Good Times

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05.06.15 | GTWeekly.com and SantaCruz.com

ZINE

GRRRLS WOMEN EXPAND THE CONSCIOUSNESS OF UNDERGROUND CULTURE P22

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MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM


INSIDE Volume 41, No.5 May 6-12, 2015

SOMETHING’S FISHY The unsettling realities of farmed salmon P11

POISONING PUPILS Pesticides near local schools alarm community P14

PULP POETRY Homegrown zine exposes stories of gendered violence P22

Opinion 4 News 14 Cover Story 22 A&E 36 Music 41 Events 43

Film 66 Dining 69 Risa’s Stars 75 Classifieds 77 Real Estate 79

Cover Illustration by Allison Garcia. Design by Tabi Zarrinnaal Scan right now to get GOOD TIMES mobile or visit our website at gtweekly.com.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

FEATURES

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OPINION

EDITOR’S EDITOR R’S NOTE While I was writing a music column for Good Times in the ’90s, there ther e was a zine that used to get get sent to the office offfice i ever y month or so every called B Ballbuster. allbuster. imp pressively thick blackIt was an impressively and-white mag ma ag full of interviews interrv views and reviews of extreme exttreme metal bands. I had reviews absolutely no interest interest in that genre genre at the time, and I still don’t, but I would look forward forrwar w d to reading reading every every issue issue of cov ver to cover. They would this thing cover review i anything, anythin hing, whether h h an actuall review release or o just some one-song label release cassette demo o somebody mailed in. cassette pack ked with hundreds hundreds of So it was packed reviews of bands ban nds I’d never heard heard of, reviews nev ver hear, hear, and every every and would never review read read something omething like this: “This “This review so from o Norwegian Norwegian Pain Pain Nurse Nurrsse new demo from heaviesst thing you will ever is the heaviest d op this cassette dr cassette on hear! If you drop your toe, it will wiill crush it! The music ill melt lt yourr face f d then th send d will and your ears ears away awa ay to the Eighth Circle Circle of of Hell, and when n they come back they Hell, will sing songs Asgard song gs of A sgard and the great battles of o the gods! gods! Until you great

he hear ear this demo you have no hope of o un nderstanding what metal is!” understanding I’m par raphr a rasing, a but, seriously I’m paraphrasing, seriously,, th hey loved ever ry rrecord ecord they ever they every heard—and top he eard—and I loved how over the to p th hey would g et about near ly ever ry they get nearly every si ingle piece of music somebody wo ould single would se end in. I would rread ead e the rreviews eviews to o send m y friends, and honestly I would my have were ha ave rrather ather a met the people who we erre bands w writing the zine than hear the band ds they were th hey wer e writing about. Though I liked way more lik ked punk music wa y mor e than Ballbuster day m metal, I’d have rread ead B allbuster any any da d ay off the week over Maximumrocknroll, Maximumrocknroll, the pretentious NorCal that th he p pr etentious N orCal p punk zine th hat everybody ev verybody loved to hate. I don’t see paper zines of any an ny type ty ype around around as much anymore, an ny ymore, butt Anne-Marie An nne-Marie Harrison’s Harrison’s article this week w about how two women in Santa together Sa anta Cruz have put tog ether Speak Speak k Out Ou ut is a rreminder eminder of how zines can still vibrant force sttill be a vibr rant a for rc ce that rrallies allies a to o improve im mprove the communities for which h they’re th hey’re written. And Elise Granata’s Granata’ss accompanying ac ccompan nying y article explains how w zine culture with ziine and DIY cultur e is evolving wit th the Take stroll through Santa th he times. T ake a str oll thr ro ough San nta Cruz’s underground Crruz’s media undergr ro ound with us.

LETTERS LETTER RS

Thankss for Thank foor bringing an unf unfortunately foortunately mis missed ssed level level e of of int intelligent elligent and b balanced alanced rreporting eporting ttoo our community. Wednesdays, communit o ty. On On W eednesdays, Good Time Times es iss a far better local paper. far bet ter rread ead than the loc al daily p aper.

MAY MA Y 66-12, 12 , 2015 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEKLY. C O M | SANT SANTACRUZ.COM A C R UZ . C O M

BEYOND HYPE H

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Thanks ffor Thanks or publis publishing shing yyour our article entitled “Ho “How w w alk about Alixx Tichelman. Tichelman”” ((GT, GT, 4/29) It jus wee ttalk justt furtherss the bene benefits further efits ttoo our ccommunity ommunity ooff the mer ging ooff the S merging Santa ant a ta Cruz W Weekly eeeklyy and Good Timees, not eeven Times ven e ttoo mention the ssaved aved paper. paper. Yes, ssensationalism ensationnalism dr aws rreadership, eadership, Yes, draws and ssales, ales, but do does oes lit little tle if no sservice ervice ttoo the betterment ooff ou ur ssociety ociety or the cr eation betterment our creation of of cconscious onscious citi citizens. zens. It is har hard d ttoo imagine Alix’s goal goal w as to to murder murder Forrest Foorrest Hayes. Hayes. that Alix’s was All rreports eports indicate indicat a e that he rrequested equested ttoo be injected likee he injected with heroin. herroin. It does does not sound sound lik was was a stranger stranger ttoo it. Until just after just aft err the administration administration ooff the heroin, equal between heroin,, I ssee ee equa al rresponsibility esponsibilitty bet ween Alix and Forrest. Forr o est. Afterward Afterrward is up to to an effective efffectiv e ve “innocent proven “innocent until pr roveen guilty” guilttyy” process prroocess ttoo determine. alll such a shame shame.. Making Alix determine. It is al solely might papers draw solely a villain mig ght ssell ell p apers and dr aw TV viewers, misses way slicee ooff rreality. viewers, but mis ses w ay ttoo oo big a slic ealitty.

STEVE S TEVE P PALOPOLI A LO P OLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

MARTY M A RT Y SIEGEL S I EG E L | S SCOTTS C OTTS VALLEY VALLE Y

ONLINE O NLINE C COMMENTS OMMENT TS R KUSP RE: KUSP Aw week eek after after this article w was as written, written, the KCRW K C W de CR deal al isn’ isn’tt looking ffavorable avor o able and the KUSP K USP bo board ard is rrecommending ecommending outright sselling elling KUSP’s frequency Classical Public Radio K USP’s fr equency ttoo Clas sical P ublic R adioo Network group already Ne etwork out ooff L.A., a gr oup that alr eady bought bo ought K KUSP’s USP’s LLos os Gat Gatos os tr translator anslator and iss sscooping cooping up tr troubled oubled sstations tations right and le left. f If ft. yyou o like ou like smooth Top Toop 40 classical classical piped in from frrom afar, great dentistt ooffices, it’ss ffor Keep af faar, gr eat ffor or o dentis ffices, it’ oor yyou. ou. K e eep it loc local, al, ple please. ase. —RG — RG

I hat hhated ed the da dayy the theyy sstopped topped the music! KA KAZU AZU als so sswallowed wallowed the NPR Kool-aid Kool-aid as also >8

PHOTO CON CONTEST NTEST BREAKING BR E AKI NG NEWS NE WS Th The he tide crashes crashes against against Walton Walton Lighthouse Lighthoouse at the harbor. harbor. Photograph Photograph

b Schlievert. byy Jim Schlievert. Submit ttoo photos@gtweekly.com. photos@gtweeekly.com. Include inf ormation (loc atioon, et c.) and your your name. name. Photos Photos information (location, etc.) ma mayy be cropped. cropped. Preferably, Preferab bly, photos photos should be 4 inches inches by by 4 inches incches and minimum 250 dpi.

GOOD IDEA

GOOD D WORK

KID KI D POWERED POWERED

RATIONAL RATI ON NAL TH THOUGHTS OUGHTS

Free ffamily Free amily Sunda Sundays ys ttake ake oover ver S San an LLorenzo orenzo P ark fr om 12:30 p .m.- 3 p .m m., Ma ough Park from p.m.p.m., Mayy thr through August. A ugust. Ther Theree ar aree birthda birthdayy p parties, arties, bo board ard ggames ames and fr free ee ccake ake eeach ach ffir first st Sunda Sunday. y. On second Sunda ys, bring plan nts ttoo tr ade, ttalk alk second Sundays, plants trade, to to mas master ter ggardeners, ardeners, sswap wap book books, s, sseeds eeds and plant plant-related items. artists -related it ems. LLocal occal artis ts ttake ake over over third third Sunda Sundays. ys. FFourth oourth Sunda Sundays ys ha have ve old-fashioned old-fashioned ssack ack rraces, aces, tu tug ug ooff w war, ar, et etc. c.

Mandatory water Mandatory water rationing rationing began began this month, but b the Santa Santa Cruz Water Water Department D epartment is offering offering ssome ome help. help. It will pr provide ovide free fr f ee toilet toilet leak leak detectors, detectors, ffaucet aucet aer aerators, ators, sho shower wer timers timers and home water w ater audits. audits. It will also also give give rebates rebates for for high-efficiency washers high-e fficienncy ttoilets, oilets, w ashers and turf rremoval. emoval. To To sign s up, up, visit cityofsantacruz. cityofsantacruz. ccom/drought, om/droughht, ht or ccall all 42 0-5230. 420-5230.

QUOTE OF THE T WEEK

“It takes half half your y life beforee you y discover life is lif i a do-it-yourself d do-iiit-yourself lf project.” project j t.”” —N NAPOLEON APOLEON H HILL ILL

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LOCAL TALK

How do you maintain a balance between being informed and staying sane? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT

A little bit of looking on the Internet, a little bit of watching the Daily Show, a whole lot of just getting outside and enjoying the world. MORGAN CULP

SANTA CRUZ | CUSTOMER SUPPORT

I go out to my garden and work on my avocados and my tomatoes and peppers and whatnot. TIM MAY

CORRALITOS | RETIRED

You have to trust yourself, but also read the newspaper and be informed in other ways, like being part of the community. KATY MUNGER

SANTA CRUZ | STUDENT

JAVIER CASTANI.K. UK | ENGINEER

Making sure you know what’s important to you. TAI STONE

WATSONVILLE | CONSTRUCTION

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

You cannot keep the balance— the more information you have the worse it becomes. Keep informed, but try to ignore it.

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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of May 6 ARIES Mar21–Apr19

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22

Benedictine monks observe the Latin motto Laborare est Orare. The 19th-century abbot Maurus Wolter interpreted these words to mean "work is worship" or "work is prayer." He was trying to impress upon his fellow monks that the work they did was not a grudging distraction from their service to God, but rather at the heart of their devotion. To do their tasks with love was a way to express gratitude for having been blessed with the gift of life. I propose that you experiment with this approach in the coming weeks, even if your version is more secular. What would it be like to feel contentment with and appreciation for the duties you have been allotted?

According to the three science fiction films collectively known as The Matrix, we humans suffer from a fundamental delusion. What we think is real life is actually a sophisticated computer simulation. Intelligent machines have created this dream world to keep us in suspended animation while they harvest our energy to fuel their civilization. Now as far as I can tell, this scenario isn't literally true. But it is an apt metaphor for how many of us seem to be half-asleep or under a spell, lost in our addiction to the simulated world created by technology. I bring this to your attention, Libra, because now is a favorable time to diminish the hold that the metaphorical Matrix has on you. What can you do to at least partially escape your bondage? (Hint: A little more contact with nature could do the trick.)

TAURUS Apr20–May20 Here's one of the best things you can do for your mental and physical health: Withdraw your attention from the life that lies behind you, and be excited about the life that stretches ahead of you. Forget about the past, and get wildly inventive as you imagine the interesting future you will create for yourself. Forgive everyone who has offended you, and fantasize about the fun adventures you'll go on, the inspiring plans you'll carry out, and the invigorating lessons you hope to learn.

GEMINI May21–June20 In the children's book The Little Engine That Could, a little blue engine volunteers to pull a long chain of train cars up a steep hill, even though it's not confident it has the power to do so. As it strains to haul the heavy weight, it recites a mantra to give itself hope: "I think I can, I think I can, I think I can." The story ends happily. The little blue engine reaches the top of the hill with its many cars in tow, and is able to glide down the rest of the way. As you deal with your own challenge, Gemini, I recommend that you use an even more forceful incantation. Chant this: "I know I can, I know I can, I know I can."

CANCER Jun21–Jul22 Here's a confession: I have taken a vow to foster beauty, truth, love, justice, equality, tolerance, creativity, playfulness, and hope. To do this work is one of my life goals. I approach it with the devotion of a monk and the rigor of a warrior. Does that mean I ignore difficulty and suffering and cruelty? Of course not. I'm trying to diminish the power of those problems, so I sure as hell better know a lot about them. On the other hand, my main focus is on redemption and exaltation. I prefer not to describe in detail the world's poisons, but rather to provide an antidote for them. Even if you don't normally share my approach, Cancerian, I invite you to try it for the next two weeks. The astrological time is right.

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

LE0 Jul23–Aug22

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The hill where I take my late afternoon hikes is teeming with the six-petaled purple wildflower known as the elegant cluster-lily. Every one of them—and there are hundreds—lean hard in the direction of the sun in the west. Should I deride them as conformists that follow the law of the pack? Should I ridicule them for their blind devotion? Or should I more sensibly regard them as having a healthy instinct to gravitate toward the life-giving light? I'll go with the latter theory. In that spirit, Leo, I urge you to ignore the opinions of others as you turn strongly toward the sources that provide you with essential nourishment.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Am I reading the astrological omens correctly? I hope so. From what I can tell, you have been flying under the radar and over the rainbow. You have been exploiting the loopholes in the big bad system and enjoying some rather daring experiments with liberation. At this point in the adventure, you may be worried that your lucky streak can't continue much longer. I'm here to tell you that it can. It will. It must. I predict that your detail-loving intelligence will paradoxically guide you to expand your possibilities even further.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 In the coming weeks, you may be as alluring and intriguing and tempting as you have been in a long time. I suggest you capitalize on this advantage. Proceed as if you do indeed have the power to attract more of the emotional riches you desire. Assume that you are primed to learn new secrets about the arts of intimacy, and that these secrets will make you even smarter and more soulful than you already are. Cultivate your ability to be the kind of trusted ally and imaginative lover who creates successful relationships.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 Physicist Frank Wilczek won a Nobel Prize for his research into quarks, the tiny particles that compose protons and neutrons. The guy is breathtakingly smart. Here's one of his operating principles: "If you don't make mistakes, you're not working on hard enough problems. And that's a big mistake." Let's enshrine his advice as your meditation, Sagittarius. I think you're strong enough and brave enough to go hunting for some new super-rich dilemmas. Yes, they may lead you to commit some booboos. But they will also stretch your intelligence beyond its previous limits, giving you a more vigorous understanding of the way the world works.

CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 In 1934, Capricorn baseball player Dizzy Dean was named the Most Valuable Player after winning 30 games. It was a feat that no National League pitcher has repeated ever since. After Dean retired, he was inducted into the Hall of Fame. Never shy about acknowledging his own prowess, he declared that "if you can do it, it ain't bragging." It is in this spirit that I invite you to freely expound on your talents and accomplishments in the coming week. You won't be boasting. You will simply be providing information. And that will ultimately result in you being offered an interesting new opportunity or two.

AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 There has rarely been a better time than now to refine the art of being your own mommy or daddy. You're finally ready to take over from the parental voices in your head and assume full responsibility for raising yourself the rest of the way. What do you want to be when you grow up? You may feel a giddy sense of freedom as it becomes clear that the only authority who has the right to answer that question is you.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 The universe has always played tricks on you. Some have been so perplexing that you've barely understood the joke. Others have been amusing but not particularly educational. Now I sense a new trend in the works, however. I suspect that the universe's pranks are becoming more comprehensible. They may have already begun to contain hints of kindness. What's the meaning of this lovely turn of events? Maybe you have finally discharged a very old karmic debt. It's also conceivable that your sense of humor has matured so much that you're able to laugh at some of the crazier plot twists. Here's another possibility: You are cashing in on the wisdom you were compelled to develop over the years as you dealt with the universe's tricks.

Homework: No one can make you feel any emotion unless you agree to feel it. You are the sovereign of what happens inside you. Explain why at FreeWillAstrology.com. © Copyright 2015


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OPINION

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if that is the only “alternativeâ€? radio model. Both stations had superb music libraries and knowledgeable programmers who knew their genre inside and out. All that got sacrificed for the almighty buck and NPR was the answer to everything ... except the loyalty of us who had subscribed and listened and helped with fundraising drives for decades prior to the sellout to NPR. I listened to “Vinyl Jungle,â€? which became “Rhythm Afrique,â€? on Friday nights for almost 30 years, and then it was killed off ‌ shame on KUSP! I used to love the option to choose between four wonderful stations: KZSC, KUSP, KAZU and KKUP, supported them all

with my money because I loved the music and the programmers. We loved what made KUSP unique seven days a week, the wonderful music ... now all we get is a few hours on the weekends with local hosts, and a few hours of world music you won't find on any commercial station anywhere. You all forgot who supported the station from day one, and then you broke our hearts and wonder why we don't support you anymore, myself included. Make it all local, all volunteer ‌ and you may just find the “magicâ€? of your community again. — EILEEN SUNDET

LETTERS POLICY

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“It’s all worth it when: someone lives, someone is born, someone is truly helped.” —Jessie Larsen, RN To all the nurses at Dignity Health, we know it isn’t easy. Thanks for doing us proud. Happy Nurses Week.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

Dominican Hospital | Sequoia Hospital | Saint Francis Memorial Hospital | St. Mary’s Medical Center | Dignity Health Medical Foundation

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(' MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM


WELLNESS

THAT’S WILD As wild salmon populations dwindle, farmed salmon is spawning health and environmental concerns.

The realities of farmed versus wild salmon BY ANDREW STEINGRUBE

I

s the salmon on the menu wild or farmed?” my patrons often ask me at the local fine dining restaurant where I work. This is what doctors must feel like when they have to deliver the bad news: “Our salmon is organically farmed,” I say. The reaction that typically follows on my guest’s face is one usually reserved for the most unpleasant of experiences. Why such a negative and visceral reaction to a farmed fish?

Perhaps because as delicious as the highly in-demand fish may be, both wild-caught and farmed fish come with an impact on the health of our oceans, the fish population, and the humans who are ordering them off menus all over the world. Over the last couple of decades, the practice of farming fish, or aquaculture, has increased exponentially. Farmed Atlantic salmon production in particular saw a more than 30-fold increase between 1987 and 2012, according to the Food and Agriculture

Organization of the United Nations. This increase comes at a time when wild fish stocks have plummeted rapidly (just ask any local salmon fisherman), a trend that is likely to continue. This makes Americans’ deeply dissonant attitude toward salmon even more troubling: we love to consume it, but many of us hate to have it farmed. Rife with chemical and environmental concerns, does farmed salmon deserve its fishy reputation, or is it a viable alternative to the diminishing

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

The Salmon Debate

supply of wild-caught salmon? From a nutritional perspective, both farmed and wild salmon are loaded with protein. But, according to the USDA, farmed salmon has about twice the fat of its wild relatives (27g versus 13g per serving—wild fish do exercise more after all), and thus contains more calories and saturated fat. While farmed salmon contains slightly more omega-3 fatty acids, it also contains a much higher number of omega-6 acids—the omega6:omega-3 ratio is about three times higher in farmed salmon, compared to wild, which many scientists believe could drive an increase in inflammation and play a role in chronic diseases. Wild salmon contains more vitamins and minerals than farmed salmon though, including iron, calcium, potassium, and zinc, according to the USDA. The differences in taste are distinct as well. Wild salmon, though more expensive, has a leaner, firmer, more steaky texture, and a stronger, more “ocean-like” flavor. The taste of farmed salmon is often described as milder and more delicate. But even high-end fine dining restaurants feature the farmed version, like renowned fish chef Eric Ripert, who serves farmed salmon at his New York restaurant Le Bernardin. Just because it tastes good, though, doesn’t necessarily mean we should be putting it in our bodies, or fueling its demand with our wallets. The profound differences between wild and farmed salmon go much deeper than the plate—to the environments in which they are raised. Farmed salmon are most commonly grown and held in the ocean in open-net pens, with farms being comprised of several pens anchored next to each other, usually near the coast and in sheltered bays. These farms can be the size of multiple football fields and hold up to a million fish. Because of these close quarters, illness is common, so they are often given antibiotics, in addition to growth hormones. >13 Because wild salmon live

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population numbers dwindle. Salmon farms are working to improve their feed conversion ratios, with some switching to more vegetable-based feed—but this could lead to less omega-3 fatty acid levels, a major reason why salmon is so healthy and desirable in the first place. There is even a Canadian company that has created a GMO salmon (cue squeamishness now) which grows twice as fast even though it eats 10 percent less food and is heartier and more-disease resistant than other farmed salmon. Getting a grasp on the complex issue of salmon farming is like trying to grab a fish out of the water with your bare hands: slippery. But worldwide fish fervor and demand for seafood—driven primarily by U.S., Japan and Europe—is skyrocketing at a time when wild supply is diminishing. So what are humans to do? There is a glimmer of hope on the horizon for the future of safe and responsible fish farming. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has established a committee called the Aquaculture Stewardship Council (ASC). Their main goal is to create and uphold sustainability standards for fish farming all across the globe. For a salmon farm to be ASC certified, it must meet strict standards with respect to all aspects of fish farming including water quality, biosecurity, pollution, escaped fish, contaminants, parasites and disease, feed conversion, and transparency of farming practices. All of the world’s top producers of farmed salmon have signed on to uphold these standards and aim to be compliant by 2020. The Monterey Bay Seafood Watch program, a leading voice in seafood sustainability, lists nine “best choice” designations for salmon—which includes five farmed sources and four wildcaught. They also designate seven “good alternatives” and five to “avoid”—all of which are farmed in net pens. Visit seafoodwatch. org for more information on all different types of fish and farmed seafoods and their varying degrees of environmental impact.

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in the open ocean and eat a natural diet, they contain much fewer contaminants than farmed salmon. In particular, compounds known as PCBs—polychlorinated biphenyl—which may cause cancer and other health problems are significantly higher in farmed salmon. The issue gets even murkier though, because the FDA (Food & Drug Administration) deems these contaminants in farmed salmon to be at a safe level, whereas the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) disagrees. And, depending on the location and practices of each salmon farm, these contaminant levels vary widely. On the macro level, pollution from salmon farms can have a significant negative impact on the environment, starting with the excess feed and fish feces produced by salmon farms, which not only saturate the pen in much higher amounts than would ever occur in the wild, but also pollute the surrounding ocean. Another issue is the spread of various salmon diseases—especially a parasite known as sea lice that can threaten entire populations. Parasites and other diseases can be kept in check by administering antibiotics and pesticides, but what impact do these chemicals have on the surrounding ecosystem? And what if a fish (or thousands of fish) escape from a pen? They can not only spread disease to the wild populations, but also compete with them for food and habitat. When a farmed Atlantic salmon and a wild Pacific salmon breed, you get the salmonid equivalent of a pony: an infertile halfling that only further dilutes the wild population. Some studies have found a correlation between salmon farms and decreased local wild populations, but this is confounded by the fact that wild populations are also dwindling in places where there are no salmon farms. Something else people may want to know is that farmed salmon are fed compounds that turn their flesh pink like a wild salmon, as well as fish meal pellets partially made from forage fish like anchovies and sardines, which are themselves seeing worldwide

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NEWS TROLL CALL Lunatics and pranksters hijack California’s broken initiative system

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

BY JENNIFER WADSWORTH

14

Under Joe Decker’s theocratic law, shrimp, oysters, scallops, winkles and clams would become a controlled substance. Eating or peddling shellfish of any kind would render the guilty felonious, fined—$666,000 to be exact— and sent to the slammer. “Pretty harsh,” he concedes with a shrug, “but at least it’s not the death penalty.” In a heavier-handed take on Leviticus, Matt McLaughlin, a reclusive Orange County lawyer, submitted the “Sodomite Suppression Act” for the 2016 state ballot. It invokes unabashed fire-and-brimstone Old Testament fury, calling to legalize killing anyone guilty of “the abominable crime against nature known as buggery, called also sodomy.” Or, in less anachronistic terms, being gay. McLaughlin suggests a $1 million fine, a decade in jail or exile from the state for even a remote interest in anal pleasure. The crime of sodomy itself, he deems, should be punishable by “bullets to the head or any other convenient method.” McLaughlin’s violent proscription against homosexuality hasn’t a chance in holy hell of landing on the ballot. But it has sparked a serious discussion about reforming California’s initiative process, which lets any registered voter with $200 and the time of day to propose a ballot measure. It has also inspired satirical spin-offs, turning an esteemed expression of direct democracy into a platform for high-level trolling. Decker, a San Jose native who works as a nature photographer, submitted his crustaceancriminalizing “Shellfish Suppression Act” a day after April Fool’s. Earlier that same week, activistauthor Charlotte Laws filed the “Intolerant Jackass Act,” mandating sensitivity training for anyone convicted of “the abominable crime known as prejudice against sexual orientation, called also gay-bashing.” “I think it takes the power away from [McLaughlin], to subject him to ridicule,” says Laws, a spirited pundit known for her high-profile campaign to outlaw revenge porn. “I wanted to call him out and this seemed like the best way to do that, to use speech against speech.” Whether penned as parody or otherwise, initiative proposals are no joke. By law, they have to be treated seriously, setting in motion the momentous gears of government. Citizen-

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TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT This view from the playground of Watsonville’s Amesti School shows how near it is to fields on which pesticides have been sprayed. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER

Toxic Classrooms Watsonville educators want stricter rules limiting pesticides near schools BY MATTHEW RENDA

A

s 10 million pounds of pesticides are being dropped on fields around Watsonville—many of them near schools—distressed parents say their children are victims of “environmental racism.” A recent study shows that 46 percent of the schools in Monterey County are within a quarter mile of sprayed pesticides, as are seven schools in the Pajaro Valley Unified School District, which includes Watsonville. “Our farm workers are being sprayed with this poison in their fields,” says Ann Lopez, executive director for the Center for Farmworker Families. “Their greatest dream is to have their children get educated so they can get out of farm work, and then their kids get sprayed while they’re at school.”

On Cesar Chavez Day, March 31, a coalition of teachers, concerned parents and officials rallied at Watsonville Plaza and called for stricter regulation of hazardous chemicals around schools. The group asked that farmers notify schools one week in advance of applying pesticides, prohibit the use of pesticides within a mile of schools and forbid spraying during school hours. The 2014 study of pesticides near schools by the state’s Department of Agriculture found that 64 schools— or 46 percent of Monterey County schools—are within a quarter mile of some form of pesticide applications on agricultural land, and kids there have the highest level of exposure of any in the state. The study didn’t break out Santa Cruz County schools;

however, it found that Latino students are 3.2 times more likely to attend a school near the heaviest use of pesticides. Watsonville residents say they are suffering the same effects. “Of the 32 school sites we have in our district, about seven of them are located directly adjacent to fields,” says Francisco Rodriguez, a special education teacher for the Pajaro Valley Unified School District. “We are really concerned, and not just because of the study.” Rodriguez says applications of pesticides have increased and the notifications given to schools have decreased recently. “[In the] last couple of months, there have been some applications of which we have not been notified,” he says. “This needs >16


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to be more far-reaching. We need a state law, federal regulations or a county ordinance. It needs to have some teeth.” The two counties produced about $5 billion worth of crops in 2013, which amounts to nearly a quarter of the Golden State’s overall production. In 2010, the latest year for available data, nearly 10 million pounds of pesticides were dropped in North Monterey and South Santa Cruz County. About a quarter of the schools in Monterey County are within agricultural operations that apply anywhere from 319 to 29,000 pounds of pesticides—by far the most in California. “We are talking about thousands of pounds of this stuff,” says Lopez. “The children are being exposed through drift. It’s no accident this is happening in areas where Latinos are going to school. It’s a classic example of environmental racism.”

The California Department of Public Health says Latino children are 46 percent more likely than white children to attend schools with any pesticides of concern applied within a quarter mile, and 96 percent more likely than white children to attend schools where there is heavy pesticide use in proximity. “The system exploits these people,” Lopez says. “It’s a human rights disaster.” At the rally, California State Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel) said he has begun to work with legislators to draft potential solutions. “Historically, this has been a problem,” Monning says. “There has been a de facto respect for a 500-foot buffer zone, but it’s not codified. It has been practiced and respected by the local ag community, but the standards can be codified in state regulation so everybody is aware of the rules.” But Rodriguez says 500 feet is not enough. He describes a scene at

Watsonville’s Amesti Elementary School that took place a year and a half ago, where the teachers and children noticed an acrid smell and had itchy eyes. The local fire department was called, and it was determined to be a result of drift from a local pesticide application. “It caused unneeded panic among both teachers and parents,” Rodriguez says. “If we had been notified, we could have avoided the whole scenario.” Monning says he has been involved in conversations with officials in the California Department of Pesticide Regulation. “I’m not prepared to comment on details like the distance of the setback, but it is fair to say we are involved in a process that seems to be moving forward,” Monning says. “The community advocates and last year’s study have galvanized greater attention which has culminated in a commitment to get something done.” Charlotte Fadipe, >20

NEWS BRIEFS CLIFF NOTES

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

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Santa Cruz’s local public radio station KUSP-FM at 88.9 on the dial is heading down a short runway toward a big cliff. That’s how treasurer John Morrison described the station’s plight Monday night at the Aptos Community Services Center to a heated audience of 75 people including volunteers, staff members, board members and the community. With more than $700,000 in debt and a license and signal valued at about $1 million, Morrison advised the Board to vote to negotiate with a public radio classical music conglomerate to sell the signal to them, which they did after almost four hours of discussion. But it came with a pinch of hope. If the public comes up with money to cut the debt, or another plan to keep the programming local, the station could pull out of a deal with

the University of Southern California-based Classical Public Radio Network, which now broadcasts classical music on San Francisco’s KDFC-FM at 104.9 FM and other stations down the coast. “I just don’t want to see the control go out of the community,” says Rachel Goodman, former host of the show “Talk of the Bay,” who, like a large number of loyal volunteers, was let go when the station focused more on buying programming from National Public Radio. “I didn’t even know this was a local station,” says one man who was attending his first board meeting after hearing about the possible loss on commercial talk radio station KSCO-AM. “I only heard NPR national programs.” That was the rub for management, who found in surveys that listeners contributed as much as $500,000 a year to the station, most of it during

telethon breaks during NPR shows, according to the board’s director Kelly O’Brien. Local shows fizzled out, and the board claims they were too expensive to produce, even though hosts were mostly volunteers. The station paid $500,000 annually in salaries, $100,000 of which went to consultants and engineers. It paid more than $200,000 annually to NPR, although it has been in arrears on those payments. “You should tell them that KKUP in Cupertino has been running for 45 years without paying a programmer,” another former host, “Sleepy” John Sandidge, said outside the meeting. He, Goodman and others would like to see the station return to community broadcasts. KUSP is hemmed-in by Cal State Monterey’s KAZUFM at 90.3, which also broadcasts NPR programs and offers almost no student

programming. Deals to work with KAZU have failed, managers say. That station also offers lower prices to its sponsors, competing heavily against the Santa Cruz signal. Many in the audience were shocked by the fact that they didn’t know about the dire situation until they read it in newspapers. Good Times had reported on its talks with Los Angeles station KCRW-FM, which fell through. O’Brien told them the board thought their message was clear that they needed money during fundraisers and they “didn’t want to cry wolf” by broadcasting their problems. They hoped to erase the debt by merging with another station. Morrison suggested that if the sale goes through, the station will keep the KUSP call letters and record library and would have cash left over to possibly buy a smaller Santa Cruz signal based in Felton. BRAD KAVA


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NEWS

SHELLING OUT After being disgusted by a “kill-the-gays” state ballot initiative, Joe Decker responded with his own biblically-inspired

legislative proposal: a ban on shellfish. PHOTO: GREG RAMAR

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

TROLL CALL <14

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drafted bills go up for a month of public review and then to state Attorney General Kamala Harris, who—even against her will—must write an unbiased title and summary. That clears the proponents for signature gathering. With enough names—5 percent of the most recent gubernatorial electorate, or in this case 366,000 valid autographs—an initiative qualifies for the ballot. Thus, the lower the turnout, the easier it is to bring to voters on Election Day. Revolted by the kill-the-gays bill, Harris tried to block it, asking a Sacramento Superior Court judge for declaratory relief so she doesn’t have to dignify it with a formal response, as required by the state constitution. “If the court does not grant this relief, my office will be forced to issue a title and summary for a proposal that seeks to legalize discrimination and vigilantism,” Harris wrote in her petition. Assemblyman Evan Low (D-San Jose) says the whole debacle of fake and far-fetched bills cheapens the democratic process. Once he heard about McLaughlin’s proposal for legalized slaughter, Low introduced a bill that would up the filing cost from $200 to $8,000. The fee hasn’t been updated in 72 years. “This was such an egregious example of the

problems with our initiative process,” Low says. “When you have such a low barrier to entry, strange things do occur. I think the ‘kill-the-gays’ initiative really brought that to light.” Low hopes AB 1100 will weed out people filing initiatives for their 15 minutes of fame, or something other than their intended purpose, which is to create law, amend the state constitution or recall a governor. “On one level, we just need to modernize with the times,” Low says. “Not to mention, we have to develop trust with the electorate. If you see an initiative like [the Sodomite Suppression Act], people question the process. Trust is a nonnegotiable.” Processing citizen-led initiatives costs well over the current filing fee, even for the most wackadoodle legislative proposals. Venture capitalist Tim Draper’s initiative last year to slice the state up into “Six Californias” busied a host of analysts with the absurd, arduous task of figuring out it would impact the economy, tax base, education, social services, water supply and other factors. “The cost is definitely more than the $200 submission fee and that includes work from the Legislative Analyst’s Office, the Attorney General’s office, the Department of Finance and numerous state and local agencies that

we contact to quantify the costs,” says Nick Schroeder, a senior legislative analyst. “Some of it gets very difficult, in some cases impossible, to quantify.” Dialing up the fee would not only cover some behind-the-scenes costs, but also might get people to think twice about submitting a proposal with no chance of advancing to the ballot.“Raising the dollar amount would hopefully encourage people to put forward more thoughtful proposals,” agrees Mark Baldassare, president of the Public Policy Institute of California. Besides, anyone who hopes to land an initiative on the ballot has to be ready to foot the considerably higher price of collecting signatures, he adds. To drum up enough names, proponents often have to shell out $500,000 or more to professional signature-gathering firms. Low’s suggested fee hike comes on the heels of unprecedented reforms to the initiative system, a century-old hallmark of California democracy. Last fall, Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law that allows sponsors to withdraw their initiative closer to the election. It improved transparency, requiring the Secretary of State to post online the top 10 financial donors for and against each initiative. It also called for a 30-day public review at the start of the process and extended the signature-gathering period from

150 to 180 days. By changing the timetable, lawmakers have a greater chance to reach a compromise with initiative sponsors.“It’s going to be really interesting to see how this works out,” Baldassare says. “Particularly for some of these complicated and high-profile initiatives, like marijuana legalization, which we’ll see moving into 2016.” But raising fees has its own opponents, including the author of the jackass-suppression initiative. While extreme, the kill-the-gays bill will inevitably fail thanks to existing checks and balances, Laws says. “This is one submission that is full of hatred and intolerance, true,” says the Los Angeles-based author. “But I think it’s important to allow ordinary people to submit their ideas to reform the constitution or to add laws.” Decker worries that the intersection of crowdfunding, viral marketing and the accessibility of California’s initiative process could result in some questionable measures ending up on the ballot. When an Indiana pizza parlor raised nearly a million dollars last month to defend a state law emboldening them to deny service to LGBT customers, Decker thought, how hard would it be for a backers of a bigoted bill to raise money for signature gathering? “There’s something very dangerous in that combination,” he says.


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spokesperson for the CDPR, says her department is hopeful of getting enhanced regulations on the books by the end of the year. In the meantime, officials for the department are holding public workshops throughout the state in hopes of receiving feedback from the public. “The basic idea is that while we are figuring this out, we want to know if there are other restrictions we should look at,” Fadipe says. “We understand the concern, but we want to hear ideas about the nitty gritty. Do we notify schools every time? Do we release a schedule at the beginning the year? We want to find solutions that are meaningful and practical.” Fadipe referred to the workshops as listening sessions that will not only focus on notification, but also seek input on whether requiring additional restrictions on certain pesticides will reduce the risk of exposure. While the CDPR is working on that, Monning said he has had conversations with other lawmakers about providing incentive to farmers for converting from conventional farms with heavy pesticide use to organic farms. He emphasizes that the conversation is about creating a carrot for farmers to chase, rather than a stick. “It’s about asking ourselves if there is a way to incentivize getting more organic production around schools,” he says. “The challenge lies in that to get organic certification you can’t use certain kinds of chemicals for five years. So there are certainly time impediments, but long term this is one of my interests.” Lopez says this would be the most amenable solution not only for teachers, students and parents, but also for the farmworkers themselves, whom she asserts are the most invisible and voiceless of the stakeholder groups. “Ultimately, we would like to see no pesticides used in Santa Cruz or Monterey County,” she says. “Santa Cruz County is already 30 percent organic. Why can’t we do that countywide?” The CDPR will have a public workshop at 3 p.m. June 2 at Cesar Chavez Library at 615 Williams Road, Salinas.


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HEAR ME ROAR

Mary Mykhaylova and Julia Fogelson, both Masters of Social Work students at Smith College in Massachusetts, wanted to harness Santa Cruz's artistic energy to get people talking about gendered violence. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER


InnBlac ck&W &W Whitte Women W om o men in Santa Cr C Cruz uz use unde underground erground zinee as a m medium ffor or a rraw aw look at ggendered en ndered violen violence nce

‘I

rre remember the first time I told my therapist ra I had been a sex ex worker … I was 21, and I only did it for fo three weeks.”

It’s exactly these mo ore subtle sorts of miscommunic cations that are so often ft at the e center of gendered violence issu ues, says Mykhaylova. “Do you think it makes women fe feel good to be evaluated in n this way? To be cased down each aisle, ‘Hey beautiful’ … Do you thin nk that when I create a wide berth beetween us I am playing hard to get?” —RAGGEDY ANDEY, Y, 'SPE EAK OUT'

In “Speak Out,” Ragg gedy Andey describes the violation n of being relentlessly pursued in n a CVS drugstore—“Look drugstore— Look, II’m m out to buy cleaning supplies,” she e writes. To be called beautifu ul, she explains, is not fl flatterry that all women welcome with open arms; giving the act a cute name like “catcalling” dismiisses the fundamental problem:: catcalling is done without permiission, let alone the consideratio on that being “on display,” is someth hing women have seemingly little say s in, in say Mykhaylova and Fogellson. Even in 2015, women n are still far more likely to receive comments on their ou utward

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Out” demonstrate that the “violence” in gendered violen nce doesn’t always mean the physical kind, as Mykhaylova a and Fogelson explain—it That’s the opening line of “One encompasses everything from m Sex Wo Work ker’s Experience,” an street harassment to unwanted anonymo ous submission printed in physical attention “Speak Out! O Exploring Gendered or comments, which can be Violence e,” violent in BY B Y ANNE-M ANNE-MARIE A RIIE H HARRISON A RRIS ON the sense a local ziine published in that they April in celebration c of Sexual undermine a person’s sense Assault Aw A Awareness month. safety, space and self. The soul--baring confession, “I never said no—but he also o as grippiing as it is jarring, is never asked me if it was all rig ght,” precisely y the type of electric the author continues in “One Sex S honesty that t separates the selfWorker’s Experience.” “I came to Wo published zine from just any a realization after ft that night. night If collection n of ink on paper. men were just going to take it, I No cen nsoring, no editing, no was going to charge for it.” nonsense e, “Speak Out” is the So she did. And, at fi first, brainchilld of Mary Mykhaylova, anyway, she enjoyed it. Howev ver, 23, and Julia J Fogelson, 25, Masters after ft being wined and dined, th hen of Social Wo Work students from bedded, by men around the city y, Smith Co ollege in Massachusetts, she was again violated—this tim me who cam me to Santa Cruz to work by a man who didn’t disclose with the Resource Center for having an STD, and didn’t put on o Nonviole ence as part of their a condom despite her request. Commun nity Practice Project. Project Again it was something more Again, A tape estry of personal stories subtle than what is generally and art pieces p contributed by classified fi as “violence against women”—not a physical attack k, local com mmunity members, but a violation of consent. the 200 copies c of “Speak

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ZINES <23 appearance than on the content of their character, and that’s the inspiration for the zine’s backcover image by Allison Garcia, an art student at Cabrillo College. Her drawing depicts a woman staring defiantly above a banner reading “strong,� tigers on her head—the real seat of her power. “It’s a really important message to make women feel strong, I don’t think it’s encouraged enough,� says Garcia. “It’s not a frequent compliment to remind a woman that she’s capable, that she’s strong.� It’s possible to drive that message home in a zine, she says, unlike a more commercial or scholarly publication. “I think the whole DIY concept takes out the filter that a professionally published book might—the authors or artists put exactly what they meant. They don’t have to water it down or change their intention in any way,� says Garcia. “It feels really pure and it feels local.� That was the idea—to tell reallife stories of gendered violence, in something people can physically pick up and feel in their hands. Flipping through its pages can spark many negative emotions—disbelief, anger, sadness, rage—but also feelings of solidarity, compassion and hope. It took Mykhaylova and Fogelson months to put the zine together. After coming up with the idea, they went ahead getting the word out: printing and posting fliers, sending a call for submissions to media outlets, attending protests and poetry open mics, and then creating a Tumblr page where people could submit their work. After an initial lag in submissions (“people tend to be procrastinators,� says Mykhaylova), they printed everything they received— Community Printers gave them 24 pages. The turning point, says Mykhaylova, was when she worked with the Museum of Art & History’s “Subjects to Change� Teen Night and received nine pieces from mainly

high-school-aged kids. “It was wonderful to see how messages can come through, especially the submissions from youth, because this is a topic that is really complicated and sad, in a way,� says Mykhaylova. “It’s very powerful to see that people of all ages are connected to it, and that they have these beautiful, artistic ways of sharing their stories.� Getting people to acknowledge something as monolithic and misunderstood as gendered violence, says Mykhaylova, requires that community effort. “i have walked around for twenty years with useless hands and a gun for a mouth that has to fire inward on most days because no one can eat this much of my fire but myself. they will implant an anger in you that they will later try to deny, hold fast to this anger it is what you have won after surviving living in female skin after living in a skin that invites the other half of the world to make you into a wound.� —RAGGEDY ANDEY, ‘SPEAK OUT’

“You don’t have to have experienced sexual assault to feel like you’ve experienced gendered violence: it’s all around us,� says Mykhaylova. “If someone has a medical issue, like a broken leg— they’ll go to the doctor and get it taken care of, but when it’s an emotional issue people are scared to open up.� Emotional scars can be just as devastating, and longer-lasting, than physical ones. When we call all instances of gendered violence by their true name, society can start to recognize just how many people it really affects, says Fogelson. “Queering Abolition� is a story in “Speak Out,� about transgendered violence; it depicts the bloody, violent discrimination that so many trans men and women face,

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ZINES ZINE S

“I never said saiid no—but he als also so never asked me iff it was all right.” right.” —“One S Sex ex Worker’s Work o ke er’s Experience,” Experience,” ”A Anyonymous nyonymous <24 < 24 specif specifically fiically fr from om polic police ce and within the prison system. system minute “Please, take a minu ute to imagine what it’ it’ss like to be a tr trans rans woman men’ss prison, prison,”” wr writes in a men’ rites Nykki subjected Milano. ““To To be subjec ted to strip searches trans sear ches that open up p your tr ans guards body to the violence of o guar ds alike. To and fellow inmates ali ike. T o be misgendered constantly.” misg endered constant tly.” Gendered refer Gender ed violence doesn’t d refer to just women or just men, me en, especially when h a large l ge sector larg t off the th population l ti that does not recognize recognize themselves in that binary, binary, faces the greatest g eatest amount gr of physical physical discrimination discrimina ation and hate. Our system is sick, says says Mykhaylova, Mykha ylova, and those thosse who still offhand think the little off fh han nd comments are are ar e “no big deal” ar e jjust ust rreinforcing einforcing it, building it up and making m the stronger. walls str onger.

MAY MA Y 66-12, 12 , 2015 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEKLY. C OM | SANT SANTACRUZ.COM A C R UZ . C OM

““Mansplain Mansplain (verb): to to eexplain xplain patronizing something in a patron nizing manner ttoo a womyn, as if the man in rreference effer e ence was the eexpert xp pert in all things.”” — 'SPEAK things. 'SPEAK OUT' OUT T'

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Transforming Tr ansforming how people p view each other requires requires renegotiation, rene e gotiation, sa says ys Fogelson. Fogelson. “Sometimes the conversations conversations aren’t ar en’t happening because bec cause maybe maybe people rrecognize ecognize the concepts, but don’t have the tools to t recognize recognize them as a problem,” problem,” says s ys Fogelson, sa Fogelson, works middle schoolerss who wor ks with midd dle schooler at Star Community Sc School chool and discus ses these ideass with them. discusses She sa ys that they g e it—and even et says get though they’re they’re as young you ung as 11 1 1 and alking about 12, once they start ta talking what it feels like to be b catcalled or har harassed, assed, they g get et an angry. ngry. Oftentimes Of tentimes young people p shy shy away because awa y from from issues issues of consent c of how clinical they seem, seem, says says Mykha Mykhaylova. ylova. In otherr words, words, no one

wants to stop s ever every y two minutes in off the th heat the h to th momentt and d ask k “Is “I this OK? Is Is this OK?” But the rreality eality never is, you nev ver know what the other partner is thinking, feeling, or too afraid afr aid to sa ssay. y. “It’s even “It’s eve en things like ‘What does the body language la anguage look like?’” says says Fogelson. F ogelson. Getting to t kids at an adolescent age, are ag e, when their bodies ar e changing they’re and they’ re encountering their sexuality,, is says Fogelson. sexuality i crucial, sa ay ys F og o elson. Mykhaylova Fogelson Mykha aylov y va and F o ogelson advocate education away from for sex edu ucation to move awa ay fr om a pure pur e public c health model and include conversations conver sations about consent and sexuality.. sexuality “A “A lot off sex ed is shame-based, we’re starting with w this idea that we’ re not naturally it’ss bad—I natur ally sexual s or that it’ more it’ss wish it would wo ould be like mor e like it’ says not bad, it’s ittt’s natural,” natural,” sa ys Fogelson. Fogelson. “Misinformation “Misinfo ormation is the rreal eal danger,” Mykhaylova. dang er,” adds adds Mykha ylova. The lesson tailored lesson s could be tailor ed to younger young er children ch hildren as well, excluding excluding talk the sex tal lk and focusing instead on when it’s it’s OK O to hug, when it’s it’s OK to play child’ss toys, sa says pla y with another a child’ ys Fogelson. F ogelson. Something Something as simple as a zine, way then, is a wa w y in which ideas can be spread challenged, spr ead and d conventions con entions challeng ed ed, Mykhaylova Fogelson Mykha ylov va and F ogelson emphasize. emphasize e. “We’ve “W We e’ve been b socialized into these aren’t healthy patterns that th hat ar en’t health y for so long,”” sa says Fogelson. “We long, yss F ogelson. “W We have to society ways.” rredo edo socie ety in certain wa ys.” “Speak can “Speak Out!” O can be ffound oound at: Resource Center Ceenter ffor oor Nonviolence, Planned Parenthood, Par a enthood, Caffe Cafffe Pergolesi, Pergolesi, Club,, Louden Nelson Nellson Center, Centerr, Boys & Girls Club Walnut W alnut Avenue Aveenue Women’s Women’’s Center, Centerr, Barrios Barrios Unidos, Diversity Divversity Center, Centerr, Art Bar Bar at the Tannery, Tannery a y, Cantu Queer Center Center and others. A PDF PDF D can can be found foound at: rcnv.org/ rcnv.org/ programs/youth. progr ams/y youth.

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ZINES ZINE S

An Excerpt An Exc cerpt From From ‘‘Speak Spea ak Out’ [Editor’s Not [Editor’s Note: e: The ffollowing oollow wing is from “One SSex ex Worker Worker's 's Exp Experience” perience” by Anonymous, “Speak Out” as collected collected in “Spe ak Ou ut” and reprinted reprinted by permission.]

I

could not get get hired hired by by anyone anyone else. It was also allso around around that time that experienced I experienc ced a revolution revolution in the way wa y I thought thoug ght of my my sexuality and identity.. I had identity h just returned returned from from a ffive-week ive-week i k trip overseas overseas during which I “found” “fo ound” myself myself and gained a confidence conf idence e I had been yearning for my Months m y whole life. l Months of rreading eading fashion blogs blo ogs sharpened my my sense of style and d my my makeup abilities. Suddenly,, I wasn’t being ignored Suddenly ignored anymore an ymore att parties. Boys wanted to talk to me, m to dance with me! I began egan going going out more more and making mor more e friends, reveling reveling in my my newfound persona. persona. around Right ar ound that time “Miguel.”” ime I met “Miguel. After Afftter a slew of onenight ight stands (enough to make up for m my y remaining maining i i a virgin i i throughout entirety oughout the entir ety of freshman shman year) I decided two things: 1. N No o sex for the month of October. 2. I wanted a boyfriend. Unfortunately, Un nfortunately, Miguel goals exac didn’t exactly ctly have the same g oals commitment monogamy. of commitm ment and monogam y. He sleepoverss but we and I had a few sleepover didn’t have e sex: until one night it my happened against m happened, y will. will We W e had both b been drinking, and began we be gan playing p ying a sexually charged pla charged truth dare. game of tru uth or dar e. I rremember emember my lying on hiss bed, on m y back, and seeing him start to rip open a condom in the moonlight shining through window.. I was too ough his window in thr say anything. shocked to sa y an ything. I never said no—but he also never asked me if right. over,, I it was all ri ight. When it was over bathroom discovered went to the e bathr oom and discover ed tiny a tin y bit off blood on the toilet paper. had passed. October ha ad not yet pas sed. after I came to o a rrealization ealization af ftter that men were going night. If me en wer e just g oing to take charge it.. it, I was going goiing to to char ge ffor oor it

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remember the first remember first s time I my therapist told m y ther apist I had been a worker. sex wor ker. Immediately, Imme ediately, her changed; disposition chang e adjusting ed; glasses, became her glas ses, she becam me brusque and businesslike. were busines slike. “How old d wer e you and asked, for how long?” she ask ked, pen poised by paper,, bo body b y her pad of paper ody canted slightly forward forward so as not to miss miss a wor d. word. Amused by serious demeanor,, by her serio ous demeanor I responded, responded, “I was 21,, and I only did it for thr ee weeks.” weeks.” three sary I feel it is neces necessary to explain a bit of m y my psycholog y, and how psychology, m y ear ly experiences my early cr eated a perfect rrecipe ecip pe created for me to be gin selling g begin m y own body for mone ey. my money. Fr om an ear ly ag e I can n From early age rremember emember wanting to work play, work.. I used to play, “G i to “Going t the th office” off fffice” i ”. In daycare daycare I asked the teachers, teachers, women whom I saw every every da y taking care care of day childr en, what their children, “r eal” jobs were, were, if they the ey worked worked in “real” off fice i buildings. I expe erienced env y office experienced envy in eighth gr ade when the t fourteengrade year-olds talked aboutt their af ftterafterschool jobs at McDonald’s McDona ald’s and W e end ’s while endy’ hile thirteen n ear old me n-year-old Wendy’s thirteen-year-old was still too young to “wor ““work.” k.” say I felt I gues guesss you could say pos sessed b y the desi ire to support possessed by desire m yself, to attain auto onomy, to not myself, autonomy, be constantly asking m y par ents my parents for money. money. So by by the time I rreached eached colle ge, I started sta arted trying tr ying to college, take any any odd job I cou uld to make could money Babysitting pr p oved to be money.. Babysitting proved the most lucr ative gig g ar ound, lucrative around, and somehow I mana aged to land managed a job caring for a you ung teenag er young teenager during m y sophomor e year. my sophomore Unfortunately aged e out by by the Unfortunately,, he aged time I rreached eached seniorr year year,, and, despite weeks of inte er views, I interviews,

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ZINES

Zines 2.0

WE WANT THIS HOUSE An artist's conception of the DIY ecosystem. ILLUSTRATION: PIA BARNETT

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

How DIY culture—and the way we document it—is evolving

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W

hat happens when an entire subculture has no archive? No story exists. When no story exists, some will assume there’s no story to be told. For most of this country’s history, underground cultural movements were rarely documented. That changed in the 20th century, when musicologists, sociologists and historians became more interested in preserving and tracing populist movements, in everything from blues field recordings to Howard

Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States.” Zines evolved the storytelling further, providing a record of DIY (Do-It-Yourself) culture’s breakout in the early days of punk, through the rise of alternative, to today. And with the accessibility of the Internet, the zine ethos has continued to evolve. Grasstronaut (grasstronaut.com) is a site I started here in Santa Cruz in August of last year. It’s a blog deeply influenced by zine culture that features interviews,

case studies and resources from grassroots arts projects. Above all else, it’s an archive of stories. There’s no better way to tell our stories than to do it ourselves. Zines are printed ephemera—usually a few sheets of 8.5” x 11” folded in half to form a booklet. The content is whatever you want it to be. The format is whatever you want it to be. This freedom may seem chaotic, but this is actually what makes zines great: the absolute control over what you produce. And that’s what separates zine

BY ELISE GRANATA culture from mainstream media: we get to drive. We conceptualize, tinker with design, and spend hours hunched over a xerox machine at Kinko’s to bring these to life. You can make a zine about your favorite pumpkin cookie recipe or thoughts on increased militarization of the police force. A list of all of the best bathroom graffiti in Santa Cruz. Your poetry. Illustrations. My thing is DIY arts. And while there’s no xeroxing involved with Grasstronaut, zine culture is deeply sewn into its ethos. It’s a centralized

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Phone tag. Several thousand rounds of it. And then, thanks to the sweet Verizon overlords, I answer the phone and it’s Kyle Napalan. He’s the founder of the Dial, a multi-use arts warehouse space once based in Murrieta, California. It was an all-ages oasis of printmaking space, open mics, dance sessions, film fests, and art shows. Police had threatened the Dial before, but it finally buckled due to noise complaints in October 2014. Now the organizers are without a physical space. I interviewed Napalan for two hours for Grasstronaut about what it’s like to lose a place like this. “We recognize that when a DIY space faces difficulty, no matter where it is, there is a disruption in the vibration of the overall quality of what we’re trying to do,” Napalan says. DIY isn’t new. It’s not a phenomenon. This is a subculture that has thrived for decades, evolving to survive and thrive despite local noise ordinances and police crackdowns. We present art in critical and important contexts: cheaply, accessibly, and underground. So when Napalan talks about a disruption in the force, he means it. Shutting down the Dial meant a loss of a subversive community space in an area where that is rare—there are only a few dozen DIY art spaces like the Dial in California. Keep zooming in, and the Dial was the only creative resource of its kind in the Temecula area. When we talk, it’s half an interview for Grasstronaut, and half a phone call to connect Napalan with resources. So many other spaces just like the Dial experience shutdowns or evictions, or go broke. The C.H.E. Cafe, their neighbors to the south, are teetering daily on eviction at the hands of UC San Diego. There’s no one place you can find out about this. That’s kind

of the point. The stories of these entities exist in scattered local news sources (“Grand Rapids DIY space closing”) and personal Facebook posts (“This venue sucks because they allowed racist bands to perform”), meandering low-budget documentaries and, of course, zines, but nothing central. You could only collect history via websites, hearsay, and being there. And phone calls between Murrieta and Santa Cruz late on a Thursday night. Without that, there’s no story. It’s part of the charm. It’s part of the challenge. DIY arts can be so many things: physical spaces, temporary programs, publications, artists, collectives, record labels, podcasts. Big or small (but usually small), illegal or legit. When I speak to Napalan, I find out he has no idea about Silent Barn, a strikingly similar multi-use arts space in Bushwick, New York. I quickly make it clear that going to their website as soon as possible ranks just short of a life-or-death situation. Isn’t it amazing that two similar, alternative arts warehouses on opposite sides of the country had no clue about each other? They deserve to know of each other. Zines are great, but you would have to curate the most niche collection in the world to gain any continuity of DIY arts stories. Also, please call me if you have this niche collection. The Dial is anything but gone. And it’s thanks, in part, to the worst (or best) timing in the world. They received nonprofit status three weeks before their shutdown, and finished fundraising for a brand new, shiny PA system the day they closed. So, for Napalan and the rest of the Dial Collective, giving up is just not an option. How could it be? They have local support, a community of artists who are hungry for a home, and a lot more to learn. For now, their story lives on Grasstronaut. So do dozens of other DIY arts spaces, collectives, publishing houses, and artists. Grasstronaut is inspired by the reality that zines and the DIY ethos help create—it exists if you make it.

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Cabrillo Women’s Chorus Songs of Spring Sunday, May 10, 3:00 pm Samper Recital Hall Tickets: $10 general, $9 seniors/students $4 Cabrillo SAC card holders

Cabrillo College Orchestra Spring Concert Thursday, May 14, 7:30 pm Samper Recital Hall Tickets: $7 general ,$5 seniors/students $4 Cabrillo SAC card holders

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LITERATURE

EARLY WARNING Pulitzer Prize winner Jane Smiley brings her new novel to Bookshop Santa Cruz on May 11.

What’s In Store MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Three lit events this week in Santa Cruz illustrate why we cherish independent bookstores BY WENDY MAYER-LOCHTEFELD

36

L

ast Saturday was Independent Bookstore Day, and, like my fellow bookworms, I headed out, wish list in hand, to pay my respects. But for me, it was bittersweet. As a former co-owner of Capitola Book Cafe, I know what it means to put the right book into someone’s

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hands at the right moment. I’ve seen the spark in a toddler’s eyes when Billie Harris lent her refined British accent to reading “Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus” during Monday morning story hour. I’ve been rewarded by working with a staff that walked and talked their passion for books every day, and by customers who

lived for the hunt, often leaving with titles they didn’t know they wanted but were glad they’d found. I welcomed countless authors to our well-worn podium, inviting them to share their wit and wisdom with our community. I was also plagued by the everyday disasters familiar to booksellers everywhere: failed

computers, market challenges, and good intentions waylaid by tough realities. I may have been at the tail end of a 35-year legacy, but I wouldn’t trade the privilege of having carried that torch for anything. I was part of something bigger than me, and in the end, bigger than the store itself. I >38 still am.

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Elderhands Help to Age in Place Let’s get started! Time to roll up your sleeves and get involved. I have a job for you and only you can do it! Elderhands, in association with TimeBank Santa Cruz, is a small network of geographically close homes that pledge to do a good deeds for one another. Totally volunteer. A form of a village. To begin a group in your neighborhood, gather contact phone numbers and just ÂżUVW QDPHV RI LQWHUHVWHG IRONV LQ \RXU immediate 8-10 blocks that need help or will donate time and help. Activities such as rides to medical appointments, help with groceries, unpacking the bags perhaps; you could feed the cat, walk the dog, or change a light bulb in a hard to reach place. Perhaps someone pushed the wrong button on the cable remote and got the dreaded “no signalâ€? Ăź they could use help. If you are aging in place, losing access to the TV is really hard. Someone in your neighborhood has a knack for that kind of thing and can help. ,I \RX FDQ PHQG D IHQFH Âż[ D JDWH latch, read a story, listen to oral history, do some shopping for a neighbor: you qualify! You’ll be meeting the people in your area who will help YOU when you are 80, and meeting those that need a little cheer and just a little help to age in place now.

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38

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LITERATURE

<36 There’s a dance between readers, writers, booksellers and publishers, and the bookstore is our dance hall. Among the stacks, we’re free to tango with any character we please. We start conversations with strangers and discover soul mates. We traffic in stories. We geek out over the details of the “Mars� trilogy and hungrily clutch the latest John Green novel. We argue over Haruki Murakami. We read to our kids and watch them grow wings, treating picture books like launch pads. Bookstores force us to reconsider everything we think we know. They even offer up our heroes in the flesh, who appear on rainy nights after long drives to talk about their work and shake our hands. They make us believe we can do it, whatever it may be, all for the price of a paperback. Three events at Bookshop Santa Cruz this week illustrate why we celebrate Independent Bookstore Day. I’m especially pleased that they feature novelists; it’s been said that the novel is an endangered species, but, like independent bookstores, their demise has been greatly exaggerated. SYDNEY PADUA Animator, writer, and enthusiastic computer geek Sydney Padua will be at Bookshop Santa Cruz at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 6, for her hoot of a graphic novel, “The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage.� Who knew that the seeds of the computer revolution were planted in the brass cogs and punch cards of Victorian England? Who could imagine that the friendship between two eccentric London intellectuals—a mathematician named Charles Babbage and the brilliant daughter of Lord Byron, Ada Lovelace—would hold the makings of a fictional dynamic duo? Babbage never did see his steampowered “analytical engine� come to life, and Lovelace, who translated his work and pushed it to the next level in reams of her own added footnotes, died young, but Padua lends brawn to their brains in a steampunk adventure tale filled with fascinating historical facts and literal pipe dreams. In it, Babbage and Lovelace build the “Difference

Engine� (Padua incorporated the details of Babbage’s actual designs), using it to fight crime and set off on wild adventures. Padua’s expressive drawing style, spirited wit, and exuberant obsession with footnotes (you’ll never look at them in quite the same way again), bring history to life and paint science with magic.

CHRISTIAN KIEFER At 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, May 7, Christian Kiefer will be appearing at Bookshop for his second novel, “The Animals.� The story is straightforward: Bill Reed seeks to rebuild his life as the caretaker at a wildlife sanctuary in rural Idaho, after drug abuse and gambling addiction led him to a life of crime in Nevada, but when his partner in crime is released from prison, Reed is forced to reckon with his past. Kiefer doesn’t sacrifice an ounce of suspense in this noir meditation on instinct and redemption, but dives deep beneath the surface of Reed’s character, asking if can we change our core nature, or if it is fixed beyond our control. Kiefer is too thoughtful a prose stylist to leave us with a simple answer. Instead, he weaves cliffhangers into the winter landscape, marking a path between them to open territory, even as he cautions that it might lead to our worst fears. Like his first novel, “Infinite Tides,� “The Animals� reflects a naturalistic view of the world that holds us responsible for making our own meaning and shaping our own fates. Kiefer himself sets a good example. Besides writing novels, he’s a busy professor at American River College and a father of five boys who lives in the Sierra foothills with a small menagerie. He’s a prolific musician, too, and produced a soundtrack to the book that was released at the same time on vinyl.

JANE SMILEY At 7:30 a.m. on Monday, May 1, we score another visit from PulitzerPrize-winning author Jane Smiley, for her new novel, “Early Warning.� It’s the second installment in her ambitious “Last Hundred Years� trilogy, which traces the intimate fortunes of the Langdon family, set


LITERATURE

&

37th Annual Mother’s Day Weekend

Breakthroughs happen here™

Three events at Bookshop Santa Cruz this week illustrate why we celebrate Independent Bookstore Day. I’m especially pleased that they feature novelists; it’s been said that the novel is an endangered species, but, like independent bookstores, their demise has been greatly exaggerated.

GOOD NEWS Like distinct planets in a shared solar system, indie bookstores are bound to the same gravitational pull. Authors like Ann Patchett, Larry McMurtry, Louise Erdrich, and Jonathan Lethem have all succumbed to owning independent bookstores, and just as they might say that it was slightly insane to

take the leap, they’d also assure you that it was a labor of love. The news on the business front is actually good. Sales have grown for independent booksellers by about 8 percent over the last three years, more than for booksellers in general, and the number of new independent bookstores has grown by about 20 percent. Considering that between 2000 and 2007, at least 1,000 indies closed their doors, this is a welcome change indeed. Make no mistake, the days of retail bookstore giants that cover city blocks have all but gone. Amazon has ensured that no bookstore can compete with the everything store. But indies are coming to understand that their place is not to slay corporate dragons or be all things to all people. It’s to bring community members together around thoughtful collections of books that remind us what’s new in the world of ideas, as well as what’s timeless. There will never be much profit in the game, but again, it’s a labor of love. Venture out this weekend if you missed Independent Bookstore Day, and seek out a book you’ve always wanted—or better still, a great new title you stumble upon—at community gems like Bookshop Santa Cruz, Logos, the Literary Guillotine, and Crossroads in Watsonville. Ann Patchett put it best: “If what a bookstore offers matters to you, then shop at a bookstore. If you feel that the experience of reading a book is valuable, then read a book. This is how we change the world: We grab hold of it. We change ourselves.”

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

against the sweeping backdrop of the 20th century. She was here last October for the first installment, “Some Luck.” It begins in 1920 at the Iowa farm purchased by Walter and Rosanna Langdon. As the chapters unfold over 33 years (each chapter comprising a year), babies are born, children leave home, and fortunes change. “Early Warning” picks up in 1953, at patriarch Walter Langdon’s funeral. At this point, the Langdon children have grown up and spread out, migrating to urban opportunities and raising families of their own, all while navigating the tidal flow of history. Benchmarks like the Cold War, Vietnam, the Jonestown massacre, and AIDS find their way into the characters’ living rooms, merging with their personal triumphs and tragedies. Through it all, Smiley never loses touch with the universal questions that come to define us all. Are we loved? Can we change? Do we matter? Like a great cinematographer, she moves in for a close-up and then pulls back to reveal the big picture, rewarding us with a unique sense of our own place in the grand scheme of things.

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MUSIC

Just What She Needed Kris Delmhorst on folky New Wave covers and coming back to songwriting with a whole new perspective BY CAT JOHNSON

K

ris Delmhorst has the best of two worlds. Born and raised in Brooklyn, she’s a bona fide city girl, but she also has a nature-loving side. When we talk on the phone, she’s busy putting in a “pretty extensive” garden in Western Massachusetts, where she lives with her husband, singer-songwriter Jeffrey Foucault, and their six-year-old daughter. “In a way,” she says, “this is a perfect existence because I get to have both. We tour and we go soak up all of our favorite cities, then we come back here. It’s a really restful place to come back to.” In a way, she’s brought the same

mix of rootsy earnestness and urban cool to her music. A favorite of folk fans, Delmhorst raised a few eyebrows among purists with her 2011 album Cars, a tribute to the music of the slick New Wave band of the same name. For Delmhorst, making the album was a chance to "inhabit the joy of just playing,” and take a peek at the inner workings of the Cars songs she has known and loved for decades. “They’re built like these amazing, intricate machines,” she says, “with all these interlocking parts and so many memorable riffs packaged into each song. I’ve always been fascinated by the construction of those songs.”

Delmhorst also wanted to see what the songs sounded like stripped down and played with acoustic instruments. “They were so rooted in their moment, production-wise,” she says. “I wanted to hear those songs wearing different clothes—less ’80s outfits.” On her latest album, Blood Test, which is her first of original material since 2008’s Shotgun Singer, Delmhorst took a different approach. Where Cars is a fun romp down memory lane, Blood Test is a deep journey into the mind of a woman who is now focused on the big picture. “Becoming a mom zooms your

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

WHAT’S HER TYPE? Kris Delmhorst brings her new album ‘Blood Test’ to Don Quixote’s on May 13.

perspective out,” she says. “It makes you see yourself as one piece of the fabric of the continuity of your family, and the whole human family.” After not doing much songwriting for the first few years of motherhood—something she attributes to sleep deprivation and not having the luxury of applying any brain power to the process— Delmhorst re-emerged with a different take on life. “One theme of this record,” she says, “is cutting through all the noise and all the fundamentally irrelevant stuff that is everywhere in our culture right now; trying to stay connected to the real stuff.” To record Blood Test, Delmhorst teamed up with songwriter/ producer Anders Parker. The two worked well together as Parker’s calm demeanor balanced out what Delmhorst describes as her tendency to get “wound up” in the studio about having a finite amount of time to finish a project. From the start, the two wanted to keep the sound and instrumentation of Blood Test stripped-down. “I was interested in having this one be a lot more spare,” Delmhorst says. “I wanted to have the structure [of the songs] define it and not clutter it up too much with other stuff.” The result is a thoughtful, introspective album that finds the humanness in the universal. One of the standout tracks is “Bees,” in which she sings “And the sky looks down on me and says / What are you doing with your one little chance to be free? / And I look up at the sky and say / What am I doing with my one little chance to be alive?” The lyrics came to her on a long flight where she says she gets “a little distance” on her life and the world. When she takes a big-picture perspective, Delmhorst finds a place of gratitude. “I’ve had this lucky road through life,” she says. “I haven’t done any work but this work for 20 years. There's a lot of bullshit involved with being a performing musician, but there’s also this central fact that I’m getting paid to think about life ... and express it.” Info: 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, May 13 at Don Quixote’s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $15. 603-2294.

41


Mother’s Day Special! Two Services - $149 60 Minute Swedish Massage*

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CALENDAR

GREEN FIX

See hundreds more events at gtweekly. com.

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 5/6 IN PRAISE OF EARTH To continue the month-long celebration of Earth Day, local poets are reading “In Praise of Earth: The Poetry of Nature, Jubilation & the Soul” at the Louden Nelson Center on Monday. Readers include Carolyn Flynn, Kate Avraham, Linda Holiday, Carolyn Rudolph, and others who will join together to breathe life into this ode to our natural world and to benefit the Land Trust of Santa Cruz County. Info: 7 p.m., Wednesday, May 13. Louden Nelson Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. carolynbrigitflynn.com. $10 Suggested Donation.

ART SEEN

MUSIC OAXACAN MUSIC CONCERT Música Oaxaqueña concert featuring trombonist Raul Diaz, with student musicians from Centro de Integration Social School #8 Banda de Viento of Oaxaca. 7-8 p.m. UCSC Merrill College Cultural Center. Free.

HEALTH 7TH ANNUAL HEALTH & LIFESTYLE EXPO FOR WOMEN Physician panels, demos and lifestyle tips. Free refreshments, validated parking. Co-hosted by Dominican Hospital, Physicians Medical Group of SCC, and Dignity Health Medical Group-Dominican. 5-8 p.m. Cocoanut Grove, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. mysantacruzdoctor.org. Free. WELLNESS LECTURE: PLANT BASED & POWERFUL Nutrition workshop and store tour. Includes free personal health history consultation. RSVP requested. 6-7:30 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 1210 41st Ave., Capitola. Free.

CLASSES

EVERY PICTURE TELLS A STORY On Saturday, the public is invited to share their stories of Wilder Ranch with painting, coloring, sketching, or photographing the various offerings of Wilder’s natural escape. Make your artistic vision of Wilder Ranch a part of the colorful landscape of local history with basic supplies provided by the ranch or with your own masterful additions. Local artists will be on hand to offer demonstrations, advice and techniques. Info: 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Saturday, May 9. Wilder Ranch State Park. 1401 Coast Road, Santa Cruz. parks.ca.gov. Free.

ORIENTATION FOR FOSTER OR ADOPTIVE PARENTING Learn more at the monthly orientation hosted by Santa Cruz County Family and Children’s Services the first Wednesday of each month. Sign up for an orientation at fostercare4kids.com or call 345-2700. 6-8 p.m. Live Oak Family Resource Center, 1740 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.

FOOD & DRINK THE TAO OF KOMBUCHA See a vat of kombucha in the brewing process. Learn how to start your own brew, using a single bottle of kombucha. Guest speaker Judy Noon, Light Touch Therapist. 6:30-8 p.m. Way of Life, 1220A 41st Ave., Capitola. Free.

SATURDAY 5/9 SCATFEST Local multimedia artist Phoenix Dr Now brings together artistic inspirations for technology with technological tools for creative expression in Santa Cruz’s first Arts & Technology Festival (SCATfest). The festival will feature workshops, panel discussions, and a sustainability panel in concurrence with a sound art exhibit at the Museum of Art & History. Local musicians, percussionists, inventors, digital arts experts, painters, and light artists will speak at the festivities including a multimedia performance with Rick Walker, Tim Thompson, Revital Carroll, Sangita Moskow and other local musicians, dancers, and light artists. Info: 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Museum of Art & History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. scatfest.com. Free.

COOKING CLASS: ANTI-AGING FOODS Ayurvedic Chef Talya Lutzker leads a cooking class on raw, living foods rich in antioxidants, enzymes, and micronutrients. RSVP required. 7-8 p.m. New Leaf Community Market, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. newleaf. com/events. $10/$7.50 each for two.

GROUPS MEDITATION FOR WOMEN WITH CANCER WomenCARE: Guided meditation and talk with a facilitator from Land of the Medicine Buddha. 2:30-4 p.m. Land of the Medicine Buddha. 457-2273. Free.

>45

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

SALSA RUEDA CLASSES Learn the style and technique in a welcoming environment. No partners needed. Drop-ins are welcome. 8-9 p.m. Portuguese Hall, 216 Evergreen St., Santa Cruz. 818-1834. $7/$5 student.

43


Chartwell School Invites You to Join Us for a

Santa Cruz PARENT INFO EVENING Date: Tuesday, May 12

SHOPPING FOR A CAUSE

Time: 6:30 ²7:30 PM /RFDWLRQ .LDQWLœV - 1100 Pacific Avenue

Is Chartwell Right for My Child?

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Chartwell faculty and staff will be available to answer questions, along with Santa Cruz parents who will speak about how the school has benefitted their children. For information contact admissions@chartwell.org or 831-396-3468 x 1025

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Santa Cruz Tides

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Average A verage Water Water a Temperature Tem emperature in Santa Cruz is 57° The ideal wetsuit wetssuit ffor o or these conditions is the O’Neill Y Youth o outh Psycho 1 Zen-Zip 4/3 FSW O’Neill Surf Shop 24 Hour daily daily surf report report call (831) 475-BARL( 475-BARL( 2 2 7 5 )

This Week’s We eek’’s Tide Chart Chart Sponsored S Sponsor ed by: by:

Located in the King’s Plaza Shopping Center 1601 41st Ave. Capitola 831-462-3686 www.the-daisy.org See our Facebook page for current updates All proceeds go to beneďŹ t programs provided by Family Service Agency of the Central Coast www.fsa-cc.org

Used & Vintage Instruments 9LP › J<CC KI8;< :FEJ@>E Top Dollar Paid‌ for your used electric, acoustic or bass guitar, LZ]U [M\ IUXTQÅMZ wind instrument, keyboard and equipment.

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CALL TODAY FOR A FREE 15 MINUTE CONSULTATION natural medicine

(831) 515-8699 2840 Park Ave. Soquel www.thrivenatmed.com

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CALENDAR

SUMMER SAILING SEASON KICKS OFF MOTHER'S DAY WEEKEND MAY 9 & 10

SMOOTH S MOO T H S SAILING A I L I N G FOR F O R THE T H E WHOLE W H O L E FAMILY! FA M I LY ! AAfternoon f t e r n o o n & SSunset u n s e t Sails S a i l s | Wednesday W e d n e s d a y Night N i g h t Regatta R e g a t t a | Local L o c a l Wine W i n e & Beer B e e r Tastings Ta s t i n g s LLive i v e Music M u si c Cruises C r u i s e s | Wildlife W i l d l i f e Tours To u r s | Seasonal S e a s o n a l Fireworks F i r ewo r k s Sails Sails

PUBLIC P UBLIC S SAIL AIL T TICKETS ICKETS A AVAI BLE VAI BLE O ONLINE NLINE 1-hour S Sails ails $20 $2 20 1-hour $30 $ 3 1.5-hour 30 1.5-hour S Sails ails $40 $ 40 Special Special E Event vent S Sails ails OYC's O YC's captains capptains and the T Team eam e O'N O'Neill eill ar aree U.S. U .S. Coast Coast G Guard uard llicensed, icensed, insur insured, ed, and inspect inspected ed annual annually. lly.

SATURDAY 5/9 2015 HUMAN RACE WALKATHON AND FUN RUN

YELP RATING YE LP R ATING

Unchain Your Heart

Info: 8 a.m., Delaware Ave., Santa Cruz. humanracesc.org

<43 PARKINSON’S DISEASE

# 245, Santa Cruz. holeyboy.com. Free, donations accepted.

SUPPORT GROUP Support group for people with Parkinson’s disease and their caregivers. Interact with others in a friendly, supportive environment and hear speakers on a variety of topics. 1-2:30 p.m. Inner Light Center, 5630 Soquel Drive, Soquel. 708-2906. Free.

THURSDAY 5/7

MEDITATION FOR LIFE Mindfulness meditation class. Simple, basic meditation technique that focuses on the breath. Floor cushions and chairs provided. 7-8 p.m. Branciforte Plaza, 555 Soquel Ave., Studio

BIKE TO WORK/SCHOOL DAY Cyclists receive a free breakfast along with free bike maintenance, free massages and more. From 6:30-9:30 a.m. at 13 public sites and 45 school >46 sites across Santa Cruz County.

COMMUNITY

Shrine of Saint Joseph DAILY AND WEEKEND CONFESSIONS 10:30 am DAILY AND WEEKEND MASSES 11:00 am The Shrine is administered by the Congregation of the Oblates of St. Joseph

544 WEST CLIFF DRIVE SANTA CRUZ 457.1868 | OSJUSA.ORG

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

For 35 years, the Human Race has attracted families and their pets from all corners of the county to participate on behalf of an organization of their choosing. It’s the largest collaborative fundraiser on the central coast and mobilizes more than 10,000 donors every year. This year’s theme is “Use Your Superpowers,” so the Volunteer Center of Santa Cruz County invites participants to bring their own flavor of superhero extravaganza and fun. Mayor Don Lane, Santa Cruz Superintendent Michael Watkins, and County Supervisor Ryan Coonerty have all raised their capes, masks, and superhero shields on social media to announce the causes they will support at this year’s Human Race.

45


DISABILITY/SSI

CALENDAR

UÊ-- É-- Ê Ã>L ÌÞÊ ««i> à UÊNo fees if no recovery UÊ-«> à ÊÌÀ> à >Ì ÀÊ>Û> >L i UÊ£äÊÞi>ÀÃÊ vÊiÝ«iÀ i Vi UÊ , ÊV ÃÕ Ì>Ì Ã UÊ/i >V ÕÃÊÀi«ÀiÃi Ì>Ì Law Office of Sara J. Lipowitz

303 Potrero St., #45-103 Santa Cruz, CA 95060 p: 831-623-5222 f: 831-427-0530 saral@lipowitzsolutions.com www.lipowitzsolutions.com

SATURDAY 5/9 UCSC COMMUNITY AND ARTS FESTIVAL This Saturday, UCSC’s University Relations hosts their third Community and Arts Festival to bring the 50th Anniversary celebrations to the streets of Santa Cruz. Part of the Neighbor Initiative, the festival will include performances by the Hightones, Acquire, the Black Birds, Justin BeepBoop, and the Haluan Hip-Hop Dance troupe. UCSC students will present their work in the arts, music, sexual awareness, and health.

La Selva Beach

Info: 11 a.m. - 3 p.m., Downtown Santa Cruz, Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

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Miracle Family Ranch

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Learn to Sew! s -ONTHLY CLASSES FOR KIDS TEENS s 'ROUP PRIVATE LESSONS FOR ALL AGES

THE WIZARD OF OZ Carried by a tornado to magical OZ, farm girl Dorothy seeks the mighty Wizard, whose power can send her home. Along the way, three delightful friends help her on her journey. Youth production. Discount shows at 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Louden Nelson Center Theater, 301 Front St., Santa Cruz. allabouttheatre.org. $10/$7.

TALK Judy Ziegler GRI, CRS, SRES Cornucopia Real Estate BRE # 00698255

46

LUNAFEST Traveling film festival of awardwinning short films by, for, and about women. Program of eight films filled with stories of reflection, hope and humor. Locally, this event benefits WomenCARE Santa Cruz. 7-9:30 p.m. Del Mar Theatre, Santa Cruz. $20-$35.

Asking $1,195,000 5 acre Ranch in La Selva Beach zoned for commercial agriculture with 2 homes. This is a real flavor of country yet minutes to beaches and freeway.

ARTS

831.334.0257 |

cornucopia.com

Call Michelle 831.227.3565 michellesewsbytheseashore.com

THE UNSPEAKABLE - A MEXICAN PERSPECTIVE, WITH RAFAEL LANDERRECHE For more than 30 years,

Rafael Landerreche has promoted the theory and practice of nonviolence, and has spent over 16 years in Chiapas. Landerreche will speak about his work with indigenous communities in Chiapas, linking his experience there with contemporary Mexico’s institutional crisis and the shadowy forces behind the scenes. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Resource Center for Nonviolence, 612 Ocean St., Santa Cruz. $8-$25.

CLASSES SAMBA: ALL LEVELS DANCE CLASS High-energy Brazilian dance fitness classes infused with Samba Rio, Samba Reggae, Samba de Roda, plus movements from Africa, Cuba, Trinidad, Tobago, and more. Live Drumming. 6-7:25 p.m. 418 Front St., Santa Cruz. danceofbrazil.com. $15. SALSA DANCING CUBAN-STYLE Drop-in class. No partner required. Intermediate

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NPR News

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

Listen to o KAZU on o the Go!!

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Served 10AM–3PM Open until 9 pm Make your reservation now!

Back Nine Grill & Bar 555 Highway 17 (Pasatiempo Drive Exit) 4BOUB $SV[ t www.backninegrill.com

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Lunch and dinner served daily (including a special kid’s menu) and featuring a great list of California wines and specialty cocktails.


the 9th Annaul A Santa Cruzz

GREEK G REEK F FOOD OOD F FAIRE AIRE AUTHENTIC CUISINE • SPIRITS • LIVE MUSIC • DDANCING ANCING

MA MAYY 115, 5, 1166 and 1177 22015 015 FREE E ADMISSION! FFor or information information call 831.429.6 831.429.6500 6500 or visit our website website www.livelikeagreek.com www w..livelikeagr e eek.com P roceeds benefit Prophet Prophet Elias Ellias Greek Greek e Orthodox Orthodoox Church, Churrch, Santa San anta Cruz Cruz Proceeds

6th

ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

Free & open to the public, Live Music, Food, Raffle, Silent Auction, & Free Demos!

benefiting the

COME CELEBRATE WITH US!

SERVICES S ERVICES WE OFFER &25( 3URJUDP 'HVLJQ ć ì & &25( 3URJUDP 'HVLJQć ì &25(ć &25( ć 1XWULWLRQ ì 3HUVRQDO 7UDLQLQJ 1XW ULWLRQ ì 3HUVRQDO 7UDLQLQJ J 3K\VLFDO 7KHUDS\ ì 0DVVDJH 3K \VLFDO 7KHUDS\ ì 0DVVDJH &KLURSUDFWLF ì $FXSXQFWXUH ì <RJD & KLURSUDFWLF ì $FXSXQFWXUH ì <RJD %RRW &DPS ì 6HPL 3ULYDWH 7UDLQLQJ %RRW &DPS ì 6HPL 3ULYDWH 77UDLQLQJ

831.425.9500 831.42 5.9500 3177 Potrero 31 Potrero St St., ., Suite Suite C Sant aC ruz Santa Cruz ssantacruzcore.com antacruzzcore.com

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SATURDAY JUNE 6TH 10 AM–3 PM

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SUNDAY 5/10 MOTHER'S DAY PORTRAIT BENEFIT What better gift for mumsy dearest than a memory of a beautiful day frozen in time forever for her to proudly display on her mantel and gush about her thoughtful children? This Mother's Day, Home/Work and Shindig Photography are teaming up to offer $10 portraits by Amy Spencer Photo. All proceeds benefit FosterEd, a local nonprofit that works to provide dependable educational aid in the form of child care centers, education teams, and individualized educational plans for students based on strengths and needs.

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Info: 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Home/Work, 765 Cedar St. #103, Santa Cruz. 316-5215.$10.

50

<46 dancers and up. Variety of Cubanstyle dancing including Casino partnering and Salsa Suelta. Two skilled instructors with more than 15 years experience. Check out salsagente.com for holidays. 7-8 p.m. Louden Nelson Center, Santa Cruz. $9/$5.

GROUPS A COURSE IN MIRACLES SANTA CRUZ REGULAR MEETING “A Course In Miracles” is a book on enlightenment that might be called a psychological journey to a spiritual awakening. Many laughs and smiles occur as we expose the ego and share happiness. Books provided. Drop in and out as you wish. 7:15-9 p.m. Barn Studio at 104b Agnes St., Santa Cruz. 272-2246. Free.

FRIDAY 5/8 ARTS VAN ANTWERP THEATRE PRESENTS DOG LOGIC Thomas Strelich’s dark comedy takes place at a run-down pet cemetery in the California desert. May 8-23. Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. at the Radius Gallery, Tannery Arts Center, 1050 River St., #127, Santa Cruz. $18 - $20. DE COLORES Youth production by Kids on Broadway Junior Thespians. Enjoy strawberry shortcake, buy a beautiful plant for mom and enjoy the show. 7-8:30 p.m. Sat at Noon. The Resource Center for Nonviolence, 612 Ocean Ave., Santa Cruz. $10.

>52


May is

Awareness Month Mon o th

SANTA CRUZ KIDS Lizzy Fowler’s

ADVENTURE SUMMER CAMP

Santa Cruz Soccer Camp

Camps are offered to ages 7-12 9:00-3:30 Monday-Friday Sign up for the day or the week!

Mayo M ayo es el mes mes de concientizar concientizar C CalFresh alFFresh

www.mybenefitscalwin.org w ww.m ww. w.myb w. ybenefitsc enefitscalwin. alwin..or .org g 11.888.421.8080 888 421 80880

Apply Now! Solicíte hoy!

11.831.662.0991 831 662 00991

County of Santa Cruz

Human Services Department

ADVENTURE SPORTS

• June 15-19 and August 10-14 • At least 2 activities per day Tennis, Swimming, Beach Volleyball, Field Sports, Climbing at Pacific Edge, Bowling, Fencing, Surfing & More

ANIMAL CAMP

• June 29-July 3 • Live animals, animal art, guest speakers, field trips, games, and activities.

Go to www.lizzyfowler.com or contact Liz at lizzyfowler@aol.com for more information.

Over 30 Summers of Soccer Fun!!! 246-1517 www.santacruzsoccercamp.com

santa cruz kids page Contact Tiffani Petrov at 458.1100 ext 213

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

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May 5 – June 30, 2015

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Shine the light. Design the light. Hunter Douglas window fashions allow you to design with light in so many ways. Illuminate, soften or darken your spaces. Create a shimmering glow, dramatic rays, a soothing retreat. Ask for details.

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YALA LATI CHOIR Celebrating their tenth annual spring concert, the Yala Lati choir shares their harmonies for an intergenerational event benefiting Save Our Shores—a local nonprofit that protects and preserves local rivers and oceans through cleanups, advocacy and education. This year’s concert will strive to raise community and global water consciousness in these times of local drought. Yala Lati is a women’s choir whose members sing to each other and the community, offering music from around the world. Info: 7-9 p.m., The Center for Spiritual Living, 1818 Felt St., Santa Cruz. $10-$20.

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<50 THE WIZARD OF OZ Youth production. Fri-Sat 7-9 p.m. Louden Nelson Center Theater, Santa Cruz. ww.allabouttheatre.org. $20/$16/$13.

and invertebrates. Until June 21. Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History, 1305 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz.

LOCAL ART EXHIBIT Watercolor paintings by Gloria Souza, the artist for the 62nd Annual Capitola Begonia Festival in 2014. Until June 15. Zizzo’s Coffeehouse & Wine Bar, Brown Ranch Marketplace, 3555 Clares St., Capitola.

MUSIC

ART OF NATURE Annual exhibit of the California Guild of Natural Science Illustrators, featuring 40 works in a variety of media, depicting botany, birds, mammals

CABRILLO CHAMBER ENSEMBLES & STRINGS RECITAL Chamber music for large and small ensembles featuring strings, winds, percussion and piano. Featured groups include Cabrillo Strings Sinfonia and Kammermusiki Ensemble. Directed by Susan Brown. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Cabrillo Samper Recital Hall, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. $10$9/$4.

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Š——Ž­ Ž“‘’¤£ ÂŽÂšÂ“ÂœÂĄ ÂœÂ˜Â˜ÂŚÂšÂ“¤­ THE DEPARTMENT OF ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS AND THE UC OBSERVATORIES PRESENT

astro.ucsc.edu

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ACCELERATING UNIVERSE: EINSTEIN’S BLUNDER UNDONE

ROBERT P. KIRSHNER, CLOWES PROFESSOR OF SCIENCE, HARVARD-SMITHSONIANCENTERFORASTROPHYSICS,WILLDISCUSSTHEEXPANSION OF THE UNIVERSE AND THECOSMOLOGICAL CONSTANT FIRST PROPOSED BY ALBERT EINSTEIN.

WEDNESDAY, W EDNESDAY, MAY MAY AY 13, 13, 2015 2015 7 PM PM R RIO IO THEATRE THEATRE

The T heRio RioTheatre Theatreiissllocated ocateda att1 1205 205Soquel SoquelAvenue, Avenue,Santa SantaC Cruz. ruz.FREE FREEand ando open pentto otthe heg general eneralp public. ublic.TThe hellecture ectureiiss ppresented resented as as a part par t of of the the Mandel Mandel Lecture L ecture Series, Series, which which promotes promotes public public awareness awareness and and appreciation appreciation for for astronoas tronom y. W e sseek eek yyour our hhelp elp and and support suppor t in in keeping keeping these these lectures lectures going. going. For F or information information on on giving, giving, please please visit: visit : astro. as tro. my. We uucsc.edu/support-us. csc.edu /suppor t-us. For F or more mor o e information information or for for disability-related disabilit y-related needs, needs, please pleease call call (831) (8 31) 459-3571. 4 5 9 - 3 5 71.

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MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

SUNDAY 5/10

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MOTHER’S DAY RUN FOR PAJARO VALLEY SHELTER SERVICES This year’s annual Mother’s Day Run/Walk for Shelter will include a 10K run (or walk) and a 1K Kids’ Fun Run at Watsonville’s Ramsay Park. Take moms, dads, grandmas, and grandpas for T-shirts, roses, prizes for the winners, a continental breakfast and a live DJ. In its 31st year, the Mother’s Day Run has supported the continuation of services for homeless families and this year’s fundraiser goal is $100,000. Pajaro Valley Shelter Services has helped women, children, and families break through cycles of homelessness since 1983. Info: 8 a.m., Ramsay Park, 1301 Main St., Watsonville. pvshelter.org.

<52 CABRILLO SPRING DANCE CONCERT Featuring new choreography by students, faculty and guest artists. Cabrillo Dancers perform a mix of contemporary techniques and styles. FriSat 7:30 p.m. Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. Cabrillo Crocker Theater, 6500 Soquel

Drive, Aptos. $14/$12/$6.

FOOD & DRINK COOKING WITH MOM Cooking class for kids ages 8 and up and their moms. Help make and then share a

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CALENDAR <54 nutritious meal featuring family-

Tannery Arts Center, Santa Cruz. $5.

favorite recipes. RSVP required. 6-8:30 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. $35.

OUTDOORS

CLASSES CHAIR YOGA WITH SUZI Instructor Suzi Mahler guides you through a series of gentle seated yoga postures performed slowly and with breath awareness. Tue/Fri 9:30 a.m. at Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at Yoga Center Santa Cruz. 234-6791. suzimahler@ gmail.com. $5.

GROUPS NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS—GREATER BAY AREA SANTA CRUZ Nar-Anon GBA Santa Cruz offers three meetings in support of friends and families of addicts. Meet weekly to share experience, strength and hope. naranoncalifornia.org/norcal. Helpline: 291-5099. Santa Cruz, Aptos and Scotts Valley. saveyoursanity@aol.com. Free, donations accepted.

OUTDOORS ASTRONOMY AT QUAIL HOLLOW Join the Santa Cruz Astronomy Club for stargazing through club member telescopes. Sun sets at 8:03 p.m., so it will be dark around 9:30 pm. Venus will be high in the evening sky, as will Jupiter. The moon rises after midnight. Dress warmly. No white flashlights. Event canceled if overcast. 8:30-11:30 p.m. Quail Hollow Ranch County Park, 800 Quail Hollow Road, Felton. Free.

MUSIC SANTA CRUZ SYMPHONY SEASON FINALE - CARMINA BURANA The Santa Cruz Symphony partners with the Cabrillo Symphonic Chorus for a dramatic conclusion to the season. Performance features soprano Nadine Sierra, tenor Anthony Roth Costanzo and baritone John Moore. 8-10:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium. $25 - $70. FRESH PRODUCE MUSIC PRODUCERS SHOWCASE Super-dope electronic music producers from Santa Cruz and the Bay Area perform original works and includes a ‘behind the music’ style artist interview with Peek. 8-10 p.m. The Art Bar & Cafe,

MOTHER’S DAY OPEN HOUSE AND FULL BLOOM IN THE ROSE GARDEN Bring mom out to enjoy the full bloom at the Roses of Yesterday & Today Rose Garden in Corralitos. Smell and purchase antique and selected modern roses. Free cookies, lemonade and ice tea. Sat-Sun 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 803 Browns Valley Road, Corralitos. Free. EVERY PICTURE TELLS A STORY Paint, draw and more at this artistic family-fun day. Local artist offers demonstrations and advice. Basic materials provided. Donations accepted. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Wilder Ranch State Park. 426-0505. Free, parking $10.

ARTS SANTA CRUZ ARTS & TECHNOLOGY FESTIVAL Day of diverse local art, tech displays, exhibits, multimedia performances, workshops and panel discussions. Wide range of live music plus ethnic dance, robots and drones. 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Museum of Art & History, Santa Cruz. $10. UC SANTA CRUZ: COMMUNITY & ARTS FESTIVAL Live music, dancing, and exhibits from departments and groups all over campus in downtown Santa Cruz. Goodies. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Cooper Street. Free. MOTHER’S DAY WEEKEND ART & GIFT SHOW Over 20 local artists and crafters. Free face painting. Craft area for kids to make their own Mother’s Day gift. Seabright Jazz performs. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Gault Elementary School, 1320 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. Free. COMMUNITY POETRY CIRCLE Write a poem in a supportive and creative environment. All ages and levels of poets are welcomed. 1-3 p.m. Aptos Public Library, 7695 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Free. DE COLORES Youth production. Noon-1:30 p.m. The Resource Center

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SATURDAY 5/9

35TH ANNUAL HUMAN RACE WALKATHON AND FUN RUN Over 1,500 participants from all corners of the community will walk, run or wheel their way in support of their chosen nonprofit, school or community group. This year’s superhero theme is sure to inspire a lively parade of banners and costumes along the race route on West Cliff Drive in Santa Cruz. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Free.

57


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THURSDAY 5/7 LUNAFEST 2015 By women, for women, about women—Lunafest is back in town on its 150-city tour, and this year's traveling film festival features eight short films with stories of hope, humor, and reflection including "Tits," "Viva," "A Good Match," and "Miss Todd." Connecting women and their stories through film, the Lunafest celebrates its fifteenth year of its "fundraiserin-a-box," with 100 percent of its profits going to charity—every year, Lunafest raises funds for local nonprofits, with the main beneficiary being the Breast Cancer Fund and locally, WomenCARE Santa Cruz. Info: 7-9:30 p.m., Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. lunafest.org. $20.

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

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for Nonviolence, 612 Ocean Ave., Santa Cruz. $10.

MAKE A TISSUE FLOWER BOUQUET WITH AUTHOR JENNI KAYE Jenni Kaye signs her children’s book “Mommy is a Worrywart” during this special class/signing. 12:30-2 p.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery, 1855 41st Ave., Capitola. Cost of admission.

CLASSES PARTNER YOGA AND KIRTAN AT POETIC CELLARS WINERY Enjoy exchange of energies and deepen connection between you and your partner through asanas, pranayama, tantric principles and sacred sound. Bring yoga mat, and auxiliary props if you have them. Donations accepted. See

poeticcellars.com for directions. 10 a.m.Noon. 462-3478 to reserve space. CELEBRATE MOM: LAST-MINUTE GIFT POP UP DIY Body Care station, free makeovers, 25 percent off makeup sale, free massages and treats from local vendors. 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Whole Foods Market, 911 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. FREE SWIM LESSONS WITH SEAHORSE SWIM SCHOOL No appointment needed, no former swimming experience required. 1-3 p.m. Seascape Sports Club, 1505 Seascape Blvd., Aptos.

GROUPS HIGH-QUALITY GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER For local family in need. Ramey White was stricken with an illness


CALENDAR that left him unable to care for his family. Select from items at a special booth at the Boulder Creek flea market. 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Junction Park, Boulder Creek. Free.

and ending in Ramsay Park, the race route is a beautiful trek around Watsonville slough trails. pvshelter.org. 7-11 a.m. Ramsay Park, 1301 Main St., Watsonville.

THIRD ANNUAL BOARDWALK DEAF FEST Boardwalk rides, live ASL comedy show with Keith Wann, exclusive play in Neptune’s Casino, performances on the Beach Bandstand by Singing Hands Children’s Choir. Some events free and open to the public. 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk. $39.95 plus tax.

MOTHER’S DAY WALK Living history reenactments honoring the pioneer women that lived in, worked in, and fought for the basin. Also an inspiring guided walk. Meet at park headquarters. 1-5 p.m. Big Basin Redwoods State Park, Free, parking $10.

SPIRITUAL OPEN CIRCLE Introductory Pagan EarthSpirit ritual from Community Seed Earth Spirit Fellowship. 2-3:30 p.m. Quaker Meetinghouse, 225 Rooney St., Santa Cruz. espi@communityseed.org. $7-15.

SUNDAY 5/10 MUSIC CABRILLO WOMEN’S CHORUS PRESENTS SONGS OF SPRING Music for women’s voices celebrating the spring season with special guest performances. Directed by Mark Bidelman. 3-5 p.m. Cabrillo Samper Recital Hall, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. $10/$9. SANTA CRUZ SYMPHONY SEASON FINALE - CARMINA BURANA With the Cabrillo Symphonic Chorus. 2 p.m. Henry J Mello Center, Watsonville. $25-$70.

BENEFIT MOTHER’S DAY PORTRAITS TO BENEFIT FOSTER ED Family portraits by Amy Spencer Photo. All proceeds benefit FosterEd. Home/Work, 765 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $10.

OUTDOORS 31ST ANNUAL MOTHER’S DAY RUN/ WALK FOR SHELTER Proceeds benefit Pajaro Valley Shelter Services in their mission to help homeless families gain the tools needed for self-sufficiency. Starting

ARTS STUDENT EXHIBITION 2015 Comprehensive survey of student artwork completed at Cabrillo College during the spring 2015 semester. Until May 15. Cabrillo Gallery, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Free.

TALK REDWOODS: 50 YEARS OF FREEWAYS, LANDSCAPES, AND GARDENS Luen Miller, co-owner of Monterey Bay Nursery, talks about the coast redwood and plant propagation. His nursery provided 450 redwoods for Highway 1 merge lane plantings. Free plant to first 100 attendees. 7:30 p.m. UCSC Arboretum, Santa Cruz. Free.

FOOD & DRINK MAHALO MONDAY Ten percent of your dinner bill will go to support the Coastal Watershed Council. 5:30-9:30 p.m. Hula’s Island Grill, 221 Cathcart St., Santa Cruz.

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TUESDAY 5/12 ARTS NATURALIST NIGHT: ILLUSTRATING SCIENCE Nature sketching. 7-8:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History, 1305 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. $10/$5.

FOOD & DRINK WESTON A. PRICE FOUNDATION SANTA CRUZ CHAPTER MONTHLY POTLUCK Promotes health and healing through nutrient-dense, traditionally prepared foods. Bring a dish to share. All welcome. 6-9 p.m. Live Oak Grange, Santa Cruz. $2-$5 donation.

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

HUSHFEST: SANTA CRUZ LIGHTHOUSE This silent Sunday is brewing to serve up one hot afternoon of beats on 2-channels of Silent Disco. Little John, Gordo Cabeza, Smasheltooth, Motion Potion, Alabaster Kane, DJ Mancub, The Pirate, U9lift. 2-7 p.m. Lighthouse Point Park, West Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. $20-$25.

MONDAY 5/11

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MUSIC MUS SIC CALENDAR CALENDAR

LOVE LO VE YOUR

LOCAL LOCAL BAND B A AND SUBPAR SUBP PAR A

FFor oor ggarage-rockers arage-rocckers and surf b bands, ands, pla playing aying y the annual ttwo-day wo-day music ffestival estivvaal in Southern California known Burgerama S outhern Cali iffornia o kno wn as Bur gerama important milestone is an import annt mile stone in their ccareer. arreeer. locals Subpar, lastt FFor oor loc cals a Sub bpar, this happened las most memberss w were yyear—while ear—while mo m st ooff the member erre juniors they’d sstill till junior rs in high h sschool, chool,, and the eyy’d only band went been a b and fo ffor or about a yyear. ear. It w ent ssoo well w ell they theey were werre asked askked e back back again aggain a this year. year. times, they house. Both time s, th heey played played e ttoo a full hous e. was “It w as awesome. awesome o . We We made a lot of of ffans aans from was fr room that. It w as really really cool. cool. They They don’t don’t bands normally pickk rrandom andom b ands ttoo play plaay it,” drummer ssays ays drumme er Austin Austin Corona. Corona. group were The gr oup w e e fortunate er foortunate to to have have Bassist Lukas an inside cconnection. onnection. Bas sist Luk as Henderson’s works Paradigm Hender son’s aunt w orks ffor or P aradigm Talent T aalent Agency, Agenccy, and has a working working rrelationship elationship with w Bur ger R ecords, which Burger Records, p put ts on the ffestival. estiv tivaal. al puts “W We w ere just just trying ttoo see see if w could get get “We were wee could tick ets ttoo ggo, o, then t she’ e, ‘I ssent ent them tickets she’ss lik like, yyour our demo and annd the want you you o to to play. play.’ We We theyy want ssaid aid ‘yeah, ‘yeah,, of of course, course,’” orroona ssays. ays. ’” C Corona

MAY MA Y 6-12, 6- 12 , 2015 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM T WEEKLY. C O M | SANT SANTACRUZ.COM A C R UZ . C O M

Subp ar’s music mussic is a perfect perffect e fit ffor or o the Subpar’s Bur ger R ecorrds sound. sound. They They lean lean toward toward Burger Records surf —with a ccouple ouple ooff ins trumental surf—with instrumental tunes, tune s, eeven—along ven— e —along with ssome ome sstrong trong elements. ggarage, arage, pop and a punk element s.

60

“W We don’ ke one ggenre, eenrre, which is nice. nice. W “We don’tt lik like Wee t and try diinc corp o porrat ateeasman enr e resasw incorporate as manyy ggenres as wee lik ke and make makke it our ssound, ound,” Corona Corroona ssays. ays. like D espite their yyoung oung ag ge, the ey ar re all Despite age, they are sseasoned easoned mu sicians. C orona and guit arist musicians. Corona guitarist A very e Murphy Murphy have have played plaayed e in loc al Tess Tess Avery local D unn’s b and ffor oor rroughly oughly fiv ve yyears. earrs. While Dunn’s band five mo st high sschoolers chhoolers ar tarting their fir st most aree sstarting first b ands, all the member rs ooff Subp ar ha ve bands, members Subpar have been in sseveral eveerral ab ands prior ttoo fforming orming o the bands group. gr oup. As As seriously serioously as they theey take take music, music, the ey kkeep eep the ssongs ongs pr reetty lighthearted. lighthearted. they pretty “W Wee’re all fun n laid n, laid-b back guy s. We We “We’re fun, laid-back guys. lo ve writing m music are love music,, but our lyric lyricss are de finitely nott super deep says. definitely deep,,” she says. “It’ asicallyy about sstandard tandard tteenage eenage “It’ss b basically bullshit.” AAR AARON RON CARNES CARNES INFO: 9 p INFO: p.m. .m.. Saturday, Saturday, Ma Mayy 9 9.. Cr Crepe epe Place, Plac e, 11 1134 34 S Soquel oquel A Ave., ve., S Santa anta Cruz. $8.. 429-6 $8 429-6994. 99 94.

EVENING BELL BELL

WEDNESDAY W WEDNESDA AY 5/ 5/6 6

THURSDAY THURSDA AY 5/7 57 5/

WAYNE W AYNE Y HANC HANCOCK OCK

PARADISE P AR ADISE S A SOUL O OUL SAVERS S AV VERS S

COUNTRY C OUNTRY S SWING WING

Im Imagine magine an announcer announcer’ss voice announcer’ saying sa aying the following: “Wayne “W Wayne y ‘the Train’ Tr rain’ Hancock, the undisputed king ki ing of juke-joint swing. swing.”” Pr Pretty etty damn da amn catch catchy, y, isn’t it? It just oozess heartland he eartland style and show showtime time fflair. lair. It also al lso sounds like it’ it’ss an introduction introductio on from fr rom the 1950s. But Hancock is ver very ry m much of toda today, y, bringing his blend off countr country, y, blues, honky-tonk, rrockabilly o ockabilly and jazz to those who appreciate ap ppreciate g good ood music made b by y ha hardardworking Often compared w wor king musicians. Of ten compar red to o Hank Williams, Hancock is a m modern-da y purveyor purveyor of the pr e-rrock modern-day pre-rock oll sound, without sounding lik like ’’n’ n rroll n’ ke a w wannabe. CAT C AT JOHNS JOHNSON ON IN INFO: NFO: 8:30 p p.m. .m. Cat Catalyst, alyst, 11011 011 P Pacific acific A Ave., ve., Santa $12/adv, $15/door. 423-1338. S a a Cruz. $12/ ant /adv a , $15/ /d door. 4231338 8.

JAZZ JA ZZ

SOUL

JONATHAN JONATHAN T KREISBERG KREIS SBERG QUARTET QUARTE T

Soul band W Wooster o ooster rreferred efferred to local funk ensemble Par Paradise adisse Soul Saver Saverss nasty.” For as “stanky and nasty .” F or a funk band, that’ that’ss a good good thing—it thing—it means these cats gr groove oove hard. hard. d Plus they’re they’re rrecord ecord cr crate ate digg diggers ers who w g go o deeper than big names of funk k and soul fr from om the ’60s and ’70s, and pla p play y tunes that even har hardcore dcore rrecord ec cord collector collectorss won’t rrecognize. ecognize. Also co-headlining c the show is Pawn Shop p Soul, a local horn-driven funk,, sou soul, l,, Latin gr g group oup p different that pulls out a whole differ ent bag of obscure obscur e soul g gems—the ems—th he ex exclusively clusively instrumental ones. AAR AARON RON CARNES CARNES

Over the past p decade, Jonathan Kreisberg Kr eisberg has quietly become one of jazz jazz’s z’s most formidable guitarists,, both thr through ough his work wor k as a leader and extensive with touring wi ith Hammond B-3 legend le gend Dr.. Lonnie Smith. While possesses jaw-dropping he pos sesses s jaw-dr opping chops and impr improvisational o ovisational ffluency, luency, what sets him apart a is his commitment to honing a gr group oup sound with the superlative super lativ ve combo featur featured ed on his new al album, lbum, W Wave ave Upon W Wave, ave, with the brilliant b British-born alto sax ophoniist Will Vinson and the saxophonist prolific pr olif ic rrhythm hy thm section tandem of bassist bas sist Rick Ric ck Rosato and drummer Colin Str Stranahan an nahan (both 20-something rising star rs). ANDRE stars). ANDREW W GILBER GILBERT T

INFO: 8:30 p.m. INFO: p.m. Moe’s Moe’s Alley, Alleey, 1535 Commercial C ommercial Way, Way, Santa Santa Cruz. Crruz. $5/ $5/adv, /adv a , $8/ door.. 4 door 479-1854. 79-1854.

INFO: 7 p INFO: p.m. .m. Kuumbwa Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 320-2 Cedar Cedar St., Santa S anta Cruz. $2 $ $20/adv, 0//aadv, $25/ $25/door. /door d . 42 427-2227. 7-2227.


MUSIC

BE OUR GUEST NEXTIES On the surface, Santa Cruz is a surf town, a tourist town, an artsy town. But stick around long enough and you’ll discover the not-so-secret secret about our little city: it’s full of innovators, changemakers, and entrepreneurs. Once a year, the Nexties honor some of the area’s hottest movers and shakers with an event that celebrates the future-forward spirit of the Santa Cruz community. This year’s recipients are Andrea Mollenauer, Martijn Stiphout, Monica Karst, Paul De Worken, Courtney Laschkewitsch and Coffee Zombie Collective (above). CAT JOHNSON

JONATHAN KREISBERG

FRIDAY 5/8 INDIE/COUNTRY

EVENING BELL

INFO: 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $8. 429-6994.

SATURDAY 5/9 HIP HOP

DEM’ BAY BOYZ Hip-hop royalty in the Bay Area takes on many names: B-Legit, RBL Posse, Spice1, Celly Cell, Richie Rich, San

INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $30/door. 429-4135.

SUNDAY 5/10

PROGRESSIVE BLUEGRASS

TONY FURTADO

Tony Furtado took an early interest in the banjo, picking it up in the sixth grade. Not having a banjo of his own, the Oakland-born youngster crafted one out of materials he found around the house, and went on to win the National Banjo Championship. If that doesn’t get him some serious bluegrass-cred points, I don’t know what will. When Furtado later picked up the slide guitar with ease, he sealed his fate as a multi-faceted artist who

bends the boundaries of style and instrumentation. CJ INFO: 8 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $18/door. 479-1854.

TUESDAY 5/12 DREAM POP

CASTING CIRCLES The local music scene continues to amaze. Just when one thinks one knows all the bands, there are always a couple that fall through the cracks. Luckily, Casting Circles will be playing at the Blue Lagoon on Tuesday, so this is a chance to catch up. Self-described as “Cholagaze,” the four-piece bursts with the oddly-dreamy-yet-tragic sounds of bands like Best Coast, the Pixies, the Cranes and more. Let Casting Circles remind you what it’s like to be young, in love, and hating every minute of it. MW INFO: 9 p.m. Blue Lagoon, 923 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $5 door. 423-7117.

IN THE QUEUE YELLOWCARD

Violin-wielding pop-punkers. Thursday at Catalyst JOSH GARRELS

Christian-themed blend of hip-hop and folk. Friday at Rio Theatre KATDELIC

P-Funk All-Star Ronkat Spearman and company. Friday at Moe’s Alley CHRIS DOUD

Lead singer of the Good Luck Thrift Store Outfit. Sunday at Don Quixote’s NELLIE MCKAY

Acclaimed singer-songwriter, actress, and comedian. Tuesday at Kuumbwa

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

A collaboration between honky-tonker Hart Kingsbery and classically trained vocalist and pianist Caitlin Sherman, Evening Bell plays the kind of music that works really well on a long road trip: slow-burning, haunting, spacious, and reminiscent of the Old West. Originally a duo, the Seattle-based band now includes bassist Aaron Harmonson and drummer Jason Merculief. CJ

Quinn, Big Omeezy … oh wait, that’s also the line-up for this Saturday’s Catalyst show. That’s right, Dem’ Bay Boyz will be blazing the neighborhood stage for a one-time show appropriately named “Return of the Real.” MAT WEIR

INFO: 7 p.m. Friday, May 15. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $40/adv, $50/door. 423-8209. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Friday, May 6 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the event.

61


LIVE MUSIC

Wednesday May 6th 8:30pm $9/12 Lice Electronica/Folk

LYNX

& THE SERVANTS OF SONG + FERAL FAUNA Thursday May 7th 8:30pm $5//8 Live Funk & Soul Double Bill

PARADISE SOUL

SAVERS w/ GINA RENE + PAWN SHOP SOUL Friday May 8th 9pm $9/12

P-Funk All-Star Brings 10 Piece Band

KATDELIC + KUCKAW! Saturday May 9th 9pm $15/20

Afro Brazilian Dance Party With

SAMBADÁ

WED AP TO S ST. APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos Aptos 805 9 Apt os St, A ptos

5/6

Al Frisby 6p

AQUARIUS A QUARIUS 1175 75 W West est Cliff D Dr, r, S Santa anta Cruz T THE HE ART ART B BAR AR & C CAFE AFE 11060 060 Riv River er St #112, S Santa anta Cruz

THU

5/7

FRI

Preacher Boy 6p

W Wayy ayy O Open pen Mic 6:30-9p

Mart Martyy O’Reilly O’Reilly 8:308:30-10p 10p

S Santa anta Cruz Bik Bikee P Party arty 77:30-8:30p :30-8:30p

BITTERSWEET B IT TERSWEE T BISTRO B ISTRO 7787 87 Rio Del Del Mar Blvd, Blvd, Apt Aptos os BLUE BL UE LAGOON L AGOON 923 Pacific Ave, Santa 9 23 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz

Three Thr ee Dimensional Crew, Nicky Indicaa & Cr ew, Nick ky Indic Moree $5 9p Mor p

BLUE LOUNGE BL UE L OUNGE Seabright Ave, Santa 529 S eabright A ve, S anta Cruz

Comedy C omedy Night/ 80s Night FFree ree 8:30p p

Olright & SuperFool SuperFool $5 9p

Rainbow R ainbow Night w/DJ w/DJ AD DJ/Ladies’ DJ/Ladies’ Night

Karaoke K araoke 9 9p

Karaoke K araoke 9 9p

BRITANNIA B RIT TA ANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey 11 0 Mont erey Ave, Ave, Capitola Capitola

Hippo Happy Happy Hour 5:305:30-7:30p 7:30p

MAY MA Y 66-12, 12 , 2015 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM T WEEK LY. C O M | S SANTACRUZ.COM A NTA C R UZ . C O M

62

May 30th WHITEY MORGAN & THE 78’s June 3rd DIEGO’S UMBRELLA + THE INCITERS June 7th ERIC LINDELL June 10th THE DIRTY KNOBS w/ Mike Campbell June 11th THOMAS MAPFUMO June 12th LYRICS BORN + Le VICE

WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854

Jazz Night 5:30p Cloudship FFree ree 9p

Trivia T rivia Night FFree ree 8:30p

Comedy C omedy Night FFree ree 9p Songwriter Showcase S ongwriter Sho wcase 7-10p 710p

Gustavo Gustavo Riv Rivera era de la Sin Sis ters Burle sque Sisters Burlesque Dinastia Dinastia Riv River er $2 $27/$30 7//$30 0 $15/$20 $15/$2 0 9p p 8:30p KPIG Happy Happy Hour 5:305:30-7:30p 7:30p

1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135

Jamaica’s “Riddim Twins” w/ All Star Band & Vocals

May 29th THE SAM CHASE, MCCOY TYLER

Karaoke K araoke 8p-Close 8p-Clo se

Dem’Bay Bo Dem’Bay Boyz yz $25/$30 8p

Thursday May 14th 9pm $25/30

May 23rd HURRICANE ROSES- Farewell Show

Open Open Mic

Reggae R eggae Night FFree ree 9p

C IL ANTRO S CILANTROS 19 34 Main St, W atsonville 1934 Watsonville

May 22nd NEW ORLEANS SUSPECTS + The Earful

Karaoke Karaoke

Swing S wing Night 5:30p ZAG $10/$15 ZAG $1 0/$15 9p

Wednesday May 13th 8:30pm $20/25

ONE A CHORD

Comedy Comedy Night

Bingoo 6:30p Bing Intangibillies Int angibillies FFree ree 9p

Antis erum Antiserum $14/$17 $1 4/$17 8:30p

May 21st WILLIE K

DJ/Live DJ/Live Music

Light The Band FFree ree 9p

W ayne Hanc ock, Mis M Wayne Hancock, Misss LLonely onely Hearts Hearts $12/ /$15 $12/$15 8:30p p

May 17th JORDAN T, MANGO KINGZ,

P Poetry oetry Workshop, Workshop, P Poetry oetry Open Open Mic & Lat Latee Mic 4 4-10p 410p p

Casting Circles, Cas ting Cir cles, RevoltRevolt, Mindrips, R evoltRevolt, Mindrip s, SA90 S A90 $5 9p p

BOCCI’S BOCCI’ S CELLAR C ELL AR Santa 1140 40 Encinal Encinal St, S anta Cruz

CATA AL LYST ATRIUM AT TRIUM CATALYST 1011 Pacific Pacific A ve, S anta Cruz 1011 Ave, Santa

May 16th HOT BUTTERED RUM + Coffis Brothers

5/12

Mojo Navigators 6p

Post Punk P ost P unk Night 9p

Chantss Phat Chant 9-11:45p 911:45p

DUO w/SAM HOWARD

May 15th INDIGENOUS

TUE

The Box Box ((Goth Goth Night) 9p

Karaoke K araoke 8p-Close 8p-Clo se

Yellowcard Yeellowcard $20/$22 $20/$22 7p

SLY& ROBBIE & THE TAXI GANG w/ BITTY MCLEAN

5/11

Br Broken oken Shades Shades 6p

Top Video w// T oop 40 Music V ideo w DJJ T Tripp D rripp 9p

Karaoke K araoke 8p-Close 8p-Clo se

Tommy Trash, T oommy T rash, Kill tthe he Noisee $25/$40 8p Nois

REBIRTH BRASS BAND

MON

FFresh resh Produce Produce w/El w/El Siet Sietee 88-10p 10p

BOARDWALK BOWL BO ARDWA ALK BO WL Santa 115 Cliff St, S anta Cruz

CATALYST C ATA LYST Pacific Ave, Santa 11011 011 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz

New Orleans Grammy Winning Greats

5/10 5/1 0

SUN Hawk Ha wk n Blues Blues Mechanicss Mechanic 6p p

The Joint Chie Chiefs fs 88-11p 11p

Country Nightss C ountry Night w/DJ Marcc Mc McVeigh w /DJ Mar Veigh

TONY FURTADO

5/9

Llo Lloyd yd Whitne Whitney ey 12p Al FFrisby risby 6p Minor Thirds Thirds Trio Trrio 77-10p 10p

DJJ Luna D 9p

Partially Seated Concert – Guitar & Banjo Virtuoso

SAT S AT

Minor Thirds Thirds Trio Trio 6:30-9:30p

CASA SORRENTO C ASA S ORRENTO 393 Salinas Salinas 39 3S alinas St, S alinas

Sunday May 10th 8pm $15/18

5/8

Jewl S Jewl Sandoval andoval 6p

Wednesday, May 6 • AGES 18+

TOMMY TRASH Kill The Noise Ouster

Camouflage... a look that never goes out of style! Huge selection for the whole family

$25 - $40 Adv. • Drs. 8 p.m./ Show 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 6 • In the Atrium • AGES 21+

plus

WAYNE HANCOCK

plus Miss Lonely Hearts $12 Adv./ $15 Drs. • Drs. open 8 p.m./ Show 8:30 p.m.

Thursday, May 7 • AGES 16+

YELLOWCARD plus

Finch

also

The Downtown Fiction

$20 Adv./ $22 Drs. • Drs. open 7 p.m./ Show 8 p.m. Thursday, May 7 • In the Atrium • AGES 18+

ANTISERUM plus Angor Republic $14 Adv./ $17 Drs. • Drs. open 8:30 p.m./ Show 9 p.m. Friday, May 8 • In the Atrium • AGES 21+

GUSTAVO RIVERA DE LA DINASTIA RIVER plus Banda Corazon Solteco $27 Adv./ $30 Drs. • Drs. open 9 p.m./ Show 9 p.m.

Saturday, May 9 • AGES 16+

DEM’ BAY BOYZ B-Legit Richie Rich Celly Cell plus

also

and

San Quinn $25/ $30 • Drs. 8 p.m./ Show 9 p.m. Saturday, May 9 • In the Atrium • AGES 21+

SIN SISTERS BURLESQUE

$15 Adv./ $20 Drs. • Drs. open 9 p.m./ Show 9:30 p.m.

May 13 May 15 May 19 May 21 May 22 May 23 May 24 May 25

Earl Sweatshirt (Ages 16+) Waka Flocka Flame (Ages 16+) Little Dragon (Ages 16+) Dustin Lynch (Ages 16+) Tallest Man On Earth (Ages 16+) Steel Pulse (Ages 16+) Dirty Heads (Ages 16+) Sage Francis (Ages 16+)

Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating. Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online

www.catalystclub.com

Your Hunting, Camping, Survival & Paintball Headquarters

“PRICE MATCH” on most items

J&S Surplus & Outdoor Store Highway 1 & N. Struve Rd., Moss Landing (only 15 minutes south of 41st Ave)

³-XVW ORRN IRU WKH ÀDJV´

(831)724-0588

DP SP 2SHQ GD\V D ZHHN

www.SurplusInc.com


LIVE MUSIC WED WE ED

5/6

CREPE PLACE P L AC E 11 34 Soquel Soquel A ve, S anta Cruz 1134 Ave, Santa

Com medy Night w/ w/ Comedy Brook o s Wheelan $10 $10 9p Brooks

CR OW ’ S NEST NEST CROW’S Dr, Santa 2218 E. Cliff D r, S anta Cruz

Yuji Tojo Toojo Yuji 8 $3 8p

THU

5/7

Greens The Super Greens $5 8:30p

55/8 /8

FRI Evening Eveningg Bell, Amee Chapm man, P arlor Tricks Tricks Chapman, Parlor p $8 9p Decadees Decades $6 9p

5/9

5/10 5/ /10

S SAT AT Bobby Bobby T and the Slackers, Subpar Slackers, Subp ar p $8 9p

SUN

Extra Lar ge Extra Large $7 9:30p $7

Live Comedy Comeedy Live $7 9p $7

Esoteriic Collective Collective Esoteric

DON QUIXOTE’S QUIXOTE’ S 6275 62 75 Hwy 9, 9, FFelton elton

Austin LLounge ounge Liz ards Austin Lizards $20 $20 8p p

Cats China Cats $12/$15 8:30p

Chris Doud, Doud d, Cole Thom mason Cole Thomason p $8 7p

THE FISH HOUSE THE 9 72 Main St, W atsonville 972 Watsonville

10 10 O’Clock O’Cllock Lunch

NiteCreepers NiteCreepers

Soul Soul D Doubt oubt

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

HENFLING’ S HENFLING’S 9450 Hwy 9, 9, Ben LLomond omond

Flinngo Flingo 7p

Pete C ontino A ccordion Pete Contino Accordion 6-9p Moondance Moondance 8p

Leftovers The Leftovers 9p

IDE AL BAR BAR & GRILL GRILL IDEAL 1106 06 Be ach St, S anta Cruz Beach Santa IT ’ S WINE T YME IT’S TYME 312 C Capit itola l A ve, Capit C itola l Capitola Ave, Capitola

Opeen Mic Open 7p 7

Pea and d the Thir d Lil’ Pea Third Degree Degree 4p

Live Music Live

Karaoke w /Eve Karaoke w/Eve 2-4p

Jade 7p 7

Seaside Sis ters Seaside Sisters 7p 7

K UUMBWA KUUMBWA 32 0-2 C edar St, S anta Cruz 320-2 Cedar Santa

Jonathan Kreisberrg Quartet Quartet Kreisberg $20/$25 7p p $20/$25

Caminoos Flamenc os Caminos Flamencos $25/$30 $25/$30 7:30p 7:30p

Merchants Merchants of of Groove, Groove, Gail & Smith Dobson Dobson V $20 $20 77:30p :30p p

MALONE’S M ALONE’ S 44022 S Scotts Valley Dr,r, S Scotts Valley 440 cotts V alleey D cotts V aalley

Chris Kelly Kelly 7-10p 710p

M IC HAEL’ S ON MAIN MICHAEL’S 25 91 Main St, S oquel 2591 Soquel

Chr ris Ells Chris

MIS SION ST. ST. BBQ MISSION 11618 618 Mis sion St, S anta Cruz Mission Santa

T oom mas Gome Tomas Gomezz 6p

E xtra LLounge ounge Extra

TUE

5/122

7 Come Come 11 $5 9p

Claudio 4p 4

Al FFrisby risb by 6p

T ssunami Tsunami

JONATHAN KRE SBERG QUARTET

“ he p ays he he ou o ha gu a – ohn Scofie d

Austin w Sherry Austin w// Henhouse Henhouse

F day May 8 7 30 pm The fines flamenco n he Bay A ea

CAM NOS FLAMENCOS “NUEVAS TENDENC AS” Sa u day May 9 7 30 pm

Roadhouse Karaoke Kar a aoke Roadhouse 7:30p 7:30p

THE MERCHANTS OF GROOVE FEATUR NG CHR S CA N p us GA L AND SM TH DOBSON V T cke s b ownpape cke s com Tuesday May 12 7 pm

NELL E MCKAY Pe o m ng a Steve W alters Steve Walters 6p 6

Pablo and Vivian Vivian Pablo 6:30p 6 30

Kuumbwa Kuumbwa 40 Years Years Fundraiser Fundraiser 6p

Nellie McKay McKay $25/$30 7p

w ng pop o k & mo e

Thu sday May 14 7 30 pm

BENNETT JACKSON AND THE RANCH HANDS T cke s b ownpape cke s com F day May 15 7 pm

K araoke w /Ken Karaoke w/Ken 9p St ormin’ Norman and Stormin’ the Cy c clone s Cyclones

Ce eb a ng Fo y Yea s o C ea v y Thu sday May 7 7 pm

Reggae Jam Reggae Free 8p Free

Urzua Flamenc Roadhouse Karaoke Kar a aoke Matias Urzua Flamencoo Roadhouse 6-9p 7:30p 7:30p

Swytchback Swytchback 9p

JP The Band 6:30p 6 30

5/11

Palmz, Tomten, Palmz, T oomten, Burnt Palms $8 9p Palms

D AV. R OADHOUSE DAV. ROADHOUSE Davenport 1D avenport Ave, Ave, Davenport Davenport

GG RESTAURANT RE STAUR ANT 8041 S Soquel oquel Dr, Dr, Apt Aptos os

MON

S cott Slaug ghter Scott Slaughter

D ave Muldaue er Dave Muldauer

A MUS CAL BENEF T FOR MONARCH SERV CES W TH TAMM BROWN & JOSH LOWE T cke s hewhee company com

R and R ueter Rand Rueter 6p

Sa u day May 16 8 pm

KE TH GREEN NGER & BAND T cke s b ownpape cke s com Monday May 18 7 pm

JANE BUNNETT AND MAQUEQUE Wednesday May 20 7 pm F NA PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR

May 8 9 5QWVJ 2CE ƂE P e en ed by Mon e ey H gh Schoo o

May 19 M rreya eya Mayor P nk Boo & A Mache e P e en ed By B Na ona Geog aph c L ve Summe Speake Se e 2015

June 19 &CXG /CUQP U 6TC 6TTC ƂE ,CO ,C CO J ne 27 28 My June M Fa r Lady Lad the Mu M Muss ca P esen ed By B oadway By The Bayy ~ Ce eb a ng 50 yea s o p esen ng ng Aw wa d w nn ng mus ca s Awa

Ju y 21 Br an Skerry Ocean Sou P esen ed By Na ona Geog aph c L ve Summe Speake Se es 2015

For F oor T cke www wG Goo denS a eThea e com m 831 649 1070

Wednesday May 20 7 30 pm a he R o Thea e N mp x

ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL S he K ng Ce ebra ng he Mus c o Bob W s and h s Texas P ayboys Thu sday May 21 7 pm LOCAL & LIVE!

GA L CRUSE: BACK N T ME Tuesday May 26 7 & 9 pm N m x STORM LARGE & LE BONHEUR Taken by S o m Songs o Seduc on & Obsess on 5/28 6/2 6/8 6/9 6/11

Becca S evens Band Oz Noy T o ea u ng Dave Weck and ames Genus Benny G een T o Robben Fo d S eve Sm h & V a n o ma on

Un e no ed advance cke a kuumbwa a o g and Logo Book & Reco d D nne e ved 1 h be o e Kuumbwa p e en ed conce P em um w ne & bee A age we come

320 2 Cedar S San a Cruz 831 427 2227

kuumbwajazz.org

SANTACRUZ.COM SANT A CR UZ . C OM | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEK LY. C O M | MA MAY Y6 6-12, 2 20 2015 5

June 16 Steve W nters On The T a o B g Ca s T ge s Sn Snow ow Leopa d ds and Couga s P esen ed By Na ona Geog aph c L ve Summe Speake Se es 2015

KUUMBWA JAZZ HONOR BAND

63


LIVE MUSIC WED

5/6

5/7

5/8

THU FRI P aradise S oul S avers, Paradise Soul Savers, Katdelic, Kuck aw Katdelic, Kuckaw Gina R ene, Pawn Pawn Shop Rene, $9/$12 9p S oul $5/$8 8:30p p Soul

MOE’ S ALLEY MOE’S M ALLEY 1 Commercial 1535 Commerrccial W ay, S anta Cruz Way, Santa

LLynx, yynx, S ervants ooff S ong, Servants Song, FFeral eral FFauna auna $9/$122 8p

MO M TIV MOTIV 11209 12 09 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz Pacific Ave, Santa

FFort ort Kno e, Knoxx Fiv Five, Nick odemus Nickodemus 9:30pp 1:30a 9:30p-1:30a

Lib ation Lab w/Syntax w/Syntax Libation 9:30p-2a

99 BOTTLES 9 BOT TLE S 1110 11 0W alnut A ve, S anta Cruz Walnut Ave, Santa

T rivia Trivia 8p

Bleu 10 p 10p

P A R A DISE BE ACH PARADISE BEACH 2 E 215 splanade, Capit ola Esplanade, Capitola

Lis aylor Lisaa T Taylor

THE P T OCKE T POCKET 3 31 02 P ortola D r, S anta Cruz 3102 Portola Dr, Santa

Jam S ession w inny Session w// V Vinny Johns on 77-10p -10p Johnson

D-R OC D-ROC 9:30p

The St eve Thr oop Gr oup p Steve Throop Group $5 9p

POE P T & PATRIOT PATRIO T T POET 3 32 0 E. C edar St, S anta Cruz 320 Cedar Santa

SAT SAT

5/9

SUN

5/10 5/1 0

MON MON

The Ale aymond Band T aate T ooussaint Alexx R Raymond Tate Toussaint 8p Liv Livee 8p

THE REEF T 1120 12 0 Union St, S anta Cruz Santa

Jazz Jam

R IO T HE ATRE T RIO THEATRE 12 205 S oquell A ve, S antta Cruz C 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa

TUE

5/12

T oony FFurtado urtado Tony $15/$18 8p

D rgandy DJJ Juan Bur Burgandy 9:30p

Eclectic Primal E clectic by by P rimal R asta Cruz R eggae Party Partty Rasta Reggae P roductions Productions 9:30p-2a 9:30p-2a p

Hip-hop with DJ DJ Marc Marc 9:30p-2a

V inny Johns on Vinny Johnson

Ho ’Omana Ho’Omana

Chris Kelly Kelly

The Hum $ $77 9p

Billy Manzik 610p 6-10p

Jazz Jam S anta Cruz Santa 811p 8-11p

O pen Mic Open 47p 4-7p

T HE RED RED THE 2200 00 LLocust ocust St, S anta Cruz Santa

5/11

S ambaDá SambaDá $15/$2 0 9p $15/$20

C omedy O pen Mic Comedy Open 8p

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

Sunda w/ Sundayy Brunch w/ Chris

O pen Mic Open

The LLenny enny and K enny Kenny Sho w Show

K araoke Karaoke 9:30p

Indus try Night Industry 3p

A cousstticJam Acoustic Jam with T oob by Gr ay ’’n’ n’’ FFriends riends Toby Gray

T raditional Ha waiian Traditional Hawaiian Music

A coustic C overs Acoustic Covers Brunch and Dinner

El Sis tema Spring Sistema C oncertt FFree ree 66 10p 0 Concert 6-10p

Jo sh Garr els Josh Garrels $2 0/$45 8 8:3030 11:30p 11 30 $20/$45 8:30-11:30p

Hous yd Housee ooff Flo Floyd $25/$40 8 8-11p 11 8-11p

R O SIE MC CA NN’ S ROSIE MCCANN’S 12 220 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa

Liv Js Livee D DJs

Liv Js Livee D DJs

The Br others Str ong Brothers Strong 7p

Whitne Monge Whitneyy Monge 7p

Liv Js Livee D DJs

T rivia Trivia

THE SAND T SA ND BAR BAR 2211 11 Esplanade, Esplanade, Capit ola Capitola

Jack ooff All T rades O pen Trades Open Mic 6-9p

Comedy Night Comedy 8-10p 810p

Charmas Celtic Celtic 8p-Midnight

Jewl’s Br Jewl’s Broken oken Shade Shadess Bluess Band 8p-Midnight Blue

Jesse S Jesse Sebala ebala and the Soul S oul P Pushers-7-11p ushers-7-11p

The Cr Crew ew 8-11p 811p

S A NDERLINGS SANDERLINGS 1S Seascape eascape R Resort, esort, Apt Aptos os

At the Rio Theatre

International Music Hall and Restaurant

FINE MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOOD ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET M-F $7.95 Fri May 8

Austin Lounge Lizards Big Satirical Fun

Sat May 9

China Cats

$20 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 8pm Songs of the Grateful Dead

$12 adv./$15 door 21 + 8:30pm Sun May 10

Chris Doud plus Cole Thomason Bluegrass, Folk, Blues, Americans

MAY MA Y 66-12, 12 , 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM GT T WEEK LY. C O M | S SANTACRUZ.COM A NTA C R UZ . C O M

$8 adv./$8 door <21 w/parent 7pm

64

Wed May 13

Kris Delmhorst plus

Thur May 14

Bill Kirchen & Bobby Black Songs & Stories

Dave McGraw and Mandy Fet Americana Contemporary Folk

$15 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm

Fri May 15

Celebrating the Music of Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys Wednesday May 20th, 7:30 pm Tickets: kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records, Downtown Santa Cruz Info: kuumbwajazz.org 831-427-2227 SPONSORED BY LIGHTHOUSE BANK

|

Sat May 16

Amazing waterfront deck views.

$20 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

John Craigie

See live music grid for this week’s bands.

Humorous Storytelling, Serious Folk plus McCoy Tyler

$20 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 8pm

Still the King:

Life is a salad bar – it’s what you make of it. LOCATED ON THE BEACH

Spirit of 76 celebrating The Jerry Garcia Band feat. members of China Cats, Shady Groove, JGB

$12 adv./$15 door 21 + 8:30pm COMING RIGHT UP

Sun. May 17 Scotts Valley High School Music Production 2pm Matinee Sun. May 17 Houston Jones 7pm Concert Wed. May 20 Box Set Duo Jim Brunberg and Jeff Pehrson of Box Set Thu. May 21 Reverend Billy C. Wirtz Reservations Now Online at www.donquixotesmusic.com Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am

STAND-UP COMEDY

Three live comedians every Sunday night.

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

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


LIVE MUSIC WED WE ED

5/6

THU

5/7

SE ABRIG HT BREWERY SEABRIGHT B REWERY 519 Seabright, Seabright, S Santa anta Cruz

5 5/8

SAT S AT

Don D on McCaslin & the Geezers Amazing Jazz Gee zers 6-10p 610p p

SHADO SHADOWBROOK WBROOK 11750 750 Wharf R Rd, d, Capit Capitola ola

Road Hogss R oad Hog H 77:30p :30p

MON

5/11

TUE

5/122

Trivia w/Roger T rivvia w /Roger

5.07 Spring Concert 2015

Karaoke K araoke w/Eve w/Eve

Taco T ac a o Tuesday Tuesday

Corduroy C orduroy Jim $5 9p

The Beach Beach C Cowboys owboys

V Vito ito & FFriends rieends

Cooper Street C ooper Str eet $5 9p

Witit & Jimm Jimmy W my FFree reee 9p

Robert Stone R obertt Elmond St one 55-7p 7p

Scott Cooper S cott C ooper 6-9p

Sundance Sunda nce Hill Band

ZELDA’S ZELD A’ S 2203 03 E Esplanade, splanade, Capit Capitola ola

Billy Martini M

B4D B4Dawn awn

Jon Dryden Dry r den 6:30-9 9:30p 6:30-9:30p

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5.09 House of Floyd “The Pink F loyd Floyd Concert Experience” 5.13 Lecture: The Accelerating Blunder Universe: Einstein’s Einstein’s Blunde er Undone 5.20 Asleep at the Wheel

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5.22 Sam Bush 5.29 Film: Fishing Naked 5.30 Film: Fishing Naked 6.06 Rudy Colombini & The Unauthorized Rolling Stones Stonees 6.111 Mason Jennings 6.1 6.13 Hot Rize 6.26 Dalai Lama A wakening Awakening 6.27 Y Yellow ellow Submarine Sing-Alo Sing-Along ng 6.29 Summer Music Camp - 20155 7.27 Summer Music Camp p - 20155 8.6

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FILM

CLASS ACT Juliette Binoche stars in ‘Clouds of Sils Maria’ along with Kristen Stewart and Chloe Grace Moretz.

Life vs. Art MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Women shine in backstage drama ‘Clouds of Sils Maria’ BY LISA JENSEN

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T

he milieu is theatrical— actors, directors, stage and film. But there’s more than the typical backstage melodrama going on in French filmmaker Olivier Assayas’ Clouds of Sils Maria. It’s very much a movie of ideas, rather than action, in which a highly lauded and beloved French actress—played by the highly lauded and beloved Juliette Binoche—must confront thorny issues of aging, sexuality and personal relationships when she’s asked to return to the stage in a revival of the same play that made her a star 20 years earlier. Except this time, instead of playing the ingénue, she’ll be playing a conflicted and defeated older woman.

It’s an astute premise for drama, made more intriguing in that Assayas creates not one, but three strong female roles. Besides the star played by Binoche, we get Kristen Stewart, as her harried but efficient young personal assistant, and Chloe Grace Moretz as the even younger American movie starlet cast in the ingénue role in the play opposite the star. Yes, there’s a lot of talk in the film (although, since two of the main characters are Yanks, most of the dialogue is in English), but the talk is often rich and thoughtful. Maria Enders (Binoche), celebrated actress of stage and screen, is on a train in the Alps en route to an international tribute to the Swiss dramatist who launched her career

20 years ago by casting her in his play The Maloja Snake. (The title refers to a weather phenomenon by which morning fog appears to wind through a certain valley of the Alps like a snake.) As she writes her speech, her assistant, Val (Stewart), intercepts incoming calls, emails and texts, arranges transport, and keeps her on schedule. Maria’s memories are stirred by running into a German actor she dislikes at the tribute, and reuniting with the dramatist’s widow (the great Angela Winkler, fondly remembered as the star of The Lost Honor Of Katharina Blum), who loans Maria her secluded house in the Alps. She’s also approached by a director who wants to restage

The Maloja Snake in London. The play concerns an executive businesswoman beguiled, seduced and manipulated by a younger woman rising in the ranks. But this time, instead of the disruptive younger woman, Maria is cast as the executive, while the younger role goes to a 19-year-old Hollywood starlet, JoAnn (Moretz), with a scandalous reputation. The stage is set, literally and metaphorically, for reflections on reckless youth, the inevitability of aging, and the change of perspective between the two, as well as facing and letting go of the past. But the interaction is mostly between Maria and Val, rattling around their borrowed house, hiking through the mountains, and getting raucously sauced together at the bar in town. They also rehearse the play together (Val reading the ingénue role, of course), a clever device by which Assayas explores not only the volatile relationship in the play within the film, but also the evolving real-life dynamic between Maria and Val—often leaving it to the viewer to distinguish between dialogue written in the play and their own impromptu conversations. There’s a sly undercurrent to Assayas’ portrait of modern technodriven arts. (Maria doesn’t want to do “another X-Men;” she and Val debate the merits of JoAnn’s performance in a cold, slick sci-fi epic, a dubious snippet of which we see.) But while the idea of moving on and not getting stuck in the past is a recurring theme, Assayas’ decision not to address certain dangling plot points (unknown papers burned in a grate; one character’s disappearance) feels a bit perverse. Still, this is the kind of femmedriven story it rarely even occurs to anybody in Hollywood to make, and it’s a treat to see all three actresses rise to the challenge of the material. An ensemble piece in every sense, Clouds of Sils Maria explores the collaborative art of making drama. CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA ***(out of four) With Juliette Binoche, Kristen Stewart, and Chloe Grace Moretz. Written and directed by Olivier Assayas. A Sundance Selects release. Rated R. 124 minutes.


MOVIE TIMES

May 7-13

All times are PM unless otherwise noted.

DEL MAR THEATRE

SSHOWTIMES HOW TIMES 5/8 5/8 - 5/14 5/14

FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD

831.469.3220

FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD Daily 2:00, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 + Sat, Sun 11:20am 5 FLIGHTS UP Daily 1:30, 5:20, 7:20*, 9:20 + Sat, Sun 11:30am *No show Tues, Thu EX MACHINA Daily 2:10, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30* + Sat, Sun 11:50am *No show Tue, Thu MONKEY KINGDOM Daily 3:30 MAN + SUPERMAN Thu 7:30 BLADE RUNNER: THE FINAL CUT Fri, Sat Midnight

NICKELODEON

“Carey Mulligan is a live wire in a movie that knows how to stir up a classic”

831.426.7500

- Rolling Stone

THE D TRAIN Daily 1:00, 4:00, 7:30, 9:50 + Sat, Sun 11:00am RIDE Daily 3:00, 6:00 CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA Daily 1:30, 5:00, 8:00 + Sat, Sun 11:05am

()=M MAT AT I N E E S H HO OW “Charged with life, hunger…romantic-erotic hunger…romantic-e erotic energy with the ever-present danger of fire and storm”– Salon.com Starring Carey Mulligan & Michael Sheen She een

OPENS FRI. 5/8

5/8 - 5/14: 2:00, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 + Sat, Sun 11:20am

tthe he

D E L M A R

THE WATER DIVINER Daily 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30 + Sat, Sun 11:20am

Far from the

PG-13 -

Madding g Crowd d Daily (2:00pm), (4:40), 7:10, 9:40 0 + Sat, Sun (11:20am) Starring Diane Keaton & Morgan Freem Freeman man

5 Flights Up

PG-13 1

Daily (1:30pm), (5:20), 7:20*, 9:20 0+ Sat, Sun (11:30am) *No show *No 7:20pm sh how on TTues ues 5/12 & TThurs hurs 5/14 “Mesmerizing mind-bender... a tour de force of shock and awe” – Rolling Sto Stone one R

Daily (2:10pm), (4:30), 7:00, 9:30 9:30* 0* + Sat, Sun (11:50am) *No *No 9:30p 9:30pm pm show on TTues ues 5/12 & TThurs hurs 5/1 5/14 14 Disney Doc Narrated by TINA FEY! FEY! G

Once O nce Daily (3:30pm) STARRING RALPH FIENNES National Theatre Live presents

WOMAN IN GOLD Daily 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:15 + Sat, Sun 11:30am

MAN + SUPERMAN N TThurs hurs 5/14 @ 7:30pm Sun 5/17 @ 11am

APTOS CINEMA

831.426.7500

MIDNIGHTS AT THE DEL MAR prese presents p ents

BLADE RUNNER: THE FINAL CUT

HOT PURSUIT Daily 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:10 + Sat, Sun 12:20 THE AGE OF ADALINE Daily 2:00, 4:30, 7:00*, 9:20*, + Sat, Sun 11:40am *No show Thu

R

FFri. ri. 5/8 & Sat 5/9 @ M Midnight idnight g 1124 PACIFIC PA C I F I C AVENUE A V E N U E | 426-7500 426 - 7500 7 0

PITCH PERFECT 2 Thu 7:00, 9:30

F OR OR M MO OR R E I N FO F O:: TH E N I C K ..CO COM Starring Jack Black & James Marsden Marsde en

GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8

831.761.8200

R

HOT PURSUIT Daily 12:55, 3:05, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 + Sat, Sun 10:45am LITTLE BOY Daily 1:25, 4:05, 6:45*, 9:25* + Sat, Sun 10:45am *No show Thu EX MACHINA Daily 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 + Sat, Sun 11:00am AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON Daily 12:40, 2:15, 3:50, 7:00, 8:35, 10:10 + Sat, Sun 11:05am AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON 3D Daily 5:25 THE AGE OF ADALINE Daily 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45 + Sat, Sun 11:05am PAUL BLART: MALL COP 2 Daily 1:25, 4:05, 6:45, 9:25 + Sat, Sun 10:45am WOMAN IN GOLD Daily 1:25, 4:05, 6:45*, 9:25* + Sat, Sun 10:45am *No show Thu FURIOUS 7 Daily 12:45, 3:50, 6:55, 10:00 MAD MAX: FURY ROAD Thu 7:00, 9:45 PITCH PERFECT 2 Thu 7:00, 9:45

tthe th he

N I C K

Daily (1:00pm), (4:00), 7:30, 9:5 9:50 0 + Sat, Sun (11:00am) Written and Directed by Helen Hunt Hunt Starring Helen Hunt, Luke Wilson and an nd Brenton Thwaites R

(3:00pm), 6:00 Starring Academy Award winner Juliette Binoche & Kristen Stewart

Daily (1:30pm), (5:00), 8:00 + Sat, Sun (11:05am) Russell Crowe stars in his Directorial Debut! Debut! R

Daily (2:10pm), (4:40), 7:10, 9:30 0 + Sat, Sun (11:20am)

831.438.3260

HOT PURSUIT Daily 11:40am, 2:00, 4:30, 5:15, 7:15, 8:00*, 9:45 *No show Thu

Starring Academy Award winner Helen Mirren and Ryan Reynolds

MONKEY KINGDOM Daily 11:15am, 12:30, 2:45 PAUL BLART: MALL COP 2 Daily 11:15am, 2:30, 4:55, 7:30, 10:00

+ Sat, Sun (11:30am) 210 L I N C CO O L N SSTR T R E E T | 426 426-7500 - 7500 7

THE AGE OF ADALINE Daily 1:45am, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:45 AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON Daily 11:00am, 11:55am, 12:45, 1:30, 2:15, 3:30, 4:15, 4:55, 5:30, 7:00, 7:45, 8:30, 9:15 + Fri, Sat 9:45, 10:15

Starring Academy Award winner Reese Ree ese Witherspoon & Sofia Vergara

AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON DBOX Daily 11:55am, 3:30, 7:00 + Fri, Sat 10:15 AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON 3D Daily 11:30am, 3:00, 6:30* *No show Thu PITCH PERFECT 2 Thu 7:30, 10:15 MAD MAX: FURY ROAD Thu 7:00, 9:45

CINELUX 41ST AVENUE CINEMA 831.479.3504 AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON Daily 11:55am, 3:30, 7:00, 10:15

PG-13

WOMAN in GOLD D Daily (2:00pm), (4:30), 7:00, 9:1 9:15 5

A P T O S

CCinemas in inema mas

HOT PURSUIT (2:30pm), (4:50), 7:10, 9:10

PG-13

+ Sat, Sun (12:20pm) Starring Blake Lively, Harrison Ford P & Oscar winner Ellen Burstyn PG-13

Daily (2:00pm), (4:30), 7:00*, 9:20 9:20* 0* + Sat,Sun (11:40am) *No *No 7:00pm m& 9:20pm show on TThurs hurs 5/14 Advance Screenings g

PITCH TCH PERFECT 2

PG-13

Thurs 5/14 @ 7:00 & 9:30pm Thurs 122 R A N C H O D DEE L M MA A R | 426 426-7500 - 7500 0

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA

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FILM NEW THIS WEEK ADULT BEGINNERS TV regular Nick Kroll stars in this comedy (he came up with the story) as a would-be entrepreneur reduced to leaving Manhattan to move in with his estranged sister’s family and become a nanny to their little boy. Rose Byrne, Bobby Cannavale, and Jane Krakowski co-star for director Ross Katz. (R) 90 minutes. Starts Friday. THE D TRAIN Jack Black stars as a guy so desperate to be cool at his upcoming high school reunion, that he recruits a classmate (James Marsden)—now the star of a popular TV ad campaign—to go with him, in this comedy from directors Jarrad Paul and Andrew Mogel. (R) 98 minutes. Starts Friday. FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD Thomas Hardy’s literary classic of love, sexuality, and class in Victorian England gets an update from director Thomas Vinterberg (The Hunt). Carey Mulligan stars as the headstrong Dorset lass courted by three very different men—a solid, reliable farmer (Matthias Schoenaerts), a prosperous older man (Michael Sheen), and a dashing young soldier (Tom Sturridge). (PG-13) 119 minutes. Starts Friday.

MAY 6-12, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

FIVE FLIGHTS UP Diane Keaton and Morgan Freeman star as a married couple of a certain age preparing to sell their apartment in New York City’s East Village after 40 years in this drama from Richard Loncraine (My One and Only). (PG-13) 92 minutes. Starts Friday.

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HOT PURSUIT A no-nonsense Texas policewoman and the mobster’s sexy wife she’s assigned to protect find themselves on the run from cops and crooks in this chase comedy. Reese Witherspoon and Sofia Vergara star. (Guess who plays which role?) Anne Fletcher (The Guilt Trip) directs. (PG13) (87 minutes) Starts Friday. RIDE Helen Hunt wrote and directed this dramatic comedy in which she stars as an editor from New York who follows her son (Brenton Thwaites) to California after he drops out of college to surf, and reinvents her own life as well. Luke Wilson and David Zayas costar. (R) 93 minutes. Starts Friday.

WELCOME TO ME Kristen Wiig stars as a woman who wins big in the lottery, dumps her psychiatric meds, and buys a talk show of her own to host. James Marsden, Tim Robbins, Joan Cusack, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Linda Cardellini, and Wes Bentley co-star for director Shira Piven. (R) 87 minutes. Starts Friday. CONTINUING SERIES: MIDNIGHTS @ THE DEL MAR Eclectic movies for wild and crazy tastes plus great prizes and buckets of fun for only $6.50. This week: BLADE RUNNER: THE FINAL CUT Without the hard-boiled narration tacked onto the original studio version, director Ridley Scott’s recutting of his moody, 1982 sci-fi masterpiece is much more focused. Harrison Ford’s ex-cop Deckard is more eloquent in his silences as he scours a futuristic Third World L. A. gone to seed for renegade replicants, and with a slightly altered ending, the theme of the preciousness of life, however short, has new urgency. Hard to believe that Scott’s indelible vision of urban America in decay ca. 2019 is only five years away! (R) 120 minutes. (***1/2)—Lisa Jensen. At the Del Mar, Fri-Sat midnight only. CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited to join us Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. in downtown Santa Cruz, where each week we discuss a different current release. For our location and discussion topic, please visit our Google Groups webpage: https:// groups.google.com/group/LTATM

NOW PLAYING THE AGE OF ADALINE Blake Lively stars in this fantasy drama as a woman who has remained 29 years old for nearly a century who risks her isolated existence when she falls in love with a charismatic man (Michiel Huisman). Harrison Ford, Kathy Baker, and Ellen Burstyn co-star. Lee Toland Krieger directs. (PG-13) 110 minutes. AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON The fate of the universe hangs in the balance (surprise!) in this latest superhero slugfest from the everwry imagination of writer-director Joss Whedon. Usual suspects Iron

ENJOY THE ‘RIDE’ Helen Hunt and Brenton Thwaites reinvent themselves in the dramatic comedy ‘Ride.’

Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Captain America (Chris Evans), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), The Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), and Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), reteam to battle villainous Ultron (James Spader). Jeremy Renner, Don Cheadle, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, and Paul Bettany have featured roles. (But, sadly, no Loki this time.) (PG-13) 141 minutes. CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA Reviewed this issue.(R) 124 minutes. (***)—Lisa Jensen. THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT Shailene Woodley and Theo James return as Tris and Four in this second installment of the dystopian future trilogy based on the popular book series by Veronica Roth. Hunted by the leader of the Erudite ruling class (Kate Winslet), they race to unlock the secret of their fiercely classbased society. Octavia Spencer, Zoë Kravitz, Miles Teller, and Ansel Elgort co-star for director Robert Schwentke. (PG-13) 119 minutes. (Saved FGB) EX MACHINA Screenwriter Alex Garland moves into the director’s chair with this simmering sci-fi chamber piece for three, with elegant echoes of Frankenstein and Blade Runner. Domhnall Gleeson is effective as a drone at a giant Internet search company invited to help his genius boss (Oscar Isaac) to determine if his AI experiment has consciousness. Alicia Vikander is the seductive creation. Garland has fun viewing

the mad-scientist motif through the template of modern technology, and invites us to consider the nature of humanity, at its best and worst, in this smart, literate thriller. (R) 110 minutes. (***)—Lisa Jensen.

comedy hit. This time he heads to Las Vegas for a last, pre-college outing with his teenage daughter and winds up facing a whole new cast of foes. Raini Rodriguez co-stars for director Andy Fickman. (PG) 94 minutes.

FURIOUS 7 The untimely death of co-star Paul Walker midway through filming this installment was a blow to the series, but the action franchise roars on with this tale of a vendetta sworn against team leader Vin Diesel and his crew. Dwayne Johnson, Tyrese Gibson, Jordana Brewster, Michelle Rodriguez, Ludacris, and Walker are featured. Jason Statham and Kurt Russell also join the cast. (PG-13) 137 minutes.

THE SALT OF THE EARTH The 40year global journey of photographer Sebastião Salgado, on a mission to capture and record our planet’s wild, unspoiled beauty, is the subject of this documentary from Wim Wenders. (PG-13) 110 minutes.

HOME A lovable purple alien from another world and a hip earth girl with a suped-up car become friends and allies in this family adventure comedy from DreamWorks Animation. Jim Parsons, Rihanna, Steve Martin and Jennifer Lopez provide voices. Tim Johnson (Antz; Over the Hedge) directs. (PG) 94 minutes. MONKEY KINGDOM Hot on the heels (or paws) of the previous Disneynature films Earth, Chimpanzee, African Cats, and Bears, comes a new Earth Day doc about a monkey clan in South Asia. Tina Fey narrates for co-directors Mark Linfield and Alastair Fothergill. (G) 81 minutes. PAUL BLART: MALL COP 2 Kevin James is back aboard his Segway in this belated sequel to the 2009

UNFRIENDED Chat room friends find themselves stalked online by an evil entity using the account of their dead friend in this horror thriller from director Levan Gabriadzre. (R) 82 minutes. THE WATER DIVINER Russell Crowe makes his directing debut with this drama in which he stars as an Australian farmer who travels to Turkey in 1919, at the end of World War I, where all three of his sons were lost in the Battle of Gallipoli, to find their remains and bring them home. Olga Kurylenko co-stars. (R) 111 minutes. WHILE WE’RE YOUNG Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts star in this new comedy from Noah Baumbach (The Squid and the Whale; Frances Ha) as a “middle-aged” couple of New Yorkers (they’re in their 40s) on a collision course with upheaval and introspection when they are befriended by a hip, spontaneous younger couple (Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried). (R) 94 minutes.


&

FOOD & DRINK says Boyle. “It will make the wine bar easier for many people. We’ll be able to use the kitchen better, there will be much more prep space.” The initial dust has to settle by Wednesday, May 13, however, because “that’s when we begin serving bar food at Motiv,” says Boyle. Soif’s chefs—including a new young group for whom Motiv will act as a “culinary incubator”—will be cooking on May 13 up at the former Pearl Alley Bistro space. “We’ve never done bar food,” Boyle says. “Fun finger food, silly things, and we’ll keep doing that as long as it works.” Meanwhile, Soif’s upstairs will continue to host private events, and the newly expanded shop will add new retail items. “More retail items will be great, and new areas for specialty high-end wines, as well as an area for locally produced wines,” says Boyle. Expect to find trending touches, such as plump, comfy chairs, Wi-Fi, and snacks that will encourage lingering over that glass of wine. (As if we didn’t linger enough already.) “Ideally we’ll re-open at the end of May, with a soft opening for Memorial Day weekend,” says the woman who never sleeps. Soif, expanded and full of surprises, will re-open the last weekend of May: soifwine.com.

MORE PLEASE Soif’s executive chef Mark Denham will be expanding the menu as the restaurant

expands its kitchen as part of its first remodel. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER

Soif Gets Soifier

S

oif is currently closed for its first remodel and expansion in 13 years. “The retail wine shop will be moving to the other side of the restaurant,” says owner Patrice Boyle, which means that the wine shop will occupy most of the former import store space at the corner of Pacific and Walnut avenues. “The wine bar will move to where the retail space has been,” she says, chuckling. “And the current bar will be opened into an expanded kitchen.” Got it? The real impetus for all of this rearrangement,

Boyle admits, is that it will enable the expansion of the kitchen—and the menu, too. “It’s going to be great,” says Boyle. “We’ll have a grill, a griddle, a fryer, a plancha—it will allow us to do a lot more things.” Boyle assures me that this does not mean a multi-page menu, “but lots of new dishes, new ideas,” she says. Inspired in part by every trip she takes, “even to San Francisco,” says Boyle, the remodel—with consultation by original interior architect Mark Primack and kitchen design by Chris Baer—was stimulated by Boyle’s

desire to improve Soif’s tiny kitchen. “We’ll have more refrigeration—that’s going to make a giant difference,” she says. New equipment will include a “super cool, variable-speed hood that will be more energy efficient. It’s very exciting.” Soif regulars will be happy to know that not everything will change. “The entrances will stay the same, one door for the restaurant and another for retail—but when you’re sitting at the wine bar you’ll be able to look across the restaurant as well as out through the windows,”

It was a veritable poet’s corner after hours at Gabriella Cafe last Wednesday, when owner Paul Cocking set the big table for friends of poet/author Stephen Kessler after his reading and book signing at Bookshop Santa Cruz. Among the free-flowing wines, the clear favorite was Terra Nova Pinot Noir from Windy Oaks, the perfect partner for salami platters piled high with cheeses, meats and spiced fruit, as well as focaccia and those ultra unctuous Castelvetrano olives. Kessler’s ravioli dish looked pretty tantalizing, too. Thanks to the presence of loquacious literary artists like Joe Stroud, Tai Moses, Robert Sward, Eric Johnson, Alta Ifland, Donna Mekis, Traci Hukill, Frank Galuszka, and Jory and Karen Post, the tone of conversation was as wide-ranging as the delightful meal. When we left at 10:30 p.m., the throngs across the street were still swilling the sweet frozens of the Penny Ice Creamery.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

Soif to begin serving bar food at Motiv while renovations are underway, plus a gathering at Gabriella Cafe BY CHRISTINA WATERS

CAFE SOCIETY

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VINE & DINE

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BY JOSIE COWDEN

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The Gravitas, which comes with an imaginative label and a screw cap, sells for only $16—an absolute bargain for such a splendidly delicious wine. *Crikey! and blimey! are two exclamations in every Brit’s vocabulary, including mine. I was thrilled to see them both on the Gravitas label, reminding me of Dear Old Blighty. Bonny Doon Vineyard, 450 Highway 1, Davenport, 471-8031. bonnydoonvineyard.com. For info, visit catamaranliteraryreader.com.

Handcrafted Santa Cruz Mountain Wines

Visit our Tasting Bar at the Winery Friday through Sunday afternoons

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KURT’Z KREATIONS Kurt Zellerhoff, who says he grew up loving to cook, has recently gone into business with his Triple D sauces and seasonings. His entire line of organic products are “vegan- and vegetarianfriendly,â€? with no salt added. Triple D makes about 10 different sauces and about five “shakers,â€? which are blends of seasonings to “shakeâ€? over your food for extra zing. The Savory Medium shaker is an all-natural blend of onion, garlic, jalapeĂąo, cayenne pepper, and mustard powder. You can now find Kurt’z Kreations on the shelves of New Leaf Community Markets. Info: Kurtz Kreations, 216B Fern St., Santa Cruz, 925-639-5465. kurtzkreations.com

Handcrafted Handcr afte ed in the Santa Cr Cruz uz Mountains M 1100 FFair air Ave., Ave., Santa Cruz Cruz on the Ingalls St. side siide of the bldg. bldg. 234-2178 (831) 234 4-2178 Open Fridays Friday ys 5-9 and 3rd 1st and 3r d Satur SSaturdays days www.stockwellcellars.com www .stockwellcellars.com

Offering Award Winning

Santa Cruz Mountain Pinot Noirs & Chardonnay from Big Sur’s only vineyard

WINE TASTING

SATURDAYS ALL YEAR SUNDAYS ALL SUMMER

WINEMAKER’S DINNER AT PINO ALTO RESTAURANT Mark your calendar for a special winemaker’s dinner at Pino Alto Restaurant in the historic Sesnon House in Aptos on Friday, May 15, where the featured winery will be Roudon-Smith. For info, visit pinoaltorestaurant.org.

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

ravitas 2014. Crikey! Here comes another great wine from expert winemaker Randall Grahm—a Gravitas 2014 that will thrill your palate.If you haven’t yet visited Grahm’s Bonny Doon Vineyard tasting room in Davenport, then I recommend you head there at the first opportunity. A welcoming spot with an upbeat vibe that is all Bonny Doon Vineyard’s own, it’s a jolly place to hang out and taste some excellent wines. Four of us recently did just that for a special evening of readings and talks by four contributors of the Catamaran Literary Reader—including Grahm himself. I meant to try several different wines, but once I tasted Grahm’s Gravitas, I kept going back for more. The 2014 Gravitas—a simply gorgeous wine with enticing flavors—is resonant with the haunting perfume of magnolia flowers and the scent of white peaches. Suggestions of ripe Bosc pear, sweet green grass, saffron, and a touch of lavender honey make this blend of Semillon (54 percent), Sauvignon Blanc (43.5 percent) and Orange Muscat (2.5 percent) a perfect wine to pair with seafood, cassoulet and lighter entrees. With all the food laid out for the event—cheeses, fruit, nuts, dried figs, grilled veggies, and more—it was an excellent pairing. But wait, as ebullient winemaker Grahm says, there’s more ‌ You’ll also find bergamot orange blossom, jasmine, key lime custard, quince, and Madagascar vanilla—all of these aromas and flavors add up to an intoxicating mix. Blimey! It can’t get any better.

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MOBILE SERVICE Ate3One’s Kasia MaslankaSmith and Jonathan Smith outside their food truck. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER

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Where can people find you? KASIA MASLANKASMITH: We are at the Corralitos Brewing Co. (2536 Freedom Blvd., Watsonville) five days a week. Westridge Business Park in Watsonville on Thursdays during lunch and in Scotts Valley serving the Central Coast Alliance employees. You can check our daily itinerary and menu on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

What is on the menu? The menu is constantly rotating, but we always have a pork, beef,

chicken, fish, and vegetarian option. We cater to our location. At the Brewery, we will have fried or heavier items like the rosemary-and-garlic-scented grilled pork tenderloin and garlic mash. Customer favorites include the Philly cheesesteak and the Asian-style ribs using beer from the Corralitos Brewing Co.

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What are some unusual requests? People think we are a rolling grocery store, so we will get asked, “Do you have a banana?� or “Do you have fish sauce?�—and that one we actually do! We got a lot of requests for tacos before the truck was wrapped and it was just white. Because of the Food Network logo on the truck [Kasia has competed on Cupcake Wars four times] we get people asking for cupcakes. Maybe we will at some point.

What are some of the biggest challenges in operating a food truck? Finding the right spot. We can’t go to certain areas where food trucks are not allowed—including the City of Capitola. And parallel parking. Info: Follow Ate3One at facebook.com/ ate3one.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

rapped in a striking illustration of farm animals, Ate3One is a food truck operated by married couple Kasia MaslankaSmith and Jonathan Smith from Santa Cruz. Trained at Le Cordon Bleu in Pasadena, Kasia has been a chef for more than 10 years, having worked at Wolfgang Puck Catering and at Google’s Quad Campus as Executive Pastry Chef. Kasia spent six months learning the gourmet food truck business by riding along with the Waffle Roost in Fremont. Together with Jonathan, who handles orders, the duo produces mouthwatering comfort food.

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CSA at the Homeless Garden Project: http://shop.homelessgardenproject.org/csa.html


+ RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES MOTHER’S DAY

On Mother’s Day—Venus is in Cancer (the protector), the sun is in Taurus (comforter). Mother’s Day (Sunday) this year with an Aquarius Moon, may be a bit unusual—Uranian, unexpected, unpredictable. My mother is no longer on the Earth to call upon, have dinner with, receive flowers or cards. I try remembering everything about her, what she attempted to teach us, her children. Often, I was unable to hear or understand her intentions. This saddens me. It’s important to remember the fourth Commandment to “Honor thy Mother and Father.� Many of us have forgotten this, along with the other nine commandments given to Moses for humanity’s direction at the beginning of the Aries Age. Positions and responsibilities in life change as we grow older. The mother/father become the ones who must be cared for and tended to in later years.

On Mother’s Day, let us thank and honor our mothers, accepting the future when we will care for and assist them ‌ our opportunity to nurture and love more. For those whose mothers have died, we say Ohm Mani Padme Hum, placing them in the jewel of the lotus. And if emotionally separated from the mother, we recite St. Francis of Assisi’s prayer. It helps re-establish right relations and goodwill with the mother. St. Francis of Assisi was Libra Sun, saint of right human relations. “Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light; and where there is sadness, let me sow joy.â€? To all mothers (and fathers who are mothers), Happy Mother’s Day.

ARIES Mar21–Apr20

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22

A sense of being in alignment occurs this month for everyone, but especially for Aries. As this alignment occurs, many ideas, new and revolutionary, appear. Notice them, for they will stabilize your actions and expand self-identity, both important in coming challenging times. Careful within groups. Stand tall, brave and courageous. Remember fear is a state wherein more information is needed. Stay informed.

You remember past events, people, relationships and how you made choices in terms of future actions. Your life was sometimes around money, acquiring it, saving and spending it. This was a needed developmental stage. Everything we do is a developmental stage. Looking back we think we’ve made mistakes. Each day is new. New opportunities to change those choices, to shift them, to turn them around into something made of gold. You are called to do this. You understand.

Esoteric Astrology as news for week of May 6, 2015

TAURUS Apr21–May21 You’ve been called to serve someone or something very special. It can seem to interrupt your usual daily life schedule. Perhaps you’re in retreat, behind the scenes, allowing you to ponder, think and study undistracted. Or you’re tending to a life-changing situation, healing the past, calling forth a new future in the motherland. Whatever is occurring, it’s spiritually based and love underlies your choices.

GEMINI May 22–June 20 Soon we will have both Mercury (May/June) and Venus (July/August) retrograde, your guardians, guides and rulers. Study both and be prepared for something new to occur. Perhaps dispel the illusions of others in how they see you. As you slowly enter into a more reflective state something shifts with your friends and at work. Your communication is heard by many these days. Your responsibilities as the messenger have increased.

CANCER Jun21–Jul20

LE0 Jul21–Aug22 Work continues to be destabilizing and transforming for the purpose of changing your daily life. The result is that original ideas occur developing new ways of relating personally and professionally. It’s important to be especially concerned with your creative self-identity. You’re more than you think you are, more than most see and recognize. You will be seen as the authority, more and more. There must be a balance between discipline, structure, will, kindness and love. Put them all together.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Things religious and spiritual, questions concerning justice and events occurring far from here fill your mind. You seek answers. You’re greatly organized, tending to plans and agendas affecting daily life as well as the future. You’re learning about power in personal and intimate relationships. This continues for years. You learn how to handle power with others. At first we stumble. Then we learn to love more.

In your daily life be willing to listen carefully to others in order to participate in their ideas, plans and agendas. They hold an important seed of information for your future. Listening creates magnetic emotional balance of attraction within your life. You will be seen as one who is wise, intelligent and caring, a new persona for you that helps you cooperate, share, and provide others with praise. These create right relations with all that you encounter.

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SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20 A new foundation is being built in your life to support new future endeavors. Things important now are tending to physical health in order to improve strength, emotionally and psychically, and making sure you have proper financial advice should you have financial questions. In the meantime, remember to have fun, play a lot, choose the unusual, and seek only the good in all things.

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CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 For the married and/or committed, turn to your partner (loved ones, family members) renewing love, intentions and dedications. This leads to a depth of unexpected love and with partners, romance. For those single, call forth Venus before going out and about. To attract others, radiate goodwill from your heart center (pink substance). People will wonder what’s different about you, what is that light they see? Goodness will follow you in all your days.

AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 What’s occurring at home, with family, parents or your life’s foundation? A new base of operations will soon form and there are changes you will bring about for this to occur. Tend to money carefully. It could feel like it’s disappearing or melting away. Use kindness in all communications. Don’t disrupt. Take one step of goodwill at a time. The next 99 always taken by spirit.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 You’re entering many different realities, often unseen ones. Neptune is both dropping and parting the veils, both revealing information and hiding it. The only place of reality is each moment offered in time and space. Continue with your adaptation of patience and fortitude. Keep your spirits up. Remain in the garden. Visualize a warm pool for swimming. See yourself building it ‌ in the motherland.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 6-12, 2015

There’s an opportunity offered to you within the group(s) you find yourself participating in. Perhaps your knowledge and wisdom will be recognized more, there may be a call to lead and wish or hope fulfilled. New people become part of your circle perhaps through a community interaction. Maintain in these interactions your ethics and ideals as you adapt and compromise and help plan the future.

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Classifieds classifieds PHONE: 831.458.1100 EXT. 200 | EMAIL: KELLI@GTWEEKLY.COM | DISPLAY DEADLINE: FRIDAY 3PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: MONDAY 10AM

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 150487. The following individual is doing business as SANTA CRUZ TEA KEEPERS. 151 HIGH STREET, BROOKDALE CA 95007 County of Santa Cruz. GIANNA GOODPASTER. 2210 SEQUOIA DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95065. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: GIANNA GOODPASTER. 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 March 11, 2015. April 15, 22, 29 & May 6. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 150668. The following individual is doing business as CAPITOLA CREPES. 1855 41ST AVE., CAPITOLA CA 95010 County of Santa Cruz. MOHAMED IBESSAINE. 459 CANYON DEL REY BOULEVARD, DEL REY OAKS CA 93940. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: MOHAMED IBESSAINE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 3/23/2015.. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 1, 2015. April 15, 22, 29 & May 6.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0733 The following Married Couple is doing business as SURF CHECK DRIVING SCHOOL. 777 RANCHO CALABASAS DR., WATSONVILLE CA 95076 County of Santa Cruz. BARBARA KNAPP & MARK KNAPP. 777 RANCHO CALABASAS DR., WATSONVILLE CA 95076. This business is conducted by A Married Couple Signed:

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0483 The following individual is doing business as OCTAVIAN ARTS. 1925 46TH AVE. #41, CAPITOLA CA 95010 County of Santa Cruz. SARAH HUGHES. 1925 46TH AVE. #41, CAPITOLA CA 95010. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: SARAH HUGHES 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 March 11, 2015. April 8, 15, 22, 29 & May 6. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0651 The following Corporation is doing business as CAMERON MARKS. 402 INGALLS STREET, #7, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. VCCV, INC. 402 INGALLS STREET, #7, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. Al# 3766887. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: VANESSA AMBROSE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 3/7/2005 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on March 30, 2015. April 15, 22, 29 & May 6. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 150754 The following Married Couple is doing business as THETAHEALING BENEFITS. 141 SUTPHEN STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95960 County of Santa Cruz. SUSAN HEILO & SIMON GEORGES HEILO. 141 SUTPHEN STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95960. This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: SUSAN HEILO. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/15/2015. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 13, 2015. April 15, 22, 29 & May 6. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY

OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF AKIELA CHNIECE BAKER CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV181480. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner AKIELA CHNIECE BAKER has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from: AKIELA CHNIECE BAKERto: AKEILA CHNIECE EDISON-WATKINS. 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 May 29, 2015 at 8:30 am, 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: April 10, 2015. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior April 22, 29 & May 6,13. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0775 The following individual is doing business as AARDVARK TECHNICAL SUPPORT SERVICES. 38 PINE AVE., MOUNT HERMON CA 95041 County of Santa Cruz. MAURICE MAMON. 38 PINE AVE., MOUNT HERMON CA 95041. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: MAURICE MAMON. 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 April 15, 2015. April 22, 29 & May 6,13. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0717 The following individual is doing business as LESLEY GRAINGER GARDENING. 1595 LAUREL GLEN RD., SOQUEL CA 95073

County of Santa Cruz. LESLEY GRAINGER. 1595 LAUREL GLEN RD., SOQUEL CA 95073 . This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: LESLEY GRAINGER. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/7/2015. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 7, 2015. April 22, 29 & May 6,13. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0746 The following Corporation is doing business as SANTA CRUZ CAB, SANTA CRUZ TAXI & YELLOW CAB. 1025 WATER ST. SUITE B, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062 County of Santa Cruz. BLACK & YELLOW TRANSPORTATION. 301 OCEAN AVE., MONTEREY CA 93940. Al# 3762070. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: MICHAEL CARDINALLI. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/7/2015 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 9, 2015. April 22, 29 & May 6,13. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0808 The following individual is doing business as BRIGHTER HORIZONS DAYCARE AND PRESCHOOL. 3585 VALENCIA ROAD, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. LEAH THURSTON. 3585 VALENCIA ROAD, APTOS CA 95003. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: LEAH

THURSTON 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 April 21, 2015. April 29 & May 6, 13, 20. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0788 The following individual is doing business as NORCAL COLLEGE CONSULTING. 2901 PARK AVE., SOQUEL CA 95073 County of Santa Cruz. MIRANDA DUGAN. 6996 SOQUEL DR. APT. 21, APTOS CA 95003. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: MIRANDA DUGAN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/16/2015 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 16, 2015. April 29 & May 6, 13, 20. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0825 The following Corporation is doing business as ALBERTS PLUMBING & DRAIN SERVICE. 2521 MISSION ST. STE A, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. CLD SERVICES INC. 2521 MISSION ST. STE A, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. Al# 2812567. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed:ALBERT SORIANO. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/23/2015. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 23, 2015.

April 29 & May 6, 13, 20. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF JOSE D. RODRIGUEZ CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV181537. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner JOSE D. RODRIGUEZ has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from: JOSE D. RODRIGUEZ to: JOSEPH JESUS 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 June 8, 2015 at 8:30 am, 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

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0703 The following individual is doing business as STEVE BARNES TRUCKING. 590 SWANTON RD., DAVENPORT CA 95017 County of Santa Cruz. STEVE BARNES. 590 SWANTON RD., DAVENPORT CA 95017. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: STEVE BARNES. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/6/2015... This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 6, 2015. April 15, 22, 29 & May 6.

MICHELLE BARBOSA. 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 March 4, 2015. March 25 & April 1, 8, 15.

77


Classifieds classifieds Cla cla C c ass sifi ifi ied ds s | LLINE PHONE: 831. 831.458.1100 4 58.1100 EXT. EXT. 2 200 0 | E 00 EMAIL: MAIL: KELLI@G KELLI@GTWEEKLY.COM TWEEKL LY.COM O | DIS DISPLAY PLAY DEADLINE: DEADLINE: FRID FRIDAY AY 3PM 3 INE AD DEA DEADLINE: DLINE: M MONDAY ONDAY 110AM 0AM newspaper of Gen General neral Circulation printed in Santa C Cruz ruz County, California, once a week w for four successive weekss prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: April 20, 2015. 2 John S Salazar, Judge of the t Superior April 29 & May 6,, 13, 20.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS BUSIINESS NAME STATEMENT FILEE NO. 15-0807 The following individual individual is doing business as SUN CHARTS. 195 SKY RANCH ROAD, ROA AD, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. ERIK K BENEDIKT. 195 SKY RANCH ROAD, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual BENEDIKT. Signed: ERIK BEN NEDIKT. The registrant commenced commenced to transact businesss under the fictitious businesss name listed APPLICABLE. above is NOT AP PPLICABLE. was filed with This statement w County Gail L. Pellerin, C ounty Clerk of County, Santa Cruz Count ty, on April 21, 2015. May 6, 13, 1 20, 27. BUSINESS ICTITIOUS BUSIN NESS NAME STATEMENT FILEE NO. 15-0632 The following individual individual is doing business ass GABRIELLA

CAFE910 CEDAR STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 Cou unty County of Santa Cruz. PAUL COCKIN COCKING. NG. 833 FRONT STREET, SANTA A CRUZ CA 95060. This busine ess business is conducted by a Individual Signed: PAUL COCKING. Thee registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed listeed above on 12/5/1992 This statement was filed with Gail Gaiil L. Sannta Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on March 26, 2015. May 6, 13, 20, 27. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF JOHNATHON TURNER SCHMUCK CHANG CHANGEE OF NAME CASE NO. CV1815 595. CV181595. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner JOHNATHON TUR NER TURNER SCHMUCK has filed a Petition Petitioon for Change of Name with thee clerk of this court for an orde er order changing Applicant’s name from: JOHNATHON TURNER R SCHMUCK to: JOHNATHON TURNER. THE COURT ORDERS ORDER RS that all persons interested inn

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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 j 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 June 15, 2015 at 8:30 am, 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: April 27, 2015. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior May 6, 13, 20, 27.

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Three Th ree million million vis visitors sitors c came ame tto oS Santa anta Cru Cruz z la last st year. year. Invite them Invite t to to your your business business with an a ad in Santa Santa Cruz’s Cruz’s premier premie er Visitor Visitor Guide – the 11th 11tth annual Good Tim Times es guide tto o the b best est o off what our c county ounty has tto oo offer. ffer. Space rreservation Space eservation and ad production productioon deadline: deadline: FFriday, riday, May May 8 Di Distribution: stribution: June June,, 2 2015 015 - Janua January, ry, 2016 2016

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real r rea ea al le estate esta sta ate e PHONE: PHO ONE: 831. 831.458.1100 4 58.1100 EXT. EXT. 2 200 00 | E EMAIL: M MAIL: KELLI@GTWEEKLY.COM KELLI@GTWEEKL LY.COM | DI DISPLAY SPLAY DEADLINE: DEADLINE: FRIDAY FRIDAY 3PM | LLINE INE AD DEA DEADLINE: DLINE: M MONDAY ONDAY 110AM 0AM

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0854 The following Corporation is doing business as DEER GARDEN FOODS. 213-B OCEAN STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. Cruz. HEALTHTIME INC.,, 213-B OCEAN STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. Al# 486989. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Signed: MICHAEL DONOHUE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/9/2002. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 28, 2015. May 6, 13, 20, 27. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0671 The following Joint Venture is doing business as HAPPY TOY CLUB. 418 SEMPLE AVE. , APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. Cruz. AMY SMITH & DERICK SMITH. 418 SEMPLE AVE., APTOS CA 95003. This business is conducted by a Joint Venture Signed: Signed: DERICK SMITH. 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 April 1, 2015. May 6, 13, 20, 27. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following The following General Partnership is doingg business as OLD SOUL ORCHESTRA. 1040 RIVER STREET #309, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. Cruz. JEFFREY KISSELL, CHRIS LYNCH & MARTIN O�REILLY. 1040 RIVER STREET #309, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 . This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Signed: MARTIN O�REILLY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. ..This This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on April 1,7 2015. May 6, 13, 20, 27. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF SYYUN SOFI MCBROOM CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV181632. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner SYYUN SOFI MCBROOM has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing

Applicantt’s name from: SYYUN Applicant’s MCBROOM SOFI MC BROOM to: SIING SOPHI MCBROOM MCBROO OM THE COURT ORDERS that all pe persons ersons interested in this matter ap appear ppear before this court at the hea hearing aring indicated below to show cause, c if any, why the petition fo or change of name for should no ot be granted. Any person not objecting to the name changes describedd above must file a written ob bjection that includes the objection reasons for f the objection at least two courtt days before the matter is schedu scheduled uled to be heard and must appear att the hearing to show why cause wh hy the petition should not be grante ed. If no written objection granted. is timely filed, f the court may grant the petitio on without a hearing. petition NOTICE OF O HEARING June 17, 2015 at 8:30 8 am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, California a, 701 Ocean Street, 110. Room. 11 10. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy off this order to show cause must be published p in the Good Times , a newspaper of General Circulation Circulatio on printed in Santa Cruz County, California, C once a week successive for four su uccessive weeks prior date to the dat te set for hearing on the petition. Dated: D May 4, 2015. John Salazar, S Salazar r, Judge of the Superior 13, May 6, 13 3, 20, 27.

0742 The following General Partnership is doing business as HEMPFIELDS. 10111 100111 SOQUEL DRIVE, APT APTOS TOS CA Santa 95003 County of San nta Cruz. JESSIE CAMPBELL, DAVID KRUG & THOMAS MCMANUS. M 10111 SOQUEL DRIVE, DRIV VE, APTOS business CA 95003. This bus siness is conducted by a General Geeneral Partnership Signed: JESSIE CAMPBELL. The registrant reggistrant transact commenced to trans sact business under the fictitious bbusiness name listed above iss NOT APPLICABLE. .This statement s was filed with Gail L.. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Santta Cruz County, on April 9 2015. 2 May 6, 13, 20, 27.

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Where the locals shop since 1938.

BEST GROCERY STORE BEST BUTCHER SHOP BEST WINE & CHEESE SELECTION BEST LOCAL PRODUCTS

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GROCERY: Local, Organic, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet Bakery s Fresh Daily GAYLE’S, Herb Cheese 4 Pack/ 5.99 KELLY’S, Sweet Baguette 8oz/ 1.99 BECKMANN’S, Three Seed Sour Loaf 24oz/ 3.89 WHOLE GRAIN, Whole Wheat 30oz/ 4.19 GOLDEN SHEAF, Sourdough Baguette 16oz/ 2.99

Cheese s Best Gourmet Selection in Santa Cruz

Butcher Shop: All Natural USDA Choice Beef & Lamb only, Corn-Fed Midwest Pork, Rocky Free Range Chickens, Air Chilled Mary’s Chicken, Wild-Caught Seafood, Boar’s Head Brand, Saags Sausages PORK CHOPS, All Natural, Center Cuts/ 3.98 Lb PORK LOIN ROAST, All Natural, Boneless/ 3.98 Lb SHOULDER PORK ROAST, All Natural, Boneless/ 3.29 Lb BABY BACK PORK RIBS, All Natural/ 4.98 Lb WINE & GARLIC CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless/ 5.98 Lb CAJUN STYLE CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless/ 5.98 Lb AHI TUNA STEAKS, Cut Thick/ 14.98 Lb CAJUN CATFISH FILLETS, Marinated/ 9.98 Lb SLAMON LOX TRIMMINGS/ 9.98 Lb

WISCONSIN SHARP CHEDDAR, “RBST Free,” 1/3 Loaf Cuts/ 5.19 Lb, Avg. Cuts/ 5.59 Lb BLUE EARTH BRIE, “New & American Made”/ 20.89 Lb DOMESTIC FONTINA, “Excellent Melting Cheese”/ 7.69 Lb STELLA PARMESAN, “Whole Wheel Cuts”/ 7.49 Lb

Delicatessen BELGIOIOSO MOZZERELLA LOG, “Fresh & RBST Free” 16oz/ 5.89 ALFRESCO CHICKEN SAUSAGE, “All Varieties” 12 oz/ 5.99 TILLAMOOK CHEDDAR BARS, “Sharp & Extra Sharp” 8oz/ 3.99 MI ABUELITA BONITA TORTILLA, “Green Chile & All Natural” 12oz/ 2.39 OSCAR MAYER SLICED BACON, “Naturally Smoked” 16oz/ 3.49

Seasonings & Dry Rubs

Produce: California-Fresh, Blemish-Free, 30% Local / Organic

PAPPY’S, “No MSG, No Preservatives” 5oz/ 3.99 RUB WITH LOVE, “Gluten Free” 3.5oz/ 6.49 LYSANDERS, “Premium Quality, All Natural” 3.5oz/ 4.29 ANDY’S RUB, “Great on Everything” 3.5oz/ 11.49 CHAR CRUST, “Seal in the Juices” 4oz/ 5.49

Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organics, Happy Boy Farms, Route 1 Farms Clover Stornetta APPLES, Fujis, Galas, Granny Smith and Braeburn/ 1.49 Lb BANANAS, Always Ripe/ .89 Lb MANGOS, Ripe & Firm/ 1.39 Lb NAVAL ORANGES, Large Size, Super Sweet/ 1.09 Lb GRAPE CHERRY TOMATOES, 1 Pint Clamshell/ 2.99 Lb AVOCADOS, Ripe & Ready to Eat/ 1.49 Ea YELLOW ONIONS, A Kitchen Must Have/ .49 Lb CLUSTER TOMATOES, Ripe on the Vine/ 2.29 Lb FRESH CORN, White & Yellow/ .49 Ea LEAF LETTUCE, Red, Green, Romaine, Butter & Iceburg/ 1.49 Ea BELLPEPPERS, Red & Green/ 1.49 Lb

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Beer/Wine/Spirits:

Best Buys, Local, Regional, International

Domestic Beer MENDOCINO, Red Tail Ale 12oz, 6 Pack/ 7.99 +CRV MAD RIVER, Extra Pale 120z, 6 Pack/ 8.49 +CRV LAGUNITAS, Pilsner & IPA 12oz, 12 Pack/ 14.49 +CRV MENDOCINO, Eye of the Hawk 12oz, 6 Pack/ 8.49 +CRV ANDERSON VALLEY, All Brews 12oz, 6 Pack/ 7.99 +CRV

Quality Gin – 750ml BLOOM, Premium London Dry/ 25.99 HENDRICKS, Small Batch/ 29.99 ST. GEORGE, Terroir & Botanivore/ 31.99 NOLET SILVER, “Double Gold SF Spirits”/ 39.99 OXLEY, Cold Distilled/ 48.99

Best Buy Whites 2010 FIRESTONE, Gewurztraminer (90WE, Reg 19.99)/ 6.99 2014 NOBILO, Sauvignon Blanc (Reg 13.99)/ 7.99 2012 CHATEAU ST MICHELLE, Chardonnay (89WS)/ 8.99 2013 SIMONETT FABVRE, Chardonnay (Reg 10.99)/ 7.99 2012 BEAUREGARD, Sauvignon Blanc (Reg 21.99)/ 9.99

Best Buy Reds 2011 INK BERRY, Shiraz Cabernet (Reg 13.99)/ 8.99 2011 CAMPO VIEJO, Rioja (Reg 12.99)/ 8.99 2011 ROSENBLUM, Petite Sirah (Reg 24.99)/ 9.99 2012 OLD VINE WINE CO. Carignan (Reg 21.99)/ 9.99 2013 ST. HALLET, Shiraz “Faith” (92JH, Reg 15.99)/ 9.99

Australian Wines 2012 SIBLING RILVARY, Pinot Gris (93AWC)/ 16.99 2013 BROKENWOOD, Semillon (94AWC)/ 19.99 2010 THOMAS GOSS, Shiraz (93AWC)/ 16.99 2010 TERLATO & CHAPOOTIER, Shiraz-Viognier (90WS)/ 18.99 2011 YANGARRA GSM (94AWC)/ 24.99

Connoisseurs Corner – Aged Reds

Gourmet Mustards REDMOND FALLOT, “Product of France since 1840” 7.4oz/ 3.29 BOETJE’S, “Dutch” Stone Ground Since 1889, 8.5oz/ 4.19 MENDOCINO MUSTARD, “Hand Prepared Since 1977” 9oz/ 4.79 SIERRA NEVADA, 3 Kinds 8oz/ 3.49 STONEWALL KITCHEN, “Creators of Specialty Foods” 7.75oz/ 5.29

2004 PARADOR, Reserva, Napa Valley (91ST)/ 49.99 2006 NARSAI DAVID, Napa Valley/ 36.99 2006 BEAUREGARD, Syrah, Zayante/ 49.99 2006 PAX, Syrah, Sonoma Hillsides/ 49.99 2007 SEQUEL, Syrah, Columbia Valley (93WE)/ 49.59 OUR 77 TH YEAR

MIYUKI NAGASAWA, 29-Year Customer, Santa Cruz CHRIS SOMPLE, 30-Year Customer Santa Cruz Occupation: Realtor, Co-owner DeLavega Properties

Occupation: Otoro Sushi Server Hobbies: Watching son Max play water polo, playing with our dog, love cooking, working out at the gym Astrological Sign: Aquarius

Hobbies: Working out at the gym, gardening, watching son Max play water polo, surfing, snorkeling on Maui, cooking Astrological Sign: Pisces

What do you folks like to cook? MIYUKI: “I enjoy cooking using a variety of Shopper’s wild mushrooms in pasta dishes, swordfish with a butter-lemon and caper sauce, ahi poke bowls, and more. In general, I make a lot of Italian and Japanese food.” CHRIS: “My specialty is Italian. I like Shopper’s spaghetti sauces and the Muir Glen organic fire-roasted canned tomatoes. I’ll pick up six cans at a time. Our family really likes Shopper’s sausages. I counted them the other day and they have 32 varieties! The butcher shop is beyond the best in town. They’ve set the bar really high.”

How so? CHRIS: “The quality is phenomenal. Even when I’m not buying meat, the cuts are so nice to look at. And their air-chilled chicken, there is such a difference...” MIYUKI: “We like the lamb shanks and the steaks, and if we ask for a special ahi cut, they’ll accommodate us. The butchers are so nice; they all know my name and I know their names.” CHRIS: “I could never envision buying meats or produce from the chains. ” MIYUKI: “The produce is fresh and the selections are great. They have organic and conventional produce and they’re about the same price. The avocados are ripe, ripe!”

You prefer shopping local? CHRIS: “This is a classic, family-owned, neighborhood market, a dying breed. Sometimes small local stores are not cost effective. Shopper’s prices are fine. Their inventory is well thought out. They seem to anticipate what the community wants.” MIYUKI: “The cashiers and baggers are so nice, they make you feel really welcome. Shopper’s is always clean, and I like the vintage look.” CHRIS: “It’s really warm and friendly here. You run into people you see weekly and some you haven’t see in years. They must take care of the staff since many have worked here for years.

“The butcher shop is beyond the best in town. They’ve set the bar really high. The quality is phenomenal.” Corner: Soquel & Branciforte Avenues | 7 Days: 6am-9pm | Meat: 423-1696 | Produce: 429-1499 | Grocery: 423-1398 | Wine: 429-1804

Superb Products of Value: Local, Natural, Gourmet I Neighborhood Service for 77 Years


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