at a Feb. 12 meeting for what some saw as sexist bullying behavior. PHOTO: CEBE LOOMIS

But before getting into the details, Mayor Martine Watkins reminded everyone that councilmembers need to be honest, open-minded and respectful of one another. “Perceptions that are unnamed and go unaddressed can further divide us,” she said, “and my hope is to bring us together.” Reading from a prepared

statement in front of her, Watkins glanced down occasionally while addressing the crowd. She said she felt that Councilmember Drew Glover had been trying to bully her into placing his own list of homeless-related items onto that evening’s agenda. His list included reopening city parks, overhauling overnight parking rules, creating

22>

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

T

he topic before the Santa Cruz City Council was homelessness. Neighbors of the burgeoning encampment behind the Ross department store had been calling on the city to close it. Meanwhile, $10 million in state funding for homelessness was set to come down the pike for local communities like Santa Cruz.

new transitional encampments, and reconsidering an additional 20-odd homeless ordinances. Glover had support on those items from fellow councilmembers Chris Krohn and Sandy Brown, but he submitted a rough draft of his ideas after the deadline. Watkins got the list on the day of her agenda review meeting, and the schedule for what would go on to be a 13-hour meeting was already full. So after the agenda got finalized without his items, Glover took Facebook and Twitter, writing a blog post titled “The Fierce Urgency of Now.” Glover accused his colleagues on the council of showing “a severe lack of urgency.” He called on his supporters to write Watkins and pressure her to prioritize the items he called for as soon as possible. The mayor stood her ground. As she spoke at the Tuesday, Feb. 12 meeting, Glover and Krohn whispered to each other. At one point, the audience guffawed at the notion that Glover tried to “smear” her character. Watkins told the crowd that it was her turn to speak. “I also understand,” Watkins continued, “that there are perceptions that my colleagues, both Councilmember Krohn and Councilmember Glover, are intentionally bullying me because I’m a woman.” Glover threw his head back and let out a heavy sigh in apparent disbelief. Watkins intentionally didn’t say whether or not she agreed with these perceptions, but the statement was clear. The tension comes a few months after Glover prevailed, along with new Vice Mayor Justin Cummings in a November election, where he had promised big changes. The new fourperson majority has the authority to implement policy shifts, but the procedural framework haven’t changed, nor has the makeup or size of Santa Cruz’s city staff. Former Santa Cruz Mayor Cynthia Chase supports Watkins’ decision to speak up, although she says that not everyone has been so encouraging. In the days following the meeting, Chase, who served alongside Krohn, heard a lot of second-guessing of Watkins, who was the top vote-

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<21 getter in the 2016 City Council election and works for county’s Office of Education. And it hasn’t sat well with her. “And this is supposed to be a liberal community? You don’t have to agree with Martine’s comments, but you can at least listen to her,” Chase says. “Would she actually say this if it wasn’t true? She has done nothing to show that she would make up a story.” Most local officials who have spoken about the issue in the weeks since the meeting have defended Watkins. But Glover says his feelings were hurt when Watkins singled him and Krohn out publicly. Glover felt blindsided by her comments, he says, but has tried to move past them. While he stops short of saying that he deserves an apology, he invokes Martin Luther King, saying that he’s forgiven Watkins for what she said. “For me one of the first steps is forgiveness, and I want to move forward in the centering of forgiveness,” he says. “Not only for

the mayor, but also for myself, to be as constructive and productive as possible.” Glover says that he’s an avowed feminist, noting that he served for more than a year on the Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women (CPVAW). Krohn appointed him in 2017. Glover also says he’s hoping to chat with Watkins about what he did wrong, and how to prevent incidents like this in the future. Watkins, who stands by her comments, says she has spoken with Glover, and that she would be happy to do so again.

BLAME SPIRAL Though Watkins has declined to go into detail about what specifically happened between her and the other councilmembers, some community members feel that a troubling pattern has begun to emerge. One councilmember has filed a formal complaint against Glover, who took office in early December, under the Respectful Workplace Conduct policy, which the council


CRINGE MOVEMENT reason, he argued, so that individual councilmembers can’t force their own ideas onto an agenda to the detriment of all other priorities. Then, the Sentinel ran a proWatkins op-ed from nine women— some of them deeply involved in politics, including local Democratic Women's Club President Carol Fuller, School Board Trustee Deb TracyProulx, Capitola City Councilmember Yvette Brooks, and Rachel Dann, a county analyst for Coonerty. (Brooks is a coworker of Watkins’ and also ran her 2016 council campaign.) Glover says members of the political establishment are only criticizing his behavior because he is “challenging the power structure” in local government. He draws a parallel to how critics at the national level have lobbed criticisms for newly elected democratic socialist U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York), who’s taken strong stances on taxes, immigration reform and climate change. “I’m disappointed in Supervisor Coonerty,” he says. “I’m disappointed in former Mayor Lane. I’m disappointed in Mike Rotkin, but that is what was to be expected when I came into this office.” Other politicians have weighed in, as well. Former Councilmember Richelle Noroyan, who lost a reelection bid in November, put up a Facebook post summarizing stories she had heard two years earlier. Noroyan says that during her time on the council, three feminist women requested that she not support Glover’s appointment to the Commission for the CPVAW. Each recounted stories of how he spoke to them in a harsh manner compared to how he addressed men, she says, but they asked her not to reveal their identities. Glover dismisses those claims as “vagueities.” “I find it hard to appreciate Richelle Noroyan’s criticism,” he says. In all, Glover says he enjoys being on the council, “minus all this unnecessary drama from people who are supposed to be ‘leaders in our community,’” he says, flexing his fingers to signify air quotes.

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adopted two years ago. GT made a request under California Public Records Act for complaints against councilmembers under the city’s Discrimination and Harassment Policy, approved by the council less than two years ago. Records Coordinator Kelly Thompson says in an email that all relevant records are currently in draft and note form and therefore not public. “The public interest in withholding the record clearly outweighs the public interest in disclosure due to the particular details and nature of the records,” she writes. Other individuals have stepped up to defend Glover. The Santa Cruz Sentinel ran a letter on Feb. 16 from former City Councilmember Micah Posner arguing that Watkins was wrong not to agendize Glover’s submission. “Instead of bringing up gender politics,” the mayor “should apologize for her error,” he wrote. “People of all genders make mistakes,” Posner explained. A couple of days later, the paper ran a response letter from District 3 county Supervisor Ryan Coonerty defending Watkins. “Micah Posner’s letter asking Mayor Watkins to apologize for saying she felt bullied by Councilmen Glover and Krohn is a disgrace,” wrote the two-time Santa Cruz mayor. He noted that it is the mayor’s job to set the agenda, and Coonerty felt that “she did her job well.” “More importantly, the mayor called out a pattern of bullying over the last months, not just related to political differences of the last week,” Coonerty wrote. “I’ve heard the same concerns from a dozen women who’ve watched or are involved with city government. Their concerns need to be respected.” Over the next few days, Councilmember Donna Meyers voiced her support for the mayor in a letter of her own, saying that Watkins was right to speak out. Former Mayor Don Lane and his wife Mary Howe wrote their own letter reminding readers that claims of sexism should be taken seriously. Former five-time Mayor Mike Rotkin reaffirmed that it’s the mayor’s job to set the agenda—and for good

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MEET AND GRIT Chase does not look back on certain aspects of her four-year run on the City Council—which ended in 2018—fondly. For one thing, she says she recalls Krohn putting constant pressure on her to do what he wanted, demanding long meetings with her every week and talking over her in City Council meetings. “His behavior was incredibly aggressive—very harassing, bullying—to try to get his own agenda to happen,” says Chase, acknowledging that she wasn’t always able to get items heard at Krohn’s preferred meetings. “For me, it’s never personal about those things. I’m always trying. Nobody gets special treatment. We’re trying to do the business of the city, not no one individual’s agenda.” She adds that the behavior of her former colleagues, Krohn included, was one reason she decided not to run for re-election last year. During her year as mayor in 2017, Chase remembers one time in particular, when she says Krohn asked to attend an agenda-review meeting. Agenda review is the when the mayor meets with staff to decide which items will be discussed at any given council meeting. The two argued about whether or not Krohn could join, with Chase explaining to him that it would it would be unfair to extend that courtesy to one councilmember without also

extending it to all members. When Krohn showed up at the meeting unannounced, Chase says she asked Krohn if the two of them could speak privately, and when he said no, she decided she had no choice but to cancel the meeting. Krohn says he doesn’t understand why those agenda-review rules are such a big deal, and that he sat in on an agenda-review meeting during his previous stint on the council many years prior. He pushed in recent years for a change to the agendizing rules, so that three councilmembers at a time would rotate in and out of the review meetings, but it failed. In general, Chase says she was surprised that Krohn was so pushy with her. She felt like the two of them shared progressive values and concerns about the homeless. The following year, her fellow councilmember David Terrazas took over as mayor, serving for one year just like she did. Chase felt that Krohn went far easier on Terrazas in council meetings than Krohn had been on her—interrupting him less and being less disruptive—even though he and Terrazas have less in common politically. Noroyan agrees. Chase says, in recent council meetings, that Krohn has been treating Watkins the way he treated her. Terrazas says he’s not sure that’s true. Although he generally enjoyed working with Krohn, he says he’s not sure that Krohn treated him any differently. Terrazas explains that he tried to handle any potential issues before council meetings got underway. “I did my best to and schedule one-on-one discussions and address his concerns to prevent them from spilling out into the public,” says Terrazas, who adds that he fully supports Watkins and says there should be an investigation into whether there was misconduct. Krohn says in an email that he’s “very sorry Mayor Chase felt disrespected,” and that he has no ill will toward her. He campaigned for her in 2014, he says, and had one of her signs on his lawn. Krohn says he appreciated that Terrazas made a point of reaching


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SEAT SPOT Internal disagreements aside, some of the homelessness proposals that Glover suggested are moving ahead with the blessing of the City Council (see page 14). Other items have stalled, due to lack of interest from other councilmembers. When it comes to gender equity, Noroyan, a former chair for the Santa Cruz County Democratic Party, says she hopes what transpired last month can be “a teachable moment” for Glover and Krohn. She believes that sometimes men on the political

left are so confident in the feminist politics they preach that they don’t take time to self-reflect and ask themselves if they are truly living up to the values they espouse. “They don’t ever question themselves, because, ‘Look, I’m so woke when it comes to women’s issues. I couldn’t possibly do those bad things,’” she says. That, she believes, is what’s going on with Glover and Krohn. Noroyan admits that she had her own mea culpa moments when she was on the council. She earned scorn, for instance, when she lost her temper at a 2016 Coastal Commission meeting and was asked to leave. She says she always tried to learn from her mistakes. Noroyan isn’t sure she sees a self-reflective approach in the way Glover and Krohn carry themselves, but she hopes they can do the same. Krohn writes that “of course” he believes he has the capacity to look back and grow from any missteps. Glover says that, at the end of the day, the commotion has served as little more than a distraction from the work that he and his colleagues want to get done to improve the lives of city residents. There seems to be consensus on that idea. Watkins says she wants to move forward as well. The City Council, she says, has work to do. “We have work to do on so many issues that are important for our city,” Watkins says. “I hope that this can allow us to move in a positive direction. There are so many possibilities. That’s the beauty of local governance. You can see and feel ways to have an impact.”

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out to him even when Krohn was in the minority, as he often was last year. Krohn adds that he hopes that he has been equally direct with each mayor, regardless of gender. Chase says that she wasn’t the only councilwoman who bore the brunt of Krohn’s hard-nosed tactics. She says she saw Krohn be “verbally abusive” to Councilmember Sandy Brown, one of his allies, pressuring her to vote the way he wanted her to. “I care for Sandy as a person, but we all witnessed it. It’s not a secret. But there’s not a lot we can do about it,” Chase says. “It’s very shitty to be in her position: ‘I wanted you to do something, and you didn’t. How dare you.’” Brown disagrees, telling GT she has no problem with Krohn’s behavior or political style. “There are different ways of communication,” says Brown, who adds that she misses Chase dearly. “Chris and Drew have a much more direct way of communication. That makes a lot of people uncomfortable. It’s never made me uncomfortable.”

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&

LITERATURE

MANY BOOKS, MANY LIVES Santa Cruz’s Carolyn Burke will read from her new book ‘Foursome’ on Wednesday, March 13, at Bookshop Santa Cruz. PHOTO: PAUL SCHRAUB

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Tangled Lives

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Local author Carolyn Burke’s latest book delves into the relationships that shaped 20th-century art BY CHRISTINA WATERS

T

he voluminous correspondence of four charismatic companions inspires Carolyn Burke’s latest forensic biography. Her impressive new book Foursome provides, among other things, a

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compelling portrait of American modernism in the making. The players here are no less than iconoclastic painter Georgia O’Keeffe and her mentor and lover, the domineering photographer Alfred Stieglitz, whose artistic circle—

MUSIC How the Crepe Place’s Western Wednesdays helped jumpstart the local country revival P30

Edward Steichen, Arthur Dove, John Marin, Marsden Hartley, Paul Strand, and Edward Weston—shaped the paradigm for American visual art. Burke’s exploration expands beyond the two better-known artists to include Strand, an acolyte of

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Stieglitz who went on to document proletariat struggles in Mexico and various emerging nations, as well as his wife Rebecca Salsbury, who for a decade was O’Keeffe’s close companion. (How close? Well, you’ll need to read the book to >28

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LITERATURE

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The book shows us a woman unafraid to love deeply without ever objectifying herself for a man’s approval.

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decide.) Yet it is O’Keeffe and Stieglitz who emerge most indelibly. Their mercurial, often maniacal devotion to their art and to each other practically leaps off Burke’s absorbing pages. Eager to establish himself as an arbiter of the American avant garde, Stieglitz initiated the influential 291 gallery on Fifth Avenue after the Great War. Stieglitz’s quest for new talent led him to O’Keeffe, a young school teacher. Upon first seeing her charcoal drawings in 1915, he exclaimed, “Finally, a woman on paper. A woman gives herself.” The moment when O’Keeffe and Stieglitz caught fire, both personally and professionally, came at the 1918 exhibition of his nude photographs. The sensual photographs of O’Keeffe’s torso and breasts created a media sensation. From then on, their careers became the stuff of gossip, praise and legend. The central core of Burke’s research, including key illustrations, chronicles the years from 1920-1934, during which the four companions wove a web of mutual flirtation, seduction, artistic experimentation, jealousy, betrayal, and fame. Burke quotes lavishly from what must have been a blizzard of letters among the four, as well as their other paramours. Wary of being psychoanalyzed by male critics, O’Keeffe hoped for a female interpreter, and in the late ’20s approached Mabel Dodge, whose artist colony at Taos had hosted D.H. Lawrence, Carl Jung and Henry Miller. “I feel there is something unexplored about women that only a woman can explore,” O’Keeffe wrote to Dodge. Taos enchanted both O’Keeffe and Salsbury, who drove out to New Mexico together in the spring of 1929. “We have had a beautiful relationship together, and feel the need of nobody else,” Beck wrote to her husband. “I am entirely myself in her company.” Over the course of endless

transformative discoveries, O’Keeffe’s work became internationally famous. The shadow of Stieglitz was long indeed, but not long enough to contain the willful and promiscuous O’Keeffe, whose genius was matched by her stunning independence. She was the first woman to have a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, in 1946. As Stieglitz—23 years her senior—grew crusty and narcissistic, O’Keeffe reinvented herself and her interests in New Mexico, eventually moving there permanently while Stieglitz found new female acolytes to tend his hearth and other needs. But as the letters show, their love was strong and passionate to the very end of Stieglitz’s life in 1946 at the age of 81. O’Keeffe flourished for another 40 years as a painter, proto-feminist, and connoisseur of the southwest. Her own fame ebbed and flowed, but what emerges most vibrantly in Burke’s text is O’Keeffe’s courage in rejecting the status quo. The book shows us a woman unafraid to love deeply without ever objectifying herself for a man’s approval—a stunning achievement in any era. While we never catch as full a glimpse of Salsbury, Burke’s pages show her as a woman in pursuit of elusive accomplishment. Similarly, the methodical Strand seems to have stultified true fulfillment. Stieglitz emerges as a man of great power and influence, yet Foursome’s letters and Burke’s analysis show him to be an unlikeable neurotic and controlling keeper of his own legacy. The courageous biographer must take her subjects—flaws, strengths and all—and shape them into fleshand-blood moments of history. Burke succeeds brilliantly. Carolyn Burke will read from and sign her new book ‘Foursome’ at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, March 13, at Bookshop Santa Cruz, bookshopsantacruz.com/ carolynburke.


JeWel theatre CoMPanY PRESENTS

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March 20 – April 14, 2019 London and Broadway were taken by WEDS. THURS. FRI. SAT. SUN. storm by this exceptional biographical Mar 20 Mar 21 Mar 23 Mar 22 Mar 24 2pm 8pm 7:30pm 7:30pm 2pm drama about a man who broke too (Opening) (Preview) (Preview) 8pm many codes: the eccentric genius Alan Mar 28 Mar 30 Mar 29 Mar 31 2pm Turing who played a major role in winning 7:30pm 8pm 2pm (Talk-Back) 8pm World War II and who was just named (Feb Apr 4 Apr 5 Apr 6 Apr 7 2019) ‘The Greatest Person of the 20th Century’ 7:30pm 8pm 8pm 2pm (Talk-Back) by the BBC. Turing broke the complex German Apr 11 code called Enigma, enabling allied forces to Apr 12 Apr 13 Apr 14 7:30pm 8pm 8pm 2pm foresee German maneuvers. Since his work was (Talk-Back) classified top secret for years after the war, no one knew how much was owed to Turing for his code work (and for inspiring modern computing in the process) when he was put on trial and convicted for breaking another code – the taboo of homosexuality. NY actor David Arrow (previously seen in WOMAN IN MIND and ENTER THE GUARDSMAN), fresh from his Off-Broadway run of KENNEDY: BOBBY’S LAST CRUSADE, plays Alan Turing in this poignant play.

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MUSIC

HOW THE WEDNESDAYS WERE WON The house band for Western Wednesdays at the Crepe Place.

Go Western MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

The Crepe Place’s Western Wednesdays have been a key piece of the local country wave BY AARON CARNES

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O

ver the past decade, Santa Cruz has fostered a healthy Americana scene. But more recently, things have taken an unexpected turn toward the traditional with a wave of popular country and western artists. We have newer acts like the Carolyn Sills Combo, Miss Lonely Hearts, Jesse Daniel, and McCoy Tyler, as well as longtime locals like Patti Maxine and Charlie Wallace that are increasingly in demand. All of this local talent and public interest dramatically intersects at the Crepe Place’s monthly country and western series Western Wednesdays, which on March 13 will

begin its fifth year. The series was the brainchild of Mischa Gasch, who saw something similar up in Seattle when his band Miss Lonely Hearts was on tour. “I was like, ‘Oh man, I wish we had something like that in Santa Cruz. Because we also have a great music scene, and a lot of people loving this type of music,” Gasch says. “I don’t want to say I started old-time country music or honky-tonk music in Santa Cruz. It was already there. I just wanted to build a scene.” Western Wednesdays helped to connect these bands with a local audience, and give fans a recurring showcase at which to see them.

Gasch worked to bring the culture of country and western to Santa Cruz by encouraging people to come dressed in their finest cowboy gear and ready to do some Texas two-step dance moves. It took a while to catch on, but these days, it’s a whole other world at Western Wednesdays, even when compared to country shows at other venues. “You don’t just show up and stand in the back. People participate. You get dressed up, you bring a date, you dance,” says Carolyn Sills, who’s played several Western Wednesdays, including every show in the event’s third year as part of the backing band. “It’s how you would imagine a barn

dance back in the day—everyone looked forward to the weekly dance at the town center. This kind of captured that old-school vibe.” By year three, Gasch noticed that the event was really coming together. Shows were packed. People were coming every month, dressed up and dancing, creating a strong community vibe. “It helps with the dancing when you know each other already. It started to feel like a family,” Gasch says. “I don't think we are excluding anyone. It feels really welcoming. I just love going there and seeing familiar faces.” Gasch did everything in his power to promote the event: radio ads, posters all over town. He offered discounted drinks and ticket prices to those who wore cowboy boots. But the biggest hurdle was getting everyone to dance. “I felt like everyone was really close to wanting to dance, but didn’t know how,” Gasch says. His wife stepped up and started offering two-step dance classes, which also happen a few times a year at bigger shows at Moe’s Alley and Flynn’s. It all added to the momentum of an old-timey country music scene in town. “Western Wednesdays, and Mike Lewinski started to do old-time music where you could square dance, which he did last year at the Blue Lagoon, all are smaller parts of this bigger picture,” says Gasch. “It’s growing and growing.” There are some phenomenal dancers that come out to Western Wednesdays, meaning the band on stage is not the only show. But even if people don’t get lessons, Gasch encourages them to come out and be brave. He feels like it’s something anyone can do. “Part of why I like that kind of dance so much is because it’s really easy. I’m able to teach it to a person that has never danced before. But you can also get better,” Gasch says. “It’s fun on all kinds of levels.” The next Western Wednesday will be held at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, March 13, and feature On The Tree. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $10 door/$7 with cowboy boots. 429-6994.


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CALENDAR

GREEN FIX

See hundreds more events at santacruz. com.

WATER EDUCATION SERIES

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The Santa Margarita Groundwater Agency, formed in 2017 to comply with California’s new Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, is hosting the last of their three-part educational series to engage and inform all people who rely on the water supply from the Santa Margarita Groundwater Basin. The Santa Margarita Groundwater Basin is the major water source for the San Lorenzo Valley, Scotts Valley and Santa Cruz. The topic is “Managing Groundwater: How Can We Prepare for an Uncertain Future?” Erik Ekdahl of the State Water Resources Control Board will give the keynote. Local water agency leaders will also present an interactive water management “myth-busting” exercise, and attendees will try their hand at water management planning themselves.

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Free calendar listings in print and online are available for community events. Listings show up online within 24 hours. Submissions of free events and those $15 or less received by Thursday at noon, six days prior to the Good Times publication date, will be prioritized for print (space available). All listings must specify a day, start time, location and price (or ‘free’ if applicable). Listings can be set to repeat every week or month, and can be edited by the poster as needed. Ongoing events must be updated quarterly. It is the responsibility of the person submitting an event to cancel or modify the listing. Register at our website at santacruz.com in order to SUBMIT EVENTS ONLINE. E-mail calendar@goodtimes.sc or call 458.1100 with any questions.

WEDNESDAY 3/6 ARTS FRIENDS OF THE SCPL BOOKSTORE SALE EVERY DAY The Friends of the Santa Cruz Public Libraries Bookstore sells books used & nearly new at a fraction of the cost you’d usually pay for them. We have all types of books, including classics, fiction, mysteries, biographies, local interest, art books, science books, nature, cookbooks, some reference books, children’s and young adult books, holiday books and more. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Santa Cruz Public Library, 240 Church St., Santa Cruz. fscpl.org.

PATHWAYS THROUGH OUR PARKS EXHIBITION On exhibition will be a

9 a.m. Saturday, March 9. Felton Community Hall, 6191 Hwy. 9, Felton. 335-5621. Free.

selection of artwork from artist Ann Thiermann’s series of pastel and acrylic paintings. This series invites the viewer to linger visually over the flora and fauna along the pathways of our local parks. Noon-4 p.m. San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. slvmuseum.com. Free.

ART SEEN

QUESTION BRIDGE: BLACK MALES Question Bridge: Black Males by artists Chris Johnson and Hank Willis Thomas, in collaboration with Bayeté Ross Smith and Kamal Sinclair, is an innovative, widely exhibited multimedia project that uses video to facilitate a conversation among Black men from 12 cities across the United States. Noon. Mary Porter Senson Art Gallery, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. ias.ucsc.edu. Free.

THE REAL IRISH COMEDY FEST: SANTA CRUZ Get St. Patrick’s Day off to a real traditional start—no cartoon leprechauns here. Come get a blast of blarney and Irish laughter just in time for the big day. The Real Irish Comedy Fest showcases the best blend of Irish comedic talent and is coming to Santa Cruz for one night only. Yes, accents are included, so you know it’s real. 7:30 p.m. Sunday, March 10. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz. 427-2227, kuumbwajazz.org. $20.

BORDERBUS: A COMMUNITY CONVERSATION ABOUT MIGRATION, ART AND SOCIAL JUSTICE Join recent U.S. Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera and Santa Cruz book artist Felicia Rice as they explore the powerful role that poetry and art can play in conversations about the pressing issues of immigration, belonging and home. 6:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. guides. library.ucsc.edu. Free.

CLASSES ROBO SUMO @ BOULDER CREEK Try your hand at the not-so-ancient-art of building Sumo wrestling robots using Lego

FRIDAY 3/8 ‘ARMISTICE100 SANTA CRUZ’ Local longtime videographer LB Johnson will be showing her video Armistice100 Santa Cruz to benefit local veteran groups and the Center for Spiritual Living. Armistice100 Santa Cruz documents the efforts of Santa Cruz Veterans For Peace Chapter 11, Armistice100 Santa Cruz and VFW Post 5888 to honor the 100th anniversary of Armistice Day last November. Johnson has worked with veterans-turned-peacemakers for 35 years, making videos of talks, concerts, protests, and marches. She documented Marines returning to Vietnam after 20 years in 1989 and a Santa Cruz mayor’s delegation to Vietnam in 1995. 7 p.m. The Center for Spiritual Living, 1818 Felt St., Santa Cruz. $10-$20.

Mindstorms. Will work in groups to build a competition robot to battle on the last day of class. Prerequisite of previous participation in a robo series program or previous Lego robotic experience. Pre-registration required. 2:30-4 p.m. Boulder Creek Library, 13390

West Park Ave., Boulder Creek. Santacruzpl. libcal.com. Free.

PEMA CHÖDRON CONVERSATIONS n this casual study group, we will start getting our meditational feet wet

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events.ucsc.edu

MARCH 2019

JOIN US AS W E SHA RE THE EXCIT EMENT OF LE ARNING

Leonardo Art & Science Evening Rendezvous

ONGOING EVENTS

MARCH 12, 7PM RIO THEATRE FREE ADMISSION

Pictures at an Exhibition THROUGH MARCH 9 PORTER FACULTY GALLERY FREE ADMISSION

Featuring poet Ronaldo Wilson, filmmaker Jennifer Maytorena Taylor, astrophysicist Alexie Leauthaud, and theater director Marianne Weems. Leonardo Art & Science Evening Rendezvous (LASER) is an international program bringing artists, scientists, and scholars together.

Radical Monarchs: Film Screening & Panel Q&A MARCH 7, 6:30PM CULTURAL CENTER AT MERRILL COLLEGE FREE ADMISSION

The Radical Monarchs create opportunities for young girls of color to form sisterhood, celebrate their identities, and contribute to their communities. Panel discussion with co-founders Anayvette Martinez and Marilyn Hollinquest.

Astronomy on Tap: Death in the Universe MARCH 7, 6:30PM NEW BOHEMIA BREWING COMPANY FREE ADMISSION

Come hear amazing discoveries about planets, galaxies, stars, and our own Universe. Dr. Jeffrey Silverman will talk about the various ways humanity can be struck down by things from space, and graduate student Viraj Pandya will talk about how entire galaxies die.

dens. Come watch or photograph their amazing acrobatics and elegant plumage.

Grad Slam MARCH 8, 5:30–8PM KUUMBWA JAZZ CENTER FREE ADMISSION

Graduate students distill years of academic research into compelling and accessible three-minute lightning talks conveying the impact of their work.

Birding at Dawn MARCH 8–10, 6–9AM UC SANTA CRUZ ARBORETUM & BOTANIC GARDEN $10–$15/PERSON

Allen’s Hummingbirds have returned to breed and are buzzing around the gar-

LE ARN MORE AT

The Bay Area’s premier mariachi ensemble, Mariachi Mexicanisimo de Raymundo Coronado, presents the vibrant music of Mexico. Also includes the new student ensemble, Mariachi Eterno de UCSC.

Winter Drop-In Figure Drawing

MARCH 9, 9:30AM COWELL RANCH HAY BARN $5–$40/PERSON

Learn about the joys of keeping chickens in this workshop led by UC Master Gardener Candice McLaren. Following the workshop, take an optional stroll up to the UCSC Farm to visit the chickens in the Life Lab garden.

Santa Cruz Pickwick Club Reads Barnaby Rudge MARCH 10, 2–4PM SANTA CRUZ DOWNTOWN PUBLIC LIBRARY FREE ADMISSION

The Pickwick Book Club is a community of local bookworms who meet monthly to discuss a 19th-century novel, currently Charles Dickens’s Barnaby Rudge. Guest speaker is Bruce Thompson, lecturer of history at UCSC.

events.ucsc.edu

WEDNESDAYS THROUGH MARCH 13, 7–9PM UCSC ART DEPARTMENT M-101 FREE ADMISSION

Celebrating the Music of Charles Mingus MARCH 10, 7:30PM MUSIC CENTER RECITAL HALL $4–$10/PERSON

Directed by Charles Hamilton, the Jazz Big Band presents their winter quarter concert, “Celebrating the Music of Charles Mingus,” featuring Harley White, Sr., and Dr. Teodross Avery, tenor sax.

Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism MARCH 12, 7PM KRESGE TOWN HALL FREE ADMISSION

Dr. Safiya Umoja Noble discusses her best-selling book on racist and sexist algorithmic bias in commercial search engines.

Drop-In Figure Drawing provides a live model and a room monitor. There is no formal lesson; the sessions are free and open to the public. Only dry media allowed.

UPCOMING EVENTS MARCH 15

Open Studios MARCH 16

A Conversation with YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki MARCH 16

The Fusion of Art & Physics MARCH 16

UCSC Chamber Singers MARCH 23

Global Oceans Gala

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

A moving play set during the late Victorian era and dawn of the electrical age, this lively comedy, directed by student Sequoia Schirmer, explores how deeply human connections matter.

MARCH 10, 3PM MUSIC CENTER RECITAL HALL $4–$10/PERSON

Chix in the City, Hens in the Hood

In the Next Room (or the vibrator play) MAR 7–10, TH–SAT 7:30PM, SUN 3PM EXPERIMENTAL THEATER ADULT CONTENT, $8–$18/PERSON

Music of Mexico— El Mariachi

Professor Emeritus Eli Hollander has collected digital photographs from museums around the United States showing people relating to the art and each other.

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CALENDAR 12:30 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Rd., Soquel. landofmedicinebuddha. org. $25/$5.

FOOD & WINE DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ FARMERS MARKET In addition to a large variety of farm products, this market offers a great selection of local artisan foodstuffs, delicious baked goods and lots of options for lunch and dinner. 1-6 p.m. Cedar and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. 454-0566.

HEALTH B12 HAPPY HOUR Come and get your

SATURDAY 3/9 ESTUARY RESTORATION AT THE SAN LORENZO Historically, the San Lorenzo River has been home to abundant populations of coho salmon and steelhead trout. However, as an urban stream it has also seen significant land-use change that has highly impacted these species’ numbers. Join the California Conservation Corps and local environmental volunteers in weeding and replanting to reinforce stream banks and mitigate erosion at Mike Park, which will improve water quality in the San Lorenzo. Volunteers will remove weed suppression and invasive plants and weeds, spread mulch and plant native botanicals. All ages are welcome; don’t forget to bring closed-toed shoes, gardening gloves, water in a reusable bottle, and snacks. RSVP email or call required.

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mike Fox Park, 225 San Lorenzo Blvd., Santa Cruz. 420-3931, lindsay.hansen@noaa.gov. Free.

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by following a series of renowned Tibetan Buddhist teacher and writer Pema Chodrön’s user-friendly, but revealing videos and meditations, all designed to help us break free of old habits and negative patterns. Join Denice Everham, a long-time meditation teacher and brain fitness coach, for teachings and discussion. 6 p.m. Wisdom Center of Santa Cruz, 740 Front St. #155, Santa Cruz. wisdomcentersc.org. $10.

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HOMESCHOOL DAY AT THE SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER Explore the Seymour Marine Discovery Center’s incredible marine ecosystems through live animal investigations and activities designed especially for homeschool students and families. 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter.ucsc. edu/homeschool-day.

WRITE THROUGH IT: CREATIVE WRITING CLASS In a safe and fun setting,

QI GONG Qi Gong (pronounced Chee

seniors will utilize journaling as the mode for self-discovery leading to poetry, personal essays and other useful in creating memoirs. Facilitated by published poet and author, Ellen Hart, MA.E. 9:30-11 a.m. Louden Nelson Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. cityofsantacruz.com. Donation/$4.

Gohng) is an ancient Chinese healing art that has been used for centuries to balance one’s internal body energy and to promote good health. This method of internal energy work is a fantastic and easy practice that brings physical happiness, mental calm and a general sense of well-being. 11:30 a.m.-

Happy Hour B12 shot. Your body needs B12 to create energy and is not well absorbed from the diet or in capsule form. Everyone can benefit from a B12 shot. After B12 injections many patients feel a natural boost in energy. 3-6 p.m. Santa Cruz Naturopathic Medical Center, 736 Chestnut St., Santa Cruz. 477-1377 or scnmc.com. $29/$17.

B12 HAPPY HOUR B12 deficiencies are common, as the vitamin is used up by stress, causing fatigue, depression, anxiety, insomnia and more. Not well absorbed in the gut, B12 injections can be effective in helping to support energy, mood, sleep, immunity, metabolism and stress resilience. Come get a discounted shot from 1:30-4:30 p.m. Thrive Natural Medicine, 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. thrivenatmed.com/b12-injections or 515-8699. $15.

THURSDAY 3/7 ARTS PATHWAYS THROUGH OUR PARKS EXHIBITION On exhibition will be a selection of artwork from artist Ann Thiermann’s series of pastel and acrylic paintings. This series invites the viewer to linger visually over the flora and fauna along the pathways of our local parks. Noon-4 p.m. San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. slvmuseum.com. Free.

CLASSES COMMUNITY PILATES CLASS Community Pilates class led by Pilates instructor Jennifer Balboni. Drop-in any Tuesday or Thursday for a fun and challenging 60-minute, core-based flowing strength class. Bring your own mat. 10 a.m. Temple Beth El, 3055 Porter Gulch Rd., Aptos. tbeaptos.org. Free.

POWER VINYASA FLOW YOGA Surf your edge in this energetic, inspired yoga flow designed to help you dive deep into your personal power. Instructor Tim Brattan will lead you through a fun sequence to move, sweat, smile, detox, discover, focus and play on the mat. Designed for all levels, you’ll build strength, endurance, flexibility, balance and concentration. 5-6:15 p.m. DiviniTree Yoga and Arts Studio, 1043-B Water St., Santa Cruz. oneyoga.org.

TRIPLE P PARENTING CLASSES Triple P Parenting Classes for domestic violence, sexual assault and human trafficking survivors. Gain the tools to successfully parent and learn from others in a group setting. Led by a professional facilitator. Workshops will be provided in Spanish and held in our Watsonville office. Childcare is provided. 6-8 p.m. Monarch Services, 1509 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. monarchscc. org. Free. GIRLS WHO CODE: SESSION A Girls Who Code (GWC) is a program meant to bridge the gender gap in the field of tech. In Session A, 3-5th grade girls will build sisterhood, read and reflect on the Girls Who Code book, and complete various challenges over a 10-week course. Participants must attend all classes. Space is limited and attendees must register. 3-4 p.m. Scotts Valley Library, 251 Kings Village Rd., Scotts Valley. santacruzpl.libcal.com. Free. TRIYOGA CLASS TriYoga flows are presented with personalized guided alignment assistance. 9:30 a.m. TriYoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. triyoga-santacruz.com. $15.

QUESTION BRIDGE: BLACK MALES Question Bridge: Black Males by artists

OUTDOOR

Chris Johnson and Hank Willis Thomas, in collaboration with Bayeté Ross Smith and Kamal Sinclair, is an innovative, widely exhibited multimedia project that uses video to facilitate a conversation among Black men from 12 cities across the United States. Noon. Mary Porter Senson Art Gallery, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. ias.ucsc.edu. Free.

YOUNGER LAGOON RESERVE TOUR This 90-minute, behind-the-scenes hiking tour takes visitors into Younger Lagoon Reserve adjacent to the Seymour Marine Discovery Center. Part of the University of California Natural Reserve System, Younger Lagoon Reserve contains diverse coastal habitat and is home to birds of prey, >36


In Santa Cruz

Spring Session Mar 25 – May 30 Children & Adult group French classes Farm to Table | Sustainably Harvested | Wild Caught Organic Ingredients | Locally sourced

6275 Hwy 9, Felton | 831.335.2800 | flynnscabaret.com

Call 305-877-2938 delphine.houssin@afscv.org

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

COME CHECK OUT OUR GREAT NEW MENU!

Entrées starting at $16 including salad bar & sides – A la carte available

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CALENDAR <35 migrating sea birds, bobcats, and

other wildlife. 10:30 a.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter.ucsc.edu.

FRIDAY 3/8 ARTS QUESTION BRIDGE: BLACK MALES Question Bridge: Black Males by artists

for creating ease and skillful response in our daily life. The program begins with meditation followed by a dharma talk by one of our teachers: Rev. Daijaku Kinst or Rev. Shinshu Roberts. Talks are for both the beginner as well as the advanced practitioner. 8:30 a.m. Ocean Gate Zen, 920 41st Ave. Suite F, Santa Cruz. oceangatezen. org. Free.

COACHING-CENTERED VISION BOARD WORKSHOP Join Sue Seely, CCHT, CLC,

along in an environment that is completely accepting of all diverse voices with the goal of having a good time! No experience necessary, just sing-along and have fun. 1 p.m. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. cityofsantacruz.com. Donation/$2.

in a fun, creative, and coaching-centered Vision Board Workshop for women at her Jewel Box home office in beautiful CapitolaBy-The-Sea. 10 a.m. Address provided upon registration. coachsueseely@gmail.com or coachsueseely.com/vision-board-workshop. $80.

THE INK THAT BINDS US FEATURES DARIUS SIMPSON Wylder Space and

SATURDAY 3/9

Tiny House Productions are building community with nourishing food, drinks and thoughtful expression every other Friday. Kick off the weekend with an artist that will rock you to your core. 6:30 p.m. Tiny House Productions, 9339 Mill St., Ben Lomond. thetinyhouseproductions.com. $10.

ARTS

GALS AND THE GLOBAL GOALS: WOMEN’S ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT All-

FOOD & WINE WATSONVILLE FARMERS MARKET This market is in the heart of the famously bountiful Pajaro Valley. Peaceful and family-oriented, the Latino heritage of this community gives this market a “mercado” feel. 2-7 p.m. 200 Main St., Watsonville.

FOOD FROM THE HEART, BENEFITING MEALS ON WHEELS Please join us MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Embrace your Inner Goddess through this sensuous, sacred, Divinely Feminine dance form. Original choreography by Yola. Learn body isolation, taxim undulations, belly rolls, floor work, drum solo, veil technique, finger cymbal rhythms and sword work. Bring a scarf to tie around your hips. 6:30-7:45 p.m. Te Hau Nui Dance Studio, 924 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. tehaunuidance.com.

SINGING FROM THE HEART Sing

Chris Johnson and Hank Willis Thomas, in collaboration with Bayeté Ross Smith and Kamal Sinclair, is an innovative, widely exhibited multimedia project that uses video to facilitate a conversation among Black men from 12 cities across the United States. Noon. Mary Porter Senson Art Gallery, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. ias.ucsc.edu. Free.

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ART OF BELLYDANCE WITH YOLA

at the 6th annual Food From the Heart event, benefiting Meals on Wheels for Santa Cruz County. This popular event will feature a tasting room by local vendors, a catered lunch, a live auction, and special award presentations. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Chaminade Resort and Spa, 1 Chaminade Lane, Santa Cruz. communitybridges.org/ events. $65.

MUSIC TAHITIAN DANCE: ALL LEVELS Learn the exciting, aerobic ori Tahiti with Yola and Siaosi. Build a solid foundation in Tahitian dance. This grounded form emphasizes strong, fast hip circles and accents. Learn to dance solo and with a group. Original choreography by Yola. 5:15 p.m. Te Hau Nui Dance Studio, 924 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. tehaunuidance.com.

SIDE HUSTLE COMEDY WITH JOE KWACZALA Joe Kwaczala (Who Cares About the Rock Hall Podcast) just shot his Comedy Central Half Hour! See him live in Santa Cruz before it airs! With the hilarious Maggie Maye (Conan) & Irene Tu (Viceland). 18+. 8 p.m. East Cliff Brewing, 21517 E Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. sidehustlesantacruz.com. $12.

HUMMUS & HOMICIDE - MAYHEM ON THE MENU Dinner theater patrons become the audience for the final event of the prestigious International Chef Kitchen Yearly competition (the ICKY’s). But beware: the steaks are high for the competitors, and in order to win they may not even stop at murder. 5:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Food Lounge, 1001 Center St., Santa Cruz. elfempire.com. $55.

CLASSES MYSTERIES OF WAX BATIK CLASSES Join Open Studios artist, Alexandra Sanders aka LadyWhoLovesBirds, for a series of BATIK classes using the SERTI Method of wax application (outline resist technique) on cotton and silk. Take one class or take many. At each class, students will complete one BATIK suitable for framing. 11 a.m. LadyWhoLovesBirds Studio, 637 Columbia St., Santa Cruz. ladywholovesbirds.com. $260/$75.

COME AS YOU ARE ZEN This is an informal Saturday morning program focused on investigating Buddhist teachings

you-can-eat soup luncheon, workshop on women and the Sustainable Development Goals, speakers and/or films, silent auction, music, and fun. 1-4 p.m. Resource Center for Nonviolence, 612 Ocean St., Santa Cruz. rcnv.org. Free.

FOOD & WINE APTOS FARMERS MARKET AT CABRILLO COLLEGE Voted Good Times best farmers market in Santa Cruz County. With more than 90 vendors, the Aptos Farmers Market offers an unmatched selection of locally-grown produce and specialty foods. 8 a.m.-noon, Saturdays, Cabrillo College. montereybayfarmers.org or akeller@montereybayfarmers.org. Free.

WESTSIDE FARMERS MARKET The Westside Farmers Market takes place every week at the corner of Highway 1 and Western Drive, situated on the northern edge of Santa Cruz’s greenbelt. This market serves the communities of the west-end of Santa Cruz, including Bonny Doon, North Coast, UCSC Campus and is a short trip from downtown. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mission Street and Western Drive, Santa Cruz. 454-0566.

HEALTH B12 HAPPY HOUR Come and get your Happy Hour B12 shot. Your body needs B12 to create energy and is not well absorbed from the diet or in capsule form. Everyone can benefit from a B12 shot! After B12 injections many patients feel a natural boost in energy. 10 a.m.-noon. Santa Cruz

Naturopathic Medical Center, 736 Chestnut St., Santa Cruz. 477-1377 or scnmc.com. $29/$17.

VOLUNTEER VOLUNTEER TO FEED THE HUNGRY WITH FOOD NOT BOMBS We need your help preparing and sharing vegan meals every Saturday and Sunday. We cook at 418 Front St. at 12:30 p.m. We share food from 4 -6 p.m. at the Post Office, 850 Front St. Santa Cruz. 1-800-884-1136.

ESTUARY RESTORATION VOLUNTEER EVENT AT THE SAN LORENZO RIVER Join The Watershed Stewards Program and the City of Santa Cruz for a great day of service restoring the banks of the San Lorenzo River. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mike Fox Park, 225 San Lorenzo Blvd., Santa Cruz. facebook.com/events/249151572475757. Free.

SUNDAY 3/10 ARTS SUNDAY SEASIDE CRAFTS Make it and take it! Come create and take home a fun souvenir, an activity for the whole family to share. Join the hands-on fun in the crafts room every Sunday. 1-3 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter.ucsc.edu. QUESTION BRIDGE: BLACK MALES Question Bridge: Black Males by artists Chris Johnson and Hank Willis Thomas, in collaboration with Bayeté Ross Smith and Kamal Sinclair, is an innovative, widely exhibited multimedia project that uses video to facilitate a conversation among Black men from 12 cities across the United States. Noon. Mary Porter Senson Art Gallery, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. ias.ucsc.edu. Free.

DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ ANTIQUE STREET FAIRE This open-air vintage and antique faire hosts dozens of vendors offering one-of-a-kind unique treasures. Clothing, jewelry and other accessories, indoor/outdoor decor and furniture, art, textiles, military, tools, and more. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Pacific Avenue and Lincoln Street, Santa Cruz.

MUSIC THE ORCHESTRA MOVES - FAMILY CONCERT By any definition, music moves. Melody, rhythm and harmony all shift,


CALENDAR develop and transform. When an orchestra plays for us, we may notice more than one kind of movement. On the outside, we can hear sounds move as the musicians alter their pitches, rhythms and dynamics. 2 p.m. Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium, 307 Church St., Santa Cruz. santacruzsymphony.org. $19.50/$11.50.

Feel free to practice in a chair if you like, or sit and meditate through part or all of the class. Beautiful bamboo floors, plants and light in a lovely Zen space. 10:30-11:30 a.m. Mark Stephens Yoga, 1010 Fair Ave. Suite C, Santa Cruz. yogawithirene.com. $10.

JAMES ILGENFRITZ Composer/bassist

This six-week series of classes introduces you to mindfulness meditation practices. Because the class curriculum builds on itself, please begin the course no later than week three (Monday, March 11). Registration is recommended. 6:30-8 p.m. Santa Cruz Public Library, 240 Church St., Santa Cruz. santacruzpl.libcal.com. Free.

James Ilgenfritz (NYC) leads an evening of solo and duo works, with a program straddling the worlds of composition and free improvisation, including an improvising duo with Bay Area oboist Kyle Bruckmann. 8 p.m. Wind River, 321 Wild Way, Santa Cruz. indexical.org/events/2019-03-10-jamesilgenfritz. 20/$10.

OUTDOORS YOUNGER LAGOON RESERVE TOUR This 90-minute, behind-the-scenes hiking tour takes visitors into Younger Lagoon Reserve adjacent to the Seymour Marine Discovery Center. Part of the University of California Natural Reserve System, Younger Lagoon Reserve contains diverse coastal habitat and is home to birds of prey, migrating sea birds, bobcats, and other wildlife. 10:30 a.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter.ucsc.edu.

MONDAY 3/11

INTRODUCTION TO MINDFULNESS: LETTING BE WITH KIND AWARENESS

TUESDAY 3/5 CLASSES HOMEWORK HELP Drop-in homework help for students through grade 12. 3-5 p.m. Various locations throughout the county. santacruzpl.org. Free.

COMMUNITY PILATES CLASS Community Pilates class led by Pilates instructor Jennifer Balboni. Drop-in any Tuesday or Thursday for a fun and challenging 60-minute, core-based flowing strength class. Bring your own mat. 10 a.m. Temple Beth El, 3055 Porter Gulch Rd., Aptos. tbeaptos.org. Free.

GROUPS

POETRY OPEN MIC A project of the

TRANSGENDER SUPPORT GROUP Our moderated, open group allows everyone to share their experiences and meet others in friendly surroundings. All transgender folks are welcome to attend. We meet the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each month. 7:30-9:30 p.m. The Diversity Center, 1117 Ocean St., Santa Cruz. diversitycenter.org.

Legendary Collective, the weekly Santa Cruz Word Church poetry open mic is a community of local writers who recognize the power of spoken word. They gather every Monday for a community writing workshop, then host a 15-slot open mic followed by a different featured poet each week. 4 p.m. Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. santacruzmah.org. Free.

CLASSES THICH NHAT HANH MEDITATION Santa Cruz Heart Sangha is a meditation group in the Thich Nhat Hanh tradition that meets every Monday. We welcome all to spend with us an hour in silent sitting and walking meditation followed by Dharma sharing. 7-8:45 p.m. Santa Cruz Zen Center, 113 School St., Santa Cruz. Free.

GENTLE YOGA Customized for every body.

MUSIC MONTHLY CHANTEY SING Free community sail or-singalong. Each month, local chantey singer Aaron Clegg co-hosts this event with a different featured guest, leading old traditional songs used by sailing crews to perform rhythmical hard labor. Everyone is encouraged for lead chanteys, sing along with the easy-to-learn choruses, or just listen while enjoying delicious microbrews on tap and great food. 6:30 p.m. Pour Taproom, 110 Cooper St. Suite B, Santa Cruz. charmasband.com.

Auto Express Tire Pros

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30 Years in Santa Cruz!

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

ARTS

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MUSIC CALENDAR

LOVE YOUR

LOCAL BAND SOLLOMON HOLLOW

When you listen to the chilled-out, melancholy, atmospheric self-titled Sollomon Hollow record, you can imagine a young man sitting alone in his room, lost in his head, lost in the lush layers of instruments that he’s laying down. It’s easy to picture, because that’s precisely how it came together. At the time, Austin Sides was playing in other bands and wanted to record an album just for himself. “Looking back, it kind of sounds a little bit sad,” Sides says. “I wasn’t necessarily bummed out, I just wanted to make something that I could chill to more than the bands that I was listening to at the time.”

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Since putting this little lo-fi indie gem out in mid-2017, Sollomon Hollow has become a three-piece band that gigs and even has a full-band EP coming out in the very near future, featuring four songs that the group recorded at a friend’s recording studio in Seattle.

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“Playing shows changed the direction we were going a little bit. It’s more fun to play upbeat things that the crowd can jam out to,” says bassist and vocalist Megan Dodelé. It’s not just the chemistry of the band, which also includes drummer Nick Leone. The more the group played live, the more they could see how their music was affecting the audience and how audiences were feeding their energy back. “We like to play fun shows. We don’t like to stand around and play chill music,” Sides says. AARON CARNES 9 p.m. Friday, March 8. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $7. 429-6994.

DANTE ELEPHANTE

WEDNESDAY 3/6 INDIE-FOLK

JAMIE DRAKE Los Angeles singer-songwriter Jamie Drake is happiest when she’s on stage, plucking an acoustic guitar for an attentive audience. But for a decade, she was primarily hidden in plain site as a collaborator of artists like Moby, Willie Watson and Sean Watkins. She’s also dabbled in film and television; she co-wrote the theme for the CW’s Life Sentence. Her career as a folk-oriented singer-songwriter was there, but she’s really taking steps to put that front and center these days. And judging by the couple of heartfelt ’70s Laurel Canyon-esque songs she’s already released from her upcoming 2019 album, this could be the year people start to learn her name. AC 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $12. 429-6994.

ACOUSTIC

CLIVE CARROLL Clive Carroll is what’s known in the industry as a “musician's musician.” Over the years, this extraordinary virtuoso has earned his place as one of the

world’s top acoustic guitarists. With a wealth of styles in his repertoire, from blues to jazz to 500-year-old lute ballads, it’s easy to see why Carroll caught the attention of stars such as Madonna and Guy Ritchie. MAT WEIR 7:30 p.m. Michael’s on Main, 2591 Main St., Soquel. $15. 479-9777.

THURSDAY 3/7 BLUES

JORMA KAUKONEN Though he was a founding member of Jefferson Airplane, Jorma Kaukonen has always been more about the blues than psychedelia. But there is something distinctly peppy about the blues in Kaukonen’s hands. Bright and jaunty, his acoustic finger-pickings shimmer like morning dew, bending blues progressions toward the San Francisco folk style he defined in Hot Tuna. And though he won’t be joined by his frequent collaborator Jack Casady, a night with Kaukonen is a tour through half a century of Bay Area rock history. MIKE HUGUENOR 8 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz. $30. 423-8209.

JAZZ

REBIRTH BRASS BAND If you looked up the word “celebratory” in the dictionary, and it was a weird dictionary with pictures instead of definitions, you would find a picture of the Rebirth Brass Band. One of the truest institutions of the Big Easy, the Rebirth Brass Band have gone from locals-only Tuesday night gigs in the French Quarter to Grammy-winning, HBO-featured, Beyonce-entrance-music-playing superstars. It’s all due to their incredible musicianship and absolutely infectious spirit. Funk, hip-hop, jazz, and soul all go into the stew, coming out in ecstatic blasts of brass. You will feel the rhythm and be reborn. MH 8:30 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $25 adv/$30 door. 479-1854.

FRIDAY 3/8 INDIE-POP

DANTE ELEPHANTE Dante Elephante is the kind of band you play on your vintage stereo system in your obsessively clean and orderly bedroom. You invite all your friends over after your parents leave


MUSIC

BE OUR GUEST STEPHEN MARLEY

SISTER SPARROW

for their wedding anniversary steaks. And you all sing along gleefully to the catchy ’70s AM radio pop melodies, to which you’ve worked out some synchronized dance moves. Is it embarrassing? A little bit, but you feel it strong, and it’s just so much fun to get lost in earnest vocals and the smooth WKRP in Cincinnati grooves. AC 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $7. 429-6994.

SOUL

SISTER SPARROW Sister Sparrow has spiked its neo-soul sound with a hefty dose of sparkly pop and a pinch of good old-fashioned whimsy. This newer, stronger concoction is a heady overdose of everything great about Sister Sparrow—the funkiness, the passionate hell-yeah vocals, the gritty brass—mixed with the charisma of singer Arleigh Kincheloe as she slow burns from one song to the next on the band’s new album Gold. Contemporary pop seems to have been Sister Sparrow’s missing ingredient. AMY BEE

9 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $20 adv/$25 door. 479-1854.

ALTERBEAST Sacramento technical death group Alterbeast took their name, and some song titles, from video games, but don’t confused these guys for a bunch of nerds. Over the span of two albums, the band has delivered nosebleed-inducing, high-pitched riffs and screeching gutter cries. Alterbeast will be joined by locals Continuum, who will be celebrating a new CD release, as well as Aethere and Lost to the Void. MW 7:30 p.m. Blue Lagoon, 923 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $10. 423-7117.

MONDAY 3/11 ELECTRONIC

TWRP Is TWRP the Weird Al of ‘80s synthrock? My guess is most of you would say no, but c’mon, think about it! It’s feelgood synth jams that sound like parodies of feelgood synth jams. The members of Tupper Ware Remix Party (TWRP) claim they found each other through space and time and formed a band to disseminate

synth-rock to the clock-stuck human lifeforms living in the new millennium. TWRP has no major message they’ve carried from the past or future, except they prefer that way you dance when you dance with no pants on. AB 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $14 adv/$16 door. 423-1338.

7 p.m. Saturday, March 16. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $31 adv/$36 door. Information: catalystclub.com. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Thursday, March 7 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.

JAZZ

IN THE QUEUE

TRIO TAPESTRY

SHAWN AND LEHUA

At 66, tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano is one of the pivotal figures in contemporary jazz, a composer and bandleader with a vast web of creative connections spanning the world. After some two dozen albums for Blue Note, he recently released his first project as a leader for ECM: Trio Tapestry, a gorgeous session that moves from spacious, almost ambient soundscapes to fierce, tempestuous passages. The new ensemble makes its West Coast debut at Kuumbwa. A combustible combination of old and new, Trio Tapestry features the texturally inventive drummer Carmen Castaldi and piano master Marilyn Crispell. ANDREW GILBERT 7 and 9 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, Santa Cruz. $31.50 adv/$36.75 door. 427-2227.

Award-winning Hawaiian duo. Thursday at Flynn’s Cabaret & Steakhouse THE BOYS OF SUMMER

The Eagles tribute band you didn’t know you needed. Friday at Flynn’s Cabaret & Steakhouse ONE GRASS TWO GRASS

Big city bluegrass. Saturday at Crepe Place CHRIS CAIN

Blues guitar maestro. Sunday at Moe’s Alley MOM JEANS

This is not your mom’s emo band. Tuesday at Catalyst

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

SATURDAY 3/9

METAL

I honestly have no idea how many children reggae legend Bob Marley had. But the thing is, all of them seem to be incredibly talented. Stephen Marley first gained some attention playing with his older brother Ziggy. In more recent years, he’s been focusing on his solo career, like the touching acoustic record One Take: Acoustic Jams. Marley recorded these low-key acoustic reggae songs in his living room. It’s a combination of acoustic single-takes of some of his previously released material, as well as some of his dad’s songs. Now he’s bringing the acoustic show to Santa Cruz.

39


LIVE MUSIC

Wednesday March 6 – 8/8:30pm $15 Soul/Folk/Reggae/Rock

SATSANG

+ MIKEY PAUKER Thursday March 7 – 7:30/8:30pm $25/30 New Orleans Grammy Winning Greats

REBIRTH BRASS BAND

Friday March 8 – 8/9pm $10/15

International Reggae Showcase

PURE ROOTS EARL ZERO, JR TOOTS SOUND REASONING ROCKER T, SPLEECE Saturday March 9 – 8/9pm $20/25 CD Release With Soul Favorites

SISTER SPARROW & THE DIRTY BIRDS

+ CHRIS BULLOCK BAND Sunday March 10 – 3/4pm $15/20 Afternoon Blues Series

WED

THU

3/7

FRI

3/8

SAT

3/9

Lauren Wahl & Simply Put Free 6:30-9p

DJ Solkist Free 7-9:30p

Blues Mechanics 6-8p

SUN

3/10

MON

3/11

TUE

3/12

APPLETON EVENT CENTER 410 Rodriguez St, Watsonville APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos St, Aptos

Al Frisby 6-8p

AC Myles 6-8p

Scott Miller 6-8p

Steve Freund 6-8p

Broken Shades 6-8p

Mojo Mix 6-8p

BLUE LAGOON 923 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Live Bands 9p

Comedy Night, ’80s Night Free 8:30p

Live Bands/Club 2000 Live VJ Dancing 9p Free 9p

The Box (Goth Night) 9p

Post Punk Dance Floor 9p

Funk Night w/ DJ Ed 9p

BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, Santa Cruz

Karaoke 8p-Close

Karaoke 8p-Close

Glory 9:30-12:45p

Karaoke 6p-Close

Karaoke 6p-Close

Karaoke 8p-Close

BOCCI’S CELLAR 140 Encinal St, Santa Cruz

Karaoke Free 8p

Swing Dance 5:30p

BRITANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey Ave, Capitola

Alex Lucero & Friends 8p

Karaoke 9-12:30a

Karaoke 9-12:30a

CAPITOLA WINE BAR 115 San Jose Ave, Capitola

Rich the Trivia Guy Free 6:30p

Kip Allert Free 7p

Paul Kent Free 7p

Twiddle $15/$17 8p

Big Wild $20/$25 8p

Sodown $13/$15 8:30p

Ceramic Animal, Spendtime Palace $13/$15 8p

CATALYST 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz CATALYST ATRIUM 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

CHRIS CAIN

CHAMINADE RESORT 1 Chaminade Ln, Santa Cruz

Sunday March 10 – 8:30/9pm $10/13

CILANTROS 1934 Main St, Watsonville

Americana/Blues/Folk

3/6

ABBOTT SQUARE 118 Cooper St, Santa Cruz

Welles $12/$15 8:30p

E.n Young $12/$15 8p

Karaoke 6p-Close

Beat Weekend 8p

Game Night Free 8p

John Michael Free 3-6p Atmosphere $29.50/$32.50 8p Twrp $14/$16 8:30p

Hippo Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p

Mom Jeans $15 8:30p

KPIG Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p

SHAWN JAMES Thursday March 14 – 8/9pm $26/30 Reggae’s 1st Grammy Winners

BLACK UHURU

THE

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

+ KING SCHASCHA

40

Mar 15 JESSE DANIEL, JAY LINGO, JAKE HOUSTON Mar 16 GABRIEL O PENSADOR BRAZILIAN CARNAVAL Mar 17 WEBB WILDER Mar 21 BROKEN ENGLISH + Jahny Wallz Mar 22 POORMAN’S WHISKEY Mar 23 MIDTOWN SOCIAL + HARRY & THE HITMEN Mar 24 LYDIA PENSE & COLD BLOOD Mar 27 ULI JON ROTH Mar 28 BUYEPONGO + QUITAPENAS Mar 29 MAX ROMEO + DUBTONIC KRU Mar 30 ENGLISH BEAT April 4 CASS MCCOMBS April 5 GINGER & JUICE + COFFEE ZOMBIE COLLECTIVE April 6 FLOR DE CAÑA April 7 CROOKED BRANCHES, LAUREN WAHL, WILD IRIS April 10 LEILANI WOLFGRAMM April 11 CELSO PIÑA April 12 TOUBAB KREWE + ORCHESTRA GOLD April 13 LOS LOBOS April 14 GHOST NOTE + DIRTY REVIVAL

WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854

CREPE PLACE

GREEN LEAF RUSTLERS

ADVANCE TICKETS ON TICKETWEB

FERNWOOD TAVERN!

OPEN LATE - EVERY NIGHT!

Clive Carroll

Wed. Mar. 6 7:30pm $15 adv./$15 door seated <21 w/parent

The Black Brothers

Thu. Mar. 7 7:30pm Pre-Saint Patrick’s Day Concert $17 adv./$20 door seated <21 w/parent

Jazz The Dog

Fri. Mar. 8 5pm HAPPY HOUR / NO COVER Fri. Mar. 8 9pm

Soulwise plus Harbor Patrol $10 adv./$10 door Dance – ages 21 + Painted Mandolin

Sat. Mar. 9 8:30pm $15 adv./$18 door Dance – ages 21 +

Grateful Sunday

Sun. Mar. 10 5:30pm GRATEFUL DEAD TUNES/NO COVER Wed. Mar. 13 7:30pm

A Tribute to Emmylou Harris

AJ Lee, Jim Lewin, Patti Maxine, Ginny Mitchell & Karin Phoenix

$15 adv./$18 door seated <21 w/parent

COMING UP Thu. Mar 14 Ímar Celtic From Scotland Fri. Mar 15 Blood on The Tracks By Bob Dylan As Played by Stone Fruit Sat. Mar 16 EXTRA LARGE Mon. Mar 18 Brand X Tue. Mar 19 Brand X

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Full Concert Calendar : MichaelsonMainMusic.com 2591 Main St, Soquel, CA 95073

WEDNESDAY 3/6

BIG SUR

FRI / SAT MARCH 15 & 16

JAMIE DRAKE w/ BROTHERLY MUD

9PM - $12 ADV. OR $12 DOOR

THURSDAY 3/7

DJ MONK EARL 9PM

FRIDAY 3/8

DANTE ELEPHANTE

TWO FULL SETS OF COUNTRY CLASSICS!

JAMES McMURTRY Solo Acoustic Seated Shows!

APRIL 3 RIO (Santa Cruz) APRIL 4 HMML (Big Sur)

w/ SHOOBIES & SOLLOWMAN HALLOWS 9PM - $7 DOOR

SATURDAY 3/9

ONE GRASS, TWO GRASS w/ CROCKED BRANCHES 9PM - $7 DOOR

TUESDAY 3/12

7 COME 11

9PM UNTIL MIDNIGHT WEDNESDAY 3/13 WESTERN WEDNESDAY #33

THREE ON THE TREE

8PM $10 DOOR OR $7 W/ COWBOY BOOTS THURSDAY 3/14

AUGUST SUN

w/ LOUIZA & RIP & THE FAMILY

ST PATTY’S DAY WEEKEND!!!

TIM BLUHM BAND4/7 Flynns

(of The Mother Hips)

+ THE COFFIS BROTHERS MOES 4/5

CASS McCOMBS BAND

SUN KIL MOON April 17 Kuumbwa Jazz Cntr.

THE CHURCH

5/10 RIO Starfish 30th Anniversary Tour!

5/17 ROBYN HITCHCOCK HMML BIG SUR

JACKIE GREENE BAND Friday, June 7 Monterey

Golden State Theater

9PM - $8 DOOR

Reserved MIDTOWN SANTA CRUZ

1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz 429-6994

Seating!


LIVE MUSIC

Saturday, March 9 • 8:30 PM

SIN SISTERS BURLESQUE WED CORK AND FORK 312 Capitola Ave, Capitola

3/6

THU

3/7

FRI

3/8

Open Mic Night Free 7-10p

CORRALITOS CULTURAL CENTER 127 Hames Rd., Corralitos

SAT

3/9

Mark Creech Free 3-6p

Open Mic 7-10p

Dan Frechette & Laurel Thomsen $15 7p

Acoustic Open Jam 3-5p

Jamie Drake w/ Brothery Mud $12 9p

DJ Monk Earl $7 9p

Dante Elephante w/ Shoobies & Sollomon Hollows $7 9p

One Grass Two Grass w/ Crocked Branches $10 9p

CROW’S NEST 2218 E. Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz

Yuji Tojo $3 8p

Papiba & Friends $5 8p

Jive Machine $6 9p

Sasha’s Money $7 9:30p

DAV. ROADHOUSE 1 Davenport Ave, Davenport

MON

3/11

Funk Night ft. 7 Come 11 $6 9p-12a Live Comedy $7 9p

GrandSam $5 8p Menage Free 6-9p

Sunday, March 10 • 7:30 PM

JOE LOVANO TRIO TAPESTRY WITH MARILYN CRISPELL & CARMEN CASTALDI Celebrating a new album and a new ensemble.

Wednesday, March 13 • 7:30 PM

LADYSMITH BLACK MAMBAZO World-renowned and spellbinding South African a cappella.

AT THE RIO THEATRE

Shawn & Lehua $18/$20 7:30p

Thursday, March 14 • 7 PM

PEDRITO MARTINEZ & ALFREDO RODRIGUEZ

Boys of Summer Eagles Tribute $18/$22 9p

A dazzling collaboration between two percussion and piano powerhouses.

Jeannine Bonstelle & Sweeney Schragg 6:30-9:30p

Friday, March 15 • 7:30 PM

JACK O’NEILL LOUNGE Santa Cruz Dream Inn 175 W Cliff Dr. Santa Cruz

THE SAM CHASE & DAVID LUNING

KUUMBWA JAZZ 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 2591 Main St, Soquel

Tickets: eventbrite.com

Monday, March 11 • 7 PM

Bobby Love & Sugar Sweet

Linc Russin 7-9p

3/12

Tickets: eventbrite.com

PNP (Perry, Navaroli, Potter) Free 6:30-8:30p

FLYNN’S CABARET 6275 Hwy 9, Felton

TUE

THE REAL IRISH COMEDY FEST

Ugly Beauty Free 6-9p

THE FISH HOUSE 972 Main St, Watsonville

GABRIELLA CAFE 910 Cedar St., Santa Cruz

3/10

Bonny June & Bonfire Free 7-10p

THE CREPE PLACE 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

DISCRETION BREWING 2703 41st Ave, Soquel

SUN

UCSC Grand Slam 5:30p Clive Carroll $15 7:30p

The Black Brothers $17/$20 7:30p

Sin Sisters Burlesque $20-$40 8:30p

Jazz The Dog Free 5p Painted Mandolin Soulwise, Harbor Patrol $15/$18 8:30p $10 9p

The Real Irish Comedy Fest $20 7:30p Grateful Sundays Free 5:30p

Joe Lovano Trio Tapestry $31.50-$36.75 7p

Tickets: snazzyproductions.com Saturday, March 16 • 8 PM

T3TRA: LIGHTSWITCH ALBUM RELEASE SHOW Tickets: brownpapertickets.com

Monday, March 18 • 7 PM & 9 PM

DEE DEE BRIDGEWATER & THE MEMPHIS SOULPHONY

A tribute to the iconic R&B of Memphis, by an award-winning vocalist. Thursday, March 21 • 7 PM

LIVE & LOCAL: ASHWIN BATISH – SITAR POWER Santa Cruz’s own pioneer of raga rock.

1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS Friday, March 22 • 7 PM & 9 PM

OMAR SOSA & SECKOU KEITA: TRANSPARENT WATER An elegant and profound expression of musical discovery.

A TRIBUTE TO JOHN PRINE Tickets: snazzyproductions.com Monday, March 25 • 7 PM

ROBERTA GAMBARINI

An acclaimed vocalist with dexterous range and sparkling tone. Wednesday, March 27 • 7 PM

DAVINA & THE VAGABONDS

A rollicking band, channeling influences ranging from Fats Domino to Aretha Franklin to Tom Waits.

1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS

Unless noted, advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and dinner served one hour before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wine & beer available. All ages welcome.

320-2 Cedar St | Santa Cruz 831.427.2227 kuumbwajazz.org

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

Saturday, March 23 • 7:30 PM

41


We are now open Tuesday-Sunday for dinner. Stop by for an amazing farm to table dining experience! Thur Mar 7

Shawn & Lehua

Fri Mar 8

MON

Rebirth Brass Band $25/$30 7:30p

Pure Roots, Earl Zero, Sound Reasoning & more $10/$15 9p

Chris Cain $15/$20 3p Sister Sparrow & the Shawn James $10/$13 Dirty Birds $20/$25 8p 8:30p

MOTIV 1209 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Hi Ya! By Little John 9:30p

Libation Lab w/ King Wizard & Chief Transcend 9:30p

Adam Cova 9:30p

D-ROC 9:30p

What the Funk!

11-piece band from the San Francisco Bay Area $15 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM Blues/Rock Power Trio $10 adv./$12 door Dance – ages 21+ 8:30PM The greatest living master of the five-string Spanish timple $10 adv./$12 door seated - <21 w/parent 8:30PM

Puffball Collective w/Dead Slug Society

Sun Mar 17

St. Patty’s Day Celebration w/Molly’s Revenge

Authentic Fleetwood Mac Tribute Band $12 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

99 BOTTLES 110 Walnut Ave, Santa Cruz

Powerhouse Tribute to the King of Pop $17 adv./$20 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

An Evening with Steve Poltz

Rockin’ countrified folk slices of sardonic Americana $20 adv./$25 door seated - <21 w/parent 7:30PM

Robbie Fulks

Singer, Recording artist, instrumentalist, composer and songwriter $15 adv./$15 door seated - <21 w/parent 8:30PM

Money

Powerhouse Pink Floyd Tribute Band $12 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

Grateful Bluegrass Boys Classic Rock through a Bluegrass lens $12 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

PARADISE BEACH 215 Esplanade, Capitola

Alex Lucero 6-9p

POET & PATRIOT 320 E. Cedar St, Santa Cruz

Sun Apr 7

Tim Bluhm

Comic, Actor, Author, Raconteur $20 adv./$25 door seated - ages 21+ 9PM

Open Mic Free 8-11p

THE REEF 120 Union St, Santa Cruz

Variety Show w/ Toby Gray 6:30p

RIO THEATRE 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

Acoustic Reggae Jam 6:30p

Aloha Friday 6:30p

Featured Acts 6:30p

The Human Juke Box 6p

Jorma Kaukonen $30-$45 8p

Masters Of Hawaiian Music $30-$36 7:30p

ROSIE MCCANN’S 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Comedy Night 9p

First & Third Celtic Jam

Live DJ

THE SAND BAR 211 Esplanade, Capitola

Ryan Tennis Trio 7:30p

Reggae Open Jam 7p

The John Michael Band 8p

Live DJ Alex Lucero Open Jam 7p

plus Andrew St. James

Thursday, March 7 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+ Friday, March 8 • Ages 16+

Downtown Santa Cruz

Friday, March 8 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

Your local source for quality electric bicycles

TWIDDLE SODOWN

plus Iya Terra

plus Volo and TruFeelz

Saturday, March 9 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

CERAMIC ANIMAL • SPENDTIME PALACE Monday, March 11 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

TWRP

plus Planet Booty

Tuesday, March 12 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

MOM JEANS

plus Mover Shaker

Mar 14 Liquid Stranger (Ages 16+) Mar 16 Stephen Marley (Acoustic) (Ages 16+) Mar 21 Eli Young Band (Ages 16+) Mar 28 Voz De Mando (Ages 21+) Mar 29 House Of Floyd (Ages 16+) Apr 4 Space Jesus/ Buku (Ages 16+) Apr 9 Dermot Kennedy (Ages 16+) Apr 11 Flosstradamus (Ages 18+) Apr 17 Parcels (Ages 16+) Apr 19 SOB X RBE (Ages 16+) Apr 24 Tech N9ne (Ages 16+) Apr 25 Party Favor (Ages 16+) Apr 26 Shallou/ Slow Magic (Ages 16+) Apr 27 Chicano Batman (Ages 16+) May 1 Knocked Loose (Ages 16+) May 3 Pegboard Nerds (Ages 18+) May 4 Chromeo (DJ Set) (Ages 16+) May 7 Betty Who (Ages 16+) May 8 Robin Trower (Ages 16+) May 10 Dance Gavin Dance (Ages 16+) Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.

Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online

www.catalystclub.com

UCSC Art & Science Talks Free 6:30p

Alex Lucero & Friends 7p

Singer Songwriter Showcase

Wednesday, March 6 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+ plus Coast Tribe

Tuesday Trivia Night 6:30p

Trivia 7:30p

1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135

E.N YOUNG

Open Mic 6p

Lifetime tune-ups with bike purchase Open 7 Days a Week DOWNTOWN

SANTA CRUZ t. L a ur e l S

Ba

N

y

St

Map not to scale.

.

a ro

dw

ay

BRITANNIA ARMS IN CAPITOLA 110 Monterey Avenue, Capitola Village

7-10pm Free and open to everyone Show starts at 7pm

For advance signup and info, contact Bob Carter at 831.462.9373 or crtcom@pacbell.net Raffling off an acoustic guitar Raffle proceeds go to Guitars Not Guns

Lo r e n z o

E C liff

D r.

Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am

Queer Bingo $5/card 4p Comedy Shane Secor Free 8p Free 8p

S t.

Tickets Now Online at flynnscabaret.com

Open Mic Free 4-7p Resonance Free 9p

an

Thu, Apr 11 David Holodiloff Band Sat, Apr 27 The Sun Kings Sun, Apr 28 The Sun Kings – Special Live Performance of the White Album Thu, May 9 The String Revolution w/Anthony Arya Fri, May 10 The Billie Holliday Project Sat, May 25 When Doves Cry – Prince Tribute Show

Erin Avila 6-9p

n

COMIN G RIGH T U P

The Joint Chiefs 2-5p

‘Geeks Who Drink’ Trivia Night 8p

Sa

The new album is coming March 29 Presented by Flynn’s and (((Folk YEAH!))) $18 adv./$20 door Dance – ages 21+ 8PM

The Takeover, Turn Up Tuesday w/ Cali 9:30p

THE RED 200 Locust St, Santa Cruz

WELLES

3/12

Blues Mechanics Free 6p

Vinny Johnson 2-5p

O ce

Scott Capurro

Rasta Cruz Reggae Party 9:30p

TUE

Taco Trivia Tuesday w/ Hive Mind 6:30p

t. F ro nt S

Sat Apr 6

3/11

Rob Vye Free 6p

Trivia 8p

Snap Jackson w/Red Dog Ash Foreverland

AC Myles Free 6p

NEW BOHEMIA BREWERY 1030 41st Ave, Santa Cruz

B

The top touring Eagles Tribute band in America $18 adv./$20 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

Amazing Bluegrass from California $12 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21+ 9P

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

3/10

Satsang & Mikey Pauker $12/$15 8p

18th Annual St. Patrick’s Day Tour $20 adv./$20 door seated - <21 w/parent 8:30PM

42

SUN

MOE’S ALLEY 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz

Fleetwood Macrame

Sat Mar 30

3/9

SAT

The Boys of Summer

Sat Mar 16

Fri Mar 29

3/8

Hawaiian and folk-inflected original songs $18 adv./$20 door seated - <21 w/parent 7:30PM

Rock/Psychedelic Music $12 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

Thu Mar 28

FRI

Steve Freund Free 6p

German Lopez

Sun Mar 24

3/7

Lloyd Whitley Free 6p

Thu Mar 14

Sat Mar 23

THU

Broken Shades Free 6-8p

Zach Waters Band

Fri Mar 22

3/6

Little Jonny Lawton Free 6p

Wed Mar 13

Fri Mar 15

WED MISSION ST. BBQ 1618 Mission St, Santa Cruz

W C li f f D r.

Sat Mar 9

LIVE MUSIC

Be

ac

h S t.

k ardwal

MUSIC ARTS

RECORDING STUDIO

The Bo

Santa Cruz Wharf

831-621-2309 | currentebikes.com 131 Front Street, Suite D • Santa Cruz

Guitar Works


LIVE MUSIC WED

3/6

THU

3/7

FRI

3/8

SANDERLINGS 1 Seascape Resort, Aptos

Groovetime 7:30p

SEABRIGHT BREWERY 519 Seabright, Santa Cruz

AJ Crawdaddy & Band

SAT

3/9

Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers 6-10p

Hot Fuse 8-11:30p

Groovity 8-11:30p

SHADOWBROOK 1750 Wharf Rd, Capitola

Ken Constable 6:30-9:30p

Joe Ferrara 6:30-9:30p

Claudio Melega 7-10p

Band Of Gringos & The Magic Munchies Band Free 6-9p

SuperDown Free 6-9p

Cameron Jones Free 6-9p

Cement Ship Free 6-9p

3/10

MON

3/11

TUE

3/12

Calico 7:30p

SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 7500 Old Dominion Court, Aptos

SHANTY SHACK BREWING 138 Fern St, Santa Cruz

SUN

Stephan Sams Free 6-9p

SID’S SMOKEHOUSE 10110 Soquel Dr, Aptos STEEL BONNET 20 Victor Square, Scotts Valley

Blind Rick 5p

SUSHI GARDEN S.V. 5600 Scotts Valley Dr, Scotts Valley

Dave Muldwer Free 5:30p

Scott Slaughter Free 5:30p

UGLY MUG 4640 Soquel Ave, Soquel

Open Mic w/ Steven David 5:30p

VINO LOCALE 55 Municipal Wharf, Santa Cruz

Mopen Mic Night Free 6-8p

ZELDA’S 203 Esplanade, Capitola

Kiyoe Wakabashi Free 6-8p

Caio Villela Free 6-8p

Scott T. Akrop 9:30p

The Joint Chiefs 9:30p

Upcoming Shows

MAR 07 Jorma Kaukonen MAR 10 Masters of Hawaiian Music MAR 13 Ladysmith Black Mambazo MAR 12 Art and Science Talks MAR 15 Film: Bikes of Wrath MAR 16 Greg Brown MAR 22 The 2019 NEXTies MAR 26 Ryan Bingham MAR 29 Zakir Hussain MAR 30 SUP Film Fest

Tahloula Wishes You a Fantastic 2019!!

APR 03 APR 10 APR 13 APR 27

James McMurtry Mariza Jimmie Vaughan Film: The Devil’s Road

MAY 09 MAY 10 MAY 14 MAY 27 MAY 29

Lunafest Santa Cruz The Church Cowboy Junkies Puddles Pity Party The Winery Dogs

JUN 22 John Mayall JUN 28 John Hiatt JUL 05 Rising Appalachia SEP 13 Kevin Nealon Follow the Rio Theatre on Facebook & Twitter! info@riotheatre.com www.riotheatre.com

LOCATED ON THE BEACH

PREGNANT MARE RESCUE PO Box 962 Aptos, CA 95001 pregnantmarerescue.org • 408.540.8568

Amazing waterfront deck views.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

See live music grid for this week’s bands.

STAND-UP COMEDY

Renew for spring with Peels, Fillers, and Botox!

NEW • VINTAGE • CONSIGNMENT FURNITURE • ACCESSORIES

Three live comedians every Sunday night.

HAPPY HOUR

Mon–Fri from 3:00pm. Wednesday all night!

VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET

Wood-fired pizza, ice cream, unique fine gifts.

DEAL WITH A VIEW

$10.95 Dinners Mon.-Fri. from 6:00pm

NOW SERVING BREAKFAST

Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily

(831) 476-4560

crowsnest-santacruz.com

1523 Commercial Way, SC 831.439.9210 redoconsign.com

Beauty Within 7492 Soquel Dr., Suite D Aptos, CA 95003 • 831.313.4844

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

Come in for our award-winning calamari appetizer!

43


FILM

PAINT YOU A PICTURE Tom Schilling in German filmmaker Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s ‘Never Look Away.’

True is Beautiful MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Repression and freedom examined through the prism of art in German Oscar nominee ‘Never Look Away’ BY LISA JENSEN

44

T

he term “degenerate art” was coined by the Nazis to classify the works of such early 20th-century masters as Klee, Kandinsky and Mondrian. The “afflicted” vision of these artists, in the Nazis’ opinion, failed to properly celebrate the Aryan perfection of the master race. To modern viewers, the infamous degenerate art exhibit mounted by the Nazis in 1937 is a treasure trove of visionary work—an opinion shared by an awestruck young German boy visiting the exhibit at the beginning of Never Look Away, absorbing it all in big-eyed wonder. Nominated for this year’s Foreign Language Oscar, Never Look Away is an often-striking portrait of art,

politics and life in collision. German filmmaker Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck scored big a few years ago with his exceptional The Lives Of Others, about a solitary East German spy and the life-embracing playwright he has under surveillance. Never Look Away doesn’t quite have the same powerful impact. Its three-hour-plus running time gives Von Donnersmarck plenty of room to tell his story in meticulous detail, but the storytelling loses tension in the midsection. Still, the journey of its protagonist, that little boy of the first scene who survives personal tragedy, political upheaval and the Communist regime that succeeds the Third Reich to find himself as an artist, remains compelling.

In a story inspired by the life and career of artist Gerhard Richter, little Kurt Barnert (Cai Cohrs) is visiting the exhibit with his beloved, free-spirited young Aunt Elisabeth (Saskia Rosendahl). Despite the tour guide’s profound disgust, Elisabeth confides to Kurt that she likes the paintings, and advises him to “never look away” from life or art, no matter how disturbing, because, “Everything true is beautiful.” In his next few formative years, Kurt loses several people important to him and survives the bombing of Dresden, reducing his city to rubble. As a young man (now played by Tom Schilling), his work as a sign painter gets him into the postwar art academy, even though his

teacher questions how Kurt’s private drawings “help the working man.” Like their predecessors, the Communists now in charge condemn modern artists like Picasso as “decadent,” teaching new young German artists to paint not Aryan perfection, but Social Realism. A bright spot in Kurt’s dreary routine is spirited, forward-thinking fellow student Ellie (Paula Beer). They marry, despite the disapproval of her icy father, Professor Seeband (Sebastian Koch), who has ingratiated himself with the East German Communist elite—and whose past as a doctor for the Third Reich is entwined with Kurt’s in ways neither of them yet realizes. Schilling looks just like the young Richter of the postwar era. But the role of Kurt is mostly passive and reactive, as events unfurl around him; he doesn’t really protest the stifling art school dictates, or his father-in-law’s smug campaign to demean him and control the young couple’s married life. But Schilling’s performance warms in his scenes with Beer’s Ellie, when Kurt uncorks his true feelings. Von Donnersmarck portrays art, society and youth itself in transition between stale and modern, repression and freedom, past and future. The pomposity of critics, teachers and students alike is duly skewered, along with the students’ often-loony attempts keep up with audacious new trends in modern art. Unconstrained at last, yet unable to fill a canvas, Kurt begins a series of photo-realistic images in black and white, intentionally blurred, and based on old family snapshots. (The signature style with which Richter first made a splash in the art world.) The movie suggests that only by reconciling his past and present can Kurt discover his own artistic voice. Any artist will tell you it’s a lot more complicated than that, but the filmmaker’s homage to the artist’s journey keeps us engaged. NEVER LOOK AWAY *** With Tom Schilling, Paula Beer and Sebastian Koch. Written and directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck. A Sony Classics release. Rated R. 189 minutes. In German with English subtitles.


MOVIE TIMES

March 6-12

All times are PM unless otherwise noted.

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1:45, 4:20, 7, 9:35; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 1:45, 4:20, 7, 9:35 ARCTIC Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7, Fri 3/8 2:10, 4:40, 7:20, 9:30; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10 11:50, 2:10, 4:40, 7:20, 9:30; Mon

3/11, Tue 3/12 2:10, 4:40, 7:20, 9:30 HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE Fri 3/8, Sat 3/9 11:55 APOLLO 11 Fri 3/8 2:20, 4:50, 7:10, 9:20; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10 noon, 2:20, 4:50, 7:10, 9:20; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12

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OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT FILMS 2019: ANIMATION Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 2:30, 7:20 OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT FILMS 2019: LIVE ACTION Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 4:15, 9:10 EVERYBODY KNOWS Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 1:40, 4:25, 7:10, 9:50; Fri 3/8 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10

10:50, 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 NEVER LOOK AWAY Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7, Fri 3/8 4, 7:45; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10 12:10, 4, 7:45; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 4,

7:45 GRETA Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20; Fri 3/8 2, 4:30, 7:20, 9:40; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10 11:40, 2, 4:30, 7:20,

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SPIDER-MAN: Wed 3/6 9:40 BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 12:20 A STAR IS BORN Wed 3/6 3:20, 6:30; Thu 3/7 3:20 ISN’T IT ROMANTIC Wed 3/6 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30; Thu 3/7 12:30, 2:45 HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7, Fri 3/8 1, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15; Sat 3/9,

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FIGHTING WITH MY FAMILY Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45; Fri 3/8, Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10, Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12

3:45, 9:15 ALITA: BATTLE ANGEL Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7, Fri 3/8 1:05, 4, 6:55, 9:50; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10 10:10, 1:05, 4, 6:55, 9:50;

Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 1:05, 4, 6:55, 9:50 HAPPY DEATH DAY 2U Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 1:30, 4:15, 7:15, 9:50; Fri 3/8 1:30, 7:15; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10 11, 1:30,

7:15; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 1:30, 7:15, 10:15, 1, 6:30; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 1, 6:30 TYLER PERRY’S A MADEA FAMILY FUNERAL Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7, Fri 3/8 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10

10:40, 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30 GRETA Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 1:30, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45; Fri 3/8, Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10, Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 4:30, 9:45 CAPTAIN MARVEL Thu 3/7 7, 10; Fri 3/8 12:30, 1:30, 3:30, 4:30, 6:30, 7:30, 9:30; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10 10:30,

12:30, 1:30, 3:30, 4:30, 6:30, 7:30, 9:30; Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 12:30, 1:30, 3:30, 4:30, 6:30, 7:30, 9:30 EVERYBODY KNOWS Thu 3/7 7, 10; Fri 3/8, Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10, Mon 3/11, Tue 3/12 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15

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THE LEGO MOVIE 2: THE SECOND PART Wed 3/6, Thu 3/7 1, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15; Fri 3/8 1, 6:30; Sat 3/9, Sun 3/10

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MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

FILM

46

NEW RELEASES

NOW PLAYING

APOLLO 11 If you’re thinking, “Wait a minute, didn’t I already see this movie?”—no, that might have been Ron Howard’s Apollo 13. (I hope for your sake it wasn’t the god-awful horror movie Apollo 18, about a moon mission that never actually happened.) Or maybe it was The Last Steps, the 2016 documentary about Apollo 17. It could definitely have been First Man, last year’s Neil Armstrong biopic starring Ryan Gosling that worked its way up to the Apollo 11 mission. It’s hard to keep all these Apollos and the movies about them straight, but this documentary is a brand-new look at the 1969 mission that first got us to the moon, and it’s been pieced together entirely out of archival footage (some of it never before seen), with no narration or talkinghead interviews. Its unusual approach won it the Special Jury Award for Editing at Cannes last month. (G) 93 minutes. (SP)

ALITA: BATTLE ANGEL James Cameron started developing this manga adaptation in 1999, but when it came down to actually making one of his two giantCGI-eyes projects in 2009, he chose Avatar instead. Director Robert Rodriguez rescued this from development hell, but what may have seemed edgy 20 years ago—a cyborg risking her life in a battle royale bloodsport designed to appease the post-apocalyptic masses … wait, hold on. So this movie is basically Rollerball? No wonder Cameron didn’t want to make it—it’s already been made twice! And one time it was even good! Starring Rosa Salazar, Christoph Waltz, Jennifer Connelly, and Mahershala Ali. (PG-13) 122 minutes. (SP)

CAPTAIN MARVEL In a year that will see Avengers: Endgame released on April 26, this massively hyped $152 million film is somehow the low-key, lowbudget Marvel release. (Even more remarkably, it’s the least-expensive Marvel movie since 2011’s Thor—17 films ago.) Brie Larson stars as the title heroine in what is basically an Avengers prequel about how former Air Force pilot Carol Danvers gets her powers and joins an alien military force before returning home to save Earth from the crossfire of a space war. Directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck. Co-starring Samuel L. Jackson, Ben Mendelsohn and Lee Pace. (PG-13) 123 minutes. (SP) CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. to downtown Santa Cruz, where each week the group discusses a different current release. For location and discussion topic, go to https:// groups.google.com/group/LTATM.

ARCTIC Survival thriller has Mads Mikkelsen stranded in the Arctic Circle. He’s doomed! But then … he sees a rescue helicopter! He’s saved! But then … you realize this is still the beginning of the movie and there is no way this helicopter rescue is going to work out. He’s doomed! But then … Directed by Joe Penna. (PG-13) 98 minutes. (SP) COLD PURSUIT When I have to describe these revenge thrillers where some parent has to go after the criminals who wronged his or her family, I always say, “It’s like Taken, except with Jennifer Garner” or, “It’s like Taken, except with Mel Gibson.” So what am I supposed to say about this one, where Liam Neeson plays a snowplow driver who goes after the criminals who wronged his family? “It’s like Taken, except with … Liam Neeson?” Maybe just, “It’s like Taken, except really stupid.” Directed by Hans Petter Moland. Co-starring Emmy Rossum and Laura Dern. (R) 118 minutes. (SP) COLD WAR Every shot is thrilling in Cold War, Pawel Pawlikowski’s follow up to Ida. This lean, fast film concerns the paradox of mid-20th century discontentment. Example: At great cost to yourself, you

escape the workers’ paradise of the Soviet empire, an Eden where they tie your hands. You then arrive in capitalist heaven to face what Joni Mitchell termed “the crazy you get from too much choice.” Most of all, Cold War is a lustrous romance between a Michael Fassbinder-ish pianist, Wiktor, and the younger singer Zula, whose life is clouded by a crime she committed when she was a girl. Starring Joanna Kulig and Tomasz Kot. (R) 88 minutes. (RvB) EVERYBODY KNOWS The nuance of family dynamics is a specialty of Asghar Farhadi, as seen in his two previous Oscar-winning Iranian films, A Separation and The Salesman. Family secrets and hidden agendas abound in this suspense drama, set in Spain, and Fahardi handles them with his usual sensitivity. But the movie never quite achieves the emotional epiphany we hope for. Stars Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem (even more expansive and full of gusto than usual) are worth watching in every frame they’re in, the ensemble cast is excellent, and Madrid looks beautiful. But when all is finally revealed, there’s just not as much there, there as we might wish. (R) 133 minutes. In Spanish with English subtitles. (LJ) THE FAVOURITE Rachel Weisz, Emma Stone and especially Olivia Colman as a cranky, insecure Queen Anne are all excellent as women jockeying for power in the man’s world of early 18th-century England. But the narrative often goes awry in Yorgos Lanthimos’ witches’ brew of sex, politics and intrigue—if not historically, in terms of its weirdly comic tone. Lanthimos may be taking satirical aim at human folly—greed, ambition, depravity, especially among the oh-so-idle rich—but that’s a broad target. Too often, his contrived setups and deliberately provocative images don’t add up to anything. And as the fortunes of these women rise and fall, and viewer sympathies are meant to keep shifting, they remain little more than pawns in an exercise of mannered absurdity. (R) 131 minutes. (LJ)

GRETA On the count of three, let’s both say the first two words that come to mind when you read the description “French piano teacher who loves tea and classical music.” One, two, three … homicidal maniac! I know, right? So it’s hard to believe Chloë Grace Moretz doesn’t see the Single White Female thing coming from a mile away when she returns a lost handbag to Isabelle Huppert’s Greta at the beginning of this movie, and discovers this freaky lady checks all those boxes. She doesn’t, though, and before you know it, Greta begins to act creepy and obsessive. Director Neil Jordan may be best known for The Crying Game, but he’s done some wild genre stuff in the past, like The Company of Wolves and In Dreams (let’s not talk about Interview with the Vampire), so expect some surprises in this suspense thriller. Co-starring Colm Feore and Stephen Rea. (R) 98 minutes. (SP) HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD This is the third film in this series, people. If you haven’t learned how to train your dragon by now, you probably need to hire a professional. Directed by Dean DeBlois. Featuring the voices of Jay Baruchel, America Ferrera, Cate Blanchett, and F. Murray Abraham. (PG) 104 minutes. (SP) ISN’T IT ROMANTIC Rebel Wilson gets hit on the head and wakes up as the star of her own romantic comedy. Actually, a lot of wacky things happen to people in movies when they get hit on the head. But when I try it, I just black out and then wake up with a really bad headache. Maybe this wrench is too big. Or too small? I’ll keep experimenting. (PG-13) 88 minutes. (SP) THE LEGO MOVIE 2: THE SECOND PART If you didn’t have very small children at the time, you were probably surprised at how much you were delighted by the first Lego Movie’s irresistible charm and wit. If you did have very small children, you were probably unsurprised at how much you were

delighted by the first Lego Movie’s ability to hold your kid’s attention so you could close your goddamn eyes for one goddamn minute. Well, now the sequel is here to provide the same tender mercies for a new generation of new parents about to lose their shit. Everything is awesome! Directed by Mike Mitchell. Featuring the voices of Chris Pratt, Elizabeth Banks and Will Arnett. (PG) 106 minutes. (SP) A MADEA FAMILY FUNERAL Tyler Perry says this will be the last Madea film. So, there’s that. Written and directed by Perry. Starring Perry, Cassi Davis and Patrice Lovely. (PG-13) (SP) NEVER LOOK AWAY Reviewed this issue. (R) 188 minutes. OSCAR-NOMINATED SHORT FILMS Endangered children, old age and regret, racism, irresponsible parenting, and random homicide all figure in the five live-action shorts nominated for a 2019 Academy Award. The companion program of animated shorts is not all that more upbeat, touching on dysfunctional psychiatry, dementia, divorce, and death, among other things. Grim seems to be the pervading tone among this year’s crop of fledgling filmmakers singled out by Academy voters. There are many lovely and intriguing moments in both programs—especially the animated offerings—but there’s not one E-Ticket item here that just grabs you by the lapels and leaves you awestruck. Maybe next year. (Not rated) Live Action: 109 minutes. Animated: 80 minutes. (LJ) WHAT MEN WANT Yes, this is a remake of the Mel Gibson movie What Women Want from 19 years ago. Yes, they flipped the gender roles, so that this time Taraji P. Henson can hear men’s thoughts. I think that’s great, as long as we don’t have to find out what Mel Gibson secretly wants, because I guarantee you it is terrifying. Directed by Adam Shankman. Costarring Tracy Morgan, Aldis Hodge and Richard Roundtree. (R) 117 minutes. (SP)


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FOOD & DRINK KARST’S KITCHEN Fans of Sally Solari, the resourceful fictional restaurateur-turned-sleuth, will welcome the newest installment of her adventures when Murder from Scratch is released next month. The fourth murder mystery by Santa Cruz’s own Leslie Karst—former lawyer, trained chef and talented alto—Murder from Scratch once again combines restaurant ambience, a questionable death, and professional tensions in a literary bouillabaisse set right here in Santa Cruz. In this latest caper, Karst’s fanbase will find protagonist Solari embroiled in dysfunctional family issues, which this time includes a cousin’s death. Solari thinks it’s no accident and the investigation takes her into the highly competitive world of commercial cookery. Lots of plot twists, well-seasoned(!) with a few choice recipes. Kudos to Karst, a woman who can keep a deadline simmering. Watch the skies for an April release of Murder from Scratch. lesliekarstauthor.com.

ROOM WITH A VIEW FRESH CATCH The Dream Inn’s revamped Jack O’Neill Restaurant will serve up new creations like a Cowell’s Seafood Salad. PHOTO: COURTESY OF JACK O’NEILL RESTAURANT

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Springing Forward

48

A Persian feast, ‘Murder from Scratch’ and a Dream Inn dining makeover BY CHRISTINA WATERS

I

f the first day of spring is near, then so is the Persian New Year. To celebrate, chef Jozseph Schultz plans to dazzle your taste buds with his annual multicourse Persian feast on March 17. In addition to food, the evening will include hypnotic dancing from House of Inanna. The knowledgeable chef of India Joze, a one-man culinary Wikipedia, will also provide “the table history of Persian Cuisine.” Expect culinary offerings involving pomegranatecream-mint reduction sauce, lamb perfumed by spices, chicken wok’d

in a Persian apricot-orange flower glaze, and toasted almond herb pilaf. Preparation styles and spicing combos promise to be the stars. Course after course, this is truly a meal to remember. Tickets very limited. To intensify the journey through India Joze’ Persian New Year festivities, adventurous diners and dancers might also want to leap over al fresco flames the evening of March 19. “It’s always the last Tuesday before the vernal equinox. Wednesdays start on Tuesday eve, just like the Jewish calendar,” the chef explains.

“Coincidence? I don't think so.” He also adds that “this ritual drumming and dancing reenacts the chasing out of the last unlucky Wednesday of the year. So on Tuesday, March 19 at India Joze, we build fires in the parking lot and invite all comers to jump the flames and burn away their past obstacles to happiness and prosperity in the coming year.” Removing obstacles. Sounds intriguing. Make reservations for the March 17 dinner, starting at 5 p.m., at 325-3633. Cost $45 per person. India Joze, 418 Front St., Santa Cruz. indiajoze.com.

The Dream Inn has just unveiled its new Jack O’Neill Restaurant in the former Aquarius, a dining and drinking spot that offers patrons the most spectacular view possible of the Santa Cruz wharf without the need for a wetsuit. (Apologies to the man who invented the wetsuit.) The newly spiffed up Jack O’Neill also offers live music starting at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings. Executive chef Ken Drew is still finetuning a new menu that will feature local ingredients, such as a Corralitos sausage sampler. Jack O’Neill Restaurant and Lounge at the Dream Inn, 175 W Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. (866) 966-0529, jackoneillrestaurant.com.

SOTOLA UPDATE Welcome aboard to siblings Jill and John Ealy, who along with colleague Josh Parmelee are the new owners of Capitola’s Sotola Bar & Grill located at 231 Esplanade, next to the bridge. I look forward to tasting the new menu and enjoying the dreamy view from the Sotola deck. Join me.


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aking cannabis candy isn’t so different from what typical boutique candy makers do, says Daniel Thomas, chief operating officer of Santa Cruz cannabis-infused cough drop company Dollar Dose. “It’s pretty much standard candy making, with a little bit of special stuff added,” says Thomas, who once worked for Marini's Candies. It’s the process of getting the “special” THC into the hard candy, and keeping levels consistent across batches, that is Dollar Dose’s secret weapon. As of September, the company led by founder and CEO Jason Freeman had sold 170,800 of their $1 cannabis-infused lozenges, which come in four flavors: hibiscus sativa, indica root beer, indica apple, and watermelon sativa. The candies are available all the way from Shasta County to Los Angeles, including here in Santa Cruz County at Kindpeoples, Cannacruz, TreeHouse, Herbal Cruz, Central Coast Wellness Center, and Curbstone Exchange. In December, Dollar Dose became the first cannabis distributor to obtain a local conditional use permit.

What’s it been like navigating the regulatory framework? DANIEL THOMAS: It’s been nuts.

Until mid-January, there were no real permanent regulations. They were all temporary emergency regulations, and they changed several times. Some of those changes were pretty big shifts. Then they would propose new regulations. Sometimes there would be things in those new regulations that would make us go, ‘Ah, that would be terrible!’ or ‘That would be sweet!’ They were just proposals. It’s this shifting puzzle. It’s hard to get clear answers. It was just us staring at the screen of regulations until our eyes start watering. Fingers crossed they don’t change them too much.

Cheech and Chong or Seth Rogen? Cheech and Chong—timeless. Come on.

You should introduce a night-time varietal and call it Dollar Doze. Oohhh… shoot. [Nodding] We’re definitely looking at scaling. With this new sales bump, we’re gonna buy a new forming wheel. We’re gonna start getting new products rolled out. We are interested in doing higher dosages, as well as toffees, gummies, stuff along those lines. dollar-dose.com


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Along with its weekly delivery of fresh, organic produce, Live Earth Farm is now partnering with other local vendors. Look for a hearty loaf of bread from Companion Bakeshop, pastas and pies from Pie Ranch in Pescadero, poultry and eggs from Sol Seeker Farm in Corralitos, and jams from Happy Girl Kitchen in Monterey. Additional partners include coffee from Hidden Fortress Roasters and honey from Rivas Bees and Carmel Honey. Live Earth Farm, based in Watsonville, offers shoppers an abundance of choices for the weekly CSA (community-supported agriculture) delivery. And we can all look forward to the farm stand and U-pick opening again in May. In the meantime, you can find Live Earth at local farmers markets. Bonus: their nonprofit Farm Discovery educational programs (farmdiscovery.org) are integral to the farm’s success. For more info on Live Earth Farm, including farm tours and field trips, visit liveearthfarm.net.

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

n a recent trip to Napa, we stopped by Ashes & Diamonds for a tasting. Friends had recommended this fairly new operation, both for the gorgeous wines and the unique mid-century-modern tasting room. The brainchild of advertising executive Kashy Khaledi, a visit to Ashes & Diamonds is exciting and memorable. The winery’s 2014 Cabernet Franc ($75) is one of the better Cab Francs I have enjoyed in some time. Winemaker Steve Matthiasson has made a perfect, aromatic wine with enormous bold flavors. A blend of select vineyards from Napa Valley, one can almost taste the volcanic, clay and sandy soils from which the luscious black grapes sprang. The Ashes & Diamonds team say their winemaking philosophy is simple: “A wine should be based on the quality of farming, minimal intervention in the cellar, and time-honored methods of healthy fermentation and harmonious blending.” Khaledi is the son of Darioush Khaledi, owner of the famous Darioush Winery in Napa, with its impressive entrance

Wednesday-Monday 1-6 Closed Tuesday 334-C Ingalls Street • Santa Cruz www.equinoxwine.com • 831.471.8608

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H RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES KALI YUGA: WHEN THE DARKNESS IS ALLOWED Here we are in a Mercury retrograde, under Pisces (two fish hiding behind ferns), and at the beginning of Lent (40 days and nights of purifying our elementals). Pisces is the sign of the world savior, the sign that “saves the world.” Our world at this time is in the heart of the Kali Yuga, which is a time of darkness. The Kali Yuga is a time when truth is obscured and humanity becomes confused. This darkness is allowed so humanity can begin to discern light from dark, truth from untruth, moral from the immoral, and goodness from evil. The darkness is thus purposeful for humanity’s upward evolution. Pisces is esoterically known as the “Light of the World.” The Pisces light ends forever the darkness (ignorance, cruelty, hopelessness, evil, etc.). Pisces is known for its saviors, for sacrifice, and sense of dying to the world. Saviors appear periodically on Earth, dying to their state of

paradise, sacrificing themselves to help in the struggles of humanity. They are Bodhisattvas, promising to remain on earth until all have awakened. Their words, the keynote of Pisces, “I leave the Father’s House (heaven), I return to Earth, in order to serve (in Aquarius) and save humanity (in Pisces).” Christ (archangel from Sirius, overshadowing Jesus of Galilee) was our last and present (Pisces/Aquarius) savior and world teacher. This is his season, the season of Lent. We stand with him in the desert for 40 days and nights. Lent is a time of preparing our elementals (the stuff our bodies are made of) for a new year, a new season (spring equinox), when the sun enters Aries. And this year, it is also the Aries solar festival, when the forces of restoration stream into the Earth. Lent prepares us for the resurrection festival, which we call Easter (April 21).

ARIES Mar21–Apr20

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22

Much of you has, should or will go into a state of solitude and retreat for a while. This is food for you, for your soul ruler, Mercury, is now retrograde. It’s calling you to a place of intelligent contemplation so you can reflect upon the past year and make plans in the quietest part of yourself for the future (when sun enters Aries, the new spiritual year). This is a gift of time and preparation. Attend church or synagogue or a yoga or meditation retreat.

Perhaps you find yourself striving to harmonize past and present with significant others—friends, therapists, business colleagues, family, and lover(s). Harmonizing all aspects of your life allows you to become more whole. It’s painful, the razor’s edge, honing our rough edges (karma). This is the design embedded within all relationships. What is your story? Who do you love? What do you fear? What soothes you?

Esoteric Astrology as news for week of March 6, 2019

TAURUS Apr21–May21 You find yourself constantly amid groups that need your ideas, practical direction, determined focus, and your quiet, efficient and illuminating mind. Behind all your research, knowledge and teachings is the reality that it’s time to salvage the world, and that much sacrifice must come forth from all of us to restore the plan on Earth. When you lead, everyone follows.

GEMINI May 22–June 20 What do you think and feel is your gift as a Gemini in the repair and reconstruction of the world? What do you want to be recognized for in this lifetime? What gifts of self will you offer to the new group of world servers whose task is to impress humanity with new ideals that will create the new culture and civilization? These and other ideas new and revelatory will occur in the Mercury retrograde.

MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

CANCER Jun21–Jul20

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An interesting situation is occurring. You now have the freedom to choose many paths. You can also choose to remain immovable and static. Your life becomes charged with possibilities and potentials. You will perceive complex information along with multiple levels of reality. You have entered the same brilliance Einstein saw and lived within. Ideas coming forth from the mind of God to your mind.

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You might find that religious themes begin to form an important part of your life. All of a sudden altruism becomes your keynote and people begin to perceive you as philosophical, idealistic and visionary. You will have inspired insights that assist both the self and others. You imagine other lands, distant worlds. It’s good to build a boat, eat fish, swim in warm waters, talk with the devas.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 At times you find yourself functioning in other worlds. Compassion, empathy, kind-heartedness, and intuition unfold daily. Do not be concerned with not having adequate resources, and try not to feel deprivation. There is no deprivation. There is only goodness, everywhere. Some obligations and responsibilities call. Serve like a Bodhisattva.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 As written previously, this is a time set aside to care for your health. Know that you are the best there is, always. Do you have a dream? A vision? Do not become disillusioned. This affects your health, which, with focus and care, you must rebuild time and again. Do not overwork or allow excessive worry. You never fail. There is no failure. Only experience, understanding and learning.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20 There are times you may struggle with disappointment concerning perhaps relationships and professional endeavors. However, in the midst of this you will find a deep strain of inner joy, creativity and then, recognition in the world. At times you’ll feel great powers still to be expressed and long to do something significant. You realize you’re talented and very lucky. And that sacrifice plays a large part. You need a bit of peace and seclusion.

CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 You find you’re more curious than usual about the words you and others speak. You look beneath the surface of language to understand the complete picture. If one listens to communications through the question “What needs are being expressed here?” the hidden psychological messages become clear. Keep writing, creating and doing mental/imaginative work. Confide in those who listen.

AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 You can be very generous. However, you can also be dreamy and/or imaginative about your money. You have a sense of timing and intuition concerning when things should be done, with whom, when and where. These abilities will be more easily seen in the coming months. You can tap into unusual resources. There is always the supply you need. Share it generously.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 You’re not an everyday sort of person. You don’t have the energy of Aries, steadfastness of Taurus, business acumen of Capricorn, or the relating skills of Libra. You’re in touch with other levels, with different values based on spiritual motivations. Know that in the darkest of times, you still have the ability to have gratitude. Deep within is a state of hidden joy. You need music and art and to plant many and various edible fruit, nut and berry trees.


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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0000111 The following Married Couple is doing business as AWEAR WARES, SIRIUS WARES. 15210 UPPER ELLEN ROAD. LOS GATOS, CA 95033. County of Santa Cruz. CAROLINE BLISS-ISBERG & CLIFFORD A. ISBERG. 15210 UPPER ELLEN ROAD. LOS GATOS, CA 95033. This business is conducted by a Married Couple signed: CAROLINE BLISS-ISBERG. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Jan 15, 2019. Feb. 13, 20, 27, & Mar. 6.

ANESTHESIA SERVICES, PC. 214 FAIRMOUNT AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. Al# 3680204. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: NORTHERN NURSING ANESTHESIA SERVICES, PC. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 7/1/2014. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 6, 2019. Feb. 13, 20, 27, & Mar 6.

was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 7, 2019. Feb. 13, 20, 27, & Mar. 6.

is conducted by a Corporation Signed: WILLIAM SUMP, CEO. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 13, 2019. Feb. 20, 27, Mar. 6, & 13.

hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 3, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb 13, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior

Court. Feb. 20, 27, Mar. 6, & 13. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000302 The following Individual is doing business as SHELTON PAINTING. 4241 STARBOARD CT., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. BRYAN CHRISTOPHER SHELTON. 3912 PORTOLA DRIVE #211, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: BRYAN CHRISTOPHER SHELTON The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT

APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 14, 2019. Feb 27, Mar. 6, 13 & 20.

LEE BLACKWOLF CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00450. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner ERIN LEE BLACKWOLF has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: ERIN LEE BLACKWOLF to: ARRIN LEE BLACKWOLF. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 5, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 8, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Feb. 27, Mar. 6, 13, & 20.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000248 The following Corporation is doing business as NORTHERN ANESTHESIA SERVICES. 214 FAIRMOUNT AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. NORTHERN NURSING

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000258 The following Corporation is doing business as LUX LAUNDER. 1370 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. GOLD STANDARD LAUNDRY, INC. 3441 CRESTLINE WAY, SOQUEL, CA 95073. Al# 4229176. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: GOLD STANDARD LAUNDRY, INC. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000066 The following Individual is doing business as ASL MOM, VISUAL VOICE COMMUNICATIONS. 460 KINGS HIGHWAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. County of Santa Cruz. KATHERINE LIVINGSTON. 460 KINGS HIGHWAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: KATHERINE LIVINGSTON The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 11/1/2005. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 8, 2019. Feb 20, 29, Mar. 6, & 13. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000234 The following Individual is doing business as STEAMIN' HOT COFFEE & ESPRESSO. 311 CAPITOLA AVE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. JENNIFER CAROL LAWRENCE. 615 LOMA PRIETA DR., APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: JENNIFER CAROL LAWRENCE The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 4, 2019. Feb 20, 27, Mar. 6, & 13. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000294 The following Corporation is doing business as BLOOM NETWORK. 300 PIONEER ST., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. SC BLOOM NETWORK, INC. 300 PIONEER ST., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. Al# 4161860. This business

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000291 The following Individual is doing business as SMOG PLUS SERVICE. 1505 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. FARDAD VAZIRI. 138 SEARIDGE CT., #1, APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: FARDAD VAZIRI The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on February 12, 2019. Feb. 20, 27, Mar. 6, & 13.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000241 The following Individual is doing business as RUMBA NIGHT CLUB. 840 EAST STREET, STE E, HOLLISTER, CA 95023. County of San Benito. SAMUEL YANEZ GUTIERREZ. 901 ALOHA LANE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SAMUEL YANEZ GUTIERREZ The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 5, 2019. Feb. 20, 27, Mar. 6, & 13. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF PATRICIA REAP CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00491. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner MARIA DALIA SALINAS has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: MARIA DALIA SALINAS to: DALIA SALINAS. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the

DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY

Proposed Flood Hazard Determinations for the City of Santa Cruz and Unincorporated Areas of Santa Cruz County, California, and Case No. 18-09-2484P. The Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) solicits technical information or comments on proposed flood hazard determinations for the Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM), and where applicable, the Flood Insurance Study (FIS) report for your community. These flood hazard determinations may include the addition or modification of Base Flood Elevations, base flood depths, Special Flood Hazard Area boundaries or zone designations, or the regulatory floodway. The FIRM and, if applicable, the FIS report have been revised to reflect these flood hazard determinations through issuance of a Letter of Map Revision (LOMR), in accordance with Title 44, Part 65 of the Code of Federal Regulations. These determinations are the basis for the floodplain management measures that your community is required to adopt or show evidence of having in effect to qualify or remain qualified for participation in the National Flood Insurance Program. For more information on the proposed flood hazard determinations and information on the statutory 90-day period provided for appeals, please visit FEMA’s website at www.fema. gov/plan/prevent/fhm/bfe, or call the FEMA Map Information eXchange (FMIX) toll free at 1-877-FEMA MAP (1-877-336-2627).

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF GERALD CRAIG VALENTA CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00505. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner GERALD CRAIG VALENTA has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: GERALD CRAIG VALENTA to: KYLE JACOB CROW. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 5, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 14, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Feb. 27, Mar. 6, 13, & 20. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF ERIN

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000297 The following Individual is doing business as CENTRAL COAST CONSTRUCTION COMPANY. 2736 FREEDOM BLVD., WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. County of Santa Cruz. JOSE MARIA LOPEZ SARABIA. 2736 FREEDOM BLVD., WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: JOSE MARIA LOPEZ

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 6-12, 2019

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF MARY MARCON KILZER CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00392. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner MARY MARCON KILZER has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: MARY MARCON KILZER and MARY MARCON to: MARY SAN MARCON and MARY SAN MARCON. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING March 22, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb 5, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Feb 13, 20, 27, & Mar 6.

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF DAVID DU LONG CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00424. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner DAVID DU LONG has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: DAVID DU LONG to: DAVID DULONG. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Mar 25, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 7, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Feb 13, 20, 27, & Mar. 6.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000254The following Individual is doing business as LEASING HQ. 4061 SOQUEL DRIVE, SUITE C, SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. CHRISTOPHER ROBERT SHOEMAKER. 123 VICTORIA LANE, APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: CHRISTOPHER SHOEMAKER. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 7, 2019. Feb. 13, 20, 27, & Mar 6.

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SARABIA The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 14, 2019. Feb 20, 27, Mar. 6, & 13.

NO. 2019-0000321 The following Married Couple is doing business as BATTLE MOUNTAIN EXCAVATION. 625 ICE CREAM GRADE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. STEPHANIE L. JESSEN & DARYL WILLIAM JESSEN. 625 ICE CREAM GRADE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Married Couple signed: STEPHANIE L. JESSEN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/15/1987. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb 19, 2019. Feb. 27, Mar. 6, 13, & 20.

Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 8, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 21, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Feb. 27, Mar. 6, 13, & 20.

ABLYSS STUDIOS. 815 ALMAR AVENUE, SUITE K, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. Countyof Santa Cruz. ANDREW FEHLMAN. 3050 COAST ROAD, SANTA CRUZ, CA95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ANDREW FEHLMAN Theregistrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOTAPPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 27,2019. Mar. 6, 13, 20, & 27.

KEFFI BELL. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 15, 2019 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 27, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Mar.6, 13, 20, & 27.

Court. Mar. 6, 13, 20, & 27. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF PHILIP ROGER GAUSS-OAKES CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00618. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner PHILIP ROGER GAUSS-OAKES has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: PHILIP ROGER GAUSS-OAKES to: PHILIP MARC HAMILTON GAUSS. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 11, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 25, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Mar. 6, 13, 20 & 27.

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MARCH 6-12, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

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CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF HEIDI MARIE WAGNER HOSEA CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00509. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner HEIDI MARIE WAGNER HOSEA has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: HEIDI MARIE WAGNER HOSEA to: HEIDI MARIE WAGNER. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 2, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb 14, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Feb. 27, Mar. 6, 13, & 20. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000323 The following Individual is doing business as FULL STEAM DUMPLING. 147 COATES DR., APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. ANDY HUYNH. 147 COATES DR., APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ANDY HUYNH The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 19, 2019. Feb. 27, Mar. 6, 13 & 20. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000326 The following Individual is doing business as MOOSICAL DJ SERVICES. 1730 15TH AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. SEAN KEENAN. 1730 15TH AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SEAN KEENAN The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb 19, 2019. Feb 27, Mar. 6, 13 & 20. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000346 The following Individual is doing business as COASTAL BUDS CO. 320 BRONCO ROAD, SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. GUSTAVO MONROY. 320 BRONCO ROAD, SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: GUSTAVO MONROY The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 20, 2019. Feb. 27, Mar. 6, 13, & 20. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF JENNIFER CHAPLIN CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00573. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner JENNIFER CHAPLIN has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: QUINN SKYLER NICHOLSON to: QUINN HAZEL CHAPLIN. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted.

REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE WITH CHANGE NO. 20190000284 The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as SHALE CANYON WINES. 32930 SYCAMORE FLATS RD., GREENFIELD, CA 95006. County of Monterey. SHALE CANYON WINERY, LLC. 600 BRIAR DRIVE, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. AI# 21410049. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company signed: KEITH PRADER. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 7/31/2008. Original FBN number: 2014-0000459. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on February 11, 2019. Mar. 6, 13, 20, & 27. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0000350 The following Individual is doing business as OSGOOD EDUCATIONAL SERVICES. 265 KINGS HIGHWAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. County of Santa Cruz. JOHN TUCKER OSGOOD. 265 KINGS HIGHWAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: JOHN TUCKER OSGOOD. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 9/5/2008. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 20, 2019. Mar. 6, 13, 20, & 27. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000401 The following Individual is doingbusiness as

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000409 The following Joint Venture is doing business as SANTA CRUZ SURGERY CENTER. 3003 PAUL SWEET ROAD, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95065. County of Santa Cruz. DIGNITY HEALTH, 185 BERRY STREET SUITE 300, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94107 ALT # 292448 & SANTA CRUZ SURGERY CENTER INVESTORS, INC., 3003 PAUL SWEET ROAD, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95065, ALT# 1623048. This business is conducted by a Joint Venture signed: MEREDITH NOHRDEN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 9/1/1988. ORIGINAL FBN # 2014-0000154. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 28, 2019. March 6, 13, 20, & 27. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000134. The following Copartnership is doing business as MID COAST REALTY. 110 SEA TERRACE WAY, APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. GUY BERNARD CHANDA. 110 SEA TERRACE WAY, APTOS, CA 95003 & DARRYL DAVID KENYON. 7523 FAWN COURT, CARMEL, CA 93923. This business is conducted by a Copartnership signed: DARRYL DAVID KENYON. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on January 18, 2019. Mar. 6, 13, 20, & 27. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF KEFFI BELL CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00654. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner KEFFI BELL has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: KEFFI BELL to: ANASUYA

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF CARINA ALONDRA MOYA CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00640. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner CARINA ALONDRA MOYA has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: ALEXA MOYA MENDOZA to: ALEXA MOYA ORTIZ. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 12, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 26, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0000390 The following Individual is doing business as GIGHUB. 214 PLYMOUTH STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. NICHOLAS LAWRENCE LEONE. 214 PLYMOUTH STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: NICHOLAS LAWRENCE LEONE The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 25, 2019. Mar. 6, 13, 20, & 27. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF CASEY DEAN SPROUSE CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV00564. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner CASEY DEAN

Looking for 1 or 2 bdrm - rural, private rental home. Off-grid possible. Great credit, good bank + local refs. Quiet Engineer gentleman – Robert (831) 239-8790

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GARDENING SERVICES Happy Gardens Rototilling (831) 234-4341 SPROUSE has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: CASEY DEAN SPROUSE to: CASEY DEAN DAKESSIAN. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely

filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING April 8, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Feb. 20, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Mar. 6, 13, 20 & 27.


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PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM

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IN SP

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D O SI G TT ER

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I don’t know if you noticed that Dos Equis recently retired Jonathan Goldsmith, the American actor who became famous for his role as The World’s Most Interesting Man. Turns out that Goldsmith will be relocating to Santa Cruz to start his new career as The World’s Most Interesting Realtor. Since there are more than 1300 Realtors in the county already, there’s always room for one more. Here are a few of the tag lines he is considering for his initial rollout campaign: He’s the Most Interesting Realtor in the World... • Other agents have his name on their vanity license plates • He gives virtual tours in person • His clients sign disclosures acknowl edging he’s The Most Interesting Realtor in the World • He can make a house go up in value just by appreciating it • He once foreclosed on a bank • He once picked a loan lock • Buyers he doesn’t work with suffer from remorse • When he lists a property, half baths become whole again • Even the geodesic domes he rep resents have square footage • Loan underwriters wait for his approval • He once sold a dream house in his sleep • He once went to mime school to look more convincing when going through the motions • He uses a tailor for arm’s length transactions • His termite company once tented a circus

Tom Brezsny

Realtor® DRE#01063297

103 Whispering Pines Dr, Ste D Scotts Valley 831.706.8776 | clarksauction@gmail.com clarksauctions.com

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Where the locals shop since 1938. VOTED BEST BUTCHER SHOP BEST WINE SELECTION BEST CHEESE SELECTION BEST LOCALLY OWNED GROCERY STORE BEST MURAL /PUBLIC ART

Family owned & operated 80 years. 622 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz

OUR 80 TH YEAR

WEEKLY SPECIALS Good th r u 3/12 /19

GROCERY

BUTCHER SHOP

ALL NATURAL USDA Choice beef & lamb, Local, Organic, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet only corn-fed Midwest pork, Rocky free-range Compare & Save chickens, Mary’s air-chilled chickens, ■ MARTINELLI’S SPARKLING CIDER wild-caught seafood, Boar’s Head products.

HONEY DIJON PORK TENDERLOIN WINE & FOOD PAIRING Ingredients:

2 pork tenderloins ¼ cup soy sauce 3 tablespoons honey 3 tablespoons olive oil 2 tablespoons orange juice 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard 3-4 garlic cloves, minced 2 teaspoons dried rosemary (or 1 sprig freshly chopped) fresh ground pepper, to taste

Instructions:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a rimmed baking sheet with cooking spray, and place the two pork tenderloins on top. In a small bowl, whisk together the soy sauce, honey, olive oil, orange juice, Dijon mustard, garlic, rosemary and pepper. Cut small slits in the top of each of the tenderloins, about halfway through (about 6 slits on each). Pour the sauce over the top of the tenderloins. Bake in the preheated oven for 40-50 minutes, spooning the sauce over the top of the tenderloins every 10 minutes. This creates a super yummy glaze on top and will soak into the slits you cut in the meat. Bake until a meat thermometer inserted in the largest part of the tenderloins reads 145. Remove tenderloins from the oven and allow to rest for 10-15 minutes before slicing and serving. Serve with sauce from the pan drizzled over the top. Enjoy!

2016 MARK WEST PINOT NOIR SANTA LUCIA HIGHLANDS REG 15.99 A STEAL FOR 8.99!!

■ LONDON BROIL, USDA Choice/ 5.98 Lb ■ BEEF FLANK STEAK, USDA Choice/ 7.98 Lb ■ VEAL RIB CHOPS, Pasture Fed/ 12.98 Lb

PORK

“Conventional” 25.4oz/ 2.99

■ ANNIE’S HOMEGROWN MAC & CHEESE

SAUSAGE

■ NOOSA YOGHURT, Finest, 8oz/ 1.99

■ JALAPENO & CHEESE SAUSAGE/ 7.98 Lb ■ SMOKED ITALIAN SAUSAGE/ 6.98 Lb ■ CHICKEN CHIPOTLE SAUSAGE/ 6.98 Lb ■ CHEESE & HERB SAUSAGE/ 7.98 Lb

Local Bakeries “Fresh Daily” ■ BECKMANN’S Whole Wheat Sour Petite/ 3.69 ■ BECKMANN’S Francese Baguette/ 3.69 ■ KELLY’S Sour Cheddar, 16oz/ 4.09 ■ SUMANO’S, Sourdough Sliced Loaf/ 3.99 ■ SUMANO’S, Sourdough Round/ 3.99

Delicatessen ■ BELFIORE Fresh Mozzarella Pearls/ 3.99 ■ GALLO SALAME Light & Original/ 3.39

PRODUCE

■ LAURA CHENEL’S CHÈVRE Pimento & Garlic

California Fresh, Blemish-Free, Organic, Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organics, Happy Boy Farms

■ STONEFIRE Naan Dippers/ 2.99

■ WILDBRINE KIMCHI Spicy/ 6.89

■ WISCONSIN SHARP CHEDDAR Loaf Cuts/ 5.09 Lb

4Pk Cans, 16oz/ 7.99 +CRV

■ GUINNESS Extra Stout, 22oz Btl/ 2.49 +CRV

■ BUSHMILLS (90WE)/ 15.99

■ TULLAMORE DEW/ 19.99 ■ JAMESON/ 21.99

■ PROPER TWELVE/ 22.99

■ RED BREAST 12yr Pot Still/ 55.99 ■ GREEN SPOT Pot Still/ 59.99

Red

■ 2013 TRUVÉE RED (Reg 20.99)/ 8.99

■ 2013 ZACA MESA Z CUVÉE (91WE, Reg 24.99)/ 9.99 ■ 2013 CHATEAU STE MICHELLE MERLOT Indian Wells (90WS, Reg 18.99)/ 9.99

■ 2015 MERCER MERLOT Horse Haven Hills (Reg 26.99)/ 11.99

■ 2013 FRANCIS COPPOLA PITAGORA (Reg 31.99)/ 13.99

White

■ 2015 DECUGNANO DEI BARBI (90WE, Reg 18.99)/ 7.99

Cheese - Best Selection in Santa Cruz

■ ZUCCHINI SQUASH, Extra Fancy/ 1.19 Lb ■ BANANAS, Always Ripe/ .79 Lb ■ AVOCADOS, Ripe and Ready to Eat/ 1.19 Ea ■ POTATOES, Red and Yukon/ .99 Lb ■ APPLES Fuji and Granny Smith/ 1.99 Lb ■ ORGANIC BANANAS The Perfect Snack/ .99 Lb ■ ROMA TOMATOES Ripe and Firm/ 1.19 Lb ■ BROCCOLI CROWNS, Fresh from the Field/ 2.29 Lb ■ LOOSE CARROTS, Great Source of Vitamin A/ .59 Lb ■ CLUSTER TOMATOES Ripe on the Vine/ 2.69 Lb

■ GUINNESS Draught Stout, 4Pk Cans, 16oz/ 6.99 +CRV

■ WEXFORD ORIGINAL Irish Cream Ale,

Irish Whiskey

■ C20 Coconut Water, 3 Kinds, 17.5oz/ 1.99 +CRV

■ LARGE WHITE PRAWNS, Peeled & Deveined/ 14.98 Lb ■ MEDIUM PRAWNS, White, Deveined/ 10.98 Lb ■ SALMON LOX TRIMMINGS/ 10.98 Lb ■ LARGE COOKED PRAWNS, Peeled & Deveined/ 13.98 Lb

Beer

■ CRABBIE’S Ginger Beer, 4Pks, 12oz/ 8.99 +CRV

12oz Cans/ 3.99 +CRV

FISH

Best Buys, Local, Regional, International

■ MAGNER’S Irish Cider 19.2oz/ 2.99 +CRV

Classics, 6oz, 3 kinds/ 1.49 ■ LACROIX Sparkling Water, 8Pk,

■ PORK TENDERLOIN/ 4.98 Lb ■ PORK BUTTERFLIED CHOPS, Boneless/ 3.98 Lb

WINE & SPIRITS

Great Price

Average Cuts/ 5.49 Lb

■ BOAR’S HEAD MOZZARELLA Whole Milk/ 4.09 Lb ■ ST. AGUR BLUE CHEESE/ 18.99 Lb ■ POET’S IRISH CHEDDAR, A Favorite/ 6.79 L

Shop Local First ■ ORGANIC BUTTER 1/2lb/ 3.99 ■ BUTTER/ 4.99 Lb ■ ORGANIC KEFIR 32oz/ 3.99 ■ ORGANIC LOWFAT YOGURT 32oz/ 3.99

■ 2016 SECRET RESERVE SAUVIGNON BLANC (91JS, Reg 12.99)/ 7.99

■ 2016 PAZO SERANTELLOS ALBARIÑO (Reg 14.99)/ 8.99

■ 2016 NOBILO CHARDONNAY (Reg 15.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2014 TERLATO CHARDONNAY Napa Valley (90WE, Reg 33.99)/ 9.99

Connoisseurs Corner- Santa Cruz Mountains Chardonnay ■ 2013 THOMAS FOGARTY (95WE)/ 33.99

■ 2017 SANTE ARCANGELI Lester Vineyard (93WE)/ 34.99 ■ 2015 LIOCO La Marisma (94W&S)/ 49.99

■ 2015 RIDGE Montebello (93JD, 92WS)/ 49.99

■ 2016 BEAUREGARD Bald Mountain (94WA)/ 49.99 ■ 2013 MOUNT EDEN Estate (93V)/ 63.99

AIMEE PAGE, 40-Odd-Year Customer, Santa Cruz

S HOPP ER SPOTLIG HT

Occupation: Front house manager, Chef Evan Presents; pastry chef/owner, hollyhockcakes.com Hobbies: Running, looking for mountain lions, playing music, traveling, eating chocolates at Shopper’s meat counter, dinner parties

Who or what first got you you shopping here? I was a week old and my mother brought me to Shopper’s. I remember the free hot dogs they would give to kids and the wooden floors which I still find amazing. I like Shopper's aesthetics, the lighting… I have this saying,‘If you can’t find it at Shopper’s, you probably don’t need it.’ It has the best of everything — in different price points — like their spice section, unusual baking items, amazing liquors, olive oils, vinegars, salsas, but also all your everyday products.They don’t have 2,000 of each product; Shopper’s is carefully curated. Someone has the vision.

How so? It’s a creatively-run business with a vision that’s been followed since the beginning. Shopper’s is iconic for a reason. I like that there’s only one location. I have friends with one restaurant and some with multiple locations.You lose a little something when duplicating.Take Chez Panisse… and Shopper’s. Both have that certain magic! Shopper’s is family-owned and committed to the community.The money stays here.The store has a family vibe and the employees seem happy. My sister worked here while in high school — she loved it! Shopper’s is very social and fun.And old-school cool!

What do you like to cook? Everything. From the exotic and international such as Mexican, Balinese and pasta dishes to cheese soufflés, quiches, roasted vegetables and more. I can find everything that I need at Shopper’s, like Bluegrass Butter and baking ingredients which are hard to find. Shopper’s organic produce is fantastic and sometimes cheaper than the conventional. Shopper’s is convenient as you never wait in line. The checkers — the entire staff — are genuine, friendly and not over-the-top.You have real interactions. I tell new residents that Shopper’s is the epitome of the Santa Cruz experience.

“I tell new residents that Shopper’s is the epitome of the Santa Cruz experience: there’s the Big Dipper, Steamer Lane and Shopper’s Corner.”

|

Corner: Soquel & Branciforte Avenues 7 Days: 6am-9pm

| Meat: (831) 423-1696 | Produce: (831) 429-1499 | Grocery: (831) 423-1398 | Wine: (831) 429-1804

Superb Products of Value: Local, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet ■ Neighborly Service for 80 Years


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