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The Santa Cruz Mu useum of Natural Historyy is a unique and valued d Santa Cruz County insttitution where they strivve to open windows in nto nature’s past, presen nt, and future through dynamic programs that in nspire stewardship of ou ur natural world. Theyy are wholly supported by b the work of a dedicate ed staff and inspiring com mmunity of volunteers as a well as through gen nerous donations from members m and donors, entrance fees, and purchases at our Museum store e. Sereno Group S G i proud is d to t supportt the th com mmitment it t and d service i that th t the th Santa S t Cruz C Museum off Natural Mu N t l Histor Hi t ry provides to ourr com mmunity. Forr more information about theirr program orr how you can get involved, please visit

w www.santacruzmuseu um.org

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INSIDE Volume 41, No. 33 November 26-December 2, 2014

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OPINION

EDITOR’S EDITOR R’S NOTE A few weeks ago, ag o, I went to a meeting at the headquarterss of headquarter the Community in FFoundation oundation o Gathered Aptos. Gather ed around ar ound the table were were staff memberss fr from member om all of the nonprofits nonprof ofiits we chose this year to support as part of the Good Time Timess Holiday Holiday Giving g campaign. (For (For more more on how we selected se elected these groups, groups, how the campaign camp paign works, works, and how to participate, see s page page 22.) humbling It was hum mbling just to be in the same room leaderss of wiith the local leader room with Community A Action Board, Grey ct ction B oard,, Gr ey Bears, Bearrs, Homeless Center, Homeleess Services Service v s Center r, Mountain Communityy R Resources, Pajaro esour s rcces, and P aajarro Valley Valle a ey Loaves Fishes. Loaves and Fish hees. These are are people whose wor work every day k ssaves aves lives ever y da y in Santa Cruz County County.. Some, like MariaElena D Dee L Laa Garza Garrza of CAB and Tim Bratton Bears, were practically Bratttton of Grey Grre ey y Bear s, wer e pr ractically a iconic to me, as a I’ve followed their work community, otherss worrk in the co ommunity y, while other

lik like ke Kristal Kristal Caballero Caballerro of PVLF and Jannan Jan nnan Th homas of HSC wer e new to their jo obs. Thomas were jobs. Bu ut the thing they all shar ed was an n But shared in nfectious energ y. They wer e full off infectious energy. were qu q uestions about how they y could hel lp p questions help th heir organizations make the most of their th his opportunity. opportunity. Most Most of us don’t see s this th he extr eme hung er and poverty in n the extreme hunger ou ur county rk to t our county,, but these people wor work m make y da ay. That coul d it better ever every day. could hu urt anyone’s anyone’s heart af ftter a while, but b hurt after th hey wer e all so positive and ex cite ed they were excited ab bout this pr roject. o Ther re was hope in about project. There th hat rroom. oom. that I told them that da y about how day th his is sue would kick off the mont ththis issue monthlo ong Holiday Holiday Giving campaign, an nd long and th hat in it, we wanted to tell their that st tories. That’ fiind in this stories. That’ss what you’ll find w week’ y. Read about them, th hem, week’ss cover stor story. an nd the incr edible wor k they’ re do oing and incredible work they’re doing in n our ar ea, and you’ll agree agree with me area, th hat they deser ve support from from al ll of that deserve all uss this holida y season. holiday STEVE S T VE P TE PALOPOLI ALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EDITOR OR-IN-CHIEF IN CHIEF

LETTER RS LETTERS

NOVEMBER NO VEMBER 26-DECE 26-DECEMBER MBER 2, 2 , 2014 201 4 | GTWEEKLY.COM GT WEEKL LY. C OM | S SANTACRUZ.COM ANTA CR UZ . C OM

HOPE FOR R LOCAL TECH

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I am writing in rregard egard to the rrecent ecent article in Goo d Times The N ew T ech Good Times,, ““The New Tech Nexus” ((GT, GTT,, 9/17). 9 Nexus” I just wanted to praise the article artticle and the start-up praise company San nta Cruz W o orks. company Santa Works. I am a busi iness student at San business niversity. I am also a Jose State Un University. small-business owner in Santa Cruz. small-business ften t ponder ponde er wh y ther e ar e so I of often why there are many amazin ng minds in this county many amazing county,, ugh g ood tech and and not enou enough good industry jobss her e. I was appalled to industry here. read the stati istic that 21, 000 people read statistic 21,000 work and com mmute over the hill for work commute tech-related jobs. j y tech-related As I head into m my epreneurship senior year a ass an entr entrepreneurship major, I was so ex cited to see this major, excited company in action. I am start-up company always lookin ng for wa ys to sta y always looking ways stay o looking for wa ys to local, but also ways create jobs fo or individuals so they create for y loca e is a can sta stay locall as well. Ther There e that suffer quality of life sufferss when c in a car. I you spend it commuting his sever al da ys a week. experience th this several days

I wanted to thank Santa Cruz Works, Wo orks, and applaud it for its vision viision and the opportunities it is bringing brringing to the local community members. m member s. It is important to build d an n infrastructure infrastructure for jobs in this county. co ounty. My only qualm with this article arrticle is that it did not explain how ho ow the company company would inform commuters co ommuters and potential job candidates ca andidates that the opportunitiess exist ex xist here. here. This key piece missing missing g from frrom the article kept me asking how h this th his would happen. my The article piqued m y curiosity y enough en nough to research research this company company more. m e. I look forward mor forrwar w d to seeing how ho ow the We more th he company company does. W e need mor e awareness aw wareness around around d growth g owth potential gr potent t tial i l in n our county and if the visionaries visionaries stick sttick together together and support one another, an nother, then there there may may be hope for a thriving Santa Cruz!

PHOTO CON CONTEST NTEST MARQUEE MAR QUEE MA MASHUP SHUP P Rio Theatre Theatre owner owner Laurence Laurence Bedford Bedford asks, asks, “Do “Do you you think these these two two

have shared ha ve eever ver shar ed a marquee marquuee before?” before?” We’re We’re guessing guessing no, no, but we’d we’ e d love love to to hear hear them duet on a Cohen Photograph byy Laur Laurence Bedford. LLeonard eonard C ohen ssong. ong. Pho otograph b ence Bedf ord. etc.) name.. Phot Photos Submit ttoo photos@gtweekly.com. photos@gtweeekly.com. Include information information (location, (locatioon, et c.) and yyour our name os mayy be cr cropped. Preferably, photos inchess b byy 4 inc inches ma opped. P referab bly, phot os should be 4 inche ches and minimum 250 dpi.

GOOD IDEA

D WORK GOOD

HONORING DONORS DON NORS

GIVING WITH ALL THE TR TRIMMINGS IMMINGS

Dozens ooff flo Dozens flowers wers will be de dedicated edicated on organ the Rose Parade behalf ooff or gan donors donors at th he R ose P arade Pasadena New Day. One in P asadena on Ne w Year’s Year’s D ay. O ne ooff honorees the honor ees will be Winton Wintonn “Jon” “Jon” Martin Dowler, whose were donated D owler, who se ccorneas orneas w erre donat ed when ago. Dowler was he died 26 years years ag o. D owleer w as honored honored past week, at the Watsonville Watsonville DMV thiss p ast w eek, manager at a rreception eception with DMV ooffice fffice manag er Shipley, daughter. Rhonda Shiple y, his daught ter. The flower flower appear float will appe ar on this yyear’s ear’s flo oat ffor or the California Donor Network. Calif foornia Transplant Transplant D onorr Net work.

T WEEK QUOTE OF THE

“Thanksgiv “Thanksgiving, g ving, g man. Not a good g d to be b my day m pants.”” — KEVIN KE VIN JJAMES AMES

CONTACT

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Dick Peixoto Peixoto of of Lakeside Lakeside Organics Organics in Watsonvillle donated W atsonvillle donat ed 2200 00 turkeys turkeys to to Second Harvest S econd Harv vest FFood ood Bank on Monday. Monday. The turkeys turkeys arrived arrived in time to to be distributed dis tributed to to Pajaro Pajaro Valley Valley families, families, through thr ough Second Second Harvest’s Harvest’s local local partner p artner agencies, agenncies, in the days days before before Thanksgiving. Thank sgivingg. Is there there any any better better time ttoo be b reminded remind i d ded d about b t the th impact imp i actt of of sharing with those those in need?

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LOCAL TALK

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What charities would you like to see people support this season? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT

Any charity that helps feed people who are hungry. The Homeless Services Center, Homeless Garden Project, Second Harvest Food Bank, Valley Churches United— those are really local oriented. JUDY ALLEN

SCOTTS VALLEY | CONSULTING

The Salvation Army, because they help out here locally in the community, and they have a pretty good reputation in terms of how they spend their money. PAUL COTY

FELTON | BUSINESS OWNER

Doctors Without Borders, because I know they do good, they go into foreign countries and bring medical supplies in times of need. SANTA CRUZ | MUSICIAN

[Lucile Packard] Children’s Hospital, because my cousin was born with a tracheotomy, scoliosis, and a drip feed tube, and they took really amazing care of him. CARA VANDAGRIFF

SANTA CRUZ | JACK OF ALL TRADES

The Hari Krishna temple, because they are expanding upon knowledge that’s beyond the basic necessities of just maintaining the body. RADHEYA FOURNIER

SANTA CRUZ | STUDENT

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

SHADE BYRON

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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of November 26 ARIES Mar21–Apr19 What exactly do you believe in, Aries? What’s your philosophy of life? Do you think that most people are basically good and that you can make a meaningful life for yourself if you just work hard and act kind? Do you believe that evil, shape shifting, kitten-eating extraterrestrials have taken on human form and are impersonating political leaders who control our society? Are you like the character Crash Davis in the film *Bull Durham,* who believed in “high fiber, good Scotch, the sweet spot, and long, slow, deep, soft, wet kisses that last three days”? Now would be an excellent time for you to get very clear about the fundamental principles that guide your behavior. Re-commit yourself to your root beliefs—and jettison the beliefs that no longer work for you.

TAURUS Apr20–May20 I have two encyclopedias of dreams, and they disagree on the symbolic meaning of mud. One book says that when you dream of mud, you may be facing a murky moral dilemma in your waking life, or are perhaps dealing with a messy temptation that threatens to compromise your integrity. The other encyclopedia suggests that when you dream of mud, it means you have received an untidy but fertile opportunity that will incite growth and creativity. I suspect that you have been dreaming of mud lately, Taurus, and that both meanings apply to you.

GEMINI May21–June20 Are there certain influences you would love to bring into your life, but you can't figure out how? Do you fantasize about getting access to new resources that would make everything better for you, but they seem to be forever out of reach? If you answered “yes,” it’s time to stop moping. I’m happy to report that you have more power than usual to reel in those desirable influences and resources. To fully capitalize on this power, be confident that you can attract what you need.

CANCER Jun21–Jul22 Should you cut back and retrench? Definitely. Should you lop off and bastardize? Definitely not. Do I recommend that you spend time editing and purifying? Yes, please. Does this mean you should censor and repress? No, thank you. Here’s my third pair of questions: Will you be wise enough to shed some of your defense mechanisms and strip away one of your lame excuses? I hope so. Should you therefore dispense with all of your psychic protections and leave yourself vulnerable to being abused? I hope not.

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

LE0 Jul23–Aug22

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I know you’re beautiful and you know you’re beautiful. But I think you could be even more beautiful than you already are. What do you think? Have you reached the limits of how beautiful you can be? Or will you consider the possibility that there is even more beauty lying dormant within you, ready to be groomed and expressed? I encourage you to ruminate on these questions: 1. Are you hiding a complicated part of your beauty because it would be hard work to liberate it? 2. Are you afraid of some aspect of your beauty because revealing it would force you to acknowledge truths about yourself that are at odds with your self-image? 3. Are you worried that expressing your full beauty would intimidate other people?

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Helsinki, Finland is growing downwards. By cutting out space in the bedrock below the city’s surface, farseeing leaders have made room to build shops, a data center, a hockey rink, a church, and a swimming pool. There are also projects under way to construct 200 other underground structures. I’d like to see you start working along those lines, Virgo—at least metaphorically. Now would be an excellent time to renovate your foundations so as to accommodate your future growth.

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22 The Pantone Color Matching System presents a structured approach to identifying colors. It’s used as a standard in the printing industry. According to its system

of classification, there are 104 various shades of grey. I suspect you will benefit from being equally discerning in the coming weeks. It just won’t be possible to differentiate between the good guys and the bad guys. You’ll misunderstand situations that you try to simplify, and you’ll be brilliant if you assume there’s always more nuance and complexity to uncover. Don’t just grudgingly tolerate ambiguity, Libra. Appreciate it. Learn from it.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 I am not necessarily predicting that you will acquire a shiny new asset in time for the solstice. Nor am I glibly optimistic that you will get a raise in pay or an unexpected bonus. And I can offer only a 65-percent certainty that you will snag a new perk or catch a financial break or stumble upon a treasure. In general, though, I am pretty confident that your net worth will rise in the next four weeks. Your luck will be unusually practical. To take maximum advantage of the cosmic tendencies, focus your efforts on the one or two most promising prospects.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) was an Italian astronomer, physicist, and mathematician who is sometimes called “the father of modern science.” He expressed his innovative ideas so vigorously that he offended the Catholic Church, which convicted him of heresy. For us today, he symbolizes the magnificence of rational thought. And yet Galileo also had a weird streak. For example, he gave lectures on the “Shape, Location, and Size of Dante’s Inferno,” analyzing the poet’s depiction of hell. In the course of these meticulous discourses, Galileo concluded that Satan was more than four-fifths of a mile tall. In this spirit, Sagittarius, and in accordance with current astrological omens, you are temporarily authorized to de-emphasize the constraints of reason and logic so that you may gleefully and unapologetically pursue your quirky proclivities.

CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 While in his early twenties, actor Robert Downey Jr. appeared in the films Less Than Zero and Weird Science. That got him semi-typecast as a member of Hollywood’s Brat Pack, a group of popular young actors and actresses who starred in coming-of-age films in the 1980s. Eager to be free of that pigeonhole, Downey performed a ritual in 1991: He dug a hole in his backyard and buried the clothes he had worn in Less Than Zero. I recommend that you carry out a comparable ceremony to help you graduate from the parts of your past that are holding you back.

AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 In her book “Revolution from Within,” Gloria Steinem offers a challenge: "Think of the times you have said: ‘I can’t write,’ ‘I can’t paint,’ ‘I can’t run,’ ‘I can’t shout,’ ‘I can’t dance,’ ‘I can’t sing.’” That’s your first assignment, Aquarius: Think of those times. Your second assignment is to write down other “I can’t” statements you have made over the years. Assignment three is to objectively evaluate whether any of these “I can’t” statements are literally true. If you find that some of them are not literally true, your fourth assignment is to actually do them. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to transform “I can’t” into “I can.”

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 "Dogs don’t know where they begin and end,” writes Ursula K. Le Guin in her book “The Wave in the Mind.” They “don’t notice when they put their paws in the quiche.” Cats are different, LeGuin continues. They “know exactly where they begin and end. When they walk slowly out the door that you are holding open for them, and pause, leaving their tail just an inch or two inside the door, they know it. They know you have to keep holding the door open . . . It’s a cat’s way of maintaining relationship.” Whether you are more of a dog person or a cat person, Pisces, it is very important that you be more like a cat than a dog in the coming weeks. You must keep uppermost in your mind exactly where you begin and where you end.

Homework: For three days, uphold your highest ideal in every little way you can imagine. Report results at Truthrooster@gmail.com.


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LETTERS

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ONLINE COMMENTS RE: THE F WORD This is an interesting article that echoes a conversation that feminists are having nationwide. While women have a lot more opportunities, there is still a lot to be talked about, like equal pay. Thank you for paying tribute to another aspect of Santa Cruz's unique history. Maybe looking at the past will spark some new conversation on how we can define feminism going forward. — TINA BROWN

RE: WINE HARVEST Nice article, and of course you picked a couple of our area’s best and most conscientious winemakers. I am looking forward to the 2013 vintage with all its fruit ramifications and style of our area winemakers. I attended the Pajaro Valley Community Health Trust's Evening of Wine and Roses, and tasted many of the new wines rolled out this year (23 wineries). It’s an unsung event that gives an opportunity to taste them all. Interesting and informative article, I enjoyed it, thanks. — ED PENNIMAN

LETTERS POLICY Letters should not exceed 300 words and may be edited for length, clarity, grammar and spelling. They should include city of residence to be considered for publication. Please direct letters to the editor, query letters and employment queries to letters@gtweekly.com. All classified and display advertising queries should be directed to sales@gtweekly.com. All website-related queries, including corrections, should be directed to webmaster@gtweekly.com.

THE CREW PUBLISHER Jeanne Howard x205

EDITORIAL Editor Steve Palopoli x206 Managing Editor Maria Grusauskas

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

News Editor Jacob Pierce x223

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Features Editor Anne-Marie Harrison x223 Web & Calendar Editor Roseann Hernandez x210 Proofreader Josie Cowden Senior Contributing Editor Geoffrey Dunn Contributing Editor Christina Waters Contributors Josie Cowden Sven Davis

Risa D’Angeles Lisa Jensen Cat Johnson Brian Palmer Keana Parker Matthew Cole Scott Jennifer Simeone Aric Sleeper DNA

ADVERTISING Advertising Director Debra Whizin x204 Senior Account Executives Kate Kauffman Ilana Rauch Packer Account Executives John Bland Rose Frates-Castiglione Doug Hull Tiffani Petrov

OPERATIONS Office Manager Kelli Edwards x200

Circulation Manager Mick Freeman mick@goodtimes.sc Drivers Frederick Cannon Guy Gosset Bill Pooley Carolyn Stallings Bill Williamson PedX Bicycle Courier

ART & PRODUCTION Art Director Tabi Zarrinnaal Designers Rosie Eckerman Sean George Julie Rovegno DiAnna VanEycke Photographer Chip Scheuer CEO Dan Pulcrano Vice President Lee May

Accounting Alix Crimbchin x202

is published weekly at 1101 Pacific Ave, Suite 320, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831.458.1100

The purpose of GOOD TIMES is to be Santa Cruz County’s guide to entertainment and events, to present news of ongoing local interest, and to reflect the voice, character and spirit of our unique community. GOOD TIMES is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Only inserts listed above are authorized by GOOD TIMES. Anyone inserting, tampering with or diverting circulation will be prosecuted. The entire content of GOOD TIMES is copyright © 2014 by Nuz, Inc. No part may be reproduced in any fashion without written consent of the publisher. First-class subscriptions available at $100/year, or $3 per issue. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. Adjudicated a legal newspaper of general circulation by Municipal Court of Santa Cruz County, 1979, Decree 68833. This newspaper is printed almost entirely on recycled newsprint. Founded by Jay Shore in 1975.


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N

NEWS

ALONG THE WATCHTOWER CHP introduces the county’s first license plate reader BY JOHN MALKIN

>17

CHECK-IN John Dietz, a volunteer for the 180/2020 project, meets with formerly homeless client Brad Schwartz in his home. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER

Homing Device Project 180 ups goals to house homeless BY ARIC SLEEPER

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fter many years of struggling through bouts of homelessness, Cindy Peck felt like she’d won the lottery when volunteers with the 180/180 initiative helped her find and move into an apartment in June. For more than a year before that she had been living out of her car. “I was in dream-state disbelief,” says Peck. “I don’t know if ‘blown away’ is the expression, but that comes to my mind. I’m just so thrilled, and it’s a big difference.” Peck, an elderly, physically disabled woman, says that one of the greatest boons of having a place of her own is finally getting a full night’s sleep. “When I was homeless, I slept a couple of hours every night, if that,” says Peck.

“You get tired. You’re sleeping on a bench. You’re sleeping with one eye open because you’re vulnerable. I go to sleep now and I don’t have a worry at all.” Upon surpassing its goal of housing 180 chronically homeless individuals in Santa Cruz County this past July—and having housed more than 220 individuals to date— the multi-agency initiative has changed its name from 180/180 to 180/2020. Instead of establishing another quota of individuals to house, the initiative’s steering committee developed a more ambitious objective: to end chronic homelessness in Santa Cruz County by 2020. According to the latest Homeless Census and Survey, conducted by

Applied Survey Research in 2013, the total population of people experiencing homelessness in Santa Cruz County is more than 3,500. Out of those living outdoors, close to 1,000 are considered chronically homeless. “It helps to be clear about ending chronic homelessness—what does that mean? It doesn’t mean that there might not be another individual who experiences chronic homelessness in Santa Cruz County as we approach the end of the decade. It means that we’re able to house more people on a monthly basis than are experiencing chronic homelessness,” says project manager Phil Kramer. “The name for this is functional zero.” By federal definition, a >14

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

Santa Cruz activists concerned about government surveillance held community meetings this past summer to learn more about the possibility of automated license plate reader (ALPR) cameras in Santa Cruz. What they didn’t realize was that the technology was being installed where they weren’t looking. Santa Cruz County California Highway Patrol (CHP) began using an ALPR camera— the first local use of the controversial surveillance technology—on Aug. 21. Meanwhile, Santa Cruz Police Department is currently developing protocols for its own proposed cameras, having received a grant last fall for the technology and another grant during the summer. The Santa Cruz chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union opposes their use. The CHP’s new camera, which is installed on a CHP cruiser, even took some local officials by surprise. GT called up 1st District Santa Cruz County Supervisor John Leopold, who was disappointed to hear that CHP had begun using an ALPR locally without community input. “It’s important for law enforcement to be transparent, and if there are legitimate reasons to have these, they should be very clear and talk about it in public,” Leopold says. “Community input should happen before seeking funding,” Leopold adds. ALPR supporters, including law enforcement officials, note that the technology has been used to track down stolen vehicles. But activists from the ACLU say ALPRs have also already been used to monitor the activities of political activists. Moreover, a lawsuit is pending against the city of San Francisco by Denise Green, who was handcuffed and held at gunpoint after a San Francisco Police ALPR mistakenly identified her Lexus as stolen. The ACLU has also expressed fears that images could be used to track people. Like Leopold, California State Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) had been unaware that local CHP had begun using an ALPR, and has some concerns. Stone says it’s actually in law enforcement agencies’ best interest to be forthcoming when they look into controversial technologies. “The more

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HOMING DEVICE <13 chronically homeless individual is someone who has been unsheltered for a year or more, or had four periods of homelessness in a threeyear period, and has a disabling condition, whether it be mental or physical. The housing-first concept was adopted by the local 180 initiative based on the best practices of the 100,000 Homes campaign, a national project that pledged to house 100,000 chronically homeless people by July 2014. Like the 180/2020 initiative, the 100,000 Homes campaign not only met but exceeded its initial goal, ultimately housing more than 105,000 chronically homeless people nationwide. Evidence from across the country shows that this model not only changes lives, but saves communities money, too, in terms of law enforcement and hospital costs, for instance. Cindy Peck’s story is much like one shared by 180/2020 volunteer John Dietz, who joined with the original 180/180 initiative after retiring from the aerospace industry. Before he began to volunteer for the project, Dietz

assisted a family member move into a home of their own after living in a van for 15 years. It was then that he first witnessed the remarkable positive impact that having a roof over one’s head has on someone who has been living outdoors for so long. “I could see such a dramatic change in his whole attitude toward life. I could see him becoming stabilized. I could see him being integrated into the community and wanting to help other people once I got him housed,” says Dietz. “I saw living proof that the concept of housing first worked, and saw that that was being adopted in the 180 program, so it was a natural thing for me to join in.” The goal of putting approximately 1,000 individuals under one roof is no small undertaking, especially considering 180/2020 leaders were chosen to participate in the nationwide Zero: 2016 campaign, which is a commitment to house all chronically homeless veterans by 2016. Homeless veterans make up about 11 percent of the total homeless population in the county. Although housing all the county’s chronically homeless, veterans and otherwise, might seem like an impossible undertaking, Kramer

notes that even he had experienced doubts during the first initiative to house 180 chronically homeless individuals. But having surpassed that goal, he says reaching the new goal is quite possible. “When we launched 180/180, we took our best estimate at a number we thought that we could reach. We weren’t sure if we could reach it, and there was no guarantee that we could,” says Kramer. “The 180 goal was audacious, and yet we’ve proven what we can do by coming together and working as a community at large.” The efforts have had support from the County Board of Supervisors, who have pledged to the national Mayor’s Challenge campaign, which aims to house all chronically homeless veterans by December 2015. All four of the city governments are also on board with the commitment, and Santa Cruz County is the first and only county government to take on the mission. According to the 100,000 Homes campaign the average savings to the community is $13,000 per individual each year for each person housed. Similar figures are not available locally. But according to the national figures, the 180/2020 >20

PLAY ON Santa Cruz Shakespeare Artistic Director Mike Ryan remembers walking into a pet store in San Carlos not too long ago to pick up some treats for his dog. When the clerk asked him where he was from, he said “Santa Cruz.” “She said ‘You know, they used to have the most wonderful Shakespeare festival there,” remembered Ryan at the announcement party for this year’s SCS season on Nov. 15 at Center Street Grill. D’oh! Such is the challenge of reminding everyone that

Santa Cruz still has a wonderful Shakespeare festival, and in fact its successful re-emergence is making UCSC officials look worse than they already did for the way they shut it down in the first place. (But it’s just good business, right? Wink wink! We see what you did there.) In their 2015 season, which runs June 30-Aug. 30, SCS will expand from two productions to three: Much Ado About Nothing, Macbeth and Pierre Corneille’s The Liar (as adapted by American playwright David Ives). All three will be performed in UCSC’s Sinsheimer-Stanley

Festival Glen, and the annual “fringe” production featuring SCS interns will return as well, with an extra performance. For more information about their season and new membership program, go to santacruzshakespeare.org. STEVE PALOPOLI

HOUSING CRUNCHED Santa Cruz City Council approved changes to Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) rules on Tuesday, Nov. 18, reducing required setbacks from buildings and relaxing rules to allow

more permitted housing. The changes, which are scheduled to be finalized at a Dec. 9 city council meeting, also offer fee waivers for landlords who create affordable units. The council also OKed a two-year grace period for owners of non-occupied units, which cannot be permitted. That will allow landlords to continue renting them out—giving owners more time to either sell their property, move onto it, or abate the ADU. That window could be extended to a third year for certain owners, with planning director approval. JACOB PIERCE

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NEWS BRIEFS

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PLATED AND DATED While supporters say license plate readers help find stolen vehicles, the ACLU worries that agencies could use them to monitor people’s activities. PHOTO: LEONARD ZHUKOVSKY / SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

ALONG THE WATCHTOWER <11 country run by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that shares data, allowing other agencies to access it. “CHP shares their data with NCRIC,” says NICRIC director Mike Sena. “When someone logs in through our system, they can search simultaneously through the CHP data as well.” SCPD is also currently considering using NCRIC to host its license plate data if its program goes online, according to internal documents obtained by GT. Former California State Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) helped establish CHP’s 60-day data retention limit that restricts how long the information is stored and searchable. At this juncture, though, he says when it comes to privacy, the “access to data question” is critical. “You may have confidence in the discretion of your local law enforcement, police chief or sheriff, but if he or she is sharing information in a regional database that’s accessible not only locally but perhaps even to agencies across state lines, then your confidence is almost beside the point,” says Simitian, who once represented Santa Cruz. “It only takes one person or one agency to misuse the data for all

those protections to go out the window.” The ACLU of California released a report this month titled “Making Smart Decisions About Surveillance: A Guide For Communities,” which includes a model “Surveillance and Community Safety Ordinance.” Simitian, now a Santa Clara County Supervisor, is using the ordinance as a “template to govern the use of surveillance technology” over the hill. San Francisco Supervisor John Avalos has announced similar plans. The ACLU report states that more than $60 million has been spent statewide on “invasive surveillance technology,” the vast majority of which is used without any public debate or policies to safeguard civil rights. Only six of 118 California communities surveyed held a public debate when new surveillance technology was introduced, according to ACLU research.

MEMO, ANYONE? This past summer, SCPD informed the City Council that they’d received another grant from the Department of Justice for $40,055 for more ALPRs. The grant was described in an

information report, dated June 2, 2014, from SCPD to the city manager, and placed in city councilmember mailboxes on July 22, 2014, according to the city clerk’s office. Santa Cruz City Councilmember Micah Posner and Vice Mayor Don Lane both say they missed the information reports and didn’t learn of the 2014 grant until speaking with GT. Given the controversy around the first grant, Posner and Lane both wished police hadn’t applied for that additional grant for license plate readers without council input. The ALPR issue is planned to come back to council once SCPD has finished developing protocols. “There’s enough concern in the community around (ALPRs) that we should create an opportunity for the community to weigh in before we commit any resources to it,” Lane says. The City Council’s five remaining members didn’t respond to requests for interviews with GT, nor did Deputy Police Chief Steve Clark, who is developing ALPR protocols. Police Chief Kevin Vogel declined answering specific questions, saying via email, “there is no new information to report.”

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

transparent they are, [the more it] helps their relationship with the community,” he says. Stone adds that he will be asking CHP to give him a “heads up” next time officers want to introduce such a device, although he notes that they won’t be required to. Sgt. Grant Boles of the Santa Cruz area CHP tells GT that data collected by their ALPR is stored for only 60 days. But Stone, who once worked as a computer industry attorney, still has trepidations. “When you store things electronically, deleting things is not always that simple,” Stone says. “Once you have that data, even with the best of intentions, how do you control what’s a legitimate law enforcement purpose and what’s not?” In essence, Stone’s concern is that an agency from another region could log on, scan the data, and save it. CHP’s data storage is managed by Vigilant Solutions, a private company, which shares its data with the Northern California Regional Intelligence Center (NCRIC). NCRIC is one of 80 fusion intelligence centers across the

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Businesss Pr Busines Profile: ofi file:

Byzantine Byzantin e Je Jewelry ewe elry As a third-generation goldsmit goldsmith th and jeweler hailing from Istanbul, TTurkey, urkey, Mark Ocal, Ocal owner o ner of Byzantine B antinee Jewelry Je elry, Jewelry, has been immersed in the craftt of jewelry-making his entire life. He H credits the unmeasurable beauty of hi hiss pieces to the Old W World orld skills passed down d to him from his family family..

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

“They were really judgmental people, p and I had to do the best,” Markk says.

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All of Mark’ Mark’ss work is handmade handmade, e, and he j specializes in creating custom jewelry that not onlyy meets the needs of his customers, but often surpassess their expectations. TToo do this, Mark works w closely with each of his clients during every step of the process, but first fi understanding their vision for a piece sometimes takes some work. “They know what they want m most ost of it’ss my job to be psychic, the time, and it’ p and bring the design to life,” sa says ays Mark. “That’ss challenging most of thee time, but “That’ I know II’m m doing a good job job,, because beecause they keep coming back.” biggest gest In fact, Mark finds that the big reward of his work comes withh the enduring friendships he createss with his customers. “I meet with couples every dayy who are just starting out their lives toge together, etherr, and

I’m so happy to be a pa part art of it,” he says. “I sell everything with a lifetime war war-rant ranty y, and 99.9 99 9 percentt of my m customers c stomers ranty, are happy happy,, and becomee good friends over the years.” Mark points to a couplee he has worked decade, with for more than a de ecade, who have continued to come intoo his shop for birthdays, anniversaries anniversaries, s, and everything in-between. “They were at my daug daughter’s hter’s birthday, birthday, and brought a nice cak cake,” ke,” he says. “That’ss a bigg reward forr me because “That’ they’ve been my custom customers mers and friends for 14 years.” store, Like the name of his sto ore, Byzantine Jewelry,, the intricate style Jewelry sttyle of Mark’ Mark’ss work, whether it be a ri ring, ing, earrings, a pendant, or a broach, st stems tems from the andd is unparalleled cultures of the past, an County. in Santa Cruz County y. “My jewelry is quite dif different fferent from It’ss all hand-engraved others. It’ hand-enggraved and “Wee have h d d ” says M handmade,” Mark. k. “W h a lot l t Victorian of Edwardian style, Vict torian style, and selection I have an amazing selec ction of Art Deco and Art Nouveau.” Although Mark only ha has as one employee shop,, he is often to help him in his shop daughter,r, who joined by his 3-year-oldd daughter

has all the pote potential ential of becoming a skilled salespers salesperson. son. “My daughter sometimes s helps me in exchange for a chocolate,” he says. “She can sell anythin anything ng for a chocolate.” Mark hopes tha that at his daughter will one day take the re reins ins of Byzantine Jewelry Jewelry,, but at the mom ment, he says that she moment, is more interest interested ted in cartoons than in jewelry.. jewelry When Mark wa wanted anted to move his shop to location, a bigger locatio on, he looked to the help off Santa S t Cruz C Community C it Credit C dit Union, U i customer.r. where he has been b a longtime customer small Because of a sm mall business loan the provided, credit union pro ovided, he was able to current move to his cur rrent location on PPacific aacific Avenue in the heart h of Downtown Santa Cruz. that’ss not the But that’ t only reason the skilled continues craftsman cont tinues to bank at SCCCU. In a similar fash fashion hion to his customers, developed Mark has devel oped close ties with the union’s credit dit union’ i ’s staff, sttaff, t ff andd feels f l att home h every time he walks w in. “Everyone over there knows me. I’m store re owner with a funny the jewelry stor “It’ss nice to feel like accent,” Marks says. “It’ every time I go there that I’m part of the family.” family y..”

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initiative has saved the community upward of $2.6 million dollars in hospital stays and jail visits. “Let’s just take that $2.6 million as an annual average. How do we turn that savings and cost avoidance into something that saves lives and saves money,” says Kramer. “We know that there’s a drain on the public purse, a drain on public resources for individuals who are accessing expensive general relief emergency services, and that we can save money by helping those people into permanent supportive housing. That’s one of the big things we’ll be focusing on: turning that cost avoidance into investment.” Under their new Executive Director Jannan Thomas, the Homeless Services Center (HSC) is another major partner in the efforts. [See page 32 for more information on HSC.] The Board of Supervisors has also coordinated with the Housing Authority to prioritize Section 8 voucher holders who are chronically homeless. Additionally, the board approved funding in its last budget to provide two case managers for the initiative. In October, Supervisor Leopold showed further support when he decided to facilitate an outreach effort in Live Oak and Soquel, which have experienced an increase in homelessness, according to Leopold. He and a group of approximately 40 volunteers went out into the areas known for homeless congregations and encampments with the intention of getting to know every individual experiencing homeless by name and by their personal circumstances. Among other things, Leopold says, he found that most individuals didn’t want a shelter bed, but a permanent home. “It pulled away the numbers and the statistics, and I met the real people,” says Leopold. “I learned that no two stories are alike, and that for the needs of the individuals there wasn’t one size that was going to fit all, and that by actually asking detailed questions, we could find out what it will take to help people out.”


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NEXT GENERATION Teens with Davenport Resource Service Center’s North Coast Teen Center, at UCSC.

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t’s hard t’s ha ard to believe it’ it’ss been ffive ive i year yearss Great Recession officially since e the Gr eat Reces sion off ficially i y ended—according Yes, ended d—according to economists. Y es es, unemployment pre-2008 unem mployment is ffinally iinally back to pr e--2008 levels, and an nd Wall Wall a Street Street is hitting record record highs. h But a polll conducted by News by NBC N ews and the th he Wall Wall Street Street JJournal ourrnal in August found that 50 percent perrcent of Americans American ns don’t believe the economy economy is getting getting better, U.S. better, and an nd almost as many many believe the U .S. is still in a recession. recesssion. For County,, ther For the neediest in Santa Cruz County tthere e has been no recovery—in recovery—in fact, the nonprofits nonprof ofiits that serve serrv ve them m say say it’s it’s been getting it getting worse worse every eve ery year since the recession recession for the most desperate desperatte cases of homelessness homele essness and hunger. hunger. Those are Packard a e exactly the people that the P ar ackard Foundation by participating Foundatio on wants to reach reach b y participatin ng in

the Good Times Times Holiday Holid day Giving campaign. Their criteria complemen complements desire nts our desir e to support local nonprofits nonproffiits providing providin ng basic needs not only in Santa Cruz proper, properr, but also alsso in the underserved underserved areas areas of the county. county. Our partnership p partner ship with Community Foundation Santa Foundation o Santa Cruz Cru uz County was instrumental in choosing the ffive we’re iive nonprofits no onproffiits we’ re focusing our campaign on this ye year. ear. Action Board off S Santa Community A ction nB oard o anta Cruz County number programs, maintains a numbe er of pr ograms, and is one of nonprofits serve the only nonpr offiitss to ser rv ve the northernmost area Resources ar ea of the county; Mountain Community R esources provides chronically underserved pr ovides id to t the th chr h onically o i ll under d served d in i Lorenzo Valley Valley; Pajaro San Lor enzo V alley and Scotts V a a alley; P ajaro Valley Loaves percent V alle a ey L oaves and Fishes Fisshes feeds 14 per cent of the Watsonville; Grey Bears deliverss food population of W atso a onville; Gr ey B earrs deliver elderly around to elder ly rresidents esidentss ar ound the county; and the

Homeless Services Homele ss S ervices Center is at the center of one of issues the most-talked-about social is sues in downtown Santa Cruz. For Nov. we’re F o or the next month, N ov. 26 6 - Dec. 26, we’ re asking you to help out those who do so s much to help our community,, b by one more community y donating to on ne or mor re of these nonprofits. ffive iive nonpr offits. i Since 1996, GTT rreaders eaders have rraised e aised nearly more nonprofits, near rlly $1 million for mor e than n 60 local nonpr offiits, Good Holiday and we hope this will be the Go ood Times Holida ay Giving’ss bigg biggest profiles Giving’ est year yet. Read d the pr offiiles our staff groups, go has written about these ffive iive gr roups, and g o to their link websites to donate, or ffind iind a li ink on SantaCruz.com. Your will Packard Y o our donations d ti ill be b supplemented supplem l mented t d by by the th Packar P k d Foundation $30,000. F o oundation up to $30 ,000. Let’ss make this a happ happy holiday everyone Let’ y ho oliday for ever yone in County.. Santa Cruz County —Steve —St eve PPalopoli alopoli

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Garza at the Davenport Resource Service Center. PHOTO: MOCKINGBIRD PHOTOGRAPHY Project works with landlords to prevent evictions and provides financial aid. “It’s cheaper and easier to keep someone in their home than it is to try to get them back into a home,” says De La Garza. While Shelter Project works to keep people in their homes, CAB has a program that makes sure they can stay in them legally without fearing possible deportation, and the Santa Cruz Immigration Project offers free immigration services to those working toward naturalization. Another of their programs, Alcance, pushes people to thrive by

working with underserved adults and youth within the justice program. “We teach what it is to look for a job and keep a job, build leadership, talk about career goals and educational goals,” says De La Garza. For people like Ellis, CAB has given them hope. “I have two jobs and Christmas is coming up,” says Ellis. “I’m looking at the barriers: am I going to be able to get what my kids need and what they want? Maybe I’m not able to get everything that they want but I’m able to get them what they need.”

To give: SantaCruzGives.com

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are effective and ariaElena BY ANNE-MARIE HARRISON our programs De La are very, very Garza is lean and some are very bare bones. her own success story. But the services are there. Born and raised in Watsonville, her “For me to be here now as the first job was through the Community executive director means so much Action Board (CAB) of Santa Cruz to me because I see the stories—I County, watching over the children see the folks waiting to see our staff of migrant workers when she was and they’re there first thing in the 16. Today, she’s come full circle as morning. They come with their the anti-poverty agency’s executive questions and their paperwork, and director. they need help,” she says. It isn’t a job that allows a lot of When Rachael Ellis’ car broke downtime. Speaking on the phone down in 2012, she couldn’t afford from Sacramento where she’s fighting the repair. CAB affiliate CalWorks, for CAB financing, De La Garza a state welfare program that serves explains why the position, which families lacking parental support or she’s held for just over a year, is so employment, gave her an emergency important to her; “When my father payment so that she could get back died, my mother didn’t know how to on her feet. drive and didn’t know how to speak “That was my only transportation English. She was a young widow and for me and my children to get to CAB had a class to teach women how work, to get to school,” Ellis says, to drive, in Spanish,” she says. “and they got me the check in the Since it began in 1964, CAB has same day to fix my car. I wouldn't been offering programs like this to have been able to do that on my help combat the causes of poverty, own.” helping people attain the skills, CalWorks also helped her with knowledge and motivation they the deposit on the apartment she need to live a dignified life. CAB’s currently lives in. It’s not uncommon programs cover all areas of need: the to see those who have been helped by Davenport Resource Service Center, CAB to reciprocate by helping others, for instance, provides meals, youth and Ellis is a prime example. The tutoring, teen programs and seasonal single mother applied for a position at events like an upcoming coat drive. CAB so that one day she could do the “Our mission is to help people who same for someone else, and she is now live in poverty towards the path of vice chair for Watsonville’s low income self sufficiency,” says De La Garza. sector of the CAB board of directors. According to their website, the six “CAB gives people a start; it gives CAB programs assist more than 9,000 them a chance to be successful in life low-income residents with services and it breaks down the barriers that and resources, and more than 7,000 people come across all the time—‘I with referrals and information. can’t pay my water bill, I can’t pay my Funding comes from all over: a electricity, I’m having my electricity community services block grant, shut off—basic necessities that people federal money through the state, need to live, to survive,” says Ellis. foundations and donation support. CAB systematically targets When asked if it’s enough, De specific areas of importance to La Garza laughs. “The need in our ensure basic necessities for the community is huge, and we’re always underserved in Santa Cruz County: trying to secure funding to be able Before someone faces the prospect to provide,” she says, sounding of losing their home, the Shelter surprisingly unfazed. “Our programs

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ennetta Zulim BY JACOB shows up to Grey Bears on Chanticleer Avenue every Friday in her white GMC Acadia to load up on bags of food. Each bag has seven kinds of produce and one nonperishable staple, like beans, rice, or lentils. Then, Zulim, a medical coder for Sutter Health, spends her morning driving around Santa Cruz County, delivering the food to elderly Grey Bears members who are not well enough to pick up the food themselves. “You get really well-acquainted with these people, and they wait to see you each week,” she says. “In fact, I have a man who stands outside and waits for me every time. It’s really sweet. He lives from Friday to Friday, he said, so he can see me.” He isn’t the only one living for Fridays. Zulim does too. “Different people along the route will say really nice things: ‘God bless you,’ and ‘Thank you for all you do.’ ‘You’re going to heaven,’” Zulim explains. “I really look forward to Fridays.” Tim Bratton, Grey Bears director, says many drivers connect with their recipients in that way. “It’s life-changing when you start doing it. They make this connection,” Bratton says. “It’s not just about the food. It’s about a personal relationship with each of their recipients. It’s a reciprocal kind of thing.” Through its Brown Bag program, Grey Bears distributes about 3,300 bags of food each week, 48 weeks a year, and it costs only $20 for seniors to sign up as members. “I can tell you, ‘We do this much food, we do it this often, we do this much tonnage,’ but the truth is it’s about human relations,” Bratton adds.

When Zulim first began looking for places to volunteer years ago, she chose Grey Bears, partly because of the scope of what the organization does. She had already been taking her recycling to the organization for years. In addition to the normal cardboard and glass drop-offs, Grey Bears’ extensive recycling program takes appliances—even ones that don’t work—for free, items that the landfill would charge to receive. Most are sold for parts, but skilled volunteers repair many of the broken televisions that come in and sell them in their thrift store. Grey Bears also composts almost 150 tons of waste—Brown Bag food that goes bad before it can be distributed— each year. It sounds like a wide-reaching mission, but Bratton says pretty much everything Grey Bears does falls under “resource conservation.” Volunteers get excess food from local grocery stores for nominal fees, or they glean produce from local fields, after they’ve been picked. On the recycling end, workers also repurpose many of the materials they can’t fix and don’t recycle— often turning scraps of glass into art. Grey Bears makes good use of volunteers, too, many of them retirees with spare time looking to put their experience to good use. Even that, Bratton says, falls under the conservation management umbrella. “We repurpose retirees into volunteers. It’s resource management. It’s human resource management,” Bratton says. “It’s people giving back after they’ve had a great life, or they have some time, and they want to do something for their community.” Grey Bears is currently raising

PIERCE

GET FRESH Food distribution for the elderly is still a focus of Grey Bears' mission.

money to continue its Brown Bag program, which grows more expensive as the price of food goes up. In addition to that, the nonprofit is trying to figure out how to replace the 2,700-squarefoot storage facility that burned down over the summer, putting a squeeze on the already-crowded

facility. Unfortunately, there’s no timeline for the project. “I would like it to be done yesterday,” Bratton says of plans to rebuild, “but it’s going to take a little while, because we’ve got to raise some money.”

To give: SantaCruzGives.com


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Inveest in your Invest I y Community: Com Commun unity: Help H elp a neighbor neig nei gh hbo hbor hb iin need need. n d d. Five hard-working Five hard-working or organizations ganiza attions th that at ser serve ve our n neediest eediest n neighbors eighbors fr ffrom om all p parts arts o off th thee coun county ntyy w were ere se selected lected ffor or the o the 2014 Good Good Times Times Holiday Holiday Givin ca ampaign, in associa attion wi ith the the Communi ty F oundattion Givingg campaign, association with Community Foundation Santa San nta Cruz Cruz County. Coun ntyy. Yo our donation donati t on to to on ore o ese groups grou ups will be supplemented supplemen nted by by the the Packard Packard Foundation’s Foundattion n’s participation parrticipati t on o Your onee or m more off th these off u p tto o $30,000. An ny am ount yyou ou giv ve will h elp tto ob ring h ealltth and and w ell l -being tto o th ousands o ocal rresidents esiden nts w ho up Any amount give help bring health well-being thousands off llocal who will be touched touched b y this cam paign. by campaign.

COMMUNITY ACTION COMMUNITY ACTION BOARD BO ARD (CAB) (CAB) is the County’s County’s

provides 44,500 provides ,500 senior seniorss with w weekly eekly bbags ags of fr fresh esh pr produce. oduce. Oper Operating ating rrecycling ecycling centers, centers, a thrift thrift store store and capturing the ener energy gy of 500 vvolunteers olunteers mak makes es this possible. Promoting wellbeing Pr omoting the health and w ellbeing of seniors, involvement senior s, community community in volvement and preserving pr eserving our en environment vironment ar aree the heartt of GGrey Bears. hear rey Bear s.

GGreyBears.org reyBears.or y g

M OUNT TA AIN C OMMUNITY MOUNTAIN COMMUNITY RESOURCES, R ESOURCES, a program program of o

PAJARO P AJARO VALLEY VA ALLEY LLOAVES OAVE V S AND FIS FISHES HES pr provides ovides healthy, heallthy,

multi-agency initiativ multi-agency initiativee that has housed mor m moree than 200 chr chronically, onically, medicallyvulnerable vulner able homeless individuals. HSC provides services, pr ovides a full full spectrum spectrum of ser vices, help hhelp-ing individuals and ffamilies amilies eexperiencing xperiencinng homelessness as they they mo move ve along the theirir pathway path way to to housing.

Community Bridg Community Bridges, es, builds a sstrong trrong communityy in the SSan communit an LLorenzo orenzo VValley alley and Scotts Scotts VValley alle a y ar areas, eas, wher w wheree isolation can mak makee suppor supportt har hardd ttoo come by. by. MCR is ther theree ffor or eevery very child, ffamily amily and senior in their time off need, bbyy helping residents residents help themselves. themseelves.

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locally-sourced ffood locally-sourced ood ttoo thousan thousands nds in need: w working orking poor families, families, mi migrant g ant gr ffarm-workers, arm-workers, the elderly elderly,, home homeless, eless, and disabled. PPVLF VLF also oper operates ates e Thanksgiving Thank sgiving and Christmas Christmas programs, programs, providing turkeys pr oviding turk eys and ffood ood bbaskets askkets ffor or over over 400 families families and toys toys for for o over over children. 650 childr en.

HOMELESS SERVICES HOMELESS SERVICES Center Cent er spearheaded the successf successful u ul

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Give G ive online or mail a check to to the nonprofit nonnprofit of your your choice. choiice

Good TTimes iimes Holiday Holidday GGiving iving aised n Since 1996, Go Since Good od Tim Times es rreaders eaders h have ave rraised nearly early $1 milli million on ffor or o more more th an 60 local local nonprofits. nonprofits. than Questions?? P lease e call 662.2000 Please

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premier premier ag agency ency fifighting ghting po poverty. verty. Serving Serving 9000+ individuals, CAB CAB facilitates facilitates food food distribution distribution and health clinics, clinics, and runs runs a tteen een cent center er and summer recreation recreation pr program ogram ffor or the isolated north isolated nor th coast. coast. CAB CAB also provides provides countywide countywide rrental ental assistance, assistance, free free legal legal immi immigration gration services services and emplo employment yment solutions.

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arolina Rocha Perez, 36, sits in the living room of the three-room flat she rents with her family on Pearl Street in Santa Cruz. Between smothering her 3-month-old grandson’s fuzzy head with kisses, she tells me about her family’s harrowing two-year journey through homelessness over a year ago, followed by several more months earlier this year. “My kids really wanted to stay in school in Santa Cruz and graduate,” says Perez. “I couldn’t let them down.” So, staying with her sister in Berkeley, her family commuted to Santa Cruz every day for the entire school year of 2011, dropping her husband off at work in Pescadero on the way. “We were in the car for about five hours a day. We’d leave the house at about 5 a.m. to get the kids to school by 7:30 a.m. That was really hard. But we were determined. I mean, this was their life, this is what they wanted to do.” Her four teenaged kids stayed in school—the eldest graduating high school at the end of those nine months commuting. In June of 2013, Perez and her family found themselves homeless again, after an unpaid car registration fee set off a downward financial spiral that ended in eviction. For six months, they paid $416.67 a week for a room in the cheapest hotel in the county. With no refrigerator or microwave, the family lived on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and food that could be kept in a cooler—a feat that required changing the ice three times each day. After Perez was hospitalized for a severe bone infection, she called the Homeless Services Center (HSC), and, to her surprise, her family was admitted to HSC’s Rebele Family Shelter, just in time for Christmas of

HOME FREE The Rocha Perez family in their new home. From left to right: Destinee, Carolina, Adrian, Leo Sr., Leo Jr.,

and the family dog, Spooky. 2014. “The fact that we could have hot meals every day was really nice, and our own space, because we had a one-bedroom apartment there at the shelter, with our own bathroom.” On a rainy evening, the grounds of HSC are brimming with people trying to stay dry while waiting in line for a hot meal. Aside from their Daytime Essential Services Center, which offers low-cost laundry, hygiene services, and hot meals, HSC also operates the Paul Lee Loft—50 beds for men and women, a 100-bed Winter Shelter (just opened on Nov. 15 and open through the cold months), a 40-bed Page Smith Community House, and a Recuperative Care Center which provides 12 beds for homeless individuals who have been discharged from the hospital with nowhere to go. But the HSC does not merely house and feed people; their 60

employees and numerous volunteers work to help facilitate reintegration back into society; helping participants apply for benefits, attain employment, save money and maintain sobriety. “I think that case management is really the key to our success in helping people be able to sustain their housing, plus the support that we provide that allows, like with the 180 20/20 program, the 96 percent retention rate we’ve seen,” says Executive Director Jannan Thomas, who took over for Monica Martinez just over a month ago. It takes 24 volunteers each day just to keep the HSC functioning, and donations are crucial to helping participants with everything from housing deposits to move-in kits. But the HSC’s goal to eliminate homelessness completely depends largely on the surrounding

community as well. “We’re really developing some strong relationships,” says Director of Programs Shelley McKittrick of the housing navigator volunteer team— which is mostly made up of HSC board members. Perez took full advantage of the services offered at HSC—from medical and dental services for her kids to grief support services when her 16-year-old daughter was tragically killed in a car accident during their time at the shelter. Her family was able to save up enough money to pay off their DMV debt and move into their current rental, where they’ll be able to sustain their stability. “We’re safe, we’re OK,” says Perez. “And as long as we’re together, that’s all that matters.”

To give: SantaCruzGives.com


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8 million pounds of ffood ood o e each yyear ear thr through ough our net network worrk of 200 agencies and programs program ms tto o childr en, seniors milies children, seniors,, and fam families in need in Santa Santa Cruz Cruz County. Cou unty.

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800 Ohlone P Parkway arkway Watsonville, CA W atsonville, C A 95076

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COMMUNITY FUND

PAJARO VALLEY LOAVES & FISHES T

nutritional education in Watsonville with the Food for Children program as an Americorps volunteer, Caballero has a clear vision for the future of the organization. “We need to rethink food assistance, and food aid,” she says. “We put a lot of time and effort into serving quality, good-tasting food that’s nourishing in the full sense of the word. I think it’s important not just to provide emergency food, but healthy food that will help people thrive in the world.” Though she’s new to the group, which celebrates its 25th anniversary this year, she’s inspired by the dedication and attention to detail she sees in Loaves and Fishes’ longtime volunteers, like kitchen manager Maria Gonzales. “Maria is amazing,” Caballero says. “She’s been here 11 years, and she’ll stay until 4:30, 5, 5:30 just cutting vegetables. Anybody who uses a lot of vegetables knows that it takes a lot of time. You could just grill a sausage, and that’s enough. You could just make pasta, and that’s enough. But she steams and cleans and cuts them small, and sneaks them into these meals. She’ll steam Romanesco, green beans, all these kinds of cauliflower and chard and kale, and put it into the salads, and feed people this amazing organic, fresh produce—and they don’t even know!” “A lot of people, they don’t have a home, and this is the only meal that they eat,” says Gonzales. “So I want to make it special.” Even after a decade of preparing these meals, usually with a staff of five or so other volunteers, she says she doesn’t tire of the work. “They eat everything,” Gonzales says of the people she makes meals for each day, “and they always say ‘thank you, Maria, that was very good.’ That keeps me going.” “She’ll sit there and do it, just

PALOPOLI

MEAL PROVIDER Kitchen Manager Maria Gonzales at Pajaro Valley

Loaves and Fishes. because that’s the standard she has created for herself, for the people that she serves,” says Caballero. “This is how she wants to touch their lives.” That’s also the standard Caballero wants to build on, and she hopes to raise the group’s budget by 14 percent next year. Though originally affiliated with St. Patrick’s Church, PVLF is now a fully independent nonprofit; only 6 percent of their budget comes from government funding, while the other 94 percent comes from

donations. The biggest item on the group’s wish list right now is a truck, to improve transportation of food as Caballero works on partnering with more local farms, and with area farmers markets. “When you’re hungry, that’s all you can think about,” Caballero says. “And not only that, but we can all relate to being on a healthy diet versus being on an unhealthy diet. I know I can. It changes your whole life.”

To give: SantaCruzGives.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

he inside BY STEVE of Pajaro Valley Loaves and Fishes’ headquarters is like some kind of optical illusion. Despite the fact that the group serves most of the foodassistance referrals made in Santa Cruz County, it is tucked away in a small Victorian on a Watsonville side street. The inside has been refurbished to make maximum use of every square inch. Volunteers work at desks pushed together in front of pantry shelves in one room, while others prepare meals in the kitchen nearby. The entirety of Loaves and Fishes’ paid staff—three people—sits in what is more or less a glorified hallway in between. And yet, each and every weekday, without fail, the hungry in Santa Cruz County will line up on the sidewalk out front. In the morning, volunteers hand out bags of food staples and fresh produce to needy families, and at noon a nutritious lunch is served at the tables out back. They provide food for about 350 people on an average day. Even Kristal Caballero, who started as executive director of PVLF just three months ago, hasn’t completely wrapped her mind around how the community has pulled together to make this happen. “Despite our small size—you know, we’re in this tiny house, in this not-that-well-known area of Watsonville—we’re providing 80 percent of service to the [Second Harvest] food hotline, which is countywide,” says Caballero. “Our numbers show that we’re serving 14 percent of the population of Watsonville. It’s crazy—we’re small, but we’re big. We’re the largest emergency food provider in the entire county.” Only 24 years old, but coming from a background in food aid that includes serving hot lunches to children in Ghana and doing

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COMMUNITY C OM MMUN MMUNIT N IT Y FUND NI

MOOUNTTAAIN CCOMMUNITY MOUNTAIN OMM RESOURCES RE SOURCES C

NOVEMBER NO VEMBER 26-DECE 26-DECEMBER MBER 2, 2 , 201 2014 4 | GTWEEKLY.COM GT WEEKL LY. C OM | S SANTACRUZ.COM ANTA CR UZ . C OM

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iving g in the rremote e emote BY B Y ARIC areas ar eass of the San S Lorenzo Valley Lorenzo V a alle ey brings with it a sense of peac peace ce and quiet not found in the surrounding surrou unding cities. But living off the beaten n path comes with its own set of ha hardships, ardships, especially for underserved underserved families. off wher where we’re “Because o e we’ re located in the valley valley,, it’ it’ss really hard really har d for people to know whatt the services are, services ar e, let alone get says get access acce ess to them,” them,” sa ys Jennifer Anderson-Ochoa, program Ande erson-Ochoa, pr ogram director Mountain director of M ountain Community Resources. Resources. torrential When torr e ential rrains ains fell for days days in January Janua ary 1982, the ensuing mudslides left Lorenzo lefft 10 San Lor enzo Valley Va alley residents residen nts dead and many many more more homeless, homeless, and residents residents banded together togeth her to help each other through through the tragedy. t agedy. After tr Afftter the sky had cleared cleared and a the disaster had taken its toll,, those living in the mountains decided de ecided they needed a resource resource center centter of their own for disaster rrelief. after, Mountain elief. Soon af ftterr, M ountain Community Resour Resources R ces was formed. grew out emergency “It g gr ew ou ut of that emerg gency response,” response,” says sa ays Anderson-Ochoa. Anderson-Ochoa. “That’s “That’s where where we got got our start, and then from from there the ere we realized realized there there was a need to o offer a place for people to find services support.”” fiind ser vic ces and support. Mountain M ountain Community C rresources esources still offer offerss em emergency mergency preparedness preparedness training one core programs, training as on ne of its cor e pr ograms, but offer offerss to help h with virtually any problem any pr oblem a rresident esident of the San Lorenzo may Lor enzo Valley Valle a ey ma y have—from have—from financial assistance, fiinancial and d food as sistance, to help with unemployment benefits unemplo oyment benef fiits and health insurance. insurance. a going “Whether someone s is g oing to lose their house, or o their heat is about to

be turned off, we e help people with h issues issues using what wha at we call advocac advocacy,” y,” says sa ays Anderson-Ochoa. Anderson-Ochoa. After marriage yearss Af fter t her marriag e of 15 year ended Sue en nded in divorce, divorce, SLV SLV resident resident Su ue Waters Water a s found herself herself struggling to o raise raise a her teenage teenage son as a single mom. With nowhere m nowhere else to turn, she consulted co onsulted the help of an advocate e att Mountain Resources. Mountain Community Resour ce es. After Aftter six months of working Af working closely close ely together, to ogetherr, Waters Water a s got got her life back k on She was so grateful n track. trrack. a grateful for the t help from Mountain he elp she rreceived eceived fr om M ountain Community Co ommunity Resources Resources that soon after afftter putting the pieces of her life together liffe back tog ether she became the e center’s ce enter’s rreceptionist. p eceptionist. different place “She is in a much differ ent plac ce than th han when we first fiirst met her, her, and that’s th hat’s what it’s it’s all about,” about,” says says Anderson-Ochoa. A Ander son-Ochoa. advocacy Beyond its one-on-one advocac y programs, prrograms, Mountain Mountain Community Resources Resources offers offers parent parent education n workshops holds w kshops and training, wor training, and hold ds a “Together “Together in the Park” Park” meeting each ea ach week, which gives parents w parents a chance chan nce to o connect while their children children play. pllay. p Mountain Resources M ountain Community Resour ce es also allso has computers computers open for those e without internet access, event w access, offers offers ev vent spaces sp paces for community groups groups in need n off a home, and is a food distributor distributo or for Bank, fo or the Second Harvest Harvest Food Food Bank k, among services. am mong its many many other ser vices. “We away,” “W We don’t turn anyone anyone awa y,” sa ssays ys Anderson-Ochoa. A Ander son-Ochoa. Mountain Community Although M ountain Communit ty Resources Resources is able to help rresidents esidentts with w a variety of issues, issues, there there are are still sttill areas areas of need in the San Lorenzo Lorenzo Valley. Valley a . Because some residents residents lack la ack personal personal transportation transportation and there th here are are no urgent urgent care care facilitiess

SLEEPER SLE EEPER

RAD R AD WORK WORK A volunteer volunteer e sorts rradishes adishes and broccoli at Mountain Mountain Community Resources. R

in the region, region, Anderson-Ochoa Anderso on-Ochoa and her staff are are seeking ways w ys to help wa residents residents who are are ill and a can’t make it down to the city. city. now,, I think the bigg biggest “Right now est pressing pressing issue issue we see is a lack of low-cost medical facilities,” facillities,” says says Anderson-Ochoa. day Anderson-Ochoa. “We “W We see that da y after afftter day day where where people peoplle are are coming in and they are are critically critica ally ill but they have no transportation transportation n to get get to the doctors doctors in the Central Central County. County. That’s That’s a big frustration frustration for uss right now.” now.” specific Although no specif fiic plan is in motion to help alleviate alleviatte the lack of healthcare healthcare facilitiess in the San Lorenzo Lorenzo Valley Va alley at the moment, Anderson-Ochoa Anderson-Ochoa and her h staff at Mountain Resources are Mountain Community y Resour ces ar e working working to come up with w a solution. “We are “W We ar e seeing the need, n and are are

seeing the e gap, and we just have to critical masss of people to build a crit tical mas shift,” says. make a shi ifft, t ” she sa ys. Anderson-Ochoa appreciates Ander so on-Ochoa appr eciates all support Mountain of the supp port M ountain Community Resources from Resour cess has rreceived eceived fr om the Lorenzo Valley, rresidents esidents of o the San Lor enzo V alley, forward and looks for rwar w d to giving back that and support an nd empowering community memberss in way member i any any wa y she and the service center’s are ser rv vice cen nter’s advocates ar e able. believe “I believ ve that the community has answers, the answer rs, they just sometimes need the rresources e esour ces or the small assistance bit of as sisstance to actually help themselves,” themselve s ” she says. s, sa ays. ys y “That’s “That That’s the philosophy philosoph y at Mountain Mountain Community Resources: Resour ces: we’re we’re here here to help people help themselves.” themsselves.”

To give: To givve vee: SantaCruzGives.com S antaCruzGivve ves. s com


SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

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THEATER

CRACKING UNDER PRESSURE International Academy of Dance’s Rachel Turner (foreground), with director

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Shannon Cullem-Chipman behind her, rehearses ‘Nutcracker.’

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PHOTO BY: CHIP SCHEUER

Sudden Movement

Shannon Cullem-Chipman’s wild life helps her bring ‘Nutcracker’ to life

W

hen Shannon CullemChipman was 15 years old, she was hit by a truck. While pretending to fly across a street at Opal Cliffs, she was pulled under a speeding pickup, Afterward, she did what all devoted dancers would do—she got up, dusted herself off and went to ballet class.

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That’s the kind of dedication it takes to put on Nutcracker. In preparation for the performances on Nov. 29 and 30, the director of Santa Cruz’s International Academy of Dance (IAD) has been auditioning dancers, constructing costumes that require engineers, and managing roles, characters, and choreography—all with a cast of about 100 local dancers.

It’s the same passion it took to walk away from a car accident with a broken rib poking out of her back and then get into Julliard a few months later—after being told she’d never dance again—that will get Cullem-Chipman through this year’s production. “As a young dancer, there was something so special about Shannon.

BY ANNE-MARIE HARRISON

There was a passion, and passion isn’t something you can teach to dancers,” says Vicki Bergland, an IAD ballet instructor who has taught ballet in Santa Cruz for more than 30 years. “Maria Grande, who worked at Juilliard, came out to adjudicate a ballet company that we were both >42 involved with for a regional

ART

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Louise Leong gets in the game

Portland’s Horse Feathers play the Catalyst P46

A brief history of the Stephen Hawking movie P64

P44


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Park Hall, Ben Lonond

Directed Dir ected by Robin Aronson Aronsson Fridays & Saturdays @ 8:00 p.m. p..m. Sundays @ 2:00 p.m.* Community Afternoon is Sunday, Sunday y, November 30 when all tickets are 2 for $200 TICKET PRICES: $20 General $17 Senior/Student $10 Y Youth oouth Under 12

www.mctshows.org www w.mctshows.org . g *There is no matinee matinee on Novemberr 23

Holiday Art & Craft Faire Simpkins Swim Center Saturday, December 6 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM Featuring a wide variety of unique gifts created by local artists and craftspeople.

Free parking & admission! For more info. & list of artists, visit www.scparks.com

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THEATER

It’s the same passion it took to walk away from a car accident with a broken rib poking out of her back and then get into Julliard a few months later—after being told she’d never dance again—that will get Cullem-Chipman through this year’s production.

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<40 dance performance, and she could not take her eyes off Shannon. She saw the talent, she saw the spark.” Cullem-Chipman took Bergland’s class as a teenager growing up in Santa Cruz. “Vicki taught me the importance of storytelling in dance,” she says. It’s not just about a series of steps, memorizing when to raise your leg and when to turn, it’s about living the story for a few shows a year. And Cullem-Chipman knows all about living a good story. After earning a college degree and eventually becoming disenchanted with the pressures of Juilliard, Cullem-Chipman made a living as a dancer in New York City. Then she packed up, went West and got a pilot’s license. “I wanted a career where I wouldn’t have to worry, ‘if I’m injured, do I not eat?’” she says. After returning to Santa Cruz a few years later, however, the opportunity to head a dance school fell into her lap; and, in typical indomitable dancer fashion, she accepted. Now she does most of her flying with pirouettes and grand jetés—and with four sons at home, she prefers it that way. Building the dance school virtually from the ground up hasn’t been easy though. Now in her 10th year as IAD’s director, putting on the Nutcracker ballet every year is like deconstructing a massive puzzle and then putting it all back together again—it gets easier every year, but there are a heck of a lot of pieces. “You start planning for the Nutcracker when the Nutcracker ends,” says Bergland, who also helps choreograph the show. This year’s returning principal dancers, Alison Roper and Brett Bauer, hailing from Oregon Ballet Theatre, draw a crowd of their very own. But Bergland says it’s the excitement of

the cast, which ranges from adults who’ve been with IAD for years to children under 3, that fills the seats. “Brett’s mother flew in from Arizona, and she’s been to you can imagine how many Nutcrackers. I said ‘You’d fly out to see it?’ And she said yes. She wanted to watch more than one show,” says Bergland. “For someone like her who’s watched her son dance in who knows how many Nutcrackers, she wanted to stay and watch more.” That’s what the show is all about, from watching children who’ve begun as toddlers in IAD’s first Nutcracker and moved up through the ranks—like this year’s dancer in the role of Klara, who’s been at IAD since she was 3 years old—to perfecting every detail, every character and every backstory. Building a space where people can find themselves through dance as they grow, a family of sorts, is what CullemChipman and Bergland strive to create at IAD. “It’s more important for us to bring out the love—everybody can dance and everybody can be a dancer, and they can find a place to dance,” says Bergland. “If you have the drive and the passion, you can find a place.” They agree that it’s their undying love for dance that brings them both back, dancing for the joy of it—IAD’s motto. “It’s still the discipline, the technique, the artistry, but doing it with joy and not doing it because you have to or because someone’s telling you to,” says Cullem-Chipman. “It’s something you have to do.” “It’s like breathing,” says Bergland. Nutcracker is at 1 p.m. and 4:30 p.m, on Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 29 & 30. Crocker Theater, Cabrillo College, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Tickets $25-$35 at Nutcrackersantacruz.com.


‘Tis the Season to Celebrate Santa Cruz’s Newest Theater Venue Join the Tannery Arts Center and the Santa Cruz Warriors in a holiday open house at the Kaiser Permanente Arena to celebrate the beginning of the Colligan Theater construction at the Tannery Arts Center

Sunday, December 7, 2014 3 pm to 5 pm Kaiser Permanente Arena Free Hot Cider and Holiday Cookies, generously donated by Whiting’s Foods

Preview of Tales From The Tannery, an exclusive Dunbar Production

Live performances by the Tannery World Dance & Cultural Center and the Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre’s Nutcracker

Hear from speakers from the Tannery Arts Center and the Jewel Theatre Company

Give the perfect holiday gift of a theater seat

Free Special Santa Cruz Warriors package drawing

The Tannery Arts Center is a 501©(3) non-profit pu public blic benefit organization (Federal Tax Tax ID #75-3134282)

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

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ART FILES

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

GAME THEORY Silk-screen perfectionist and gamemaker Louise Leong in her studio at the Tannery.

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She Got Game

Designer Louise Leong makes playtime into art

L

ouise Leong was fussing over her labor-intensive Halloween costume when I visited her studio at the Tannery. A Mr. Softee fabrication involving a 3-foot high pâpiermaché head ornament intended to sit above a broad-shouldered blue overcoat was taking too long to dry. Besides, the costume would barely clear the ceiling at Lenz Arts, where Louise has worked for two years, managing art supply inventories and consulting with artists about selections of paint, brushes and textured gel. A silkscreen perfectionist and maker of hand-held concentration games, Leong spends long hours at the

spacious printmakers collective. Detail is Leong’s middle name. She embeds tiny balls of shot into hand-held games with meticulous precision, and fabricates every polished surface and painted detail of her retro board games, such as pacheco, checkers or chess sets adorned with colorful cartoon characters. “It’s another kind of escapism,” she confesses, “iPhone and apps get old so quickly." So she fabricates real-time, real-space games that match her own tendencies. “I’m deliberate, obsessive, a perfectionist,” she says with a smile, flashing dimples straight out of Pixar.

PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER

BY CHRISTINA WATERS

Claiming to have once been “painfully shy,” Leong has recovered enough to have built a cult following for her “LouLeo’s Fun & Games objects of amusement,” which she sells on Etsy. She believes that games are “the easiest way to shed phoniness.” Their surfaces show off Leong’s imaginary cast of feisty cartoon creatures. Fez Boy always carries a slingshot. Cowgirl Cat—“based on me as a 12-year-old”—and a masked raccoon anarchist are partners in crime. Her favorite characters are based on old comic book tropes and cartoons. And her work has found its way into shows in Palo Alto, installations at the Cruzio

offices, and most recently at an Art Research Office show at the Sentinel Printers. Devoted to the brilliant colors of screen printmaking, the designer loves “how much detail can be applied, and yet how quickly executed screen printmaking is.” Richly retro and utterly analog, her games and images are inspired by ’30s Max Fleischer cartoons and vintage cowboy shows like Roy Rogers. She designs bold greeting cards, clothing, board games, all populated by her whimsical comicinspired pranksters. “I also like candy,” she confesses. Milky Candy is a new favorite. “The mass-produced packaging is so wonderful. You can find it at Asian supermarkets,” she says. Her screened images on fabric, such as her signature “teenage brat” serve as patches for clothing or backpacks, or as “sassy prayer flags.” “I felt out of place among fine artists,” she confesses. “Because I enjoy the construction—the making is important. I work in the studio four and five days in a row until 10:30 p.m. I have to get every detail just right.” Even before graduating from UCSC, Leong’s graphic work saw commercial success, including a commission for a Bonny Doon Vineyards wine label. Admitting she wouldn’t mind more commercial success, Leong says that her encounters in New York turned her off the Big Apple. “It was terrible. I wasn’t famous or well-connected.” Growing up “all around the Bay Area,” Leong came here to go to UCSC six years ago and still finds Santa Cruz a good fit. “I like knowing who’s doing what— it’s a small community. I have access to shops, workshops, the sharing of ideas. I can bike to work at Lenz, and bike here to the Tannery.” Naughty kids, lollipops, cowgirls, slingshots, shady characters—these are the denizens of Leong’s candycolored world. A world of “games for the hands and the mind.” Louise Leong’s greeting cards, printed with some of her wittiest and naughtiest cartoon creations, can also be found at Studio 107 in the Tannery.


Maharaja Indian Cuisine

Lunch Buffet 11:30 - 3pm | Dinner 5:30 - 10pm

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$9.95 Lunch Buffet

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M

MUSIC

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

PUT A BIRD ON THEM! Portland’s Horse Feathers performs Thursday, Dec. 4 at the Catalyst in Santa Cruz. PHOTO: JOHN CLARK

46

Horse Play

Justin Ringle’s band Horse Feathers gets downright upbeat on new album BY CAT JOHNSON

N

orthern Idaho is not exactly a cultural hotbed. For Justin Ringle, growing up there offered two options: get into four-wheeling, trucks and hunting, or come up with some other way to spend his time. The singer-songwriter behind the band Horse Feathers chose the latter. “Music was kind of an outlet,” he says. “A rebellion against the redneck cowboy shit that went on in my hometown. I learned a lot growing up there about being very introverted and insular, and getting focused on that.” Eventually, Ringle moved to

Portland, Oregon, taking his music and introspective tendencies with him. At this point, he considers himself a full-blown Oregonian. As Horse Feathers, Ringle has released five albums and created a nice niche for himself in the space where string-driven, chamber-inspired indie rock meets folk music. The band’s new album, So It is With Us, while still full of strings and introspective lyrics, is more rocking than past offerings, with bass, drums and a few songs that sound downright upbeat. “I’d previously been so focused on string arrangements, which is really

time-consuming and cerebral,” explains Ringle. “Working with the rhythm section and creating a different backdrop to all the songs was so refreshing and exciting.” The first time the band played the new rhythm-driven sound live, the audience response was immediate. “We came off stage, everybody looked at each other and we were like, ‘Let’s do this,’” Ringle says. “It was a different type of enthusiasm ... that felt so markedly different from what I’d been doing for eight years previously. All of a sudden we were getting energy back.”

In what is quickly becoming a requirement for sensitive indie-folk bands, So It is With Us was recorded in a barn in rural Oregon. Ringle says this is even too cliche for him, and that he didn’t want to mention the barn in the press materials for the album. For him, recording in the barn was a matter of isolation, convenience and economics. It allowed them to get away from distractions for the recording of the album, plus they could sleep in the barn—and record in it for free. “We didn’t do it to put in our onesheet,” he says, “it’s just kind of what happened. It was great.” Once released, the album made the Billboard charts, despite selling fewer albums than the band had ever sold during a debut week. But illegal downloads still prove problematic for artists trying to make a living from their recordings. For the 2012 album Cynic’s New Year, there were 20,000 illegal downloads in the first week. Ringle finds this change in the music industry frustrating and disconcerting. So much, in fact, that he contemplated whether he wanted to be a part of it. After touring Cynic’s New Year, he came home exhausted and full of questions. He took a break to reevaluate things. “The music industry had become such a moving target. I didn’t understand how I fit into it anymore,” he says. “I would [write songs] compulsively whether or not it was my job. But because it is my job, it was difficult to find some kind of understanding with that relationship. Money and art are kind of weird bedfellows.” The break proved therapeutic for Ringle, and he emerged from it with a renewed focus on live performances. “The record is an important thing,” he says, “but I knew that the only thing we could control was the quality of the show that we put on every night, so I focused on that a little more. I’ve always thought of myself more of a recording artist than a performer, but I started thinking of them at least on equal footing.” Horse Feathers will perform at 9 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 4 at the Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $18/door. 423-1338.


SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

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11TH ANNUAL GLOBAL CALIFORNIA CONFERENCE Welcome to the “Super Region.” If you’re reading this in Santa Cruz, you are currently in what is being described as the innovation region of the world, which includes the San Francisco Bay Area, Silicon Valley, and Monterey Bay (learn something new every day!). This Wednesday, leaders from the private, public and institutional sectors will focus on sustainable technologies and services, as well as investment, telemedicine, eco-tourism, and eCommerce. They’ll also explore the burgeoning relationship the “green, innovation superhighways” between China and California. Registration is required for this all-day event. Info: 9 a.m. – 3:30 p.m., Wednesday, Dec.3. Cocoanut Grove, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. 335-4780. $65.

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

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HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS DANCE PARTY Around this time of year Santa Cruzans have a lot to be thankful for—weather that isn’t below freezing, no snow, having access to avocados year-round, and the beginning of massive swell season. Does being this thankful make you want to dance? Mike Schermer is thankful and he’s back in town to get you on the dance floor with his all-stay Bay Area band. Shake off that Turkey tryptophan and Thanksgiving feast calories with the bluesy rhythms from a guy who’s been the “go-to” for Bonnie Raitt, Howard Tate, and Maria Muldaur, to name a few. Put the cranberry sauce back in the fridge and get your jam on with Schermer and these luminaries: Paul Revelli, Steve Ehrmann, Tammi Brown and Dale Ockerman. Info: 9 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 29. 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. 479-1854. $12-$15.

EVENTS CALENDAR 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 considered 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 gtweekly.com in order to SUBMIT EVENTS ONLINE. E-mail events@gtweekly.com or call 458.1100 with any questions.

WEDNESDAY 11/26 ARTS STAND UP COMEDY AT CALLAHAN'S. As seen on the Today show, Comedian Nick Stoberi. Come see the winner of the 2015 Guinness Book of World Record’s Longest Tongue and many other talented comics at Callahan’s Bar. No Cover, fun times, all welcome (except those under 21 yrs of age). 7:30 - 9:00 p.m. 507 Water St., Callahan’s Bar. No Cover. AGELESS ART PROJECT. Artist and craft people share your artistic skills and make creative expression possible for residents in care facilities by becoming an Ageless Art Project volunteer. Noon. 459-8917 x 208, scohelanfsa@gmail.com.

CLASSES JUNIPER MEDITATION. Drop-in meditation session that includes meditation, short talk and discussion on meditation for modern life. Beginners and experienced meditators welcome. Chairs/mats provided, bring your own cushions. 2nd & 4th Wednesdays. Holidays excepted. Get familiar with Juniper/ meditation tradition for modern life. 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. 1729 Seabright Ave.,Suite E. pam@juniperpath.org, 818-7984 juniperpath.org. $10.

GROUPS FEMALE SURVIVOR SUPPORT GROUP Monarch Services-Servicios Monarca offers a safe, supportive space. Childcare activities provided. 6 - 7:30 p.m. 1685 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. 425-4030 24hr: 888 900-4232 wcs-ddm.org. Free. APTOS TOASTMASTERS. Learn public speaking, leadership and effective feedback skills. Find out how to make a Toastmaster sandwich. Noon - 1 p.m. Rio Sands Motel, 116 Aptos Beach Drive, Aptos. Mike Young 2341545. Free. COASTAL MAGICIANS CLUB OF SANTA CRUZ COUNTY. The Coastal Magicians Club of Santa Cruz County was established to provide a venue for local magicians to meet to share their experiences, perform, and solicit critiques from

SATURDAY 11/29 HANDMADE HOLIDAY MAKERS’ MARKET If you’re someone who just doesn’t have that craft knack, that ability to make the daintiest, most ornate handmade holiday cards to surprise your mother this gift season, fear not—this is precisely why the Santa Cruz Mountain Makers’ Market is featuring local artists, crafters, and culinary creators so that you can pick the perfect gift. Local bands Olde Blue, the Swirly Girls, Lynn Holly, Asher Stern, and the Crooked Road Ceili Band will play while you peruse. Leave the crafting to the experts and explore stands filled with handmade jewelry, jams, soaps, clothing, toffee, paintings, glassware, candles, wooden toys and so, so much more. Info: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Felton Community Hall, 61961 Hwy. 9, Felton. scmmakersmarket.com

their fellow magicians. We meet the fourth Wed. of every month. Anyone with an interest in magic is eligible to join. 7:30 - 9:00 p.m. Bay Avenue Senior Apartments, 750 Bay Ave., Bldg. 4, Capitola. Coastal.Magicians@Gmail.com. Free until you decide to join the club.

MUSIC

BIG BAND DANCE. Ongoing - 2nd Friday of

each month. Swing to those great sounds of the ’40s with The 10th Avenue Band on the largest hardwood dance floor in the area. Refreshments available. (East Coast Swing Dance Lesson from 6:30pm - 7:15pm - Donation $5 - stay for the dance and receive $1 off dance admission). Public Welcome - Partner Not Required. Proceeds benefit MCSC. 7:30 - 10:00 p.m. Mid-County Senior Center, 829 Bay Ave., >50


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<48 Capitola. 476-4711 www.mid-countyseniorcenter.com Dance Donation: $6.00 per person.

SPIRITUAL INSIGHT MEDITATION GROUP Drop-in group meets twice monthly in downtown Santa Cruz at the Center for Transformative Visions above Zachary's Restaurant. Led by teacher Carla Brennan on the teachings of the Buddha. Meditation followed by talk. New people and beginners welcome. Noon - 1:15 p.m. Center for Transformative Visions, 819 1/2 Pacific Avenue, S.C. bloomofthepresent.org. Donation. MEDITATION Weekly group meditations. Just as singing in a choir provides an added dimension to a singer, group meditation offers a supportive atmosphere to practice with like-minded souls. www. anandascottsvalley.org. 7- 8:30 p.m. 75 Mount Hermon Road, Scotts Valley. Doug Andrews 831-338-9642. Donation.

THURSDAY 11/27

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VINYASA FLOW YOGA WITH MICHELLE. Drawing from a variety of styles, emphasis on alignment, connecting inward, and breath. Join us as we breathe and flow our way into deep relaxation. 7:30 - 8:45 p.m. Santa Cruz Yoga 402 Ingalls St. michellenak2@gmail. com. $10-$15.

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Santa Cruz 831.462.5900 I 3251 Mission Drive, near Dom Dominican inican Hospital NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

EVENTS CALENDAR

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AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT Explore Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement classes. These engaging and potent classes will heighten your vitality as they increase your self-awareness, flexibility, and overall well-being. Classes are ongoing. Preregistration required. 5:45 - 7:00 p.m. Pacific Cultural Center 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. suzie@suzielundgren.com or 332-7347 to register. First class free for new students.

GROUPS 24TH ANNUAL BIZAID FOR AIDS Sadly, there are new cases of HIV diagnosed each year in our community. Support Santa Cruz AIDS Project (SCAP) by shopping at local organizations displaying BizAid for AIDS posters the 10 days following Thanksgiving, Nov. 28 – Dec. 7. These businesses will donate a percentage of sales or a specific amount to SCAP which provides critical support services to people living with HIV/AIDS for free, and conducts prevention programs and testing. BizAid for AIDS was developed by Scott

Roseman of New Leaf Community Markets and SCAP. NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS SCOTTS VALLEY Newcomers, please come 15 minutes early to get acquainted. Check out our Nor-Cal website: www.naranoncalifornia.org/norcal. 7 8:30 p.m. St. Philip's Church, 5271 Scotts Valley Drive, Room #1, Scotts Valley. saveyoursanity@ aol.com. Free, donations accepted.

HEALTH FOOD ADDICTS IN RECOVERY ANONYMOUS There are no dues, fees, or weigh-ins at FA meetings. FA is a fellowship of individuals who, through shared experience and mutual support, are recovering from the disease of food addiction. 7 - 8:30 p.m. Trinity Presbyterian Church, in the library. 420 Melrose Ave., Santa Cruz. 435-0680. Free.

FRIDAY 11/28 ARTS PHOTOGRAPHY: CELEBRATING SANTA CRUZ Award-winning photographer Virginia Draper celebrates the unique moods and beauty of Santa Cruz with images of the Boardwalk and places where the water meets the land. 5:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Peet's Coffee & Tea, 1409 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. V. Draper, 471-9395. Free. MY THREE ANGELS Production is directed by Robin Aronson and runs Nov. 21 - Dec. 14. The play is set at the turn of the 20th century in tropical French Guiana where it's Christmas Eve and 105 degrees. Three convicts come to the aid of a family in need. Chaos ensues, and matters are set aright as the benevolent scoundrels prove themselves to be angels to the grateful family. Fridays and Saturdays @ 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. All tickets Nov. 30 are 2 for $20. 8 - 10:30 p.m. Park Hall, 9400 Mill St., Ben Lomond. www.mctshows.org, parkhall@ mctshows.org, 336-4777. $10-20.

CLASSES SANTA CRUZ DOWNTOWN TOASTMASTERS Join us for this fun and rewarding experience–you will meet great people, learn new skills, and become a part of a dynamic group. 7 - 8:30 a.m. Live Oak Senior Center, 1777 Capitola Road, Santa Cruz. santacruzdowntowntoastmasters.org. Free coffee for first-time participants. CHAIR YOGA WITH SUZI Instructor Suzi Mahler, CMT, NE will guide you through a


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Ever felt like you needed an escape after cooking a gigantic turkey, making sure the table’s set, and keeping all the relatives from killing each other? Get your family out of the house and step aboard the Train to Christmas Town, into a world of holiday elves and the journey of Janice, who meets magical friends from the past like Bumblebee the Polar Bear, Wabash the Squirrel, and Zephyr the depot cat. Cookies, hot cocoa, Christmas carols, music and fun await you on this themed train ride, which travels to Christmas town where a “jolly guest in red and white” will distribute special gifts to each child.

SOQUEL CREEK ANIMAL HOSPITAL 2505 S. Main St., Soquel 476-1515 www.soquelcreekanimalhospital.com

Info: 5:45, 7:30 p.m., Nov.28-Dec.27, 765 Ohlone Parkway, Watsonville. 888-978-5562. $17-50.

GROUPS CLUTTERERS ANONYMOUS 12-step meeting every Friday evening at Sutter Maternity & Surgery Center, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 5:30 - 6:45 p.m. 359-3008. Free. SCOTTS VALLEY NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUP Meets every Friday night. 6:30 - 7:45 p.m. Bison Center, The Camp Recovery Center, 3192 Glen Canyon Road. (Park in lower lot, walk up driveway, turn right at sign). Free.

HEALTH VITAMIN B12 FRIDAY AT THRIVE NATURAL MEDICINE Receiving B12 (or methylcobalamin) via injection means that people quickly and easily absorb and assimilate this form. B12 increases energy, improves mood, enhances sleep, promotes immunity, aides metabolism, and helps the body handle stress with more ease. 3 - 6 p.m. Thrive Natural Medicine, 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. 831-515-8699. YOGA OF 12-STEP RECOVERY The class is helpful for those with the addictions, their family and friends. 7 - 9 p.m. Yoga Within, 8035 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Henry Cleveland Donations.

MUSIC YUJI TOJO 8 - 11 p.m. Bittersweet Bistro, 787 Rio Del Mar Blvd, Aptos. bittersweetbistro.

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

series of gentle seated yoga postures that are performed slowly and with breath awareness. Come and stretch your body and relax your mind. Every Tuesday and Friday 9:30am at Grey Bears and every Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at Yoga Center Santa Cruz on Front Street, downtown. 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 234-6791. suzimahler@gmail. com. $5.00.

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NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

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EVENTS CALENDAR

FRIDAY 11/28 BOOKSHOP SC 4TH ANNUAL BOOK DRIVE For the entire month of December, you can give the gift of learning. Join Bookshop Santa Cruz in helping local public schools with the purchase of gift cards for school libraries, books from a schools’ wish list, or any book of your choice. Many of us have that one book we read as a child that changed our outlook in some way—don’t let budget cuts affect the joy of escaping into another world for local children. The Santa Cruz Education Foundation will distribute contributions amongst the Pajaro Valley Unified School District and the Scotts Valley Educational Foundation. Info: Nov.28 – Dec.31, Bookshop Santa Cruz 1520 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Donations can be made in-store or at bookshopsantacruz.com/hbd.

com/calendar.html#musicschedule. Free. JNJ DYNAMITE AT THE CREPE PLACE Local folk trio will be playing a special Black Friday set at The Crepe Place, November 28th. JNJ blends acoustic guitar, electric bass, and piano to create a relaxing blend of semi lo-fi folk., Show starts at 9pm. The Crepe Place. jnjdynamite@gmail.com. $5.

SATURDAY 11/29 ARTS NUTCRACKER: EXPERIENCE THE MAGIC The production is a true testament to the dedication and talented of our community, with the smallest dancers, beginning at age four, dancing alongside professional dancers of the highest caliber. Experience classical ballet, enchanting choreography, fantastic feats of tumbling, brilliant costumes, and beautiful

sets. There is something for everyone at the Nutcracker. 1 - 2:45 p.m. and 4:30 - 6:15 p.m. Cabrillo's Crocker Theater. Shannon Cullem at 466-0458. http://iadance.com/productions/ nutcracker/. GEM FAIRE IN MONTEREY Nov. 29 - Dec. 1. Monterey County Fairgrounds. Exhibitors from around the world. Free hourly door prizes. www. gemfaire.com. info@gemfaire.com. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monterey County.

CLASSES ZEN MEDITATION AND DISCUSSION “Come As You Are” zen meditation and discussion. See website for topic schedule. Feb. 1 - Mar. 8: "Authentic Zen, Ordinary Lives": An introduction to Soto Zen practice. 8:30 - 10 a.m. Ocean Gate Zen Center 920-B 41st Ave., Capitola. Hollye Hurst www.oceangatezen.org Donation.

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<53 PARTNER YOGA AND KIRTAN Ongoing Saturdays at Poetic Cellars Winery. Drop-ins welcome. Donations welcome, not required. Bring yoga mat and water. Building community through practice together. Lovely winery location. Reserve space by calling 530-828-4422 or 462-3478. 10 a.m. - Noon. 5000 Rodeo Gulch Road, Soquel.

FOOD & DRINK HOME AND HEARTH HOLIDAY FAIR 9th annual event at the Aptos Farmers Market beginning Saturday, Nov. 29 from 8 a.m. until 12 p.m. and continuing each Saturday through Dec. 20. Guest holiday vendors include Copper Moon Apothecary, Bee Mark & Moss, Earth-In Canteen, Jen Wren Designs, and Trellis & Vine. Farmers and food artisans will showcase their special holiday offerings including small-batch preserves and condiments, locally produced olive oil, flavored nuts, fruit baskets, wreaths, potted flowering plants, pies and pastries, tea and coffee. Aptos Farmers Market at Cabrillo College, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Free.

SUNDAY 11/30 ARTS

GROUPS NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS: SANTA CRUZ Members share their experiences, strengths and hopes at weekly meetings. www. naranoncalifornia.org/norcal. 6:30 - 8 p.m. Santa Cruz Sutter Hospital, Sutter Room, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. Saveyoursanity@ aol.com. Free. COUPLES RECOVERY RCA couples group provides support and a safe environment for couples to restore love and intimacy to a relationship experiencing troubled times. 10:30 a.m. - Noon. Sutter Hospital, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 234 5409. Free. SERENITY FIRST -- PAGANS IN RECOVERY A weekly meeting with a Pagan flair, where guests are free to discuss their spiritual paths, including those which are

SPIRITUAL GUIDED MEDITATION Led by Venerable Drimay, an excellent way to learn how to set up a daily meditation practice. Stabilizing meditation followed by guided contemplation on various Dharma topics. Doors close at 9:35 a.m. 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 4628383. Donation.

MONDAY 12/1 CLASSES SALSA DANCING CUBAN-STYLE Drop-in class, no partner required. Every Monday, this intermediate class features a great variety of Cuban-style dancing from Salsa Casino partnering, Salsa Suelta & styling to Rueda de Casino. Check website for schedule changes and holidays. 7 - 8:15 p.m. Louden Nelson Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. 295-6107. www.SalsaGente.com. $9/$5 students.

GROUPS MONDAY NIGHT BOARD GAMES Scrabble, Chess, Checkers and more board games available for those who would like to play. This is a weekly ongoing event for people ages 16 and up. Bring a friend. 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. Watsonville Public Library Meeting Room 275 Main St. Suite 100 Watsonville. 768-3400. Free. LOCAL TOASTMASTERS CLUB SEEKS MEMBERS The club strives to improve members' public speaking and leadership skills in a supportive environment. Guests welcome. Meets Mondays. Noon - 1 p.m. Goodwill Conference Room, 350 Encinal St., Santa Cruz. 440-9835; tvrein@gmail.com. $50 membership. 1ST ANNUAL FATHER INVOLVEMENT CONFERENCE The goal of the conference is to educate, train, present ideas and create dialogue on the importance of positive father involvement. To explore and address issues concerning the impact of absent fathers in lives of children and in systems such as Child Welfare, Child Support, Early Childhood Education, School Readiness, child wellness and resiliency. 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Santa Cruz

MONDAY 12/1 FATHER INVOLVEMENT CONFERENCE When fathers are involved with raising their children, everyone benefits. In order to openly discuss and support the positive benefits of father involvement, PAPÁS is putting on the first annual Father Involvement Conference to educate, train, and explore how the lives of children are affected by absent fathers. Panel discussions, presentations, and conversations will dive into the research, local efforts and activities, and keynote speakers Dr. Carolyn Pape Cowan and Dr. Phil Cowan, both professors of psychology, will discuss their work on human development. Local community leaders, Supervisor Zach Friend; Chief of Probation, Fernando Giraldo; and Director of Department of Child Support Services Jamie Murray will present as well, among others. Info: 8:30 a.m.– 4:30 p.m., 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. www.papassfi.org. $30-$35.

Veterans Hall, 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. www. EncompassCS.org, $35

HEALTH STRIKE OUT HUNGER Bring a can of food to the Boardwalk Bowl and bowl a game for free. All donations go to Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Cruz County to help feed local families. Nov. 1 - Dec. 21. 9 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. Boardwalk Bowl, 115 Cliff St., Santa Cruz. 426-3324. Free.

TUESDAY 12/2 CLASSES SPCA TRAINING DISCUSSION GROUP The Santa Cruz SPCA offers a free training discussion group once a month with a local reputable trainer to help dog owners with

behavioral issues or training questions. This small-group setting is perfect for people who have newly adopted their first animal, or people who have adopted and are experiencing problems they've never dealt with before. Please RSVP by calling the Santa Cruz SPCA at 4655000. 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. 2601 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz.

GROUPS NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS: APTOS A 12-Step program for the friends and families who have been affected by the addiction or drug problem of another. 7 - 8:30 p.m. Aptos Christian Fellowship, 7200 Freedom Blvd., Aptos. "Lighting the Way," a candlelight meeting. saveyoursanity@aol.com Free / please park in the back and enter the building in the back.

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

MEDITATIONS ON SACRED ART Iris's open meditations: Iris Irina Silva will guide you into the art historical, the symbolic and transcendental, on art works such as "The Birth of Venus" by Sandro Botticelli, and many other great sacred art works. Every last Sunday of the month. 7pm. Elemental Art Studio-128, Tannery Arts Center, Santa Cruz. elementalartstudio@gmail.com Free, donations are welcome.

nature-based and goddess-centered. Those from all 12-step programs are welcome. (Sometimes we arrive and start a bit late.) 7 - 8 p.m. Epic Adventure Games, 222 Mt. Hermon Road, Suite A, Scotts Valley. 336-8591. Free (donations accepted).

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,NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM


E

EVENTS CALENDAR

WEDNESDAY 12/3 CELEBRITY BARTENDER FUNDRAISER EVENT In the mood for a cocktail? How about one served to you by American Idol Contestant James Durban? Or maybe the mayor of Santa Cruz? Along with several local celebrities, they’ll be serving cocktails for a cause next Wednesday at Louie’s Cajun Kitchen downtown. Survivor Contestant Lex van den Berghe, Mayor Lynn Robinson, Rapper J-Willz, Poet Gary Young, and Santa Cruz Historian Geoff Dunn will all be behind the bar tonight in order to raise awareness for the steady rise of international human trafficking and the prevention programs that fight its spread. Proceeds go to Rising International’s Safe and Sound Program and VIP tickets get you into an exclusive reception with James Durbin. Info: 6 – 9 p.m., Louie’s Cajun Kitchen and Bourbon Bar, 110 Church St., Santa Cruz. www.risinginternational.org/celebrityfun. $25-$50.

HEALTH

CANCER SUPPORT GROUP Open to women with all types of cancer from diagnosis through treatment and the healing process. 12:30 - 2 p.m. WomenCARE at 4572273 to register. Free. FRIENDS AND FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP Open to all friends and loved ones of people with cancer. Meets every first and third Tuesday of the month. Call to register. 5:30 7 p.m. WomenCARE at 457-2273. Free.

MUSIC ENAHENA AND TAN OF DREAMS Enahena is a very distinctive vocalist. He is also a prolific songwriter, and a brilliant and innovative drummer and percussionist with a powerful revolutionary technique that has helped him to forge a unique style of his own: a blend of Trance-Rock—Electro-Jam, a hallmark of

his music. 6 - 9 p.m. Davenport Roadhouse Restaurant and Inn, 1 Davenport Ave., Davenport. Free.

SPIRITUAL REFLECTIONS ON THE LAMAS In Tibetan Buddhism, the life stories of Buddhist masters have always been a source of inspiration. They can serve as examples and show what is possible for a true practitioner. Both Karuna Cayton and Jon Landau have been longtime students of Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche, and they have kindly agreed to share their stories on two Tuesday evenings in December. See www.oceanofcompassion. org for more details. 7 - 9 p.m. Ocean of Compassion Buddhist Center-1550 La Pradera Drive, Campbell. info@oceanofcompassion.org. $15 suggested donation.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

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MUSIC CALENDAR

LOVE YOUR

LOCAL BAND

GOOD NEIGHBOR POLICY It occurred to Good Neighbor Policy’s Chris and Pat (who only use their first names, like all good neighbors) that instead of hanging out and drinking beer, they could gather up some buddies and turn their drinking sessions into punk rock sessions. A Santa Cruz band was born that day, a little over a decade ago. At the time, they figured they’d just enjoy themselves a bit and bash on their instruments in their rehearsal space. Playing actual shows seemed highly unlikely. Now, an LP and an EP later, not only have they toured up and down the coast, they’ve even flown to Japan for a two-week tour.

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

“Our only goal was to have people circlepit to our music. Once we started playing shows, people were stoked, so we just kept playing more,” says Chris, who plays guitar.

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The band was most active between 2006 and 2008, though these days they only play about once or twice a year. Their drummer Cory moved to Las Vegas, and the band is pretty adamant about keeping the original lineup intact. What has always worked for Good Neighborhood Policy was what they played together; an unhinged mixture of early ’80s hardcore and late ’80s midtempo gutter punk. When they do get together, it’s an explosion of energy. As much as they get loose and wild when they step foot onto that stage, they take pride in bringing a serious element to their music, particularly the lyrics. “To me punk rock is about equality and justice, just in a vulgar, in-your-face kind of way,” says Pat, who sings lead vocals. “The music and the message is what’s really important to me. I try to keep that, even if it’s a little abrasive sometimes.” AARON CARNES

INFO: 9 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 29. Catalyst Atrium, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $10/adv, $12/door. 429-4135.

BROKEDOWN IN BAKERSFIELD

WEDNESDAY 11/26 REVVED-UP ROCKABILLY

CHOP TOPS

Local legends the Chop Tops have been at it for almost 20 years now. It is hard to believe so much time has passed, especially when you consider the band hasn’t missed a beat when most bands would have tripped and fallen all over themselves by now. If you like rockabilly, psychobilly, punk, surf rock or just good old rock ’n’ roll—or any combination of these styles—then the Chop Tops are a group you have to see. BRIAN PALMER INFO: 8:30 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1134 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz. $9/adv, $12/door. 429-6994.

TRIBUTE BAND

CHINA CATS OK, let’s be honest: the only way a show from Grateful Dead tribute band the China Cats could be any more appropriate would be if it were to be on Thanksgiving rather than Thanksgiving Eve. Grateful. Thanks. It’s perfect, really. One of the premier tribute bands in Northern California, their lineup includes musicians who have played with members of the Jerry Garcia Band, Galactic and

others. The group has spent years infusing the classic sensibilities of the Dead’s catalog with their own flair and energy. BP INFO: 8:30 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Highway 9, Felton. $12. 603-2294.

FRIDAY 11/28 COUNTRY ROCK

BROKEDOWN IN BAKERSFIELD These days, Bakersfield is just a town that we drive through to get from here to wherever we’re going. But back in the mid-1950s, it was an epicenter of country music. Its most famous child was superstar Buck Owens, but Merle Haggard, Jean Shepard and Wynn Stewart all came out of there, too. Brokedown in Bakersfield pays tribute to the city’s signature rocking, twang-heavy sound, while also introducing the rich Bakersfield legacy to younger generations. Led by husband and wife duo Nicki and Tim Bluhm, the group also includes Scott Law and ALO's Lebo, Steve Adams and Dave Brogan. CAT JOHNSON

INFO: 9 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $20/adv, $25/door. 603-2294.

ELECTRONIC

MINNESOTA Local electronic musician Christian Bauhofer has that easygoing, friendly Midwestern charm. Is that why his friends started calling him Minnesota? Close! They called him that because he moved from the Midwest to Santa Cruz when he was 18. Once he picked up turntables, the nickname stuck. Over the past couple of years, Bauhofer, aka Minnesota, has made a name for himself touring the EDM club/festival circuit all over the country. He takes elements of dubstep, house, glitch and hip-hop and delivers a dynamic, soulful, feelgood mix—like any good Midwestern boy should. AARON CARNES INFO: 8 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $20/door. 429-4135.

BLUES ROCK

DEEPSTONE Drawing inspiration from Albert King, Stevie Ray Vaughan, the Jimi Hendrix Experience and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Santa Cruz's Deepstone blends rock and blues to create a high-energy sound that keeps dancers moving and blues appreciators nodding along. With a


MUSIC

M

BE OUR GUEST GROUCH & ELIGH: HOW THE GROUCH STOLE CHRISTMAS

IVORY CLUB BOYS

different lineup depending on the night, the band has a repertoire that includes blues standards like “Mojo Working,” “Killing Floor,” “The Thrill is Gone,” and “Rock Me Baby.” CJ INFO: 9 p.m. Coasters Bar & Grill, 115 Cliff St., Santa Cruz. Free. 426-3324.

FUNK

MATT MASIH & THE MESSENGERS An energetic and uplifting performer, Matt Masih gets inside people’s heads and turns their frowns upsidedown. (I am being metaphorical here, of course.) With his band the Messengers, he makes feel-good dance music that’s got the horns, the hooks and lots and lots of the funk. Masih’s Jamiroquai-inspired songwriting is catchy enough to please any radioloving pop fanatic, with some soul and the occasional reggae tune. AC INFO: 9:30 p.m. Crow’s Nest, 2218 E Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. $7. 476-4560.

REGGAE-ROCK

EXPENDABLES Sublime brought reggae tunes to a

INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $18/adv, $20/door. 429-4135.

SUNDAY 11/30 AMERICANA/FOLK-POP

LADY CROONERS Whether it is their way with harmonies (“Mercy”) or their selfproclaimed “almost country” sound, there is something about this San Francisco sextet that draws you in and keeps you in their sway. Siblings Nadia, Joseph and Megan Krilanovich lead the way vocally and musically,

weaving rich, emotional, detailed stories about the ups and downs of life, and the rest of the group fills in the space with complementary, skillful playing. BP INFO: 7 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Highway 9, Felton. $10. 603-2294.

MONDAY 12/1 JAZZ

IVORY CLUB BOYS The violin doesn’t typically get a whole lot of notice in the jazz scene, but it does have a jazz-related history, and that is what the Ivory Club Boys celebrate. An offshoot project of the renowned Hot Club of San Francisco, this project is a tribute to the swinging jazz violinist Stuff Smith, and his seminal work with the Onyx Club Boys back in the 1930s. Smith is credited with being the first person to play electric violin, and his work brought a verve and energy to the jazz scene that the Ivory Club Boys are proud to keep playing almost 80 years later. BP INFO: 7p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. 427-2227.

INFO: 9 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 4. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $22.50/ adv, $25/door. 423-1338. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 28 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.

IN THE QUEUE CHRIS RENE

Santa Cruz local-boy-done-good is back with a new album on the way. Friday at Catalyst JNJ DYNAMITE

Quiet, local indie folk. Friday at Crepe Place GOOD LUCK THRIFT STORE OUTFIT

Americana, roots and blues. Friday at Moe’s Alley ARNOCORPS

Purveyors of punk and metal with lyrics inspired by Arnold Schwarzenegger films. Saturday at Catalyst WINDHAM FLAT

Cure and INXS-inspired garage rockers out of San Francisco. Saturday at Crepe Place.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

SATURDAY 11/29

whole new audience in the ’90s. They also mixed it up with funk, punk and ska. But they weren’t the only band playing the California reggae-rock sound—locals the Expendables have been at it since 1997. They were DIY indie artists until about 2007, when they were signed to Slightly Stoopid’s record label. Like every other reggae-related band, they sing about weed—a lot—but they also cover other topics. For instance, their latest tune, “Zombies in America” is about, well, zombies … and also probably weed. They bring in more punk and metal than Sublime, but reggae is the backdrop to all their tunes. AC

An (almost) annual winter event hosted by the Grouch and Eligh, two rappers who came out of the Bay Area’s rich hip-hop scene, “How the Grouch Stole Christmas” brings together standout MCs and DJs for a festive warm-up to the holidays. This year’s event features Southern hip-hop trio CunninLynguists (bonus points for the clever name), and DJ Abilities. CJ

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LIVE MUSIC

Wednesday November 26th 8:30pm $9/12 Pre Thanksgiving Bash

THE CHOP TOPS

+ BACKYARD BLUES BAND, THE CONCAVES & THIRSTY THREE Friday November 28th 9pm $10/13

Americana/Blues/Roots Double Bill

THE GOOD LUCK THRIFT STORE OUTFIT

+ MARTY O’REILLY & THE OLD SOUL ORCHESTRA Saturday November 29th 9pm $10/15 Blues Party With The Mighty

MIKE SCHERMER Sunday November 30th 8:30pm $17/20 Psychedelic Rock Pioneers Return

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE

+ DOOBIE DECIBEL SYSTEM Thursday December 4th 8:30pm $12/15

Members of THE RADIATORS, THE NEVILLE BROTHERS & THE DIRTY DOZEN BRASS BAND

THE NEW ORLEANS SUSPECTS + 7 COME 11

WED AP TO S ST. APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 805 9 Apt Aptos os St, Apt Aptos; os; 662-1721 6621721 AQUARIUS A QUARIUS West Dr, Santa 1175 75 W est Cliff D r, S anta Cruz; 460-5012 BAR CAFE THE ART ART B AR & C AFE River Santa 11060 060 Riv er St #112, S anta Cruz; 428-8989 428-8 989 BL UE L AGOON BLUE LAGOON 9 23 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz; 923 Pacific Ave, Santa 4237117 423-7117 BL UE L OUNGE BLUE LOUNGE 529 S eabright A ve, S anta Cruz; Seabright Ave, Santa 4237771 423-7771 BO ARDWA ALK BO WL BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, S anta Cruz; Santa 4263324 426-3324 BOCCI’ S CELLAR CELL AR BOCCI’S 1140 40 Encinal Encinal St, S anta Cruz; Santa 42 7-1795 427-1795 C ATA LYST CATALYST 11011 011 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz; Pacific Ave, Santa 4231336 423-1336 C ATA AL LYST ATRIUM AT TRIUM CATALYST 11011 011 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz; Pacific Ave, Santa 4231336 423-1336 CIL ANTRO S CILANTROS 1934 Main St, W atsonville; 1934 Watsonville; 7761-2161 61-2161 CREPE PL ACE PLACE 11 34 S oquel A ve, S anta Cruz; 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa 429-6 994 429-6994 CR OW ’ S NEST NE ST CROW’S 2218 E. Cliff D r, S anta Cruz; Dr, Santa 4 76-4560 476-4560

Karaoke Karaoke 8p-Close 8p-Close

Expendables The Expendables $18/20 8:30p $18/20

Breakfast Show Show Breakfast $3 8:30p

INSPECTOR

NOVEMBER NO VEMBER 26-DECE 26-DECEMBER EMBER 2 2,, 201 2014 4 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEKL LY. C OM | S SANT SANTACRUZ.COM A CR UZ . C OM

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WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854

Wednesday, Nov. 26 • In the Atrium • AGES 21+

THE EXPENDABLES

Nickel $18 Adv./ $20 Drs. • Drs. open 8:30 p.m./ Show 9 p.m.

plus Ribsy’s

Friday, November 28 • AGES 18+

MINNESOTA Jackal G. Jones Late Nite Krew also

FRI

11/28

S SAT AT

11/29

SUN

11/30

Hawk Hawk ‘n’ Blues Blues Mechanics Mechanics 6-8p

Rand Rand Rueter Rueter 6-8p

and

MON

12/1

Jewl Jewl Sandoval Sandoval 6-8p

TUE

12/2

Rand Rueter 6-8p

Poetry Workshop, Workshop, Open Open Ukelele Ukelele Club, Club, Poetry Late Mic Arts Trivia Trivia Night Mic and Late Arts 4-10p 0 6 4-10p 6p DJ T rripp DJ Tripp 9p

Box (Goth (Goth Night) The Box 9p

Rainbow Night w/ w/ DJ DJ AD DJ DJ / Ladies Ladies Night Rainbow

DJ/Live Music DJ/Live

Comedy Night Comedy

Karaoke Karaoke 8p-Close 8p-Close

Deepstone Deepstone 9p

Karaoke Karaoke 6p-Close 6p-Close

Karaoke Karaoke 6p-Close 6p-Close

Minnesota Minnesota $15/$20 8p $15/$20

Expendables The Expendables $18/$20 9p $18/$20

Rene Chris Rene $15/$20 8:30p $15/$20

Arnocorps $10/$12 $10/$12 Arnocorps 8:30p

Live Music $5 9p Live

Lures, P almz Lures, Palmz

Karaoke Karaoke

Open Mic Open Karaoke Karaoke 8p-Close 8p-Close

Mansions on the Moon 8:30p $12/$15

Happy Hour Hippo Happy 5:30-7:30p 5:30-7:30p

1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135

plus

11/277 11/2

Al Frisby 6-8p

Fountain of of Bile, Bile, Fountain Grievance, Ab syniaa, Grievance, Absynia, Miasma $5 9p

Ska/Rock Greats From Mexico

December 6th BLUETECH December 10th DRAGON SMOKE December 11th THE BARR BROTHERS December 12th KATDELIC + Pamela Parker December 13th THE ITALS December 14th CFRI Benefit w/ TESS DUNN December 18th ONE DROP, ONE A CHORD, ANIMO December 19th DICK DALE December 20th THE ENGLISH BEAT December 27th B-SIDE PLAYERS December 31st New Years Eve w/ SAMBADÁ January 3rd ZONGO JUNCTION January 7th KATCHAFIRE January 8th BROTHERS KEEPER w/ JOHN POPPER January 10th MELVIN SEALS & JGB January 14th WHITEY MORGAN January 15th TURKUAZ January 16th THE MOTHER HIPS January 22nd & 23rd DAVE & PHIL ALVIN January 25th KIM SIMMONDS & SAVOY BROWN

THU

Jazz Jams Santa Santa Cruz Cruz 7p

Friday December 5th 9pm $20/25

+ LA MISA NEGRA

11/26

Bleu 6-8p

Happy Hour KPIG Happy 5:30-7:30p 5:30-7:30p Dynamite JnJ Dynamite $5 9p

Windham Flat, The Windham Monarch Rail Rail Monarch $5 9p

FishHook $6 9p

Matt Masih & the Matt Messengers Messengers $7 9:30p $7

Come 11 7 Come $5 9p Live Comedy Comedy Live $7 9p $7

Tuesday R eggae Jam Tuesday Reggae 8p

TTHURSDAY HURSSDAAY DEC. DEC. 11 7:30PM 7 at tthe he R Rio io The Theatre, atre, Santa Sa anta Cruz Cruz

$15 Adv./ $20 Drs. • Drs. open 8 p.m./ Show 8 p.m.

A Benefit P Performance erfformance o for fo or

Friday, November 28 • In the Atrium • AGES 16+

CCHADEISH HADDEISH YYMEINU MEINU

also AJG

CHRIS RENE

plus Monikape & Wattz $15 Adv./ $20 Drs. • 8:30 p.m./ 9 p.m.

Saturday Nov. 29 Ages 16+ plus

Mod Sun

also

7HJPÄJ +\I

$18 Adv./ $20 Drs. • Drs. open 8 p.m./ Show 9 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 29 • AGES 16+

ARNOCORPS

plus Good

Neighbor Policy also Can Toker $10 Adv./ $12 Drs. • 8:30 p.m./ 9 p.m.

Sunday, November 30 • In the Atrium • AGES 16+

MANSIONS ON THE MOON

plus Lincoln

Jesser $12 Adv./ $15 Drs. • 8:30 p.m./ 9 p.m.

Dec 4 The Grouch & Eligh (Ages 16+) Dec 5 Eric Hutchinson (All Ages) Dec 6 Goapele (Ages 21+) Dec 11 Nahko & Medicine For The People (Ages 16+) Dec 12 Lil B (Ages 16+) Dec 13 An Evening With Kaki King (Ages 21+) Dec 18 Trollphace/ Jphelpz (Ages 18+) Dec 19 Dilated Peoples (Ages 16+) Dec 20 K00L John/ P-Lo (Ages 16+) Dec 27 Keak da Sneak/ The Jacka/ Husalah (Ages 16+) Dec 31 Iration New Year’s Eve (Ages 16+) Jan 3 E-40 (Ages 16+) Jan 5 Aesop Rock w/ Rob Sonic (Ages 16+) Jan 9 James Durbin (All Ages) 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

THE KIN KINSEY NSEY SSICKS ICKS Americ America’s ca’s F Favorite a avorite Dragapella Dr a agapella ® Beautyshop Beautys shop Quartet

kinseysicks.com kin seysi y cks.com Presented byy CChadeish hadeishh YYameinu ameiinu & KKUSP USP To To learn learn mo more re abou about ut Chadeish Chadeeish YYameinu ameinu vvivisit: sit:

santacruzcy.org sa antac a ruzcy.org

e com & TToombooyy (next doooorr to Th .co ts. ets e k ck ick rti ert pe ap a np wn o row r y.b se in kin ts: chaassee titicckkee urch PPuur

RiRioo))


LIVE MUSIC WE WED ED DAV. R DAV. ROADHOUSE OADHOUSE 1D Davenport avenport A Ave, ve, D Davenport; avenport; 426-8801 QUIXOTE’ S DON QUIXOTE’S 62 75 Hwy 9, 9, FFelton; elton; 6275 60 3-2294 603-2294 THE FISH HOUSE 9 72 Main St, W atsonville; 972 Watsonville; 7728-3333 28 3333 28BANK FOG BANK 211 Esplanade, Esplanade, Capit ola; Capitola; 4621881 462-1881 GG RESTAURANT RE STAUR ANT 8041 S oquel Dr, Dr, Apt os; Soquel Aptos; 688-8660 HENFLING’ S HENFLING’S 9450 Hwy 9, 9, Ben Lomond; Lomond; 336-9 318 336-9318 IDE AL BAR BAR & GRILL GRILL IDEAL 1106 06 Be ach St, S anta Cruz; Beach Santa 423-52 71 423-5271 IT ’ S WINE T YME IT’S TYME 312 Capitola Capitola A ve, Capit ola; Ave, Capitola; 4 77-4455 477-4455 KUUMBWA KUUMBWA 32 0-2 C edar St, S anta Cruz; 320-2 Cedar Santa 42 7-2227 427-2227 LOUIE’S CAJUN CAJUN KITCHEN KITCHEN LOUIE’S 11 0 Church Church St, Santa Santa Cruz; 110 429-2 000 429-2000 MALONE’ S MALONE’S 440 cotts V alley D rive, S cotts 44022 S Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts V alley; 438-2244 438-2244 Valley; MANGIAMO’ S MANGIAMO’S 7783 83 Rio Del Del Mar Blvd, Blvd, Apt os; Aptos; 6881477 688-1477

11/26

THU

11/277 11/2

FRI

11/28 11 1/28

SAT S AT

11/29

SUN

11/30 11/ /30

MON

12/1

Broked down in Brokedown Bakersfield Bakersfield $20/$ $25 9p $20/$25

Sweet HayaH HayaH AZA, Sweet $12/$15 8p

12/22

Tan a of of Dreams Dreamss Tan 6-9p

Ugly Ugly Beauty Beauty China Cats Cats China $122 8:30p

TUE

GG

Celebrating Creativity Since 1975

Saturday, November 29 U 8 pm

LORD BUCKLEY LIVE: THE HISTORY OF HIP! Tickets: BrownPaperTickets.com

Monday, December 1 U 7 pm

THE IVORY CLUB BOYS Tribute to jazz violinist Stuff Smith and his Onyx Club Boys

Ladycrooners, The Ladycrooners, Dan Frechette Frecheette & Laurel Laurel Dan Thomsen $1 $ 0 7p Thomsen $10

Tuesday, December 2 U 7 pm Vinny Johns JJohnson on Band Vinny

Unccharted Jazz Uncharted 6-9 9p 6-9p

Dennis Dove Dove P ro Jam Dennis Pro

Pete C ontino Accordion Accordion Pete Contino 6-9p

Flinngo (Bing o) Flingo (Bingo) 7:30 0p 7:30p

Opeen MIc Open 7p

Jesse S abala and the Jesse Sabala Soul P ushers Soul Pushers

Live Music Muusic Live 7p

Tickets by phone (831) 233–8168

Urzua Flamenc Matias Urzua Flamencoo 6-9p

Enginee Room Room Engine 8p

Kevin McD owell Kevin McDowell 6-8p

FIRST ANNUAL TUMBLEWEED COMEDY BENEFIT FEATURING COLIN MOULTON

10 Foot Foot Faces Faces 10

Wednesday, December 3 U 7:30 pm Karaoke w e en Karaoke w// K Ken 7p

Live Music Live

Sundaay Ticket Ticket NFL Sunday

Live Music Live 7p

Kevin McD Dowell Kevin McDowell 6-8p

Tickets: BrownPaperTickets.com

Thursday, December 4 U 7 pm

KATE McGARRY AND KEITH GANZ Jazz, folk, Brazilian and popular songs! 1/2 Price Night for Students

Lord Buckley Buckleey $20/$25 $20/$25 Lord 8p

Friday, December 5 U 7 & 9 pm | No Comps

THE BAD PLUS Inventive and exciting original music! 9 pm: 1/2 Price Night for Students

Sunday Brunch Brrunch Live Live Sunday 11a-1p p Jazz 11a-1p Kelly Chris Kelly 7-10p 7-10p

IRISH CHRISTMAS IN AMERICA

Saturday, December 6 U 8 pm

Karaoke w en Karaoke w// K Ken 9p

DECEMBERCHILD BENEFIT IN MEMORY OF JACOB JOHN SAVELL: FEAT. SUPERIOR OLIVE

Acoustic t Clas sic R ock Acoustic Classic Rock 5-8p

Tickets: StillFumin.com

Monday, December 8 U 7 pm | No Comps

International Music Hall and Restaurant

FINE MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOOD ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET M-F $7.95

LOCATED ON THE BEACH Amazing waterfront deck views.

Brazilian Bossa Nova Royalty!

Grateful Dead Tribute Thanksgiving Eve Dance $12 adv./$12 door 21 + 8:30pm

Friday. December 12 U 7 & 9 pm | No Comps

Fri Nov 28

Brokedown In Bakersfield

Sat Nov 29

California Country

Sun Nov 30 Wed Dec 3

STAND-UP COMEDY

Three live comedians every Sunday night.

Saturday, December 13 U 8 pm

AZA Rock n’Moroccin plus Sweet Hayah World Soul

A TRIBUTE TO JERRY GARCIA

The Ladycrooners Dan Frechette & Laurel Thomsen $10 adv./$10 door <21 w/parent 7pm

Sallie Ford All Girl Folk, Blues, Psychedelia Old Light

$12 adv./$15 door 21 + 9pm Thu Dec 4

WINTERDANCE CELTIC CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION Molly’s Revenge, Christa Burch, Irish Dancers $17 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm

HAPPY HOUR

COMING RIGHT UP

Mon–Fri from 3:30pm. Wednesday all night!

Fri. Dec. 5

VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET Wood-fired pizza, ice cream, unique fine gifts.

SPECIAL DEALS Weekdays, upstairs and down.

NOW SERVING BREAKFAST Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily

(831) 476-4560

crowsnest-santacruz.com

DAN HICKS & THE HOT LICKS: HOLIDAZE IN HICKSVILLE

$20 adv./$25 door 21 + 9pm

$12 adv./$15 door 21 + 8pm

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT See live music grid for this week’s bands.

BEBEL GILBERTO

China Cats

The Sagittarius Ball Slugs N’ Roses Grateful Dead Tribute + Achilles Wheel Sat. Dec. 6 Be Natural Music Kid’s Rock Benefit Concert Not My Fault, Diamond Wire, The Sumthings 1:30 pm Sat. Dec. 6 Fleetwood Mask Fleetwood Mac Tribute Sun. Dec. 7 Adam Miller 2pm Folksinger, Autoharp Giant Sun. Dec. 7 The Bobs 7pm Stunning a cappella Mon. Dec. 8 Dale Ann Bradley Bluegrass Singer of the Year Wed. Dec. 10 The Kim Wilson Blues All-Stars, Alabama Mike Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am Reservations Now Online at www.donquixotesmusic.com

Tickets: TheWheelCompany.com

Monday. December 15 U 7 & 9 pm | No Comps

CHARLIE HUNTER AND SCOTT AMENDOLA Thursday. December 18 U 7 & 9 pm | No Comps

THE WYNDHAM HILL WINTER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION FEATURING WILL ACKERMAN, BARBARA HIGBIE AND LIZ STORY Saturday. December 20 U 7:30 pm | No Comps

THE KLEZMATICS “...one of the greatest klezmer groups in the world...” – NPR Unless noted advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records. Dinner served 1-hr before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wines & beer. All ages welcome.

320-2 Cedar St [ Santa Cruz 831.427.2227

kuumbwajazz.org

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Served 9:00am to 9:00pm

Thurs. December 11 U 7 & 9 pm | No Comps

Wed Nov 26

plus Easy Leaves

Walk-ins welcome for Thanksgiving Dinner.

STEEL HOUSE FEATURING EWARD SIMON, SCOTT COLLEY AND BRIAN BLADE

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S HOP O UR D OWNTOWN H OLIDAY S TORE

Holidays

&

Beyond!

Featuring products made in our training program.

Cooper House Breezeway 110 Cooper/Pacific Ave, Ste 100G

Open: Nov 17 -Dec 24, 10am - 8pm everyday. Closed Thanksgiving

Shop Online.:

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LIVE MUSIC WED MICHAEL’ S ON MAIN MICHAEL’S M 22591 25 91 Main St, S oquel; Soquel; 479-9777 4 79-9777 M MOE’ S ALLEY ALLEY MOE’S 11535 Commercial 1535C ommerrccial W ay, S anta Cruz; Way, Santa 4 79-1854 479-1854 M MO TIV MOTIV 11209 12 09 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz; Pacific Ave, Santa 429 4 429-80 8070 429-8070 9 BO 99 T TLE S BOTTLES 1110 11 0W alnut A ve, S anta Cruz; Walnut Ave, Santa 4 45 9-9999 459-9999 O OLIT TAS OLITAS 4 Municip 49 al Wharf anta Municipal Wharf,, Suit Suitee B B,, S Santa C Cruz; 458-9 393 458-9393 P AR ADISE BE A ACH PARADISE BEACH 2 E 215 splanade, Capit ola; Esplanade, Capitola; 4 76-4900 476-4900 T THE POCKE T POCKET 3 31 02 P ortola D r, S anta Cruz; 3102 Portola Dr, Santa 4 75-9819 475-9819 P POE T & PATRIOT PATRIO T T POET 3 32 0 E. C edar St, S anta Cruz; 320 Cedar Santa 4 426-862 0 426-8620 T THE RED 2200 00 LLocust ocust St, S anta Cruz; Santa 4 4251913 425-1913 T THE REEF 1120 12 0 Union St, S anta Cruz; Santa 4 45 9-9876 459-9876 R THE RIO AT TRE THEATRE 11205 12 05 S oquel A ve, S anta Cruz; Soquel Ave, Santa 4 423-82 09 423-8209 R O SIE MCC ANN’ S ROSIE MCCANN’S 11220 122 0P acific A ve, S anta Cruz; Pacific Ave, Santa 4 426-99 30 426-9930

11/26

THU

11/277 11/2

FRI

11/28

S SAT AT

11/29

SUN

11/30

Jade 710p 7-10p

T ssunami Tsunami 811p 8-11p

Chop T op o s, Back kyard Tops, Backyard Blue Bluess Band, The C oncaves 8p Concaves

Good Luck Thrift St ore Might chermer Store Mightyy Mik Mikee S Schermer O utfit, Mart ’Reilly 9p 9 $1 0/$15 8p Outfit, Martyy O O’Reilly $10/$15

Ne w Rider New Riderss ooff the P urple S age $1 7//$20 8p Purple Sage $17/$20

Big B 9:30p-2a 9:30p 2a

D DJJ B-EZ 9:30p-2a 9:30p 2a

R asta Cruz R eggae Rasta Reggae P arty 9p 9p-Clo Close Party 9p-Close

Is aiah Pick et Isaiah Picket 2:30-5:30p

Lar rice Laraa P Price 2:30-5:30p

Spe akeasy LLounge ounge Speakeasy (S wing) 6-9:30p (Swing) S Sp ace Bas B 9 30 2a 2 Space Basss 9:30p9:30p-2a

Lib ation Lab w yntax Libation w// S Syntax 9:30p9:30p 1:30a 9:30p-1:30a

MON

12/1

The Br eeze Babe Breeze Babess 811p 8-11p

TUE

12/2

Lis Lisaa Marie

T aango2Oblivion 6p Tango2Oblivion E clectic 9:30p-2a 9:30p 2a Eclectic

Hip-Hop w w// D DJJ Mar Marcc 9:30p-2a 9:30p 2a

T rivia Night Trivia 8p The Olit as All St ars ((Jazz) Jazz) Olitas Stars 6:30p

Jam S ession w Session w// Gullic 8p

Ben Ric Ricee Band $5 9p

The Joint Chie fs ffeat. eat. Chiefs P am Ha wkins Pam Hawkins $5 9p

Jazz S ession w obin Session w// R Robin Ander son Big Band 7p Anderson

O pen Mic 3-6p Open 3-6p,, Tim O ’Neil Band 9:30p O’Neil

O pen Mic Open 77-9:30p -9:30p

O pen Mic Open 77:30-11:30p :30-11:30p

Animo Jams 6:30p

Tim W ilkins Wilkins 77-9p -9p

T rivia Night Trivia 7p

O pen Mic Open 7p


LIVE MUSIC WE ED WED SANDERLINGS SANDERLINGS Resort, Aptos; 1 Seascape Seascape R esort, Apt os; 662-7120 6627120

11/26

SE ABRIG HT BREWERY BREWERY SEABRIGHT 519 S eabright, S anta Cruz; Seabright, Santa 426-2 739 426-2739 SEVERINO’ S BAR BAR & GRILL GRILL SEVERINO’S 77500 500 Old Dominion Dominion Court, Court, Aptos; Aptos; 688 688-8 8987 688-8987 SHADO WBROOK SHADOWBROOK 11750 750 Wharf R d, Capit ola; Rd, Capitola; 4 75-1222 475-1222 SIR FR OGGY ’ S PUB FROGGY’S T rivvia w oger Trivia w// R Roger 4 771 S oquel D r, S oquel; 4771 Soquel Dr, Soquel; 8p 4 76-9802 476-9802 S OIF SOIF 1105 05 W alnut A ve, S anta Cruz; Walnut Ave, Santa 423-2 020 423-2020 UGL LY MUG UGLY 4640 Soquel Soquel A ve, S oquel; Ave, Soquel; 4 77-1341 477-1341 VINO PRIMA 55 Municipal Municipal Wharf anta Cruz; Wharf,, S Santa 426-0 750 426-0750 VINO TABI TA ABI 334 Ingalls Ingalls St, Santa Santa Cruz; 4261809 426-1809 WHALE CIT Y CITY 490 Highway Highway One, One, D avenport; Davenport; 423-9009 WIND JAMMER WINDJAMMER 1R ancho D el Mar Blv d, Apt os; Rancho Del Blvd, Aptos; 6851587 685-1587 ZELD A’ S ZELDA’S 2203 03 E splanade, Capit ola; 4 75-4900 Esplanade, Capitola; 475-4900

THU

11/277 11/2

FRI

11/28 11 1/28

11/29

SAT SAT SUN Ultr ound w /Grove Ultraa S Sound w/Grove C oe, E ddie Mendenhall, Coe, Eddie St eve R obertson Steve Robertson

S ambas a sa Sambassa 811p 8-11p

11/30 11/ /30

MON

12/1

TUE

12/22

Harpinn Jonn Jonnyy and the Gr oove-Hounds e Groove-Hounds

Claudio Meleg Melegaa 8p

The Bi lly Martini Billy Sho w 12p 1 p Show

The R oom Shak ers Room Shakers 8p p

Joe Ferrara Ferrara 6:30- 10p 10p

Joe Ferrara Ferrara 77-- 110p 0p

K araoke w ve Karaoke w// E Eve 9p

T aaco T uesday Taco Tuesday G ypsy Jazz Gypsy 6:30p O pen Mic w sephus Open w// Mo Mosephus 5:30p

Brian W ard Ward 6-8p The P aolozzi T aango Trio Trio Paolozzi Tango 6p

Night Train Train 2S oonn Soon 9p

Judy Collins Aimee Mann Christmas Show

12.07

Mike Birbiglia

12.10

Film: Class Dismissed

Thank God for Jokes

Phant Chant Chantss 9p

Andy Fuhrman Fuhrman & FFriends riendss 6p

12.05 12.06

Chr ome D eluxe Chrome Deluxe 9p

12.11 12.11

Kinsey Sicks

12.12

Riders in the Sky Christmas the Cowboy Way Waay

12.14

Film: Dying to Know

12.27–28 12 27 28 White Whit Album Alb Ensemble E bl 1.15

Lecture and book signing signing by Dr. Drr. Martin Blaser

1.17

Wood Brothers The Wood

1.23

Cirque Ziva: The Golden Dragon Acrobats

1.25

Tim Flannery Tim

1.26

d Patti Smith and Her Band

2.15

Over the Rhine

2.20 22 2.20-22

Banff Mtn. Film Festival

3.19

Hay An Evening with Colin Hay

3.20

Paula Poundstone

4.22

To om Paxton Janis Ian & Tom

Follow the Rio Thea Follow Theatre atre on Facebook Facebook & TTwitter! w wittter!

501 River St, Santa Cruz s 831-466-9551

We e’ll match any l local clin ic ad sp s ecia al! w//cop o y of this ad

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F

FILM

BEAUTIFUL MIND Eddie Redmayne delivers a stellar performance as Stephen Hawking in ‘The Theory of Everything.’

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Time Lord

64

Terrific acting highlights in James Marsh’s gripping Hawking bio ‘The Theory of Everything’ BY LISA JENSEN

S

tephen Hawking is one of the most famous and admired figures in the world. A brilliant mathematician, cosmologist, and researcher into the relativity of space and time, he’s a university professor, a popular guest on the lecture circuit, and the author of many nonfiction books that make complex science comprehensible to lay readers. (His A Brief History of Time was on the bestseller charts for five years.) He’s such a pop culture icon that he’s even appeared as himself in episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation, and The Simpsons. Almost all of the above was accomplished with Hawking confined to a wheelchair during the inexorable progression of a motor neuron disease related to ALS. The image of Hawking

slouched in his motorized wheelchair, communicating through his robotic voice synthesizer, is so well known, it’s difficult to imagine him any other way. But that changes with The Theory of Everything. A smart, funny, and tender biographical drama that begins with Hawking as a vigorous young grad student at Cambridge, it also tells the enduring love story of Hawking and his first wife, Jane. Scripted by Anthony McCarten (from a memoir written by Jane Hawking), the film is directed by James Marsh, who made the absorbing documentary Man On Wire. Marsh proves to be just as adept with narrative drama, abetted here by his two stars, the exceptional Eddie Redmayne as Stephen (yes, the Oscar race starts here), and the formidable

Felicity Jones as Jane. They meet at a campus party in 1963. He’s studying science, her interest is the arts. She’s a devout Church of England girl, praying to what Stephen calls “the celestial dictator.” He’s a daredevil bicyclist and coxswain of his rowing team; she’s demure in every respect. Yet they spark, and soon he’s bringing her home to meet his bohemian family. His mentor, Professor Sciama (David Thewlis), introduces Stephen to mathematical theorems, challenging the young Dr. Who fan to look at time and space in a new way. But even as Stephen’s passions for his theories—and for Jane—increase, incidents of minor clumsiness accrue into serious motor malfunctions. Diagnosed with ALS, he’s given two

years to live. But Jane bullies him out of his initial self-pity, determined that they should go through with their wedding plans. As they produce their first two children, and Stephen earns his doctorate, his scientific and intellectual career soars despite the decline in his physical health. Redmayne is terrific at every stage of Stephen’s life. Gradually robbed of an actors’ usual tools—movement, voice, facial expression—he still manages to convey Stephen’s lively intelligence, his active participation in the life around him, his dry sense of humor. (Often, with no more than a glance or a sigh.) He doesn’t mimic Hawking; he embodies him. Jones is just as wonderful, in Jane’s unexpected grit. The ruthless progress of the disease is matched only by Stephen’s insistence that they live as “normal” a life as possible, leaving the burden of tending to Stephen, their kids, and running the household, to Jane, who’s trying to earn her own Ph.D. Marsh deftly charts the subtle shift in family dynamics when a young, widowed church choirmaster (Charlie Cox) effectively joins the Hawking family as chief caregiver to all of them. It’s not the science, but the emotional journey the characters take that makes the film so riveting. Without assigning any fault, it’s made heartbreakingly plausible how even two people who have been through so much together might find their needs changing over time. Who could blame Jane for needing to leave the marriage? Who could ever forgive her? But Stephen understands this paradox better than anyone. One of the most affecting aspects of the film is the way their friendship deepens throughout the ups and downs of their marriage, and beyond. Remarkably clear-headed, yet moving, Marsh’s film defies expectations of what an “uplifting” biopic can be—just as Hawking (now 72 in real life) defied all expectations. The Theory of Everything simply celebrates tenacity—in life, love, and ideas. THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING ***** (out of four) With Eddie Redmayne, Felicity Jones, Charlie Cox, and David Thewlis. Written by Anthony McCarten. From the book by Jane Hawking. Directed by James Marsh. A Focus Features release. Rated PG-13. 123 minutes.


F

FILM

ACID JAZZ PROFESSOR Drummer Andrew (Miles Teller) practices until he’s perfect under the harsh

tutelage of Fletcher (J.K. Simmons) at a Juilliard-like arts school.

Beat Down

A

S THE OLD expression goes, “You can sure tell what it’s been next to in the refrigerator.” That’s true about Damien Chazelle’s Whiplash, mostly a good-looking reprise of the opening 20 minutes of Full Metal Jacket. The ordeal of the drummer Andrew (Miles Teller) is similar to the anguish of Geoffrey Rush’s music student in Shine as he was tortured through Rachmaninoff. In one shot, Martin Scorsese will speculate on the life of inanimate objects, like the full-screen smoldering cigarette butt in New York Stories. In Whiplash, a lid of a soft drink cup gets its own camera set up, in a percussive scene of a movie theater

soda being made. The bloody digits are like Black Swan’s bloody toes. The unused business cut from Raging Bull of DeNiro dumping a pitcher of ice over his crotch returns: here, the crushed ice turns to a raspberry slushy when the drummer protagonist dunks his bleeding hand into it. Whiplash is, at first, very forceful. Practicing at night in a thinly veiled version of Juilliard, Andrew is recruited by a dynamically sinister school orchestra leader, Fletcher (J.K. Simmons). He’s posed like a black-clad super villain, who doesn’t feel as if he has to introduce himself. Fletcher seems completely nocturnal—more than this, he seems like the only teacher in the entire school. Over the

months, Andrew’s human qualities are stripped away through the savagery of this professor. Simmons is a versatile utility actor with the Coen Brothers, a dejected shrugger, a wretch caught in middle-manager rage. The few who saw The Music Never Stopped also saw what a capacity Simmons has for paternal compassion. His part in Whiplash is much simpler: he’s a hard-on, complete with scribbly little veins. Fletcher’s toxic simplicity goes complex in one quiet moment, right before Whiplash’s series of endings. Over a quiet drink at a nightclub we see the serene conviction underneath Fletcher’s insane horror of compromise. He’s more than just a

WHIPLASH With Melissa Benoist, Paul Reiser, J.K. Simmons and Miles Teller. Written and directed by Damien Chazelle. Rated R. 107 minutes.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

A music professor bullies a young drummer to greatness in Damien Chazelle’s ‘Whiplash’ BY RICHARD VON BUSACK

pride-stung jazzman; he’s a mirror of the obsessions of a Stalin or a Hitler. Here, the movie is more than what it eventually becomes. What it becomes is a film that says the vicious teachers are the best. In the performance scenes, Whiplash has kinetic excitement—the instruments are studied and swooped over by the camera. The music is so complex you don’t mind hearing it more than once during the movie. Miles Teller does things that haven’t been seen since John Cusack was young, in the flickering alternation of barbed and vulnerable sides. There’s nothing tiresomely callow about that flushed face with its multiple brambly scars. It’s easy to laugh with Andrew, when he passes on the bullying he’s received—when he feels that jazz musicians are being disrespected. And you see the reason for his drive. Andrew is the son of a meek father (Paul Reiser)—the kind of person who apologizes when you bump into him. (Oddly, Andrew never seems to have picked up an opinion of brutal teachers from his father.) Director Chazelle tries to make this unlikely tale plausible with photos of Buddy Rich on the walls, to commemorate a famous secret tape of the jazz drummer unleashing a mighty temper tantrum against his band. You have to take Whiplash’s tunnel vision for what it’s worth—the idea that there’s only one sort of perfection, only one school worth attending … worse, that there might be some wisdom in using Marine drillinstructor tactics in the arts. Fletcher’s insults are so harshly sexual they get ridiculous. When the script gets that low-down, you wonder who they were trying to fool by using a female love interest (Melissa Benoist). Topping crescendo with crescendo, Whiplash defies the name of its production company, Bold Films. The flashiest actor dictated the terms. This monomania is getting Simmons praise, in the same way that Ben Kingsley got praise for the repetitious, bald-headed hard-on he played in Sexy Beast. This kind of acting is to acting what a drum solo is to music.

65


SHOWTIMES S HOW TIMES 11/26 11/26 - 12/4 12/4

tthe th he he

D E L M A R

()=M Matinee atinee S Show how

THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING

THEORY of EVERYTHING The

PG-13 PG G-13

831.469.3220

THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING Daily 12:40, 1:40, 3:20, 4:20*, 6:00, 7:00, 8:40, 9:40** + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:00am

*No Wed show **No Wed or Thu show ROSEWATER Daily 2:10, 4:40, 7:10*, 9:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:40am *No Wed or Thu show

Jon Stewart’s Directorial Debut

A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Thu 7:30

R

Daily (2:10pm), (4:40), 7:10*, 9:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun (11:40am) *No 7:10pm show on W Wed ed 12/3 & Thurs 12/4 1

NOW PLAYING

@ The Del Mar

Globe on Screen presents NR

A

F

All times are PM unless otherwise noted.

DEL MAR THEATRE

Daily (12:40pm), (1:40), (3:20), (4:20*), 6:00, 6:000, 7:00, 8:40, 9:40** + Fri, Sat, Sun (11:00am) (11:00aam) *No 4:20pm show on Wed Wed 12/3 ** No 9:40pm show on Wed Wed 12/3 & Thurs 12/4

MOVIE TIMES

November 28-December 4

MIDSUMMER R

11/26 - 12/4: 12:40p, 1:40, 3:20,

One O ne Night Only!! Only!! Thurs 12/4 @ 7:30pm m

4:20*, 6p, 7p, 8:40, 9:40** + Fri, Sat, Sun 11am - *No 4:20p show on 12/3

1124 Pacific A Avenue vvenue | 426-7500 426-75500

www.thenick.com

NIGHT’S DREAM M

**No 9:40p show on 12/3 & 12/4

NICKELODEON

831.426.7500

BIRDMAN Daily 1:45, 3:30, 4:20, 6:10, 7:00, 8:45, 9:40 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:00am WHIPLASH Daily 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:40am PELICAN DREAMS Daily 4:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:20am CITIZENFOUR Daily 2:00, 6:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:30am DEAR WHITE PEOPLE Daily 1:20, 9:00

for mor moree info: thenick.com thenick.com

APTOS CINEMA

R

tthe th he

N I C K

INTERSTELLAR Daily 12:30, 4:00, 7:30 HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 Daily 2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:15 + Fri, Sat, Sun 12:00 Daily (1:45pm), (3:30), (4:20), 6:10, 7:00, 8:45, 9:40 + Fri, Sat, Sun (11:00am)

Smokin’ Meat Everyday! REAL SMOKED BBQ R

Daily (2:10pm) (2:10pm), (4:40) (4:40), 7:10 7:10, 9:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun (11:40am)

NR

Daily (4:30pm) + Fri, Sat, Sun (11:20am)

NR

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Daily (2:00pm), 6:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun (11:30am)

66

Live Music every Wed 6p - 8p!

GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8

27

PENGUINS OF MADAGASCAR Daily 12:15, 1:20, 2:35, 3:40, 4:55, 6:00*, 7:15, 8:20, 9:35 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:00am

Highly Sought Afte After er Draft Brew Brews ws

Mission St BBQ is proud to bring REAL SMOKED BBQ to the Westside of Santa Cruz

831.761.8200

*3D show HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 Daily 1:45, 4:30, 6:15, 7:30, 8:45, 10:00 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:15am THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 Daily 1:00, 2:00, 4:00, 5:00, 7:00, 8:00, 10:00 + Fri, Sat, Sun

11:00am DUMB AND DUMBER TO Daily 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:00am BIG HERO 6 Daily 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45 + Fri, Sat, Sun 11:00am INTERSTELLAR Daily 12:10, 2:30, 3:50, 7:30 + Fri, Sat, Sun 10:45am

1618 Mission Street, Santa Cruz (831)458-2222

CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA

R

831.438.3260

DUMB AND DUMBER TO Daily 11:15am, 2:00, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15

Daily (1:20pm), 9:00pm

210 Lincoln Str eet | 426-750 00 Street 426-7500

BIG HERO 6 Daily 11:00am, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40

Your favorite

mix

Jason Bateman, Jennifer Aniston, Christoph Waltz & Jamie Foxx

A P T O S

831.426.7500

R

from three to six

INTERSTELLAR Daily 12:30, 4:15, 8:00 THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 Daily 11:00am, 11:45am, 12:45*, 2:00, 3:00, 4:00, 5:15, 6:30, 7:15,

8:15, 9:30, 10:15 *No Sat show HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 Daily 11:00am, 1:30, 4:55, 7:20, 8:30, 10:00 PENGUINS OF MADAGASCAR Daily 11:15am, 11:55am, 1:45, 2:30, 4:00, 4:40, 6:45, 9:15 THE WIZARD OF OZ Sat 11:00am IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE Thu 7:00

$3 beers $4 margaritas

Daily (2:20pm), (4:40), 7:00, 9:15 + Fri, Sat, Sun (12:00pm)

CINELUX 41ST AVENUE CINEMA 831.479.3504 THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 Daily 12:30, 3:45, 7:00, 10:00

Starring Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway and Jessica Chastain Chastaain

BIG HERO 6 Daily 11:00am, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00

PG-13

DUMB AND DUMBER TO Daily 11:30am, 2:10, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15

CCinemas in inema mas

Daily (12:30pm), (4:00), 7:30

122 Rancho Rancho Del Mar | 426-7500 426-7500

655 Capitola Rd, Santa Cruz 831.477.9384


FILM NEW THIS WEEK HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 Jason Bateman, Charlie Day, and Jason Sudeikis return as the three working guys who outwitted their employers in the first film now trying to launch their own business—and running into flak from incoming guest stars Christoph Waltz and Chris Pine. Jennifer Aniston and Kevin Spacey also reprise their original roles. Sean Anders directs. (R) 108 minutes. Starts Wednesday. THE PENGUINS OF MADAGASCAR In this animated family comedy, the lovable goofball penguins from the Madagascar franchise get their own movie, in which they are recruited as international spies. Tom McGrath, Chris Miller, and Christopher Knights provide the main voices; Benedict Cumberbatch voices their mysterious spymaster. Eric Darnell and Simon J. Smith direct. (PG) 92 minutes. Starts Wednesday.

NOW PLAYING BEYOND THE LIGHTS Gugu Mbatha-Raw (last seen in the costume drama Belle) stars in this musical drama as a young singer whose road to superstardom is complicated when she falls for a young cop assigned to her security crew. Nate Parker and Minnie Driver co-star for director Gina Prince-Bythewood (Love and Basketball). (PG-13) 116 minutes. BIG HERO 6 The folks at Disney adapt the Marvel comic book series into an animated family adventure about a child prodigy,

his giant, inflatable robot pal, and the eccentric friends he transforms into a band of hightech superheroes to save their city. Scott Adsit and Ryan Potter head the voice cast, with guest voices provided by Damon Wayans Jr., Genesis Rodriguez, James Cromwell, and Maya Rudolph. Don Hall and Chris Williams co-direct. (PG) 108 minutes. BIRDMAN or THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE Michael Keaton is inspired casting for this black comedy about a movie actor, once famed for playing an onscreen superhero called Birdman, trying to reinvent his career and himself by mounting a serious Broadway play. Filmmaker Alejandro G. Iñárritu delivers dark, often scathingly funny observations on pop culture, celebrity, and priorities, with plenty of nifty style. The soundtrack is mostly edgy percussion, and the hyperreality of the way the camera follows characters around in their personal dramas is balanced by a touch of magic realism as Keaton’s character tries to suppress his cynical alter ego—in full Birdman regalia—who urges him to forget acting and become a movie star again. Too many false endings dull the story’s impact, but Iñárritu makes cogent points, and elicits fine performances from Edward Norton, Emma Stone, Amy Ryan, and Keaton himself. (R) 119 minutes. (***)—Lisa Jensen.

BUSINESS MEN Charlie Day, Jason Sudeikis and Jason Bateman in ‘Horrible Bosses 2.’

written and directed by Justin Simien. Tyler James Williams, Tessa Thompson, Teyonah Parris, and Brandon P Bell head the cast. (R) 100 minutes. DUMB AND DUMBER TO You didn’t ask for it, but here it comes anyway, a 20-years-later sequel to the comedy starring Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels as champion dim bulbs. Now one of them is trying to find his long-lost daughter. Laurie Holden and Kathleen Turner costar for returning directors Bobby Farrelly and Peter Farrelly. (PG-13)

CITIZENFOUR While researching a project about government surveillance in the post-9/11 world, documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras began receiving encrypted emails from “citizen four” about skullduggery in the NSA. Her informant was Edward Snowden, and this real-life thriller of a doc is built around Poitras’ interviews with Snowden in Hong Kong as the NSA scandal broke. (R) 114 minutes.

THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 Jennifer Lawrence returns again as Katniss Everdeen—along with most of the original cast—in this first installment of the third and last book in Suzanne Collins’ dystopian futurist sci-fi series. (Part 2 comes out next year.) Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks, and Julianne Moore head the cast. Francis Lawrence directs. (PG-13) 123 minutes.

DEAR WHITE PEOPLE Four black students at an Ivy League college find themselves in the middle of a controversy when a white fraternity stages an African-American theme party in this cross-cultural satire

INTERSTELLAR Christopher Nolan’s epic of cautionary speculative fiction begins in a toonear future where climate change is eroding Earth’s resources. Matthew McConaughey plays an

engineer/ex-astronaut who joins a team of explorers flying through a wormhole on a quest to find another habitable planet for the human race. Lengthy sequences of hardware lumbering through space while orchestral music swells on the soundtrack slow things down, but the prickly human element keeps us involved. The relationship between McConaughey’s character and his daughter (Mackenzie Foy and Jessica Chastain, as the narrative time-loops around) is especially nicely wrought. The science of space/time travel may be more trouble than it’s worth to keep up with as the film hurtles toward its payoff, but it’s still a voyage worth taking. Rated R. 169 minutes. (***)—Lisa Jensen. NIGHTCRAWLER Jake Gyllenhaal stars in this thriller as a guy trying to survive in Los Angeles who gets sucked into the underworld of freelance crime journalism, chasing stories of car wrecks, fires, murder and mayhem while the city sleeps. Rene Russo, Bill Paxton, and Riz Ahmed co-star for director Dan Gilroy. (R) 117 minutes. PELICAN DREAMS San Franciscobased filmmaker Judy Irving has pretty much cornered the market on avian documentaries. Her last film was the irresistible The Wild

Parrots of Telegraph Hill, about an improbable flock of tropical birds in the canyons of the city and the singular man who made it his life’s work to care for them. Pelican Dreams does not have quite the same Shakespearean range of high drama, low comedy, romance and heartache as the earlier film, but, as a glimpse into the private lives of these wild shorebirds and the challenges they face, it’s often fascinating. (Not rated) 80 minutes. (***)—Lisa Jensen. ROSEWATER Jon Stewart makes his screenwriting/directing debut with this real-life thriller based on the bestselling memoir by BBC journalist Maziar Bahari, about his lengthy imprisonment in Iran and the family who refused to let his story die. Gael García Bernal and Shohreh Aghdashloo star. (R) 103 minutes. THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING Reviewed this issue. (PG-13) 123 minutes. (****)—Lisa Jensen. WHIPLASH Miles Teller stars as a young drumming phenom who wants to make it in the world of jazz, and J. K. Simmons is the bullying music conservatory instructor who puts him through hell. Paul Reiser co-stars; Damien Chazelle directs. (R) 107 minutes

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES This informal movie discussion group meets at the Del Mar mezzanine in downtown Santa Cruz. Movie junkies are invited to join in on Wednesday nights to pursue the elusive and ineffable meanings of cinema. This week (Nov. 26): WHIPLASH Discussion begins at 7 p.m. and admission is free. For more information visit groups. google.com/group/LTATM.

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FOOD & DRINK free? That’s why it’s so chewy. No flour. Big fat pecan sitting in the middle. Two bucks. Barely sweet. An adult chocolate cookie.

ASSEMBLE THIS!

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK Persimmons can be a holiday-baking substitution for pumpkin puree.

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Round About Now The glory of persimmons, plus Ivéta scone mix and lunch at Assembly BY CHRISTINA WATERS

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or sheer eye-appeal nothing quite matches the beauty of persimmons hanging from autumn trees like so many vermillion lanterns. Fascinating to behold, the satin-skinned fruit (the official fruit of Japan, mind you) can be perplexing to approach. The super hard, elongated, deep orange-colored Hachiya persimmon needs some serious ripening time until it can be used. This is not a fruit to be consumed in its raw state. But the more user-friendly Fuyu persimmon—rounder in shape, shorter in stature—makes a

beautiful addition, even in its raw state, to salads and cheese plates. My aunt’s persimmon tree worked overtime this year and the results are ripening in at least a half dozen pantries all over Santa Cruz. When they get good and ripe—very soft to the touch and almost transparent looking—they will form the fragrant background for the tea cakes and breads I plan to bake during the holidays. Persimmons are wonderful in place of pumpkin puree in quick bread recipes, or as a secret ingredient in muffins, pancakes and

other seasonal items. Or, you can simply put them on your window sill and let them decorate your life.

BAKE OFF Shopper’s Corner now carries a full line of the mighty Ivéta Scone Mix, including my favorite blueberry version ($5.99). This is the sort of product that will make you a big hit at breakfast time and at tea time. Or snack time … And about Ivéta's Fudgy Cookie that I went crazy about last week—did I mention that this addictive bit of very chewy chocolate insanity is also gluten-

My friend Bev and I like to meet for lunch at Assembly these days. That way, we can check in on that little POPUP space next door to 1108 Pacific Avenue and see what’s cooking on our way into the big dining room. Mortal Dumpling was offering fat steamed bao with saucy green beans last Thursday between 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. And through the end of the year, you can try out truly designer breads from the new Manresa Bread pop-up shop every Wednesday from 11:30 a.m. to 4pm. Get in line now! Meanwhile, back at Assembly, we behaved shamelessly (lots of “oh my God!” and “ooooooo”) over two seasonal dishes that showed off the kitchen’s outside-the-box approach to seasonings and textures. Beverly had a beautiful bowl of roasted mushroom ragout with hazelnuts, zucchini and parsley, topped with a fried egg and crispy polenta triangles on top. Along with thick slabs of the house bread, and a fistful of butter topped with salt crystals, it was one of the better dishes either of us had enjoyed all year. My salad was another sensuous, stylistically complex creation I’m coming to expect from Assembly. In one of those large-scale bowls came a layer of baby spinach, thin carrot slices, fat toothsome barley, and pistachios. Green beans added more crunch and a generous helping of roasted pulled chicken breast was intertwined with every bite. But the real secret of this lovely creation— aside from plenty of interesting food groups living in a single bowl—was a vinaigrette laced with the pungent flavors of fresh-grated turmeric and ginger. The entire salad was elevated into something quite special by that dressing, and I might try my own version one of these days, since I’ve seen fresh turmeric root available at New Leaf. The bread was worth the indulgence. On a rainy day—what a great lunch!


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Be a Big Brother, Big Sister

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VINE & DINE

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Big Basin Vineyards BY JOSIE COWDEN

NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

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Arbor Gardens & Antiques

Vintage Furniture & Accessories Arbors | Gates | Trellises Fountains | Statuary | Planters Iron-work | Sculptures | Local-art Find us between Toys R Us & Marshalls! 2650 17th Ave, Santa Cruz www.arborgardensantacruz.com

was just in the process of purchasing a bottle of Big Basin’s 2012 Homestead in Vinocruz when Matt Ryan walked into the store. Ryan manages the tasting room, sales and the mailing list at Big Basin, and, considering the popularity of their wines, he’s a very busy man. “Oh, that’s a good one,” he says of the Homestead, offering to email me some tasting notes on this wine. After gathering my own “tasting notes” by way of my tongue, I agree with Ryan that it’s a good one. A blend of 34 percent Grenache, 23 percent Syrah, 18 percent Mourvedre, 21 percent Carignane, and 4 percent Cabernet Sauvignon, the five varietals come beautifully together in one hugely flavorful and well-made wine by expert winemaker Bradley Brown. Appealingly crimson and full of spice and dark fruit, this intriguing blend would be impressive on any holiday table. Ryan says that almost all of the Grenache is from Big Basin’s estate vineyard in Boulder Creek, and the other varietals listed come from their estate and other wellknown vineyards. Most notably, the Carignane is from 80-year-old vines in the Wirz Vineyard–and dry farmed. Grapes are hand-picked and hand-sorted, and spend 11 months in neutral French oak. “We made 620 cases,” says Ryan, “our biggest production to date–and we can’t get any bigger.” The Homestead will not be hard to find. As well as being available at Vinocruz ($36), it’s sold in 12

states, and in Germany, Switzerland, Denmark and Australia. Visit their tasting room at 14598 Big Basin Way, Saratoga, 408-564-7346. Bigbasinvineyards.com.

SURF CITY VINTNERS’ ANNUAL ART & WINE FAIR On the day after Thanksgiving (aka Black Friday) you can escape the buying frenzy and shop to your heart’s content in the enclave that is Surf City Vintners (SCV). You can enjoy wine tasting while you browse for gifts of art made by local artists at the dozen wineries that make up the SCV. Noon to 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28, Swift Street Courtyard, Santa Cruz. Visit surfcityvintners.com.

ASSEMBLING AT ASSEMBLY Assembly is on the cutting edge of happenings in Santa Cruz. An event I attended there in mid-November was to spotlight a few new local businesses and give them the opportunity to talk about their business and showcase their wares by handing out samples of food and drinks to attendees of this sold-out event. I particularly enjoyed Cardamom Tuesday’s cordial syrup, and Mutari Chocolate’s hot chocolate as well as delicious treats from Mortal Dumpling and Ashby Confections. Some business owners took the mic and talked about their future plans–including “fruit wrangler” Tabitha Stroup of Friend in Cheeses Jams, Andrea Mollenauer of Lifestyle Culinary Arts, Romney Dunbar of 100 Mile Meals and Annie Pautsch of Brew Cruz. Check them all out on their websites.


FOODIE FILE

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THANK YOU! MY MAMA ALWAYS SAID We’re salivating for a box of these chocolates

Since 2008, Hula’s has contributed $122,671 to 51 local nonprofits through our Mahalo Mondays program.

made by Ashby Confections in Scotts Valley. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER

Ashby Confections Local chocolate maker talks chocolate and self control BY JOSIE COWDEN

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What is Ashby Confections all about?

JENNIFER ASHBY: We strive to create the best chocolates and confections possible. We work to create original flavor combinations as well as adhering to the classics. We enjoy being inspired by seasonal local ingredients. Quality is paramount, so

we make every effort to use the best ingredients available. Aesthetics are equally important. We experiment with colors, shapes, patterns, textures and other materials to make a beautiful display. How do you juggle 8-year-old twins and a candy store?

My kids come in here and run around like Tasmanian devils. So I had a sit-down with them and explained that at some point they need to selfregulate. I told them I wasn’t going to say ‘no’ anymore. If they want to come in my store and eat two of everything, they could do that and see how they felt. What’s a fabulous favorite that you can’t make enough of?

The ghost chili caramel! But I can’t make enough English toffee. It’s a secret family recipe and I’m the only person who makes it. And I can only make small manageable batches because of the way that it’s made. I have to pour it out, melt chocolate on it, sprinkle nuts, then flip it over, then melt more chocolate on it and sprinkle on more nuts. Ashby Confections, 16 C Victor Sq, Scotts Valley. 454-8299. Ashbyconfections.com.

We want to recognize the organizations listed here and thank our customers for supporting Mahalo Mondays: Alzheimer's Association Northern CA Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Santa Cruz County Big Stick Surfing Association Boys and Girls Club

Family Service Agency of the Central Coast FleaHab Santa Cruz Fringe Festival

Omega Nu of Santa Cruz

Grey Bears

Pisces Moon Theatre

Haven of Hope

Planned Parenthood Mar Monte

Cabrillo College

Healthy Kids of Santa Cruz County

Cabrillo Music Festival of Contemporary Music

Homeless Services Center

Childrens Hospice

Hope Services

The Clean Oceans Project

Hospice of Santa Cruz County

Defenders of Wildlife

Jovenés SANOS

Dientes Community Dental Care

Katie's Clinic at Children’s Hospital Oakland

Ecology Action Encompass Community Services

KZSC Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History

Actors' Theater of Santa Cruz County Santa Cruz Education Foundation Santa Cruz Grey Bears Santa Cruz Longboard Union Santa Cruz Police Officer's Association for the Jim "Butch" Baker & Elizabeth Butler Fund

Kids on Broadway

Santa Cruz SPCA

KUSP Radio

Santa Cruz Teen Center

Kuumbwa Jazz

From all of us at Hula’s,

Santa Cruz Community Health Centers Santa Cruz Women's Health Center Save Our Shores Second Harvest Food Bank Seymour Marine Discovery Center Shakespeare Santa Cruz Shared Adventures Suicide Prevention Service Surfrider Foundation Tierra Pacifica Charter School UC Santa Cruz Men's Volleyball United Way of Santa Cruz County WomenCARE

We Wish You a Happy, Healthy Thanksgiving!

MAHALO!

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | NOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 2, 2014

n the chocolate biz since 2004, Jennifer Ashby’s consuming passion for making high-end artisan confections knows no bounds. She wants to create exquisite-looking chocs made from real food—and that means fresh cream, real butter and the best Swiss Grand Cru chocolate. Ashby also finds a way to use locally sourced organic fruits and herbs in her chocolates, so when you bite into a Meyer lemon lavender truffle, it tastes of the real McCoy. Almond pralines are filled with delicious almond paste, and the sea salt caramels are sprinkled with salt from the Monterey Bay. The chocs are made by hand, they’re not swamped in sugar and there are no “fillers” of low-end stuff. We asked Ashby a few questions about her life in the chocolate business and her 8-yearold twins; daughter Berkeley and son Ferron.

The organizations used these funds to heal, house, feed, and protect those in need; they beautified and cleaned our natural environment; they educated our kids; advocated for justice; and inspired and engaged us in the arts. As a local business that has received so much from our community, we are proud to do our part to help make Santa Cruz a great place to live and work.

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+ RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES GIVING THANKS: THE THOUGHT-FORM OF SOLUTION Esoteric Astrology as news for week Nov. 27 – Dec. 3, 2014

We are in the time and under the influence of Sagittarius, sign of the wanderer, good food, good music, and the joy (Jupiter as ruler) that occurs from giving to others while simultaneously giving thanks from our hearts. Having the Thanksgiving holiday during the month of Sag is not a mistake. No other sign understands joy (an aspect of the Soul) as Sag (except Pisces when not in despair). “Sag is a beam of directed and focused light. The beam reveals a greater light ahead, illuminating the Way to the center of the Light,” emitting the Ray of Joyfulness. Thanksgiving is a time for gratitude; in the form of prayers, thoughts, feelings, wishes, hopes and greetings. Gratitude is something we still need to learn. Gratitude creates goodwill. Together, gratitude and goodwill create the “thought-form of solution” for humanity and our world’s problems. Gratitude and goodwill are the prerequisites for the

ARIES Mar21–Apr20 Something unusual occurs with money or things you hold in common with others. Also, your astrology displays a Pisces flavor—an act of surrender, a revelation, or a feeling of being behind a curtain or veil. You will remember the way your mother (or grandmother) tended and cared for you. You will attempt to recreate their food. You will finally understand praise and thankfulness. Quietly.

TAURUS Apr21–May21

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Hopefully you’re home, with family and friends, and you have access to things that nurture. If not, make it so. You will ponder upon your family in the past, remember a time when you felt life was bountiful. It still is. Know this. Do get some peace and quiet amidst all the work you’ll find to do for the world. We’re grateful to you.

GEMINI May22–June20

reappearance of the Christ, the Aquarian World Teacher. In Ancient Wisdom texts it is written, “being grateful is the hallmark of one who is enlightened.” Gratitude comes from the Soul— the characteristics of which are love and wisdom (Ray 2). Gratitude is scientifically and occultly (mental, not emotional) a releasing agent. Gratitude liberates us and everything around us. Also a service to others, gratitude is deeply scientific in nature, releasing us from the past and laying open our future path leading to the new culture and civilization, the new laws and principles, the rising light of Aquarian, the Age of Friendship and Equality. The Hierarchy lays much emphasis upon gratitude. Let us be grateful this year and this season together. And so now the days of light illuminating the darkness begin (December’s festivals and feast days). Happy Thanksgiving, everyone. I am grateful for all of you, my readers. emergencies. An innovative idea will occur to you concerning how to better save and how to build monetary safety for the future. Think about family wealth (not only money but information, land, a legacy, etc.). Attempt to be prepared when the economic reorientation occurs. Begin now.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 After giving profound thanks for all that you have (and all that’s packed away for some eventful and eventual later time) and for your bright and enlightened mind, it may be time to give some attention to your finances and slow down on any new output of monies till previous debts are paid. Abundance will continue. Some (many) things in boxes, hidden away, now need to be sold.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20

You’re working internally and externally, thinking and then acting. In the months to come, it will be important to ponder on future plans and goals. It is also most important to create more cooperation between yourself and those around you, balancing your self-interests with those of others. Allow no conflict to arise between life at home and life at work. They are one. Tend to a garden.

You are vulnerable at this time. Usually, you aren’t, but now you are. And in that vulnerability great ideas appear. Write about them. They contain a power for the future and since your senses are always attuned to humanity, the subject of your ideas is what humanity is interested in. Don’t tell anyone—just one or two. Keep your ideas secret lest they dissolve away. New paths emerge. Different ones.

CANCER Jun21–Jul20

CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20

You may spend more than you have, be hungrier than usual, and a bit more temperamental and touchy. Ouch! Read what I wrote for Libra. Apply it. Watch for impressions, vivid ideas, thoughts that lead to more independence, further resources, and a set of disciplines that make you feel more safe and secure. A new inner structure and coordination is happening.

You would do well to give thanks for all hidden things in your life, all those events and people that completely transformed you. And even those things that made you weary. Something new enters your world. In preparation, tend to everything close to home with care and awareness. Good things always come with gratitude.

LE0 Jul21–Aug22

AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18

Libra’s information also applies to you. Organize your financial information, keep up to date on taxes and insurances, check investments, tend to debts (monetary, emotional), tithe 10 percent and save 10 percent for yourself. Be close to family, share with them ideas, plans and fears. They care for you. Be kind in your speech. Remember gratitude. Then magic occurs.

Create a journal of hopes, wishes and future dreams. There will be information as you write that turns into goals. For now tend to what is most important around you. Clean and clear away what seems confused, unkempt, untidy, disorganized, overflowing or incomplete. Change will occur in the coming new year. Uranus prepares you for a future that is unexpected, filled with love and freedom and community.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Spend time with loved ones and those close by. Compromise and have the intention for Right Relations. As you extend gratitude to everyone and everything in your life, be forgiving in areas where you judge yourself. Remember there is no failure. There are only successive stages of learning. Work calls. Maintain a firm discipline.

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22 Tend carefully to finances; try not to spend on things not needed. Save resources for family members or

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 Gratitude propels you forward, releases the past, sets you free. You can be grateful for knowing this. There’s a ladder you’re seeking. Know also that you’re a true leader, that you will eventually turn and serve humanity in ways you better understand. For now it’s time to rest, ponder on new ideas and plans. Refine them. Concentrate on love within relationships. You’ve changed.


Classifieds CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OFDOROTHY QUESADA CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV180204 THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner DOROTHY QUESADA has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from Dorothy Quesada to: Dottie Escalante Quesada. 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 December 2, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: October 14, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. October 22, 29 & November 5, 12.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2044. The following Individual is doing business as ARCHAEOLOGICAL GRAPHICS. 35 EASTRIDGE DR., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. ABIGAIL E. CRAWFORD. 35 EASTRIDGE DR., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a ABIGAIL E. CRAWFORD. 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

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2070. The following Individual is doing business as AMAZING BONOBO CHOCOLATES. 4246 TOPSAIL CT., SOQUEL CA 95073 County of Santa Cruz. RITT DUDLEY. 4246 TOPSAIL CT., SOQUEL CA 95073. This business is conducted by a RITT DUDLEY. 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 October 20, 2014. October 29 & November 5, 12, 19. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2042 The following General Partnership is doing business as SQUEAKY CLEAN. 8005 WINKLE AVE., SANTA CRUZ CA 95065 County of Santa Cruz. ADAM HUGHES, ARON HUGHES, DAVID HUGHES & SUSAN HUGHES. 8005 WINKLE AVE., SANTA CRUZ CA 95065. This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed:ARON HUGHES. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/20/2014 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 20, 2014. October 29 & November 5, 12, 19. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2078 The following Married Couple is doing business as ZAYANTE STUDIOS. 15205 UPPER EAST ZAYANTE ROAD, LOS GATOS CA 95033 County of Santa Cruz. DAVID LEONARD JOHNSON & FAYE DOUGLAS JOHNSON. 15205 UPPER EAST ZAYANTE ROAD, LOS GATOS CA 95033 This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: FAYE DOUGLAS JOHNSON. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 6/1/2002 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 24, 2014. October29 & November 5, 12, 19. FFICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 142103. The following Individual is doing business as PHOENIX UNLIMITED. 1012 3RD ST., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. HENRY G. SCHWAN. 1012 3RD ST., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual HENRY G. SCHWAN The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on

10/17/2014 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 29, 2014. November 5, 12, 19, 26. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2060 The following Individual is doing business as REMEDI. 7965 SOQUEL DRIVE, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz.KELLY K. GIRARD. 607 MIDDLEFIELD DRIVE, APTOS CA 95003. This business is conducted by a Individual KELLY K. GIRARD. 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 October 21, 2014. November 5, 12, 19, 26. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF KEITH LEE RANFT CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV180298. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner KEITH LEE RANFT has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from Keith Lee Ranft to: Keith Lee Rodriguez. 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 December 11, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: October 27, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. November 5, 12, 19, 26. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-2107 The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as DAVE’S CUSTOM BIKES. 910 SOQUEL AVE. UNIT A, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062 County of Santa Cruz. DO-OVER BIKES, LLC. 910 SOQUEL AVE. UNIT A, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. Al# 28710186. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company.

Signed:CATHERINE WILLIAMS. 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 October 30, 2014. November 5,12,19,26. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF DIANE ROSE CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV180125. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner DIANE ROSE has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from Jager Charles Seitz-Tosh to: Charlie Dylan Rose-Tosh 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 November 17, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 4 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: September 30, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. October 8, 15, 22, 29. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2097. The following Individual is doing business as DAMSEFLY DESIGNS. 133 WAUGH AVE., SANTA CRUZ CA 95065 County of Santa Cruz. LEANNA SIMMONS. 133 WAUGH AVE., SANTA CRUZ CA 95065. This business is conducted by a Individual LEANNA SIMMONS The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/27/2014 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 28, 2014. November 12, 19, 26 & December 3. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 142131. The following Individual is doing business as H&D TOYS. 1855 41ST AVENUE, CAPITOLA CA 95010 County of

Santa Cruz. HASAN NIFTIYEV. 5350 BELLAIRE BLVD. #775, BELLAIRE, TX 77402. This business is conducted by a Individual HASAN NIFTIYEV 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 November 3, 2014. November 12, 19, 26 & December 3. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2171. The following Individual is doing business as LEGENDARY IRON WORKS. 111E LEE ROAD, WATSONVILLE CA 95073 County of Santa Cruz. MICHAEL HANS PFLUEGER. 252 SPRECKLES DRIVE, APTOS CA 95003. This business is conducted by a Individual MICHAEL HANS PFLUEGER The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 5/1/2012 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 10, 2014. November 12, 19, 26 & December 3. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-2153 The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as AUTHENTIC SANTA CRUZ, CONNECTED, ONETASTE SANTA CRUZ & RELATING GYM. 215 RIVER STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. RELATING DOJO, LLC. 215 RIVER STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. Al# 28910498. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Signed COLIN ROGNLIE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/23/2013. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 6, 2014. November 12, 19, 26 & December 3. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-2117 The following Corporation is doing business as HERBAL CRUZ OF SANTA CRUZ.1051 41ST AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062 County of Santa Cruz. 41ST AVENUE COLLECTIVE. 1051 41ST AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. Al# 3720943. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: JOHN HADAYING. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/31/2014.. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 31, 2014. November 12, 19, 26 & December 3. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-2181 The following Corporation is doing business as MARGARITAVILLE. 231 ESPLANADE, SUITE 101, CAPITOLA CA 95010 County of Santa Cruz. SUNSET HOSPITALITY GROUP, INC. 16 HOLLINS DR., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. Al# 3714869. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: SARAH ORR. 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 November 12, 2014. November 19, 26 & December 3, 10. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-2124 The following Corporation is doing business as CLOWNS FOLLY. 105 C POST OFFICE DRIVE, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. ARMITAGE WINES CORP. 1975 COX ROAD, APTOS CA 95003. Al# 3444558. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: BRANDON ARMITAGE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 7/28/2014. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 3, 2014. November 19, 26 & December 3, 10. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-2123 The following Corporation is

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2074. The following Individual is doing business as ERIK BURNS INTERACTIVE. 1299 LOST ACRE DRIVE, FELTON CA 95018 County of Santa Cruz. DAVID ERIK BURNS. 1299 LOST ACRE DRIVE, FELTON CA 95018 . This business is conducted by a DAVID ERIK BURNS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/1/2014. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 23, 2014. October 29 & November 5, 12, 19.

Cruz County, on October 20, 2014. October 29 & November 5, 12, 19.

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Classifieds Clas ssifie sifie eds ds s PHONE: 831.4 831.458.1100 58.1100 EX EXT. XT. 217, 219 | FAX: 831.4 831.458.1295 58.1295 | DISPLAY DEADLINE: FRIDAY 3PM M | LINE AD DEADLINE: MONDAY Y 10AM

doing business as HEART HEEART O THE MOUNTAIN. 7055 CANHAM ROAD, SCOTTS VALLEY VALLLEY CA 95066 County of Santa Sannta Cruz. 1975 ARMITAGE WINES CORP. C COX ROAD, APTOS CA C 95003. Al# 3444558. This business b is conducted by a Corporation Coorporation Signed: BRANDON ARMITAGE. A The registrant commenced comm menced to transact business under the fictitious business businesss name 6/20/2014. listed above on 6/20/ /2014. This with Gail L. statement was filed w Pellerin, County Clerkk of Santa November Cruz County, on Nov vember 3, 2014. November 19, 26 & December 3, 10.

NOVEMBER NO VEMBER 26-DECE 26-DECEMBER EMBER 2, 2 , 2014 201 4 | GTWEEKLY.COM GT WEEKLY. C OM | SANT S SANTACRUZ.COM A CR UZ . C OM

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS BUSINES SS NAME No. STATEMENT FILE N o. 14-2159 Individual The following Individu ual is doing business as MENNAVIGATE. MENNAV VIGATE. 1214 BROADWAY, SANTA S County CRUZ CA 95062 Cou unty of FREIWALD. Santa Cruz. K.A. FRE EIWALD. 1214 BROADWAY, SANTA S CRUZ CA 95062. This This business is conducted by a Ind Individual dividual K.A. FREIWALD. Thee registrant transact commenced to transa act business business under the fictitious bu usiness name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This sstatement was Pellerin, filed with Gail L. Pelle erin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, C on November 7, 2014.. November 12, 19, 26 & December Decem mber 3.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS BUSINES SS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. No. 14-1851 Individual The following Individu ual is doing business as ADVANCED AD DVANCED BUSINESS CONSULTING CONSULTTING & i2i CAFE. 364 EVERSON N DRIVE, 95060 SANTA CRUZ CA 95 5060 County of Santa Cruz. AKINDELE AKIND DELE BANKOLE. 109 BEACHGATE BEAC CHGATE WAY, APTOS CA 95003. 950003. This conducted business is conducte ed by a Individual AKINDELEE BANKOLE.. commenced The registrant comm enced to under transact business un der the name fictitious business na ame listed APPLICABLE. above is NOT APPLI ICABLE. This statement was filed with w Gail L. Clerkk of Santa Pellerin, County Cler County, on September Cruz County Sepptember 23, 2014. October22. October222. 29 & November 5, 12.

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY Y OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF CHRISTIAN SAMUEL MOORE CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV180434. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner CHRISTIAN SAMUEL MOORE has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from Christain Samuel Moore to: Dmitri Zurita THE COURT ORDERS that all persons personns interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, iff 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 too be heard and must appear at thee hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the NOTICE petition without a hearing. NOTIC CE OF HEARING January 6, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published newspaperr in the Good Times , a newspape of General Circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, y, California,, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Novenber 14, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. November 26 & December 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 142182. The following Individual is doing business as HAPPY HORSES SOUND AND ENERGY HEALING. 301 REDWOOD HEIGHRS ROAD, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. CYNTHIA LEE AMBAR. AMBAR 301 REDWOOD HEIGHRS ROAD, business APTOS CA 95003. This busines ss is conducted by a Individual

CYNTHIA LEE AMBAR. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/27/2014 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 28, 2014. November 12, 19, 26 & December 3. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2203 The following Individual is doing business as AMBER’S LIFE COACHING BY THE SEA. 415 13TH AVE. SANTA CRUZ CA 95062 County of Santa Cruz. AMBER JONES. 415 13TH AVE. SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. This business is conducted by a Individual AMBER JONES. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. L Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 17, 2014. November 26 & December 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2204 The following Individual is doing business as SANTACRUZNANNIES AND DOMESTIC STAFFING. 415County of Santa Cruz.AMBER JONES. 415 13TH AVE. SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. This business is conducted by a Individual AMBER JONES & MICHELLE TURNER. 415 13TH AVE. SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 6/23/2009. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 17, 2014. November 26 & December 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-2137 The following General Partnership is doing business as SANTA CRUZ MOVING SERVICES. 908 OCEAN ST. BLDG. A, SANTA CRUZ CA95060 County of Santa Cruz. NICOLETTE KLUS & MARIANO KUK. 421

MARTINELLI TINELLI ST., WATSONVILLE MART 95076. CA 95 5076. This business conducted is cond ducted by a General Partnership Partne ership Signed:MARIANO KUK The T registrant commenced to transact trannsact business under the fictitious fictitiou us business name listed above on 3/12/2010. This statement statem ment was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, Pelleri in, County Clerk of Santa on November Cruz County, C 2014. 4, 201 14. November 26 & December Decem mber 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS FICTIT TIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT STATE EMENT FILE No. 14-2193 The following foollowing Individual is doing business as LUMINOUS, LUMINOUS LUMIN NOUS BODYCARE & LUMINOUS LUMIN NOUS PURE BODYCARE. STREET, SANTA 115 AVERITT A CRUZ CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. AMBER GREWER. STREET, SANTA 115 AVERITT A CRUZ CA 95060. This business conducted is cond ducted by a Individual

AMBER GREWER GREWER.. The registrant commenced to transact traansact business under the fictitiouss business name listed above is NOT NOT APPLICABLE. was This statement wa as filed with County Gail L. Pellerin, Co ounty Clerk of County, y, on November Santa Cruz Count November 13, 2014. Novem mber 26 & December 3, 10, 17. BUSINESS FICTITIOUS BUSIN NESS NAME STATEMENT FILEE No. 14-2223 Individual The following Indiv vidual is doing business as LUMINOUS LUMINOUS BABYCARE & LUM MINOUS PURE AVERITT BABY CARE 115 A CA STREET, SANTA CRUZ C 95060. County off Santa GREWER. Cruz. AMBER GRE EWER. 115 STREET, AVERITT STREET T, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual GREWER.. The registrant AMBER GREWER transact commenced to tra ansact business under the fictitiouss business name listed above is NOT NOT APPLICABLE. APPLICABLE

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This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of o November Santa Cruz County, on Novem mber 21 2014. November 26 & December 3, 10, 17.

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NOTICE OF PUBLICATION PUBLICA AT TION OF ORDINAN ORDINANCE NCE BY POSTING E NO. 2014-12) (ORDINANCE (ORDINANC

O ORDINANCE NO. 2014-12 AN ORDINA ORDINANCE ANCE OF THE CITY OF SANT SANTA TA CRUZ AMENDING SECTION 13.08.100 OF THE SANT SANTA TA CRUZ MU UNICIP PAL A CODE PERTAINING PERTA AINING TO MUNICIPAL ORDERS S TO V ACA A AT TE PARK PARK A PROPERTY VACATE PROPERTY This or dinance will provide provide for incremental incremental increases increases ordinance in time that a pe erson receiving receiving a citation in a City park, person beach or any other otther property property maintained by the Parks and d Recreation Recr eation Department Dep partment must stay away from from the pr property opertyy where where the arrest arresst was made or citation issued. P ASSED A FOR P PUBLICA AT TION on this hi 18th 18 h day d off PASSED PUBLICATION November,, 2014, November 2014, by the following vote: AYES: AYES: Councilmembers Comstock, Mathews; Vice Councilmembe ers Terrazas, Terrazas, e Vice Mayor Lane; Mayor Ma ayor Robinson. NOES: Councilmember Posner.. ABSENT: Posner ABSEN NT: Councilmember Bryant. Bryant. DISQUALIFIED D: None. APPROVED: ss/Lynn ss/L Lynn y Robinson, DISQUALIFIED: Mayor.. ATTEST: Mayor AT TTEST T: ss/Bren ss/Bren Lehr, Lehr, City Clerk Administrator. Administrator. Ordinance This Or dinance e is scheduled for further further consideration and final adopt ion at the Council meeting of December adoption 9, 2014.

831.440.3690 831.440.36 690 1040 41st Avenue Aven e ue BRE License# 01 01898006 898006 NOTICE OF PUBLICA PUBLICATION AT TION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING G (ORDINANCE NO. 2014-13) The City Council of the City of Santa a Cruz having administrator, authorized the city clerk administrato or, that the ordinance ordinance hereafter her eafter entitled and described, be e published by posting thereof copies ther eof in three three (3) prominent prominentt places in the City, City, to wit: Website The City of Santa Cruz W ebsite www.cityofsantacruz.com www w.cityofsantacruz.com City Hall–809 Center Street Stree et Central Branch Librar Library–224 Church y–22 24 Chur ch Street Street copies ordinance NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that cop pies of said or dinance were according order. wer e posted accor ding to said or der. (Original on file with ordinance city clerk.) Said or dinance was introduced introd duced on October 28, 2014 and is entitled and described as a follows: ORDINANCE NO. 2014-13 2 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY Y OF SANTA SANT TA CRUZ 5.43.005, AMENDING SECTIONS 5.43.0 005, 5.43.010, AND SANTA 5.43.020 OF THE SANT TA CRUZ MUNICIPAL MUNICIP PAL A CODE PERTAINING PER TA AINING TO THE NON-COMMERCIAL NON-COM MMERCIAL USE OF STREETS AND SIDEWALKS SIDE EWALKS This ordinance ordinance will amend sections of o the Santa Cruz non-commercial Municipal Code pertaining pertaining to the no n-commercial use of streets device-aided streets and sidewalks, in particular, particular, display d street activity. street performance performance and speech acti vity. Currently Currently City regulations regulations designating where where display displa ay device-aided street street performance performance and speech activity is permitted permitted in downtown Santa Cruz specify permissible locations permissible loca ations in the context of distance rrequirements equirements from from storefronts, storefron nts, sidewalk cafes, intersections et cet. This ordinance ordinance would w rreplace eplace those regulations regulations and would provide provide that permissible p permissible display performance activity device per formance and speech ac ctivity locations will be designated by sidewalk markings. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION PASSED A PUBLICA AT TION on thiss 28th day of October, October, 2014, by the following vote: A AYES: YES: Y Councilmembers C Bryant, Bryant, Comstock, Mathews, NOES:: Councilmember Posner; Vice Vice Mayor Lane; Mayor Robinson. Ro obinson. ABSENT: ABSENT T: Terrazas. ss/Lynn Te errazas. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: AP PPROVED: ss/L Lynn y Robinson, Mayor. Mayor. ATTEST: AT TTEST T: ss/Bren ss/Bren Lehr, L , City Clerk Lehr Administrator. Administrator. This Ordinance Ordinance is scheduled sch heduled for further further consideration and final adoption at the t Council meeting of November 18, 2014.

ANTACRUZ.COM ANT A CR UZ . C OM M | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEKLY. C OM | NO NOVEMBER VEMBER 26 26-DECEMBER -DECEMBER 2 2,, 201 2014 4

The City Counc cil of the City of Santa Cruz having Council authorized the city c clerk administrator, administrator, that the ordinance ordinance hereafter her entitle ed and described, be published by eafter entitled posting copies thereof thereof in three three (3) prominent prominent places in the City City,, to wit: The City of Sant Santa ta Cruz Website Website www www.cityofsantacruz. .cityofsantacruz. com City Hall–809 H Center Street Street Centr Central ral Branch Librar Library–224 y–224 Church Church Street Street NOTICE IS HER REBY GIVEN that copies of said ordinance ordinance e HEREBY were wer e posted according ac ccording to said order. order. (Original on file with h city clerk.) Said ordinance ordinance was introduced introduced on November 18, 2014 and iss entitled and described as follows:

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