Good Times

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OPINION

EDITOR’S EDITOR R’S NOTE When I wr wrote ote about Matthew Matthew S winnerton Swinnerton taking over Nexties the Ne xties in a story cover stor y last year,, someone year asked me about the in-depth profiles the awards pr offiles i of th he awar ds show and winners—in “Why all of the win nners—in effect, “Wh y Nexties?” There are the N exties?”” Ther e ar e other prestigious awards pr estigious aw wards to be won in true, generally Santa Cruz, tr rue, and they g enerally get spot GT’s don’t g et a sp pot on GT ’s cover. To T o me, e, it’s it’s uncanny uncanny how c closely ose y Nexties are the N exties ar a e aligned with what try here GT. awards we tr y to do her h e at GT T. The awar ds celebrate “entrepreneurial celebr ate the e “entr epreneurial spirit,”” to use spirit, e a shorthand definition, but def fiinition, bu ut at their most basic

le level evel what they rreally eally do is bring at ttention to locals who are are doing attention gr reat wor k in this community nd great work community,, an and that’s th hat’s one of our g goals oals ever every y week week. k. A ll of the N extie winners winners deser ve e to All Nextie deserve be e the subject of GT stories—some e ha ave been pr eviously, but other e have previously, otherss ar are ju ust on the cusp of doing somethi ing just something great, gr reat, and I think the biggest biggest thin thing ng th he N exties have g oing for them the Nexties going iss catching many many winner winnerss just as th hey’re about to have their bigg esst they’re biggest im mpact. These ar en’t rretrospective etrospectiv ve impact. aren’t lifetime lif fetime achievement awar awards, ds, th hey’re looking forward—just forrwar w d—just like e they’re th he Nextie Nextie winner s. Get to know the winners. th hem and the wor k they’ re doing in them work they’re th his week’ y, and see you y this week’ss cover stor story, att the awards awards ceremony ceremony on Ma y 15. 1 May

LETTER LETTERS RS

Matthew has writ Matthew written ten a ggood ood article on o a disturbing disturbing subject, but has missed missed aann important disservice, im mportant point and done a dis service, in my my opinion, opinion b byy jumping on the p paranoia aranoiia bandwagon bandw a agon and not making the eeffort ffort ttoo distinguish distinguish what exact exact substances substances he is i reporting e Just because because farmworkers farmworkerrs or reporting on. Just landscapers landscapers or tr tree ee ccare are pr professionals ofessionals lik likee myself are are spraying, spraying, doesn’t doesn’t mean mean tha myself thatt thhey are are spraying spraying highly they toxic chemic als. toxic chemicals. A brie sticide ccategories ategories brieff primer on pe pesticide can a be found found at livingwithbug s.com/ can livingwithbugs.com/ organic. orrganic.

MAY MA Y 1313-19, 19 , 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM GT T WEEKL LY. C O M | SANTACRUZ.COM SANTA C R UZ . C O M

BREEDING G SUSPICION SUSPICION

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Iw was as enjoying enjoying the t seemingly seemingly well-informed well-inf ell informed article citing th thee differences differences between between T, 5/6) when I ffarmed armed and wild d ssalmon almon (GT across ccame ame acr oss the thhe erroneous erroneous statement statement that byy cr crossing Atlantic b ossing a farmed farmed a Atlantic salmon salmon and breed, a wild Pacific Pacific salmon salmon a breed, “you “you get get the ssalmonid almonid equiv equivalent valent of of a pony: pony: an infertile infertile halfling that fur further rther dilutes dilutes the wild population.”” A pony population. p y by pon by definition definition is a small horse. infertile hor se. It is neither neithher inf ertile nor a halfling. It mayy be that Mr. ma Mrr. Steingrube Steingrube doesn’t doesn’t know know the diff difference erence bet b between ween a pony pony and a mule. mule. If not, it makes makes me wonder wonder if he actually knows kno ws the difference differ e ence between between a wild and a ffarmed armed ssalmon. almon. PETER WEISER WEI S ER | BONNY DOON

ORGANIC O RGANIC C PESTICIDES PESTICIDES Too T oo o b bad ad that Mathew Mathew Renda Renda doesn’t doesn’t know know or doesn’t doesn’t take take the opportunity opportunity to to educate educate and dispel some some of of the uninformed uninformed fear fear and neg negativity ativity about a pesticide pesticide use. use. Theree is legitimate Ther legitim mate concern concern about toxic toxic substances sub stances in our o en environment, vironment, but not all pesticides pesticides ar are re toxic. toxic. Of Of the synthetic synthetic and natur natural al botanical bottanical substances substances that aree classified ar classified ass “pe “pesticides,” sticides,” man manyy ar aree organic-program or ganic-program compatible compatible and are are not mammals ttoxic oxic to to mamm als (people and pets). pets).

PHOTO CON CONTEST NTEST

STEVE S T VE P TE PALOPOLI ALO P OLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EDITO R-I N -CHIEF

AIR BUD BUD F Four-legged our-legged friend frriend on the sand sand in Aptos. Aptos. Photograph Photograph by by Jaime Lucas. Lucas.

DON D ON C COX OX | S SCOTTS C OTTS V VALLEY ALLE Y

Submit ttoo photos@gtweekly.com. photos@gtweeekly.com. Include inf information ormation (loc (location, atioon, et etc.) c.) and yyour our name name.. Phot Photos os ma mayy be cr cropped. opped. P Preferably, referab bly, phot photos os should be 4 inche inchess b byy 4 inc inches ches and minimum 250 dpi.

GOOD IDEA

GOOD D WORK

MONSTERS M ONSTERS IN A BLOCK BLOCK

SHOW SH OW O OF FF FEET EET

The phrase phrase “public works” works” sounds sounds boring, but ffor or kids anta Cruz’ e P ee ublic W ork o s kids,, S Santa Cruz’ss fr free Public Works Day D ay ssounds ounds lik likee a hoot. FFrom rom m 1:30-6:30 p.m. p .m. on Wednesday, Wedne e sday, Ma Mayy 220, 0, kids ccan an check out ssome ome re real al mons monster ter truc trucks, cks, lik likee sstreet treet ssweepers, weepers, asphalt rrollers ollers an nd giant rrecyclers eccyclers and on Linc Lincoln oln Str Street eet bet between ween C Cedar edar and C Center enter sstreets. treets. E Engineers ngineers will w field que questions stions and giv givee demo demoss on thing thingss lilike ke ccomposting omposting with w worms orms and gr graffiti affiti rremoval. em moval.

The streets streets of of downtown downtown Watsonville Watsonville will be closed closed to to cars cars Sunday, Sunday, May May 16—but 16—but open to to bikes, bikes, pedestrians, pedestrians, dancers, dancers, children childr en and d musicians. musicians. Open Open Streets, Streets, which was was a hit in Santa Santa Cruz two two years years ago, ag o, moves moves south south for for the first first time from from 11 a.m.-3 a.m.-3 p.m. p.m m. on Brennan Brennan and Union sstreets, treets, featuring featuring ggames, ames, art, music and he alth educ a ation. It will also also return return to to health education. West W est Cliff Drive Driv r e in Santa Santa Cruz in October. October.

ONLINE O NLINE C COMMENTS OMMENT TS

QUOTE OF THE T WEEK

RE: R E: A ATE3ONE TE3ONE

“I’m convince convinced d that about half off what separates the successfull entrepreneurs from m the nonsuccessful one ones es is pure perseveran perseverance.” nce.” — STEVE STE VE JO JOBS BS

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LOCAL TALK Should Pacific Avenue be a one-way street, two-way street, or pedestrian only? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT

I would definitely support closing off Pacific Mall to cars. I think that would be wonderful. JIM GREY

SANTA CRUZ | BUILDER

If they change it, it will probably be more confusing for the locals, and we like it the way it is. PATRICK CASTRO

SCOTTS VALLEY | HOSPITALITY

I think it should be a two-way, because that gets people in and out. As far as pedestrians … they’re going to have to deal with the traffic. YESINIA RAYA

SANTA CRUZ | CAREGIVER

CELINE MIRANDA

SANTA CRUZ | STUDENT

I would support making Pacific Avenue pedestrian only, because it’s a wonderful way of supporting community. It’s better for the business community by bringing people into the street. PETER BECKMANN SANTA CRUZ | BAKER

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY13-19, 2015

I wouldn’t change it to two-way traffic because that could lead to a lot more of a mess … there’s going to be a really rough adjustment period.

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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of May 13 ARIES Mar21–Apr19

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22

The danger of resisting a temptation too strenuously is that the temptation might depart. I suggest that you prevent that from happening. Without throwing yourself at the mercy of the temptation, see if you can coax it to stick around for a while longer. Why? In my view, it's playing a useful role in your life. It's motivating you to change some things that really do need to be changed. On the other hand, I'm not yet sure that it should become anything more than a temptation. It might serve you best that way, not as an object of your satisfied desire.

I suspect you are about to experience some prime contenders for The Most Unusual Adventures of 2015. Are you thoroughly prepared? Of course not. There's no way you can be totally ready to adapt to unpredictable wrinkles and change your mind at a moment's notice. But that's exactly what will make these experiments so fun. That's why they will be effective in building up your resilience and willpower. For best results, apply your nighttime thinking to daytime activities, and vice versa. Spend minimal time on responsibilities that don't teach you noble truths about your fellow madmen and madwomen. Now here's my big question: How can you tap into the extra power you will need during your rite of passage?

TAURUS Apr20–May20 My astrological colleagues discourage me from talking to you Bulls about financial matters. "Most Tauruses know 10 times more about the mystery of money than you will ever know," said one. "Their excellent instincts trump any tips you could offer." Another astrologer concurred, noting, "The financial advice you give Tauruses will at best be redundant and at worst simplistic." A third colleague summed it up: "Offering Tauruses guidance about money is like counseling Scorpios about sex." So although I'm shy about providing recommendations, I will say this: The next five weeks will be a favorable time to set in motion the plans to GET RICHER QUICKER!

GEMINI May21–June20 "Endings to be useful must be inconclusive," wrote science fiction novelist Samuel R. Delany. I endorse that theory for your use in the coming weeks. Interweave it with this advice from playwright Sam Shepard: "The temptation towards resolution, towards wrapping up the package, seems to me a terrible trap. Why not be more honest with the moment? The most authentic endings are the ones which are already revolving towards another beginning." In other words, Gemini, don't be attached to neat finales and splashy climaxes. Consider the possibility that you can simply slip free of the complicated past and head toward the future without much fanfare.

CANCER Jun21–Jul22 In mythic terms, you should be headed for the winner's circle, which is inside the pleasure dome. The parade in your honor should follow the award ceremony, and let's hope you will be on the lead float wearing a gold crown and holding a real magic wand while being sung to by a choir of people you love and who love you. If for any reason you are not experiencing some version of these metaphors, I urge you to find out why. Or better yet, get busy on planning a homecoming or graduation party or award ceremony for yourself. From an astrological perspective, you have a mandate to be recognized and appreciated for the gifts you offer the world.

MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

LE0 Jul23–Aug22

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British Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley was a brilliant military commander. Renowned for his ability to beat larger armies, he also had great skill at minimizing loss of life among his own troops. His most famous triumph took place in 1815, when he led the forces that defeated Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo. In the aftermath, the French tyrant lost his power and went into exile. What was the secret of Wellesley's success? "Bonaparte's plans were made in wire," he said. "Mine were made in string." In other words, Wellesley's strategy was more flexible and adaptable. As circumstances changed, it could be rearranged with greater ease. That's the approach I recommend for you in the coming days.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 Many modern astronomers are allergic to astrology, but from my perspective there is no inherent conflict between the two fields. Four of history's greatest astronomers were practicing astrologers, after all: Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, Tycho Brahe, and Pierre Gassendi. One of my friends in college, a Scorpio woman named Martha Maiden, is a first-rate astrologer who got a degree in astronomy and became a top scientist at NASA. In the spirit of finding reconciliation between apparent opposites, I'm happy to say that you are now a virtual virtuoso in your ability to reconcile both apparent opposites and actual opposites. I invite you to use this aptitude with flair and daring.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 Sagittarian Matt Stutzman competes in the sport of archery. He's the world's record holder for longest accurate shot, having hit a target 230 yards away. What makes his accomplishment so extraordinary is the fact that he was born without any arms. He holds each arrow in his mouth and grasps the bow with his right foot and the help of a chest harness. In the spirit of this armless archer, and in accordance with your current astrological omens, I invite you to initiate an attempt to triumph over one of your so-called disadvantages.

CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 Long before Lou Reed recorded the song "Walk on the Wild Side," Nelson Algren wrote a novel titled A Walk on the Wild Side. It depicts the luxuriant depravity of New Orleans' French Quarter in the 1930s. One of Algren's most enduring bits of spiritual advice goes as follows: "Never, ever, no matter what else you do in your whole life, never sleep with anyone whose troubles are worse than your own." What do you think of that, Capricorn? Even if you don't regard it as a universal rule that you should unfailingly obey, I suggest you observe it in the coming weeks. For the sake of your mental hygiene, be extra discerning about what influences you absorb—not just in bed, but everywhere.

AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 The cosmos has authorized you to be hungrier than usual. You may also feel free to respond to your enhanced hunger with an extra aggressive quest to be fed. Therefore: Be voracious! Risk being avid, ardent, and even agog. Fill yourself up with pudding, pleasure, praise, peace, perks, and privileges. Anything else you'd like to engorge? If some unenlightened person questions your right to claim the biggest piece and the sweetest taste and the best fuel, inform them that your astrologer says you have ultimate permission.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22

PISCES Feb19–Mar20

You may not be strong enough to take a shot at a daunting challenge that's five levels beyond your previous best. But I think you are at least ready to try a tricky challenge that's one level higher than where you have been operating. And that, in my opinion, is a more practical use of your courage. I think it would be a waste of your energy to get wrapped up in grandiose fantasies about impossible perfections. As long as you don't overreach, you can accomplish small miracles.

Is there an interesting ally whose path rarely crosses yours? Do you draw inspiration from a like-minded dynamo who is not fully available? Has fate kept you and a friend from getting as close as you would wish? According to my reading of the astrological omens, relationships like these could become more substantial in the coming weeks. The dream of a more robust connection could ripen into an opportunity to actually collaborate. So be alert for the openings, and be prepared to do what's necessary to go deeper.

Homework: Imagine that everything important you know is condensed into a single symbol or image. What is it? FreeWillAstrology.com. © Copyright 2015


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areas: please allow food trucks such as Ate3One to service our cities! It’s sad that in a city as vital and creatively inclined as Santa Cruz, that we cannot have something as simple as a food truck. Time for a change!

told that they were low. The wind blows toward the school all afternoon. I think that pesticides, especially methyl bromide and others that are used to kill all insect life in the ground, are especially dangerous. — PETER HATCH

— A HUNGRY RESIDENT

RE: TOXIC CLASSROOMS I taught at Ohlone and Pajaro schools in PVUSD and both were next to agricultural fields. The district said that they would measure the amount of pesticides on the play equipment at Ohlone School. We were

CORRECTION In the article “Block Party” (GT, 4/21), Santa Cruz Metropolitan Transit District General Manager Alex Clifford was misidentified. Also, a quote in the story from Clifford incorrectly used the word “disputing” instead of “disrupting.” We regret the errors.

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NEWS UNLIVING WAGES Santa Cruz preschool workers, who make less than store clerks, want a raise

MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

BY KEN BURSON

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Santa Cruz child care workers are paid wages so low that some live in boats and trailer parks because they can’t afford to rent a house or apartment. Some don’t have cars and struggle to buy groceries in an area where rents are 71 percent above the national average. Many of these workers are coming out to support the “Fight for $15” movement, which started in 2012 in New York with a walkout by fast-food workers, and kickstarted a grassroots effort to increase the minimum wage. “I think it’s terrible,” says State Assemblyman Mark Stone of child care wages. “Instead of being seen as glorified babysitting, we should see child care as part of our obligation to educate our children.” Sandy Davie, director of the Santa Cruz Toddler Center, has asked the city and county to up their support of the center by $45,000. She would then raise all of her staff to a minimum of $15 per hour with the funds. The city and county will consider her requests in June. One of the top early education educators in the county, Eric Hoffman, says he doesn’t know how his graduates live on their wages. Hoffman has taught early childhood education at Cabrillo College for 30 years, sending hundreds of teachers into the workforce. “For a long time, there’s been the sense that child care, that’s what you do with a babysitter,” says Hoffman. Many child care workers in Santa Cruz County are paid barely more than $9. Store clerks averaged $14.35 an hour in 2014, while child care workers averaged $12.81, and preschool teachers got $14.19, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Low wages drive about 46 percent of child care workers to depend on subsidies such as welfare and food stamps—up to $2.4 billion per year, according to a UC Berkeley study. What this means, Hoffman says, is that some of the most important people in a child’s formative years are woefully underpaid.

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GARDEN OF EDEN Valerie Leveroni Corral, co-founder of the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana (WAMM), the oldest

marijuana collective in the U.S., outside the WAMM garden. PHOTO: BRAD KAVA

The End of WAMM?

The state’s oldest marijuana collective survived federal raids and arrests. Can it survive divorce? BY BRAD KAVA

I

n the midst of a veritable “marijuana gold rush,” the oldest marijuana collective in the U.S.—based in Santa Cruz— may be closing its doors and losing the 106-acre field that has saved terminally ill patients from immense pain and suffering. WAMM, short for the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana, started serving Santa Cruz clients in 1993, when the idea of legalized pot was barely a fantasy. The collective has survived two raids—one by local police, who dropped charges, and one by the DEA, which WAMM sued and won. Now, though, they face an entirely different challenge: divorce. Valerie Leveroni Corral, 62, and her husband Mike Corral, saw their friends dying in the middle of the AIDS epidemic and thought that used

medically, marijuana could provide the comfort and healing patients needed in the face of harsh medical treatments that sapped their appetites and left their bodies writhing in pain. The couple started growing marijuana illegally in the 1970s after Valerie found that it helped her with epileptic seizures, and then they took advantage of a loosening of state laws allowing medical cannabis and set up a garden and collective. Unlike the marijuana stores that have been growing like weeds around the state and making owners millionaires in Colorado and Washington, WAMM was never about the money. Marijuana wasn’t bought and sold here. It was given in return for donations, and many of the 600-800 regular patients paid their way by gardening and

processing the crops for others. “I can’t tell you how many people have come in and said ‘I’m going to make you rich,’” says Valerie Corral, the fiery 5-foot Italian sparkplug who was born in San Francisco and runs through the collective with the energy of a bullet train. “I’m very much insistent that WAMM remains true to our mission of service. Just because the industry can supply cannabis legally, it doesn’t mean it’s more available for people who are seriously ill and financially compromised, as well as physically compromised.” She says legalization doesn’t necessarily help the 85 percent of her patients who have terminal and severe illnesses. “We’re just trying to get enough funds to help people who are sick and dying,” she says. The group >13


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NEWS THE END OF WAMM? <10 also runs a hospice. Now, WAMM could lose everything in the divorce from her husband of 40 years. “A divorce changes everything,” says Corral. “Mike’s moved on. He’s not working with WAMM anymore. I don’t have the money to buy him out and WAMM can’t just stay there.” She’s asking the locals who helped her fight off DEA teams to help her keep the property. The has group launched a crowd-funding campaign on Indiegogo.com, hoping to raise $150,000 to keep the farm and grow house. To continue as a nonprofit, she says she has to come up with the funds, based on an appraisal, to pay exactly what the land is worth. Their site is in a lush, green location on the North Coast. They also have an office at 815 Almar Ave., on the Westside, where clients can get counseling and medical support and advice. Members are worried about the future and hope the community will support the fundraising. “WAMM has been an essential part of Santa Cruz’s healthcare system and an integral part of the community

for over 20 years,” says author David Jay Brown. “As a WAMM member since 1995, I’ve personally witnessed how medical marijuana from the community-run WAMM garden can help save people’s lives and greatly reduce suffering—as this valuable medicine would otherwise be too expensive for many of the low-income patients that WAMM serves.” Valerie has helped more than 150 people pass into the next phase of life and says watching people die has helped her commitment to help others. “We deal with people who are facing death, losing homes, losing cars,” she says. “By the time the average cancer patient dies, it costs $250,000, especially with treatment. You pay 20 percent of that if you have good insurance. The costs are huge. Huge! And you don’t pay at the end. You pay all along.” She’s worried about losing her life’s work and what it has given to so many. “We’re in the 11th hour hoping the value of people’s lives and the way we’ve been in service to a community that’s made hundreds of millions of dollars has an impact in the interest of human health and human kindness,” she says. “We can’t disregard the origin of this work. We called this the

‘Compassionate Use Act.’’’ The Corrals’ were arrested by local officials in 1992 and by a federal DEA task force in 2002, but not charged in either case. Officials feared no jury would convict them. To protest the second arrest and send the feds a message, the mayor and members of the City Council permitted the collective to distribute marijuana outside City Hall, an event that made national news. DEA agents had chainsawed 167 plants, and were forced by WAMM members, who blocked their U-Hauls at the farm gate, to surrender the Corrals from their custody. Then the City and County of Santa Cruz filed suit against the feds, claiming the federal government under President George W. Bush was denying the rights of patients and using the case for publicity. Some 15 of the collective’s patients died while the plants were gone. The collective won the suit and has been growing the federally illegal medicinal herb ever since. "When the DEA raided WAMM, held Valerie, Mike and others at gunpoint, and threatened them with life in prison, the federal government basically thought they could >17

FREE WELLNESS CLASS In store at Way of Life

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NEWS BRIEFS NEW LEAF FOR BUSH?

same two companies that became the first two grocery stores to achieve B Corp status, which recognizes us for, as the B Corp saying goes, ‘using business as a force for good.’ “We still give more than 10 percent of our profits to support our local community’s nonprofit organizations. We still share our profits with our employees, and even have a new plan that allows employees to use some or all of their profit-sharing dollars to invest in the company and gain potential future rewards. We still are committed to sustainability in both the way we do business and the products we sell. In particular, we still are committed to a local, organic, and non-GMO food system.”

Can one right-leaning member sway the board? “Absolutely not,” says Roseman. “There are eight board members, I being one of them, and, as I wear my left-leaning liberal politics on my sleeve, I can tell you that. Moreover, Stephen Babson, the subject of this discussion, has been 150 percent behind what we are doing, as he has personally supported the organization to support non-GMO labeling initiatives in Oregon and California, he has personally supported the New Season’s public stance last year to support gay marriage, and he has been completely committed to all of our efforts to operate as the same progressive businesses that we have always been.” BRAD KAVA

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

New Leaf Community Markets shoppers might be shocked to learn that one of the company’s board members sponsored a $12,500-a-plate benefit for Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush. Stephen Babson, a Republican who put on the dinner to raise money for Bush’s Right to Rise super-PAC, is on the board of directors of New Seasons Market, which bought the local New Leaf chain from Santa Cruz liberal Democrat Scott Roseman. Babson’s employer Endeavour Capital became the major investor in the chain in 2009 and has guided its rapid growth.

Bush is the last green you might expect at New Leaf. The brother of former President George W. Bush has come out against the federal minimum wage. But it’s not a surprise to former owner Roseman, who is also on the board. He describes Babson as a liberal-leaning Republican, who might be considered a Democrat in some places. “The fact that one individual in the organization has different political views than most of us, including me, does not mean that we have suddenly become a tool of the Koch brothers,” says Roseman. “But, more importantly, New Leaf’s values, as well as New Seasons’, have not changed. We are still the

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MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

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The community’s co ommunitty’ y’s choice choice for loc local al banking. b “We “W We choose Santa Santa Cruz Cru uz County County Bank because w we e know know they they ϐ Ǥ ϐ Ǥ Not onl only y do the they y make m e banking easy, mak easy, we we see e them out volunteering, volunteering, engaging engag ging their customers customers and investing investing in our community community every day.” ~K Karen aren Delaney Delaney & Lois Connell, Connell, o V Volunteer olun o Center of Santa Cruz County

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NEWS

NOT JUST PLAYING AROUND Cabrillo early education teacher Eric Hoffman writes books and builds playgrounds

One of them, Jessica Alaimo, works 40 hours a week as a teacher at Santa Cruz Toddler Center in Live Oak. Her pay is less than $15 an hour “by a decent margin,” she says. “Rent, PG&E, phone and Internet, [excluding] food—my take-home pay is about 76 percent of those costs,” she says. To make ends meet, Alaimo gets by without a car and works five to seven hours in other child care work each week. She also sells jewelry, and her 18-year-old daughter contributes a bit. Parents are already paying a small fortune for daycare and preschool. In Santa Cruz, it costs $8,593 a year for full-time preschool care in a licensed home and

$9,376 for infants, according to 2012 data from the state Department of Education. Hoffman says one way to increase pay might be to include California preschool 4-year-olds in the public school system— something they do in Oklahoma, New York and New Jersey. Stone, the assemblyman who represents Santa Cruz, wants public education to include 4-year-olds, but he doesn’t see support from state leaders. “That is something the governor just does not understand,” says Stone. “He sees the child care need really as just warehousing.” Fran Kipnis of UC Berkeley’s Center for the Study of Child Care Employment says expanding the years of public schooling could help. “The K-12 system is publicly supported;

parents could never pay [fully] for the education of their children,” says Kipnis. “We need the same type of public support for preschool.” While the pay is tight, Hoffman says the rewards have been rich for him. He came to early childhood education 45 years ago while studying for an architecture degree at MIT. As part of the program, he volunteered in local schools. He tried high school, junior high school and elementary school, and each left him unfulfilled. Then while volunteering at preschools, he found his niche. Hoffman has designed school playgrounds and written children’s books. His newest, “A Dark, Dark Cave,” has been picked up by Viking/Penguin. He’s also

created children’s toys and puzzles that he sells locally during the Open Studios Art Tours and elsewhere. Hoffman fondly recalls a boy who some parents did not want in a preschool because he was “bossy.” The director let him stay and Hoffman worked with him. Whenever the boy demanded something, Hoffman would say, “I’m pleased to help you.” The boy got the idea and started saying “please.” Near the end of the school year, the boy asked Hoffman to help him put his shoes on. When Hoffman said “sure,” the boy screamed “NO!” Leaning against him, the boy said, “I didn’t say please.” The boy’s mom cried, and several parents apologized to Hoffman for their earlier complaints.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

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(MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM


NEWS

The WAMM fundraising campaign can be found at indiegogo.com.

Visual & Performing

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eliminate the most compliant, compassionate, effective and selfless medical marijuana organization in the country, and the medical marijuana movement would fold or go back underground,” says journalist David Bienenstock, a former High Times editor who now works for Vice. “Instead, WAMM and the Santa Cruz community stood up to those terribly misguided bullies, and everything changed as a result. I think it's safe to say that literally millions of people have benefited from this brave stand, not just directly by becoming WAMM members, but because the truth about medical marijuana has finally come out, and now we see this movement spreading to even the most conservative communities in California and around the world." A $5 donation to WAMM’s campaign gets a thank you note. Donate $100 and you get a T-shirt; raise it to $420 and you get a marijuana leaf plate made by artist Don Ivey, a member whose partial paralysis is helped by the plant. A $1,500 donation includes a tour of the gardens and a meal with “Nonna Marijuana, the Queen of Weed Cuisine,” Valerie’s 93-year-old mother, who is famous for posting recipes on the Internet. That donation, available only to patients, includes rooms at the Davenport Roadhouse and a shuttle to the farm. Eight guests can do the tour and meal. Brown says the loss of WAMM would be an incredible blow to the community. “People would die without WAMM and others would needlessly suffer. WAMM’s compassionate model sets the gold standard for medical cannabis collectives, as no one in the organization goes without medicine and every member contributes to making WAMM what it is,” he says. “WAMM owes its hard-earned existence to the brave and heroic work of Valerie and Mike Corral, and to the high spirits of its members. Despite the many serious ailments that WAMM members suffer from, there is always a strong feeling of hope and optimism at the weekly meetings—and this supportive community spirit is every bit as healing as the medicinal herb.”

© 2015 EWC

THE END OF WAMM? <13

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WHO W O’S NEX N XTIIE? The T he annual salute saalute to Santaa Cruz’s Cruz’s entrepreneurial entrepr e eneurial sp irit expands, expands,, honoring locals loc cals with a spirit rrange ange of goals goals and d crusades crusades


“Next year is my full vision,” says Swinnerton. “It might be 10--15 winners. This is a test run, almost.” The 18-and-under category y is the most significant addition, and win nner Courtney Laschkewitsch first made he er mark with a speech about the entrepreneu urial spirit given at Event Santa Cruz, the serie es of talks also produced by Swinnerton. “We We have to keep that new wness, and what better way to do that th han to have [a winner] under 18,” says Swin nnerton of the new category. “There are so many young kids that are doing somethin ng. They’re not just sitting there playing Xbox.”

SANTACRUZ.COM SANT A CR UZ . C OM | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEKL LY. C OM M | MAY MAY 13-19, 13- 19 , 2015

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hen n Matthew Swinnerton of Event Santa Cruz took over the Nexties last year, he had a plan n: take the popular awards ceremony honorin ng locals who “create, build and inspire,” reva amp it, and make it a show. He did that, butt as the Nexties awards show returns to th he Rio Theatre on Friday, May 15, Swinnerto on reveals that his vision for the Nexties is actually a three-year plan. The first year wass the remodel, and this year sees the begiinning of an expansion, with an under-18 category and an award to seven-piece loc cal band Coffee Zombie Collective.

In man ny ways, the Nexties awards ov verlap nicely wiith Swinnerton’s work in Eventt Santa Cru uz. “It’s ab bout people, and their stories,” he says. “ Ho owever we showcase it, it still comes c back to th hat.” In partticular, though, the Nexties representt the search for “the entrepren neurs of tomorrrow.” “These e are not the people everybody knows. Th hese are the people you’re goin ng to be hearing about from now on,” says Swinnertton. Introdu ucing this year’s Nexties winne ers …

21> 21 >

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<19

ANDREA MOLLENAUER

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events, and she used to own Lifestyle Culinary Arts on Front Street. How crazy is her life? On Wednesday, when she accepts her Nextie, she is also catering the event for 225 people. “I think it’s cool that I was asked to cater it before I won,” she says. “They gave me a chance to back out, but this is what I do—I serve people food.” Mollenauer considers the Food Lounge a daily party because she and other chefs cook for each other and exchange ideas. She does little marketing, except for posting events on her Santa Cruz Food Lounge page on Facebook. She says the Lounge is a difficult concept for some people to understand because it’s different every night, but it’s also attracting regulars. Mollenauer never wanted a restaurant; she was happy owning a kitchen and renting it to people while teaching others. But she considers the Food Lounge to be a place for events, arts, live music. “There’s no walk-by traffic, but I think if you give people good food and dynamic events, they will show up.” BRAD KAVA

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or Andrea Mollenauer every night is a party—but not everyone would think so. She works on her feet as many as 14 hours a day. But that’s what makes her happy: serving dynamic food and teaching others to do the same. She’s getting a Nextie for creating a new kind of place to eat, a restaurant that’s like a permanent pop-up, with different chefs and menus every night. Her Food Lounge at 1001 Center St. (the old Center Street Grill), which opened in March, has nine tenants, including a very successful Monday night Dim Sum maker, Mortal Dumpling; a Sunday brunch spot, Ty’s Eatery, which also serves casual comfort foods on Wednesdays; and a chocolate house called Mutari Chocolate House and Factory. She also has Fogline Farm for barbecues, and La Marea, which makes ceviche and has an oyster bar. “My business is complex,” says the 35-year-old Montreal native. “I wear a lot of hats.” She teaches cooking for public high schools; she is on the board of Cabrillo College’s culinary program, she caters

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verywhere Paul De Worken goes, he sees blank walls. “But I don’t see a wall. I see a blank canvas just waiting for artwork,” says De Worken, who founded Monterey Bay Murals (MBM) in 2008 with his friend Jaime Sanchez. Since its inception, MBM, which De Worken now runs solo, has orchestrated some 20 murals from Santa Cruz down to Monterey, with community members—and really, anybody lucky enough to walk by during the painting process— invited to take part, even if they’ve never picked up a paintbrush before. “One important thing I’ve experienced is all of these friendships that I’ve made. I always invite people to participate, and when they do they just have a blast. In the end you have this brother or sisterhood of artists that come out,” says De Worken. The Watsonville native says that beautifying the town he loves benefits the whole community and counteracts urban blight. “When people come up to me and say ‘You’ve enhanced my commute to work,’ or ‘I purposely take this route now so that

I can look at this beautiful painting,’ that really inspires me,” says De Worken. “It’s instant to the public. It’s like they own it, they have a relationship with it.” A couple of years ago, De Worken, Sanchez, Martin Garcia and members of the Watsonville community decided to tackle local alleyways with the Monterey Alleyway Project (MAP). They painted huge California poppies on a heavily graffitied wall between Sudden and Jefferson streets. “The whole thinking behind that was to get into the alleyways and bring art to people who wouldn’t normally see it, making art accessible,” says De Worken. To this day, the mural has not been re-tagged with graffiti—a positive sign that the community respects and appreciates the art. “The cool part was that the same day we finished, while we were packing up, there were children already playing in front of it and looking at it, and people were coming out thanking us and offering us food. It’s a really good feeling when that happens,” he says. MARIA GRUSAUSKAS

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ou get your first job, and then realize you have no idea how to file your taxes. You blow a tire on Highway 17 and haven’t a clue how to change it. You try to make your first pot of pasta and boiling water floods the kitchen floor. These are situations that everyone faces when they make that critical leap into “the real world,” and teaching kids to handle them is what Monica Karst’s Sprouting Hope Project is all about. Still in its fledgling phase, Sprouting Hope will offer a mix of mentoring and skills-building to teach teenage girls what they aren’t taught in schools, says Karst. Building on Karst’s other brainchild, Santa Cruz Socialites—a networking and support website for women—the community has already stepped up, says Karst. “Everyone is willing to join forces so that we can create the next leaders of Santa Cruz—to empower them and have them know that just because they’re girls doesn’t mean that they can’t do whatever they want to,” says Karst. Local businesswomen have

already begun mentoring, says Karst, and classes will teach everything from balancing a budget and changing a car tire to social media presentation and cooking. Karst is the type of woman who does everything at once; during the day she works for Scotts Valleybased Catbird, and at night she works on building Santa Cruz Socialites and Sprouting Hope—ideas that burgeoned around the same time. Back in 2011, Karst was facing the realities of owning a small business—handling everything from bookkeeping to janitorial duties. Her downtown storefront, Baby Shoppe Santa Cruz, was struggling and she found herself in the middle of a divorce; she worried her three teenage daughters would fall through the cracks. Karst knew that other women were in similar situations, so she decided to create one place to find all the answers: Santa Cruz Socialites. “I realized I needed support, not competition—which we usually do as women,” says Karst. “I thought: We need a network of women to watch over our girls and to teach them.” ANNE-MARIE HARRISON

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learning songs on the ukulele after his daughter was born. He then roped his wife and friends into what ended up as a rootsy seven-piece ensemble. Coffee Zombie Collective are known for their weird twists on covers, like turning Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House” into a ska song, or adding call-and-response to Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” And their mutant versions spin off even further in their live shows. “Right now I’m trying to shoehorn the theme from Fresh Prince of Bel Air into the end of ‘Don’t Stop Believing,’” says Lieby. The group was surprised and thrilled to win a Nextie; Lieby says they’ve been stunned at the way their quirky vision has been accepted in the local music scene. “We’re all completely mystified. We did it expecting nothing,” he says. But they have worked hard to support Santa Cruz’s quirkiness, too, playing at all kinds of local events. “The Kale Festival asked us to play. It was like ‘Yeah!’ Rock Scissors Paper Tournament? ‘We’ll play that!’” says Lieby. “I want this band to be part of Santa Cruz. We’re straight outta Live Oak.” STEVE PALOPOLI

29>

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here’s a video on YouTube from about 15 years ago of a band called the Real Jimmies, four young guys who used to busk on Pacific Avenue. One of them grew up to be Nate Lieby, the lead singer of Santa Cruz’s freakishly inventive cover band Coffee Zombie Collective. The video is a portrait of the artist as a young crazy man: while the acoustic rock quartet plays Weezer’s “Say It Ain’t So,” Lieby wails on a stand-up drum kit, dances, and occasionally blows a kazoo in between singing and interacting with passersby at the corner of Pacific and Cooper. “I had to find a way to get up in people’s faces,” Lieby says. He’s still getting in their faces—and still covering Weezer, actually, via the monster medley CZC has built around “Come Undone” (aka “The Sweater Song”) that they call “The Sweadley.” Lieby’s put a lot of time into Santa Cruz bands that did original songs over the years—the Sneaky Creekans, 300 lbs.—but in the last five years he’s returned to covers, and it’s sort of like the Real Jimmies days all over again. Only a lot weirder. Coffee Zombie Collective started when Lieby was fooling around

27


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<27

MARTIJN STIPHOUT

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became an online surf shop and wholesaler with occasional “pop up shops” around California in December 2014 with the help of David Dennis. Dennis manages the sales, marketing and surf supply for Ventana. Stiphout takes about three to four weeks to make a board, and he can work on up to two in one month. Working on more than two boards at once is overwhelming, he says. Ventana has various recycling partnerships set up around Santa Cruz; the Santa Cruz Guitar Company and Soquel Vineyards both give wood scraps to Stiphout. Each board is made with fiberglass cloth and bio resin, which is 75 percent tree sap based. While each board is visually different, Stiphout has used materials such as abalone pieces, stone, shells, jade, driftwood and historical metal on his boards to create a one-of-a-kind look. “The most sustainable material I’ve found is redwood,” Stiphout said. “Most of my boards have redwood, but if not, it is always reclaimed wood.” AMANDA EDWARDS

31>

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

o most Santa Cruz residents, a pile of old wood on the side of the road is just trash. To Martijn Stiphout, founder of Ventana Surfboards and Supplies, it represents endless possibilities. Reclaimed wood is readily available, and in Santa Cruz where redwood and old wood is so prolific, people throw it away every day. “It breaks my heart that a tree once living can just be thrown away after a couple of years,” Stiphout says. The idea for Ventana came about when Stiphout was out catching some waves on his foam surfboard and it snapped in half. It was then that he realized how often it must happen, and he wondered what he could do to prevent that. “When my foam board broke, I figured I could make one out of wood for cheaper,” Stiphout says. According to Stiphout, wooden boards aren’t just more durable; they are much better for the environment. Foam boards are made of polyurethane, which creates a carbon impact and is full of toxins. Ventana Surfboards and Supplies

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COURTNEY LASCHKEWITSCH

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will reduce people’s stress. “Throughout high school I found stress to be a common thing that everyone has, so I wanted to create a device that would basically help with biofeedback—help reduce stress and balance someone’s life to make them more relaxed in situations,” Laschkewitsch says. She grew up with parents in the nonprofit industry, and credits her entrepreneurial aspirations to them. A small portion of her speech was devoted to her business, but most of it was about her philosophies on how to create the right headspace to be an entrepreneur. “I think failure is great. If you are failing, then you are on the path to success. I know that sounds weird, but you learn from failing,” Laschkewitsch says. “In 10 years, I would like to see my company hit the news and really start to change lives. My real main goal is to see people walking on the street, and I want to see them using my products.” AARON CARNES

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

he first time Courtney Laschkewitsch recalls wanting to be an entrepreneur, she was 4. By 6 years old, she’d gotten into the habit of ripping up pieces of paper so she could fold and tape them together to create prototypes of her product ideas, which were usually tables, chairs, desks, and kitchen appliances. Now 18, she’s the first recipient of a Nextie in the teen category (ages 18 and under) for her inspirational speech on the entrepreneurial spirit, given as part of Event Santa Cruz. “I always thought that the greatest thing I can do is to create something out of nothing,” says Laschkewitsch. “I think the best I can offer people is my ideas and to create products and services that benefit others.” She is currently studying business at Cabrillo College, and is in the early stages of starting her own company, which will be in the smart watch industry. It’s something she hopes

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&

LITERATURE

BLOWING MINDS AND TAKING QUESTIONS Leonard Mlodinow reveals what he knows about what we don’t know at Bookshop Santa Cruz on May 14.

All He Did Was Ask MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Theoretical physicist and author Leonard Mlodinow investigates why we investigate in ‘The Upright Thinkers’ BY WENDY MAYER-LOCHTEFELD

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I

f you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to live the sciencenerd dream, just ask author and theoretical physicist Leonard Mlodinow. The coolness factor hovering over his long list of accomplishments is enough to give The Big Bang Theory’s Sheldon Cooper pause. Often photographed in a rock-

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star black T-shirt, Mlodinow has graced the TED talk stage, debated science versus spirituality with Deepak Chopra, pestered his mentor Richard Feynman with quantum physics theories, and co-written two books with Stephen Hawking. For the cherry on top, he’s put words into Captain Jean Luc Picard’s mouth

and gadgets into Angus MacGyver’s hands, as a screenwriter for both Star Trek: The Next Generation and the classic TV series that reinvented duct tape and swiss army knives as secret agent must-haves, MacGyver. Mlodinow is the perfect argument that science, creativity, and imagination work best in tandem,

and his bestselling books explore the myriad ways we seek out answers to our most puzzling questions. He’s coming to Bookshop Santa Cruz at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, May 14 for his new book “The Upright Thinkers: The Human Journey from Living in Trees to Understanding the Cosmos,” which charts no less than the >34

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<32 evolution of the human desire to know. But this is no dry treatise on the history of intellectual theory, or a whirlwind trip through its greatest hits. It’s a spirited survey of the scientific mileposts that have marked our way since the beginning, as well as an epic tale of curiosity and courage—not bad for 350 pages. How did we go from thoughts of standing upright, killing dinner, lighting fires, and seeking shelter to comprehending the inner workings of the distant sun, as well as our own DNA? The journey is embedded in our uniquely human capacity for wonder. Mlodinow explores our questioning nature in building blocks that take shape as far back as archeology allows, and expand through the lives and minds of great scientific thinkers, but he never loses sight of the larger landscape. “The greatest triumphs of human intellectual history—writing and mathematics, natural philosophy, and the various sciences—are usually presented in isolation,” he writes, “as if each has nothing to do with the others. But that approach emphasizes the trees and not the forest.” He makes no such mistake, noting instead the rich soil that binds ideas to circumstance, individuals to communities, and the world we see to the world we don’t. Along the way, he marvels at everything from lizard brains to libraries, and acknowledges the human failings of colossal icons like Galileo and Newton. Long fascinated by the vagaries of chance (he wrote about it at length in “The Drunkard’s Walk”), Mlodinow points out that the development of human

understanding has been anything but linear. Chance has intruded all along, for better and for worse— Paleolithic humans were once reduced to mere thousands, and Charles Darwin almost didn’t get the job on the famed ship the Beagle, where he formulated his theory of evolution. “Science teaches us a lot about the order of the universe,” says Mlodinow, “but it also teaches us that, despite our best efforts, it is the small chance occurrences that often count the most.” Within the big picture, he writes poignantly about the role chance has played in his own life, through his parents, who survived the Holocaust separately and met in New York. He maintains a deep admiration for his seventh-grade-educated father, who lost his first wife and child in the Nazi camps, fought in the Jewish Underground, and never fully understood the complexities of his son’s vocation but took comfort in the knowledge that we are made of “the same stuff as the perfect and romantic stars.” When asked how being a scientist has influenced his character, Mlodinow says, “Having the scientific knowledge of where the universe came from and who people are helps you to appreciate who you are, who we are as human beings, and how we should act.” Indeed, and in lighting our path to such knowledge, he reminds us that scientific inquiry begins with the oldest human question of all—and it’s only one word: Why? Info: 7:30 p.m., Thursday, May 14, Bookshop Santa Cruz, 1520 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.


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STRIPE SIRENS Suna Lock and Dana Rader celebrate six years at their retail location in downtown Santa Cruz. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER

Success by Design MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Stripe Design Group’s Suna Lock and Dana Rader keep it timeless and classic BY CHRISTINA WATERS

36

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he tireless entrepreneurs of Stripe—Suna Lock and Dana Rader—think of their work as “providing an inspirational playground” for their customers. Anyone who’s found themselves glued to the retail eye candy of both Stripe and its brother store, Stripe Men, will agree. “Walls and windows,” they tell me, are key. “Windows are the eyes of the store,” says Lock. “The back wall is the anchor,” says Rader. Stripe’s back walls remain lit after hours— “like a stage set,” they both nod in agreement. Pooling Lock’s background in textile and interior design with Rader’s degree in fine arts, the duo focused on creating an irresistible retail environment. “That’s what we needed to compete in an online world. People have to be enamored

immediately. We can’t be lazy about the environment,” says Lock. A giant whiteboard in the upstairs office documents the coming year of windows and walls for Stripe designers and planners. “We collect ideas all year,” and then the entire team meets in January to brainstorm and hash out ideas for the six-yearold flagship and its three-year-old sibling. The theme-driven walls change six times a year. “Or more,” Lock quickly adds. Once themes are planned, the buying begins. Where do they shop? I ask. Their eyes roll as if dealing with a friendly idiot. Flea markets! Including one that spans five towns and thousands of purveyors. Who knew that the country’s largest flea market unfolds each year in Round Top, Texas?

A recent display of vintage farm implements—this, in a shop for women—testifies to the stylish frenzy of their retail imagination. “Stripe for men is much easier to plan for,” they both agree without knowing exactly why. “The space is smaller, hence cozier.” Right now giant puffy cotton-batting “clouds” drift along Stripe’s back wall and down the front windows. The idea came from a friend’s wedding. “Effective and simple. That’s what we love.” Lock specializes in kids’ stuff, jewelry, and heads up Stripe’s Design Group. Rader, who pretty much can’t stay still, does clothing and buying. “We start with soap land and kitchen world,” Rader says. They both laugh. Other “lands” include “blue and white.” I start noticing all the blue

and white towels, toys, blouses, and scarves. “Or beige,” Rader says, straightening a towel. “We never run out of ideas. We get ideas everywhere. Ideas in the shower,” says Rader. “We know our customer by now pretty well. We buy timeless.” Timeless is a guiding concept at Stripe, handpicked in a curated landscape. They both nod. “We watch what’s trending,” says Lock. “But we tend to be just off trend,” adds Rader. “Timeless and classic.” It looks expensive, they both agree. But it isn’t. Stripe shoppers cross over age groups and body types. Stripe is for the entire gamut of age groups, from the rubber-duckie new moms to people who partied with Andy Warhol. And there are private as well as corporate clients for their design group, too, including Marini’s new candy store, the new Venus Spirits tasting room, Bonny Doon Vineyard Tasting Room and Citrix. “We moved here to Walnut [Avenue] in 2007,” Lock explains. “Rents were lower and negotiable. Everyone was closing up. We saw a massive opportunity in a time that was desolate.” What’s next? International travel “to find places that make certain clothing is the very best,” they say. There will then be a Stripe line of clothing, and eventually more. “We asked ourselves, if we want to mind the store ourselves, how could we expand?” says Lock. Having a custom line available online and in other larger retail stores, that’s how. “Besides,” Rader reminds me, “we have a team—and we’re both OCD.” Past the $24 earrings displayed on playing cards, we check out a huge dried tree stuck into a giant tub and anchored by round boulders. “We actually went driving around looking for a dead tree,” Rader recalls happily. When customers come in they’re greeted by a circular table, the “activity area.” “It’s how we’re feeling at that moment,” Lock explains. “Our current ideas on a table.” Hammered copper Moscow Mule mugs make a statement next to striped scarves, jelly glasses and tooled leather. “We try to help people look at things differently,” Rader confesses. “We wouldn’t buy something we didn’t like,” they agree, adjusting clothing on racks and turning tags to maximize visual excitement.


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MUSIC

RAY OF DARK Ray Bonneville brings his crooked tales to the Corralitos Cultural Center on May 15.

Criminal Mind MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Fascinated by seedy characters on society’s edge, Ray Bonneville has never played blues by the rules BY CAT JOHNSON

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A

s a youngster, blues artist Ray Bonneville was out of sorts. Born in French-speaking Quebec, he moved with his family to Boston when he was 12 and found himself in a new town, with a new culture and an unfamiliar language. It wasn’t until his mother bought him a used guitar that he started feeling at home. He fell in love with the sound of the guitar, and played the E chord until his parents asked him to please learn some more chords. “Playing guitar kind of saved me,” Bonneville says. “It took me away from the challenge of the language barrier, and gave me a thing to hang on to.” Bonneville took one or two guitar

lessons, but says he really learned to play “from everything and everyone he could.” In high school, he joined a band that covered songs by Roy Orbison, Elvis Presley, the Zombies and other British bands. Playing music gave him something of his own, but it didn’t keep him out of trouble. Bonneville started having run-ins with the law, and eventually got expelled from school. His dad, who Bonneville describes as authoritarian and very religious, didn’t want him hanging around being a bad influence on his eight siblings, and challenged the teenager to join the military. Bonneville joined the Marines, and in 1967, went to Vietnam. On his return, Bonneville once again

found himself feeling lost. Once again, it was music that gave him direction. He was driving a cab, wondering what he was going to do with his life when he was turned on to the great blues harmonica players like Little Walter, James Cotton, Sonny Boy Williamson, and Paul Butterfield. Bonneville took a shine to the instrument and practiced it between cab fares. When he combined playing harmonica with playing his guitar, a new musical chapter opened for Bonneville, but he was 40 years old before he started writing his own songs. “For 20 years, I had been playing other people’s music, but never the way I heard it,” he says. “I always changed it a bit to suit me and my

style. When I started writing, I had a guitar style that was already there from doing that.” When asked why he waited so long to start writing his own songs, Bonneville says he’s not sure, but maybe it was a matter of confidence. “It could have taken me all that time to get comfortable with the English language,” he says. Once he did start writing, Bonneville was drawn to dark characters, criminals, and lost souls. Part of his attraction to these characters is that they provide a way for people to live another life vicariously, and also because he can relate to them. “I have a bit of a criminal mind myself,” Bonneville says. “I like to break rules, and I like to go my own way. I think criminals and people who live at the edge of society have something to say, and something to teach the rest of us.” In the spirit of the blues, Bonneville takes hard-luck tales and turns them into toe-tapping, swinging tunes— something he has a well-established reputation for doing. He attributes his ability to create a nice groove to time spent in New Orleans, where he learned to take his time. He wonders if the languid pace in the town—and the music—is because it’s so hot there in the summertime. “Being in New Orleans taught me to relax,” he says. “The music has its own groove. It’s as much about what you don’t say as what you do say.” He adds, “The listener can be coaxed into imagining things that aren’t even there if you just give them the space to do it.” On his latest album, Easy Gone, Bonneville does what he does best—tell stories of fringe dwellers, criminals and the broken-hearted. But despite his proclivity for dark subject matter, and a history that includes more than a few bumps, Bonneville counts himself among the lucky. “No matter how crooked my path has been,” he says, “I feel really, really fortunate to have found what it is I’m here to do on the earth.” Ray Bonneville performs at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 15 at the Corralitos Cultural Center, 127 Hames Road, Corralitos. $15$20. 254-2669.


CALENDAR

GREEN FIX

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Free calendar listings in print and online are available for community events. Listings show up online within 24 hours. Submissions of free events and those $15 or less received by Thursday at noon, six days prior to the Good Times publication date, will be 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 5/13 THE BUZZ ABOUT BEES The sad buzz about bees is that they’re dying—we’ve known that for a while now, but how do we stop it and ensure crop sustainability and diversity? That’s what Hamutahl Cohen, bee expert and Ph.D. student in Environmental Studies at UCSC, will discuss in this installment of the “Citizen Science” series at the Santa Cruz Public Library, co-sponsored by the Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. Cohen will share her research on bee biodiversity, colony collapse disorder, and how to support bees in home gardens. Info: 6:30 p.m., Thursday, May 14. Santa Cruz Public Library, 224 Church St, Santa Cruz. 427-7707. Free.

ART SEEN

MUSIC BREAD AND ROSES The Santa Cruz Peace Chorale presents its 13th annual spring concert, celebrating art, love and beauty in the struggle for peace and justice. Silent auction of fine local wines, crafts, gift certificates and more. 7 p.m. Mount Calvary Lutheran Church, 2402 Cabrillo College Drive, Soquel. $15 at the door. No one turned away.

ARTS COMMUNITY POETRY CIRCLE Join the circle and write a poem in a supportive and creative environment. All ages and levels of poets are welcome. Led by poet-teacher Magdalena Montagne. 1-3 p.m. Aptos Public Library, 7695 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Free. POETRY OF NATURE, JUBILATION & THE SOUL Carolyn Brigit Flynn and seven local poets read to benefit the Land Trust. 7-8:30 p.m. Louden Nelson Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. $10.

CLASSES BOOKMAKING AT STRIPE

Info: 6-8 p.m., Sunday, May 17. Stripe, 107 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. Reservation required: 421-9252. $55.

SPIRITUAL MEDITATION FOR LIFE Simple, basic meditation technique that focuses on the breath. Floor cushions provided. 7-8 p.m. Branciforte Plaza, 555 Soquel Ave., Ste. 245, Santa Cruz. 246-0443. holeyboy.com. Free, donations accepted. JUNIPER MEDITATION FOR MODERN LIFE Second and fourth Wednesday evening meditation. Includes meditation, talk, discussion on Buddhist training for modern life. All level meditators and drop-ins welcome. 7:30-9 p.m. Pacific Cultural Center, Gallery room. juniperpath.org. $10.

EMILY HELLER AT VETERANS HALL UCSC produces some funny people, with some of the most famous being Saturday Night Live’s Maya Rudolph and Andy Samberg. Another UCSC grad, Emily Heller, is rising through the ranks of comedy, and she’ll perform this Friday at the Veterans Hall as part of her first national tour. Heller cameoed in the SNL digital short “Lazy Sunday,” starred in “Ground Floor” on TBS, created the “The Future” series and was named one of Comedy Central’s 2011 Comics to Watch. Info: 8:30 p.m., The Veterans Memorial Building, 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. emilyheller. tumblr.com/post/113396081025/tour. $15-$20.

THURSDAY 5/14 ARTS MARY POPPINS Teen production. Using a combination of magic and common sense, Mary Poppins must teach a troubled family how to value each other again. 7-9 p.m. Louden Nelson Center Theater, Santa Cruz. allabouttheatre.org. $10. SNAPSHOT STORIES AT THE 100-YEAROLD GARFIELD PARK LIBRARY Bring family historical photos. Your photos will be scanned and returned along with a USB drive containing an electronic copy of all photos. Images are added to the Santa Cruz Public Libraries’ Local History Photo Collection.

3–5 p.m. Garfield Park Library, 705 Woodrow Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.

TALK CITIZEN SCIENCE: THE BUZZ ABOUT BEES Local bee expert Hamutahl Cohen discusses her research, bee biodiversity, Colony Collapse Disorder, and offers tips to gardeners to support bees in home gardens. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Downtown Branch Library, 224 Church St., Santa Cruz. Free.

BUSINESS MAY BREAKFAST MEETING Learn the

>40

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

This Sunday, Stripe Design Group will offer an introductory book binding class with instructor Janina Larena, who studied printmaking and book arts at UCSC and has been making books for 20 years. Larenas is an expert in intaglio and letterpress, but in this weekend’s two-hour class she will lead students in the pamphlet stitch and its variations—with which you can create cards, notebooks, chapbooks and zines. Each student will receive a portfolio of notebooks, an instructional zine, and a bookmaker’s tool kit.

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.

FRIDAY 5/15

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CALENDAR

the 9th Annaul A Santa Cruzz

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

MAY MAY 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 Proceeds P roceeds benefit Prophet Prophet Elias Ellias Greek Greek e Orthodox Orthodoox Church, Churrch, Santa San anta Cruz Cruz

FRIDAY 5/15 PORTER GULCH LITERARY AND ARTS JOURNAL 30TH ANNIVERSARY This Friday Cabrillo College celebrates 30 years of producing the Porter Gulch Literary and Arts Journal—a student-made journal which strives to highlight local authors and artists, and is distributed free to the local community. Founded in 1985, the journal features poetry, fiction, drama, critiques, reviews, photographs and other forms of visual art. Students, faculty, and community members are invited to celebrate 30 years of the journal at the Horticulture Center at Cabrillo College with live music, free food and drink. Info: 6-8 p.m., Cabrillo College, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Free.

MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Curtis Shaw Painting

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<39 greatest and latest of Aptos while enjoying a delicious breakfast from the Best Western Seacliff Inn. Bring business cards and promotional material to network with other Aptos Chamber of Commerce and community members. RSVP at 688-1467, meggie@ aptoschamber.com. 7:30–9 a.m. $20/$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. Features a great

variety of Cuban style dancing including Casino partnering and Salsa Suelta. Two skilled instructors with over 15 years’ experience. 7-8 p.m. Louden Nelson Center, Santa Cruz. salsagente.com. 295-6107. $9/$5.

GROUPS STEVE GOTTLIEB PRESENTS “UNWRAPPING THE VISUAL DISCOVERY OF SPIRAL NEBULA” May meeting of the Santa Cruz Astronomy Club. Hear the story of William Parsons’ (Third Earl of Rosse) first visual observations of M51 with his 72-inch speculum reflector in the spring of 1845 and the subsequent discovery of spiral structure in dozens of “nebulae.” 7-8:30 p.m. Scout House at Harvey West Park, 326 Evergreen St., Santa Cruz.

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

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CALENDAR <40 A COURSE IN MIRACLES SANTA

CRUZ REGULAR MEETING A book on enlightenment that might be called a psychological journey to a spiritual awakening. 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.

HEALTH ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION 18TH ANNUAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE For those who want to understand more about memory loss, Alzheimer’s or a related dementia. Workshops, self-care, lunch and networking. CEUs are available for many professions. Register at edconference. kintera.org/SantaCruz2015. 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Mount Hermon Conference Center, 37 Conference Drive, Mount Hermon. 800-2723900, iglatt@alz.org. $35-85.

FRI MAY 15 FOOD & DRINK 9th ANNUAL EAT LIKE A GREEK FOOD FAIRE Three days of authentic Greek food, desserts, frappes. Taverna with Greek and American beer, wine and traditional Greek spirits. Live Greek music. Free admission. 5-10 p.m. on Friday. 11 a.m-10 p.m. on Saturday, and Noon-8 p.m. on Sunday. Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church, 223 Church St., Santa Cruz.

ARTS

MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

MARY POPPINS Teen production. 7-9 p.m. Louden Nelson Center Theater, Santa Cruz. allabouttheatre.org. $20/$16/$13.

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3RD FRIDAYS—CAPITOLA MALL WALKING ART TOUR Stores and venues at the Capitola Mall host local artists and their work. Join us for wine, music, food, raffles, and local art around every corner. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Capitola Mall, 1855 41st Ave., Capitola. Free. BEYOND BORDERS: DANCE & MUSIC Third Friday event with food, performances and hands-on workshops. Live performances from Love Gutter, Amy Obenski, Vive Oaxaca and CIS perform traditional Oaxacan music and dance. 5:30-8 p.m. Santa Cruz MAH. $5/$3. EMILY HELLER LIVE UCSC alumnus Emily Heller is a comedian and writer who likes you very much. See her at the Vets Hall, 842 Front St., Santa Cruz. 8:30 p.m. $15.

VAN ANTWERP THEATRE CO. PRESENTS DOG LOGIC Thomas Strelich’s comedy “Dog Logic” takes place at a run-down pet cemetery in the California desert. Fri-Sat 8 p.m. Radius Gallery, Tannery Arts Center, 1050 River St., Santa Cruz. $10.

COMMUNITY The 2015 NEXTies This year’s honorees: Andrea Mollenauer, Martijn Stiphout, Monica Karst, Paul De Worken, Courtney Laschkewitsch, Coffee Zombie Collective. 7-10 p.m. The Rio, Santa Cruz. $40.

CLASSES CHAIR YOGA WITH SUZI Instructor Suzi Mahler guides you through a series of gentle seated yoga postures that are performed slowly and with breath awareness. Tuesday/ Friday 9:30 a.m. at Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. Wednesday at 10:30am at Yoga Center Santa Cruz, Front St., 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.

HEALTH VITAMIN B12 FRIDAY A fun time for people to meet and mingle, enjoy our beautiful healing atmosphere and meet the doctors. 3-6 p.m. Thrive Natural Medicine, 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. 515-8699. COMMUNITY ACUPUNCTURE CLINIC In a cozy and nurturing group setting, join LAc Rachel Farber at TLC for a holistic treatment that can help with anxiety, depression, digestion and more. The first and third Fridays of the month. 9-11 a.m. The Lotus Collaborative 701 Mission St., Santa Cruz. 588-0497. $35 for initial assessment and session $20 for all follow-ups.

MUSIC MUSICAL BENEFIT FOR MONARCH SERVICES Tammi Brown, a world-renowned


CALENDAR

THE THE ARCHITECTS ARCHITECTS A ASSOCIATION SSOCIATION OF SANTA SANTA C RUZ C OUNTY OF CRUZ COUNTY PRESENTS PRESENTS

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FRIDAY 5/15 - SUNDAY 5/17 GREEK FESTIVAL This weekend enjoy the festive cultural experience of the ninth annual Eat Like A Greek Food Faire with foods of all varieties—calamari, gyros, tiropita, pastitsio, moussaka, koulourakia, etc.,—and music throughout the entire weekend. Families are invited to groove to the Spartan Band’s Greek tunes, relax in the sunshine of the church’s courtyard, and enjoy the Greek taverna which will feature imported Greek spirits, wine and beer. Info: Various times, May 15-17. Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church, 223 Church St., Santa Cruz. livelikeagreek.com.

gospel, blues and soul singer; the T Sisters, a trio singing American Roots music; and Young and Lowe, with Joshua Lowe, a local master with a unique style of Americana. Proceeds benefit Monarch Services. 8-11 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, Santa Cruz. $17/$20.

SATURDAY 5/16 17TH AVE STUDIOS SPRING SHOW Open house where 20+ studios will showcase hundreds of beautiful original artworks. Meet the artists, and get a glimpse into the creative processes behind their work. Sat-Sun 11 a.m.– 6 p.m. 980 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. Free. ED SMILEY: COLORFUL ABSTRACTS / OPEN STUDIO Part of the 17th Avenue Spring Show. Building 4. 980 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. Free. BIG SPRING BOOK SALE Select from thousands of books at the annual Spring Book Sale. History, fiction, coffee table books, kids’ books, CDs, DVDs, and more. Members shop at 10 a.m. Public 11 a.m–4 p.m. Downtown Library’s adjacent parking lot, Church Street, Santa Cruz.

20TH ANNUAL OPEN ARCHITECTURE TOUR Self-guided tour of nine private homes throughout Santa Cruz County. The Tour Booklet admits two. On sale at Bookshop Santa Cruz, Palace Art in Capitola, San Lorenzo Lumber in Santa Cruz, Alladin Nursery in Watsonville, Habitat’s ReStore on Swift Street, and online at habitatsc.org. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. aascc.org, 4602999. $36 for two people. MAY FAIRE CELEBRATION AND OPEN HOUSE Garden filled with art, music, dancing, face painting, crafts, games, local artisans, a huge water slide (bring swim clothes and a towel), and more. Tickets for food and drinks available for purchase, or bring your own picnic. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Orchard School, 2288 Trout Gulch Road. Aptos. Free.

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

ARTS

MARY POPPINS Teen production. 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Louden Nelson Center Theater, Santa Cruz. allabouttheatre.org. $20/$16/$13.

SATURDAY S ATURDAY MAY MA AY 16 16THH 20 2015 15

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CALENDAR <43 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.

GROUPS SANTA CRUZ DERBY GIRLS YARD SALE Score some unique finds—all proceeds will benefit our league. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. The Garfield Park Christian Church (aka the Circle Church), 111 Errett Circle, Santa Cruz. IF NONPROFIT LATIN AMERICA MULTICOURSE FUNDRAISER DINNER MultiCourse Latin America feast, country setting, interesting guests. Proceeds benefit Pietro Ameglio, scholar-activist in Mexico and 2014 winner of the El-Hibri Peace Education Prize. 7–9 p.m. 160 Sunflower Lane off Freedom Blvd., next to Scott Park, Corralitos. 7244108, if.integrities@gmail.com. Donation. APTOS LIBRARY ANNUAL KIDS CHESS TOURNAMENT Kids aged 6-18 are invited to participate. Hosted by resident chess master Dana MacKenzie. All participants receive a certificate, with the top three finalists awarded medals. Play three games with no elimination. Light snacks. RSVP required. Call 427-7702 to register. Noon–4 p.m. Aptos Branch Library, 7695 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Free.

MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

MUSIC

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PACIFIC VOICES SPRING CONCERT Just back from performing at Carnegie Hall, Pacific Voices will entertain you with a variety of styles, including gospel, jazz and folk from several countries. Conducted by Dr. Sean Boulware. 7:30 p.m. Sun 3 p.m. Inner Light Ministries. THE MUSIC OF YOGA - BHAKTI YOGA KIRTAN WITH LIVING DEVOTION Join us for singing, dancing chanting and sound healing. 7-10:30 p.m. Divinitree Yoga Studio, 1043B Water St., Santa Cruz. events@ LivingDevotion.org. $10 - $20. No one turned away for lack of funds. CHARMAS Santa Cruz Celtic band plays traditional and modern Celtic music featuring fiddle, flute, pennywhistle, guitar, mandolin, banjo, bodhran, bagpipe, and vocal music. 6-9 p.m. Davenport Roadhouse Restaurant and Inn. Free.

OUTDOORS BOARDWALK SEASON KICK-OFF Free

entertainment with Circus of Nations on the Boardwalk’s Beach Bandstand at Noon, 3 p.m., and 6 p.m. Celebrate 100 years of Marini’s. First 1,000 wristbands sold include a free collectible pin. Grab a brass ring on the carousel and win a free treat from Marini’s. 10 a.m.–8 p.m. Free Admission.

VOLUNTEER PROSPECTIVE TUTOR ORIENTATION Attend a one-hour Prospective Tutor Orientation. No teaching or foreign language experience necessary. 10–11 a.m. Santa Cruz Volunteer Center, 1740 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.

SUNDAY 5/17 ARTS FREEHAND: A DRAWING SHOW A drawing show. Invited artists: Celeste Baross, Delia Krupp, Ian Everhard, Robin Kandel, Hildy Bernstein, Marc D’Estout, Barbara Downs, Eva Burnstein, Donna Cehrs, Terry Hogan and Ron Milhoan. Exhibit until June 21. 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. Pajaro Valley Arts Council, 37 Sudden St., Watsonville. Free. VIVE OAXACA GUELAGUETZA A colorful dance, music, food, arts festival featuring dancers and musicians from Oaxaca, Santa Cruz, and Los Angeles. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Harbor High School, 300 La Fonda. viveoaxaca.com. $10, under 5 free. CYT SANTA CRUZ NIGHT ON BROADWAY Christian Youth Theater Santa Cruz presents: “A Night on Broadway,” a musical benefit performance. Join us at the Seascape Golf Club in Aptos for dinner and a show. Tickets at ciytsantacruz.org. 5-9 p.m. Seascape Golf Club, 610 Clubhouse Drive, Aptos. $60-$75.

CLASSES SALSA FOOTWORK AND WORKOUT Learn how to dance and get fit at the same time. Learn style and technique in a welcoming environment. No partners needed. Drop-ins welcome. 9-10 a.m. The Tannery, 1060 River St., Santa Cruz. 818-1834. $7/$5. ESSENTIAL OILS FOR ROMANCE Heather Wiliams teaches interactive class to learn about the overall benefits of essential oils and how they can be used to enhance a romantic evening. Make personalized bath salts. 1-2 p.m. Mountain Spirit, 6299 Hwy 9, Felton. 335-7700. $10. FLY FISHING 101 Here’s your chance to

acquaint yourself with all the knowledge and gear needed to fly fish successfully. A casting master from the Santa Cruz Fly Fishermen leads workshop. Bring your own rod and reel or use club rods provided. Free BBQ lunch and cold drinks. Ages 8 and up. 10 a.m.–3 p.m. Quail Hollow Ranch County Park, 800 Quail Hollow Road, Felton. prc120@scparks.com. $3. GREENWOOD ARTS FOR ALL AGES Be inspired in the Beauty of Nature through song, circle dance, music, free-form movement with colored materials, pastel drawing, writing and sharing circle. No previous experience needed. Art and writing materials included. RSVP 662-0186. 2-4 p.m. Outdoors in Aptos. Adults $10, children free.

FOOD & WINE ANNIEGLASS POUR & TOUR LOCAL WINE TASTING AND STUDIO TOURS Sip on a glass of wine or a tasting flight featuring local wineries at our wine bar. Take a free studio tour to discover the craftsmanship that goes into every sustainably handmade Annieglass piece. Noon-4:30 p.m. Annieglass, 310 Harvest Drive, Watsonville. annieglass.com. $6-$8.

GROUPS 20TH ANNIVERSARY OCEAN ALTERNATIVE HOMESCHOOL Celebrate 20 years of homeschooling with Ocean Alternative (a.k.a. Live Oak Home Study). Graduates, students, family and friends join us to commemorate this milestone for the school in the Live Oak School District. 1-4 p.m. 984-6 Bostwick Lane, Santa Cruz. 475-0767. Free. JOY HINZ Direct from the Hague, Joy will tell us about the WILPF 100th Anniversary Conference with over 30 countries represented, and four from WILPF Santa Cruz. Various “Endurance Activists” will tell their poignant and sometimes funny stories from the trenches of activism over the past half century. 2-5 p.m. Downtown Library, Santa Cruz. Free. OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS 12-Step support group for those wanting to stop eating compulsively. Meetings daily. See website for a schedule of times and locations: santacruzoa. org. 9:05-10:15 a.m. Sutter Maternity & Surgery Center, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 462-9644. Free. SERENITY FIRST—PAGANS IN RECOVERY Guests are free to discuss their spiritual paths, including those which are naturebased and goddess-centered. Those from

all 12-step programs are welcome. 7-8 p.m. MHCAN Room 12, 1051 Cayuga St., Santa Cruz. 336-8591. Free, donations accepted.

HEALTH SEAHORSE SWIM SCHOOL FREE SWIM OPEN HOUSE Celebrate Summer with an Open House at the Elks Lodge in Santa Cruz. Free swim lessons, Junior Guard tryouts, open pool for play and check out Summer Programs. 1-4 p.m. 150 Jewell St., Santa Cruz. Free.

OUTDOORS 14TH ANNUAL SPRING DOG FESTIVAL Bring your dog out to play. Games, agility demonstrations, treibball, nosework, herding, Frisbee, fieldwork, and lure coursing. An adoption showcase helps rescue dogs find homes. Event raises thousands of dollars for local dogs in need. 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Soquel High School, 401 Soquel San Jose Road, Soquel. coastaldogsweb@gmail.com. $10/ Dog & $5/Person. ARBORETUM FAMILY NATURE WALK AND BOOK SIGNING Join Santa Cruz author Kelly McCandless and renowned birder Todd Newberry as they walk the trails highlighted in her new book “A Budding Naturalist’s Guide to the UC Santa Cruz Arboretum.” Nature walk starts at 9 a.m. Book signing at 11:30 a.m. UCSC Arboretum, High St., West of Western Drive, Santa Cruz. Free.

SPIRITUAL GUIDED MEDITATION Led by Venerable Drimay, an excellent way to learn how to set up a daily meditation practice. Stabilizing meditation followed by guided contemplation on various Dharma topics. Doors close at 9:35-10:30 a.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383. Donation. INSPIRATIONAL MEDITATION SERVICE Includes inspirational readings from the teachings of Paramahansa Yogananda, the founder of Self-Realization Fellowship and author of Autobiography of a Yogi. 11 a.m.Noon. Call for location. 334-2088.

MONDAY 5/18 CLASSES VING TSUN CLUB SC Learn and Practice: Pak Sao, Pak Dar, Lop Sao, Don Chi Sao, Luk Sao, etc. 8-9 p.m. 1344 Pacific Ave., second


CALENDAR

SATURDAY 5/16 DIGITAL NEST FUNDRAISER “FACES OF THE DIGITAL FUTURE” This Saturday the Digital NEST (Nurturing Entrepreneurial Skills with Technology) and David Dennis Photo present “Faces of the Digital Future,” featuring large-scale portraits of Watsonville youth in tech companies. Over the past four months, local and Silicon Valley businesses, Cruzio, NextSpace, Microsoft, Plantronics, and others, participated in photo shoots. This Saturday will feature a free afternoon garden event with live Latin music, food and wine, and the photos will be available for purchase, with proceeds benefitting the Digital NEST. The NEST serves as a platform that offers digital filmmaking, digital game design, networking, music recording, website design and graphic design as a pathway to higher education for students who don’t otherwise have access to it. Info: 2-6 p.m., YWCA Watsonville, 340 East Beach St., Watsonville. on.fb.me/1QZT5kM. Free.

floor. Presents Ving Tsun Club SC. Free for April/May/June.

THE PIECES & AMY OBENSKI Hear a blend of ethereal delicious folk-rock and live looping with multiple harmonies, instruments, bass lines, and beat boxing. 8:30–11 p.m. The Crepe Place, Santa Cruz. $8. MARION WALKER Three-piece psych-rock band of sweethearts with sharp teeth. 5 p.m. Streetlight Records, Santa Cruz, 939 S. Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.

SPIRITUAL MONDAY DROP-IN MEDITATION Led by Venerable Yangchen and Venerable Gyalten— Basic meditation instruction and practice.

Awesome View! Huge outdoor Beer Garden!

TUESDAY 5/19

Craft Beers-Restaurant-Live Music Breakfast on the Weekends 10-1

GROUPS MOOD MATTERS Weekly, confidential, dropin peer support group for persons with any type of mood challenge. We use a check-in and feedback discussion format. Family and friends are welcome. 6–8 p.m. MHCAN, Room 12, 1051 Cayuga St., Santa Cruz. 247-1124. Free.

HEALTH FRIENDS AND FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP >46 Open to all friends and loved

Thursday Locals Night 10% off Fridays Karaoke 8-Midnight

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The SUMMIT’S SUMMER CONCERT SERIES

A LL S H OW S FR OM 1– 4P M

5 / 1 6 C rooke d Bra n c h e s 5/17 Depot Dogs 5/23 Reactors 5 / 2 4 Bla c k Ou t s 23123 Santa Cruz Hwy, Los Gatos 408.353.2700 summithousebeergarden.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

MUSIC

One session of mindfulness meditation, followed by guided reflection meditation. 5:30 - 6:30 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383. Donation.

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CALENDAR

FINE ART MADE SIMPLE SUMMER CLASSES

831.298.0062 | santacruzatelier.com

SANTA CRUZ ATELIER ART CLASSES AND WORKSHOPS AT THE OLD SASH MILL 303 POTRERO STREET BUILDING 47, ROOM 202

CALL 831.429.5340 VEHICLE SIGNS • PRINTING

FRIDAY 5/15 - THURSDAY 5/21 “SHE’S BEAUTIFUL WHEN SHE’S ANGRY” AT THE NICK

S A N TA

C R U Z

This week the Women Lawyers of Santa Cruz County will present the film “She’s Beautiful When She’s Angry” at the Nickelodeon Theatre from May 15-21, and will hold discussions following showings on May 15 and 20. This documentary follows influential leaders of the women’s movement between 1966 and 1971—the first to proclaim that “personal is political.” The film takes viewers from the founding of National Organization for Women (NOW) to the more radicals of the movement with their meat dresses, burning bras and topless marches. The film unpacks the spirit of the time and also explores the controversies over race, sexual preference and leadership that plagued the movement. •

MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Info: Various showings, The Nickelodeon, 210 Lincoln St., Santa Cruz. thenick.com. $7-$10.50.

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Arbor Gardens & Antiques

<45 ones of people with cancer. Meets every first and third Tuesday of the month. Call to register. 5:30 - 7 p.m. WomenCARE. 457-2273. Free.

MUSIC

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

BILLY MANZIK AT DAVENPORT ROADHOUSE Driving roots rock sound, complete with catchy riffs, lyrical hooks and a feel good, toe tapping kind of style. 6-9 p.m. Davenport Roadhouse Restaurant and Inn, 1 Davenport Ave., Davenport. Free.

SPIRITUAL PATH TO ENLIGHTENMENT STUDY GROUP Reviews and discusses materials

on the steps of spiritual development as outlined in the Tibetan Buddhist Tradition. Group facilitator and resident nun Ven. Drolma. 6:30-8 p.m. Vajrapani Institute for Wisdom Culture. drolma@vajrapani.org. Free.

BUSINESS GOLDEN CHIROPRACTIC GRAND OPENING Opening features guest speaker pro-cyclist Ben Jacques-Maynes on “Bodywork and How it Helped Him Prepare for the 10th Amgen Tour of California.” Dr. Goldi Jacques-Maynes is an experienced Chiropractor formerly located in Watsonville who specializes in adults, children and sports. 5-7 p.m. 9053 Soquel Drive, Suite A, Aptos. Free.


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MUSIC MUS SIC CALENDAR CALENDAR

LOVE LO VE YOUR

LOCAL LO CAL BAND B A AND

MAY MA Y 1313-19, 19 , 2015 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM G WEEKL LY. C O M | SANT SANTACRUZ.COM A C R UZ . C O M

KUNG K UNG FU V VAMPIRE AMPIRE A

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Over a dec Over decade ad de ag agoo S San an Jo Jose/Santa se/Santa apper Kung FFuu Vampire Cruz rrapper Vampire started started fusing sstraightforward traightforward hip-hop with a liv ve b and and d dark the atrical element live band theatrical elementss ooff vvampires ampires and a kung fu. It ttook ook sseveral everal yyears, ears, but wh hen the Ins ane Clo wn when Insane Clown P osse’s ffanbase anbase (kno wn as jugg alos), Posse’s (known juggalos), he ard him, they thhey embr aced him full on. heard embraced Sinc oured the U .S. 113 3 Sincee thenn he’ he’ss ttoured U.S. time s, with ssome ome Midw est mark ets times, Midwest markets dr awing bigg ger cr owds than right here here drawing bigger crowds in the Ba y. Bay. “I’ m he avily cconnected onnected ttoo a super “I’m heavily niche market. markett. The good good thing about that is that I ha ve lo oyal fans faans that ar have loyal aree super supportiv ve, with w m ac a e ttattooed attooed on supportive, myy fface th At them. At the th same same titime, time, it hurts h ts me th hurt thatt other people who might enjoy enjooy my my music might be turn ned ooff ff bec ause the ve turned because theyy ha have the wr ong idea, ideea,” Kung FFuu Vampire Vampir a e says. says. wrong “It’ ome fr eaky-deaky thing. It’ “It’ss not ssome freaky-deaky It’ss not met al. It’ ock kind ooff thing. metal. It’ss not a rrock It’ traight-uup hip-hop It’s jus ool It’ss sstraight-up hip-hop.. It’s justt a ccool name and a ccool ool imag e.” image. When he sstarted, tarted, he w as una ware was unaware juggalos, always ooff jugg alos, and a alw ays played played ttoo hiphop audienc es, ssome ome ooff whom ffelt elt his audiences, theatrics the atrics w were erre a bit oover ver the top. top. Now Now he’ss ggot audience, he’ss trying ttoo that he’ ot an audienc e, he’ eexpand xpand it and d sho w the hip-hop crowd crowd show that he is is,, mo more ore than anything, anything, a rrapper apper culturee with skills.“I skills.“I gr ggrew ew up in Latin cultur and lo low-riding, w-ridinng, going going to to classic classic hip-hop and liv livee rrock ock shows. shows. I ha have ve ssoo much love lo ve and respect resp pect ffor or the jugg juggalo alo kids, kids, doesn’t makee ssense but it doe sn’t mak ense ffor or that ttoo be myy only ffan base. m an a b ase.” Kung FFuu Vampire Vampir a re has a new new album eexpected xpected out this yyear, ear, along with a new dropping ne w video dr roopping this month that he promises pr omises will be “movie “movie quality quality with an American Americ caan Ho Horror orrroor St Story ory, paranormal paranormal kind ooff theme ttoo itit. t.” AAR AARON ON C CARNES ARNE A S INFO: 9 p INFO: p.m. .m. Thursday, Thursday, May May 14. 14. Catalyst Catalyst A trium, 11011 011 P acific Ave., Ave., Santa Santa Cruz. Atrium, Pacific $22/adv, $22/ /adv a , $25 $25/door. 5//d door. 429-41 429-4135. 35.

GRMLN

WEDNESDAY W WEDNESDA AY 5/13 HIP-HOP H IP-HOP

KYLE K YLE

Rapper Kyle addr Rapper addresses esses his criticss directly di irectly on 2013 vir viral al video “I K Keep eep Itt Real” with the line “People sa say y I sound s like Dr Drake/I ake/I don’t. don’t.”” And indeed, in ndeed, the rrapper’s apper’s casual bedr bedroom o oom fe eel meets pop-oriented hip-hop — feel hip-hop— not no ot to mention the “everyman “ever yman struggle” pervasive st truggle” theme per vasive in his so ongs—does bring Dr ake to mind. mind d. songs—does Drake But (Previously Bu ut still, Kyle (Pr eviously known n ass K.i.D.) has his own style. He comes co omes fr from om the pr predominantly edominantly w white beach town of V Ventura, entura, an and d rreps e it pr eps operly, with some V alle ey properly, Valley inflections in nf lections and rreferences eferences to vid video deo games ga ames and Instagr Instagram. am. At the sam same me time, ti me he appr me, approaches oaches hip-hop hip hop wit with h si incerity, br aggadocio, rreally eally g oo od sincerity, braggadocio, good pu unch lines and some har d-hittin ng punch hard-hitting be eats. AAR beats. AARON ON C CARNES ARNES IN INFO: NFO: 9 p p.m. .m. Cat Catalyst, alyst, 11011 011 P Pacific acific Avenue, Avenuue, Santa S a a Cruz. $15/ ant $15/adv, /adv a , $2 $20/door. 0//d door. 429-41 429-4135. 3 . 35

NEW ORLE ORLEANS ANS

REBIRTH BR REBIRTH BRASS AS S BAND B AND Hailing fr from om New New Orleans, Orle eans, a city with no shortag shortage e of musical institutions, the Rebir rth Br ass Band Rebirth Brass is an institution in its own right. F ounded in 1983 b is a rrededFounded 1983,, the band hot dr aw on its home turf, t and a draw beloved global ambas s sador ambassador for the N ew Or leans br ass ban nd tr adition New Orleans brass band tradition when it’ road. If you haven’t it’ss on the road. seen Rebirth in action n, do your self action, yourself a favor: put on your ju jumping umping shoes, wear something you can c sweat in, and check these gu guys ys out. You’ll You’ll never forg et it. C forget CAT AT JOHNSON JOH HNSON INFO: 8:30 p INFO: p.m. .m. Moe’ Moe’ss Alle Alley, ey, 1535 Commercial C ommercial Way, Way, Santa Santa Cruz. Crruz. $2 $20/adv, 0//adv a , $25/ door.. 4 door 479-1854. 79-1854.

FRIDAY FRIDA AY 5/15 5 FOLK

JOHN CR CRAIGIE AIGIIE For a performing sing For singer-songwriter, er-songwriter, nothing being on the rroad oad is no othing new—

it's what th they hey do. But g generally, enerally, musicians g go o out on tour then head home e to rrest, est, rregroup, egroup, and write song songs. gs. Sing Singer-songwriter er-songwriter Craigie everyday John Cr aig gie is not your ever yday musician though. t The 30-something modern-day modern-da ay tr troubadour oubadour just sta stays ys out on the rroad, oad, and has done so for the last 10 10-plus -plus p y year years, s,, performing p g in venues in all 50 states and countries around ar ound the e wor world. ld. His new album, Craigie’s Working On n My Farewell, Fa arewell, is Cr aigie’s all-electric ffirst irst all-el ectric guitar album, which makes me think we can expect a showcase of bluesy and rrocking ocking songs. CJ INFO: 8 p.m. INFO: p.m. Don Don Quixote’s, Quixote’s, 62 6275 75 Hwy Hwy.. 9 9,, FFelton. eelton. $2 $20. 0. 60 603-2294. 3-2294.

SATURDAY S ATTUR RDA AY 5/16 INDIE

GRMLN GRML N For his las For last st two rrecords, ecords, GRMLN (the cr creative eattive pr project oject of Y Yoodoo oodoo Park) Par k) has been bor bordering dering on ’90s-loving ’90s-lovin ng pop-punk without ever seem seeming ming to have an ounce of


MUSIC

BE OUR GUEST SANTA CRUZ AMERICAN MUSIC FESTIVAL

JOHN CRAIGIE

INFO: 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz. $5. 429-6994.

SUNDAY 5/17 AMERICANA

HOUSTON JONES Grab a pint glass. Pour in one part Southern-steeped rock, add a dash of bluegrass and top it off with a two-count of sweet country music and you have the musical mixture

Houston Jones is serving up. This Bay Area-based American roots outfit delivers fresh melodies with old-fashioned twists that could easily fit in-between the Grateful Dead and Doc Watson. MAT WEIR INFO: 7 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Highway 9, Felton. $17/adv, $21/door. 603-2294.

MONDAY 5/18 CUBAN JAZZ

JANE BUNNETT & MAQUEQUE Over the past two decades, no North American musician has done more to showcase the extraordinary array of jazz talent flowing from Cuba than Canadian soprano saxophonist and flutist Jane Bunnett. She scored her fifth Juno, the Canadian Grammy, with her latest album Jane Bunnett & Maqueque (Justin Time), featuring an extraordinary allfemale Cuban sextet. Pronounced mah-keh-keh, the band features a bevy of rising stars, including

powerhouse vocalist Daymé Arocena, who recently recorded a project with British DJ/producer Gilles Peterson, and drummer Yissy García, daughter of Irakere drummer Bernardo García. ANDREW GILBERT

INFO: 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $30/door. 427-2227.

TUESDAY 5/19 PSYCH ROCK

SLOW SEASON This quartet from Visalia took their blues and wrapped them up into a hard rock joint reminiscent of early Jimmy Page. Touring on their second album, Mountains—released on one of the underground’s heaviest and hairiest labels, Riding Easy Records—Slow Season is the band for anyone who’s owned a van, grown their hair out for headbanging purposes or rocked a pair of cut-off jean shorts. MW INFO: 9 p.m. Blue Lagoon, 923 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $5. 423-7117.

INFO: 11 a.m. Saturday, May 23 and Sunday, May 24. Aptos Village Park, 100 Aptos Creek Road. $65-$200. 454-7900. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/ giveaways before 11 a.m. on Friday, May 15 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the festival.

IN THE QUEUE EARL SWEATSHIRT

Odd Future member and underground hip-hop sensation. Wednesday at Catalyst SLY & ROBBIE

Dub pioneers and legendary drum and bass combo. Thursday at Moe’s Alley MONARCH SERVICES BENEFIT

Tammi Brown, the T Sisters, and Young & Lowe. Friday at Kuumbwa INDIGENOUS

Blues rockers out of South Dakota. Friday at Moe’s Alley SPIRIT OF ’76

Tribute to the Jerry Garcia Band. Saturday at Don Quixote’s

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

punk in him. Certainly the chords and drive is there, but it’s more like moody, fuzzy beach-pop, and, on the latest record, more dynamic and self-analytic. When GRMLN started some years back, it was a solo lo-fi project, with Park recording surfy, undistorted guitars, drum machines and muffled lead vocals. After some Internet buzz, he transformed the project into a full band. On his latest record, he’s moved past the two-and-a-half minute mark into four-minute territory, broadening his emotional range a bit, too. AC

For over 20 years, the Santa Cruz Blues Festival has been a Memorial Day weekend staple, but this year, there’s a new show in town. The Santa Cruz American Music Festival is a celebration of American music in many forms including blues, rock, country, folk, funk, and jazz. Festival organizers are going big with the inaugural event, bringing country duo Big & Rich and the legendary Bonnie Raitt, along with Kellie Pickler, Los Lonely Boys, JJ Grey & Mofro, Ryan Bingham, Big Sam, and others. For those Blues Festival diehards among us, Coco Montoya, Chris Cain, Ana Popovic and others will be making sure the blues are well represented. CAT JOHNSON

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LIVE MUSIC

Wednesday May 13th 8:30pm $20/25 New Orleans Grammy Winning Greats

REBIRTH BRASS BAND Thursday May 14th 9pm $25/30 Jamaica’s “Riddim Twins” w/ All Star Band & Vocals

SLY& ROBBIE & THE TAXI GANG W/ BITTY MCLEAN Friday May 15th 9pm $15/20 South Dakota Blues Great

INDIGENOUS Saturday May 16th 9pm $15/20 Bay Area Bluegrass Favorites

HOT BUTTERED RUM + COFFIS BROTHERS Sunday May 17th 8:30pm $9/12 Reggae From Hawaii

JORDAN T, MANGO KINGZ, ONE A CHORD Thursday May 21st 8:30pm $20/25 Hawaii’s Talented Singer/Multi-Instrumentalist

MAY MA Y 1313-19, 19 , 2015 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM G WEEKL LY. C O M | S SANTACRUZ.COM A NTA C R UZ . C O M

WILLIE K

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May 22nd NEW ORLEANS SUSPECTS + The Earful May 23rd HURRICANE ROSES- Farewell Show May 28th THE POST ST RHYTHM PEDDLERS May 29th THE SAM CHASE, MCCOY TYLER May 30th WHITEY MORGAN & THE 78’s June 3rd DIEGO’S UMBRELLA + THE INCITERS June 4th KOUNTRY KITTENS BURLESQUE June 6th FLOR DE CAÑA + PELLEJO SECO June 7th ERIC LINDELL June 10th THE DIRTY KNOBS w/ Mike Campbell June 11th THOMAS MAPFUMO June 12th LYRICS BORN + Le VICE June 13th MELVIN SEALS & JGB June 14th KABAKA PYRAMID + Iba Mahr June 17th JESSE ROYAL & The KingSuns June 18th ORGÓNE + NTH POWER June 21st THE RED ELVISES June 26th B-SIDE PLAYERS + ROOTZ UNDERGROUND June 28th GLEN DAVID ANDREWS July 1st FRUITION July 3rd MICHAEL ROSE July 4th PATO BANTON July 8th JOHN MAYALL July 9th DEAD WINTER CARPENTERS

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

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Al Frisby 6:30p

A AQUARIUS QUARIUS 1175 75 W West est Cliff D Dr, r, S Santa anta Cruz

THU

5/14 5/1 4

FRI

5/15

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

T HE ART ART B AR & C AFE THE BAR CAFE 11060 060 Riv River er St #112, S Santa anta Cruz

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

5/16 5/1 6

SAT SAT Lloyd Llo yd Whitne Whitney ey 12p Ha wk n Blue Hawk Bluess Mechanicss 6p Mechanic p

SUN

5/177 5/1

MON

Al FFrisby risby 6p

5/18

Kid Andersen Andersen 6p

TUE

5/19

Rand Rueter 6p

Minor Thirds Thirds Trio Trio r 710p 7-10p Bill Walker, Walker, D Daniel aniel Thomas 77-9p -9p 9p p

Art Artss and D Drafts rafts 77-9p -9p

B BITTERSWEET IT TERSWEE T BISTRO B ISTRO 7787 87 Rio Del Del Mar Blvd, Blvd, Apt Aptos os

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

Mary Skate Skate and the T Trashleys rashleys 77-9p --9p The D D’Oh ’Oh Br Bros os 8-11p 811p

BL UE LAGOON L AGOON BLUE 9 23 P acific A ve, S anta Cruz 923 Pacific Ave, Santa

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

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

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

Hammer Down, Down, P rojekt2 $5 9p Projekt2

D DJJ Chilang Chilangoo $5 9p

The Box Box ((Goth Goth Night) 9p

Met al Monda Metal Mondayy 9p

W orship, Slo w Season, Season, Worship, Slow Black out, Mother ship Blackout, Mothership $5 9p p

DJ/Live Music DJ/Live

Comedy Night Comedy

Karaoke Karaoke

Open Mic Open

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

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

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

Bodacious 911:45p 9-11:45p

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

Light the Band FFree ree 9p

Bing Bingoo 6:30p E ric W inders FFree ree 9p Eric Winders

S wing Night Swing 5:30p

Be achslam W restling Beachslam Wrestling Jazz Night 5:30p $1 0/$20, R eggae Night $10/$20, Reggae Silv erbacks FFree ree 8p Silverbacks FFree ree 9p p

K araoke Karaoke 9 9p

K araoke Karaoke 9 9p

B RIT TA ANNIA ARMS BRITANNIA 11 0 Mont erey Ave, Ave, Capitola Capitola 110 Monterey C ASA S ORRENTO CASA SORRENTO 39 3S alinas St, S alinas 393 Salinas Salinas

D DJJ Luna 9p

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

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

E arl S weatshirt Earl Sweatshirt $2 0/$25 8p $20/$25

Dillon Francis Francis $40 8p

W aka Flock Waka Flockaa Flame $20/$55 $2 0/$55 8p

C ATA AL LYST ATRIUM AT TRIUM CATALYST 11011 011 Pacific Pacific A ve, S anta Cruz Ave, Santa

K Kyle yyle $15/$2 $15/$20 0 8:30p

T Twiztid w wiztid $22/$25 8:30p

Chali 2na $22/$25 8:30p

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

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

K araoke Karaoke 8p-Clo se 8p-Close T rivia Night Trivia FFree ree 8:30p

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

Little D Little Dragon ragon 7p The Cyph Cyphyy $1 $10/$15 0/$15 8:30p

Nef the Phar Nef Pharaoh aoh $15/$20 $15/$2 0 8p

The R Rezillos ezillos $13/$16 $1 3/$16 8:30p

The Expanders Expanders $1 $10/$14 0/$14 8:30p KPIG Happy Happy Hour 5:305:30-7:30p 7:30p

Music Series 2015 FIDDLING CRICKET & THE CANYON ACOUSTIC SOCIETY PRESENT:

International Music Hall and Restaurant

FINE MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOOD ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET M-F $7.95 Wed May 13

Kris Delmhorst plus Dave McGraw & Mandy Fer

$15 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm Thur May 14

Bill Kirchen & Bobby Black

Fri May 15

John Craigie plus McCoy Tyler

Songs & Stories

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

$20 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 8pm Sat May 16

Spirit of ‘76 celebrating The Jerry Garcia Band

Sun May 17

Scotts Valley High School Music Production 2pm Matinee

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

$7 adv./$7 door 2pm <21 w/parent Sun May 17 Wed May 20

with his SANTA CRUZ BAND

Dave Davis guitar | Bob Carter harp & Mando Leroy Hoornbeck Bass | Toby Gray percussion G R EA E ATT M U S I C , FFO OOD & DRINKS

SATURDAY MAY 16 2015

Open Seating 7:30–9:30 tickets $15 reservations available: 408.499.9441 4840 SOQUEL DRIVE 831.477.1341 K E N N YB U T T E R IL L . C O M

Thu May 21

Houston Jones 7pm Concert $17 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 7pm

Box Set Duo Jim Brunberg and Jeff Pehrson $15 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm

Reverend Billy C. Wirtz $20 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm

COMING RIGHT UP

Fri. May 22 Sat. May 23 Sun. May 24 Wed. May 27 Thu. May 28 Fri. May 29 Sat. May 30

Become a Sustainable Partner www.thefoodbank.org/partner

Our mission is to end hunger and malnutrition by educating and involving the community.

The Inciters + Swamp Angel The Sun Kings Beatle Tribute To Linda With Love Linda Ronstadt Tribute Santa Cruz Percolators Front Country + The Down Beets EXTRA LARGE +Sweet Hayah Stu Allen & Mars Hotel Grateful Dead Tribute

Reservations Now Online at www.donquixotesmusic.com Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am

800 Ohlone Parkway Parkway,, Watsonville Watsonville California, 95076 950 076 831-722-71 831-722-7110 10


LIVE MUSIC WED WE ED

5/133 5/1

THU

5/14 5/1 4

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

Harrbor House, House, S weet Harbor Sweet Plott, A Bobk at $8 9p Plot, Bobkat

Beach Fuzz, Fuzz, Pyomids, Pyomids, Beach Trabants $8 9p Trabants

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

Phooenix Rising Phoenix 8 $3 8p

Soulwise Soulwise $5 8:30p

55/15 /15

5/16 5/1 6

FRI SAT SAT Thanks Mishka, Thanks Buddy, Buddy, Mishk a, ead R ecipe, GRMLN, D Dead Recipe, Shubally, Michael Dean Dean Shubaly, Darling Darling $5 9p p $8 9p Sneakky P ete & the Sneaky Pete Hall Pass Pass Secret W eapons Secret Weapons $7 9:30p $7 $6 9p p

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

5/17 5/ /17

SUN The Earnest Earnest LLovers, overs, Suzanne Wilde Suzanne W ilde and the Hats $8 9p p Black Hats

Delmhorst Kriss Delmhorst $155 7:30p 7:30p

Kirchen & Bobby Bobb by Bill Kirchen Black Songs Songs $2 $20 0 77:30p :30p

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

Live Live Comedy Comeedy $7 9p $7

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

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

Flinngo Flingo 7p

C Craigie, McC oy John Craigie, McCoy Tyler Tyyler $ $20 20 8p

Garcia Band The Jerry Garcia $12/$15 8:30p

Scotts Scotts V Valley alley HS Music Productionn $7 $7 2p Hous Production Hous-ton $17/$20 ton Jones Jones $1 $ 7//$20 7p p

Power of of Three Three Power

Next Blues Blues Band The Next

Rain Big Rain

Pete C ontino A ccordion Pete Contino Accordion 6-9p Doctor Madd Sho w Lencat Lencat The Doctor Show 8p 9p

Live Live Music

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

Kevin Arranger Kevin the LLone one Arr anger Myhaloo and Hannah 6p 7p 6 7

Depot Depot Dogs Dogs 7p 7

Jade 4p 4

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

Bennett Jackson Bennett Jack son & the Ranch Moree Ranch Hands & Mor $12 7:30p 7:30p p

Keith Keith Greeninger Greeninger and Band $25/$45 8p

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

Chris K elly Kelly 710p 7-10p

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

Open Opeen Mic 7p 7

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

E ntourage Entourage

MIS SION ST. ST. BBQ MISSION 1618 Mission Mission St, Santa Santa Cruz 1618

Toom mas Gomez Gomez Tomas 6p

Phoenix Rising

Wednesday May 13 • AGES 16+

Earl Sweatshirt V nce S ap es Remy Banks

$20 Adv $25 D s D s 7 p m Show 8 p m Wednesday May 13 • n h A um • AGES 16+ $15 Ad

$20 D

8 30 p m 9 p m

Thu sday May 14 • n he A um • AGES 16+

TWIZTID

Kung Fu Vamp e op n 8 30 p m Show 9 p m

D

F day May 15 • AGES 16+

WAKA FLOCKA FLAME DJ Aspec An dog Da Beas $19 D

8 30 p m 9 p m

D

H P HOP CYPHER op n 8 30 p m Show 9 p m

Sunday May 17 • n he A um • AGES 16+

NEF THE PHARAOH A

D

D

m S w

m

Monday May 18 • n he A um • AGES 16+

THE REZILLOS K D CONGO POWERS & THE P NK MONKEY B RDS $13 Ad

$16 D

D

op n 8 30 p m Show 9 p m

May 21 Dust n Lynch Age 16+ May 22 Ta est Man On Earth Age 16+ May 23 Stee Pu se Age 16+ May 24 D rty Heads Age 16+ May 25 Sage Franc s J Late y Age 16+ May 27 Doctor P Age 18+ May 28 J Boog New K ngston Age 16+ May 29 Tramp ed By Turt es Age 16+ May 30 D zzy Wr ght Age 16+ June 2 Awo nat on Age 16+ w

w &

A MUS CAL BENEF T FOR MONARCH SERV CES W TH TAMM BROWN & JOSH LOWE T cke s hewhee company com Sa u day May 16 8 pm

KE TH GREEN NGER & BAND

w w

m &

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

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

Steve Walters Steve W alters 6p 6

Scott Slaughter Scott Slaught er 6:30p 6 30

Crazy Beard Beard and guests guests Dave Dave Muldauer Muld dauer Crazy

Lisa Marie Lisa Rand Rueter Rueter Rand 6p

KUUMBWA JAZZ HONOR BAND Wednesday May 20 7 30 pm a he R o Thea e N mp x

Jane Bunnett Bunnett and Maqueque $25/$30 7p

K araoke w /Ken Karaoke w/Ken 9p C fs Chie Joint Chiefs

Monday May 18 7 pm

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 F day May 22 9 pm CLUB KUUMBWA!

STEEP RAV NE & KENDRA MCK NLEY Tuesday May 26 7 & 9 pm N m x STORM LARGE & LE BONHEUR Taken by S o m Songs o Seduc on & Obsess on Thu sday May 28 7 pm

BECCA STEVENS BAND Sa u day May 29 8 pm

www cata ystc ub com

Sa u day May 30 7 30 pm

E LEN JEWELL

T cke s SnazzyP oduc ons com Tuesday une 2 7 pm N

m

x

Monday une 8 7 pm N

m

x

OZ NOY TR O FEATUR NG DAVE WECKL AND JAMES GENUS BENNY GREEN TR O 6/9 6/11 6/12

Robben Fo d S eve Sm h & V a n o ma on u an age & Ch s E d dge

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 WEEKL LY. C OM M | MAY MAY 13-19, 3 9 20 2015 5

THE CYPHY

D Lo

F day May 15 7 pm

T cke s b ownpape cke s com

T cke s TheWhee Company com

Sa u day May 16 • n he A um • AGES 16+ $15 D

Reggae Reggae Jam Free 8p Free

A TR BUTE TO VAN MORR SON

a N K w A D M&G m m F day May 15 • n he A um • AGES 16+ $15 Ad

Monarch Monarch c Services Benefit Services Bene fit $17/$20 $17//$220 8p p

Brokenn Shades Shades Broken 6p

1011 PAC F C AVE SANTA CRUZ 831 429 4135

$10 Ad

BENNETT JACKSON AND THE RANCH HANDS

Urzua Flamenc Roadhouse Karaoke Kar a aoke Matias Urzua Flamencoo Roadhouse 6-9p 7:30p 7:30p Next Blues Blue B s The Next Band 4p

CHALI 2NA

5/19 9

7 Come Come 11 $5 9p

Billy Manzik

to Nowhere Nowhere Back to 9p

$25 D

TUE

T cke s b ownpape cke s com

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

$22 Ad

5/18

Amy Amy Obenski, The Pieces $8 9p Pieces

Trio Charmas Trio

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

KYLE

MON

Ce eb a ng Fo y Yea s o C ea v y Thu sday May 14 7 30 pm

51


LIVE MUSIC WED

5/133 5/1

5/14 5/1 4

THU Robbie w/Taxi Sly & R obbie w /T Taaxi Gang, Bit Bitty ty McL McLean ean $25/$30 8p p

FRI

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

R Rebirth ebirth Brass Brass Band d $20/$25 $2 0/$25 77:30p :30p

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

DassWassup! byy Zagg D assWassup! b Zagg a 9:30p9:30p-1:30a 1:30a

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

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

Trivia T rivia 8p

Jak Jakee Niels Nielsen’s en’s Triple Threat T rriple Thr eat 10 10p p

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

Lisaa T Taylor Lis aylor

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

Session w// P Pam Jam S ession w am Hawkins Ha wkins 77-10p -10p

POET POE P T & PATRIOT PATRIO T T 320 Cedar Santa 3 32 0 E. C edar St, S anta Cruz T THE HE RED RED 2200 00 LLocust ocust St, S Santa anta Cruz

Alexx R Raymond The Ale aymond Band 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

“The A ccelerating Uni U Accelerating Uni-vverse: erse: Eins tein ein’s Blu under Einstein’s Blunder Undone” FFree ree 7:15p 7:15p p

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

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

Open Mic w Open w/Jack /JJack ooff All Trades T rades 6-9p

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

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

5/15

Indigenous Indigenous $15/$20 $15/$20 8p

5/16 5/1 6

SAT SAT Buttered Rum, Hot But tered R um, Coffis C offis Br Brothers others $15/$20 $15/$2 0 8p p

5/177 5/1

SUN Jordan Jor dan T, T, Mang Mangoo Kingz, One Chord King z, O ne A Chor d $9/$12 8p p

MON MON

5/18

TUE

5/19

B-EZ 9:30p

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

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

Kelly The K elly Brothers Brothers

Extra E xtra LLounge ounge

Chris Kelly Kelly

Touched Too T oouched T oo o Much $5 9p

Roux Hot R oux $77 9p $

Ryan R yan Behling 6-10p 610p

Denny Jointss w w/the D enny Joint /the Pyromids P yromids

Open Mic,, Cr Crow O pen Mic ow and Canyon 4-7p the Can yon 47p

DJJ Jahi D 10 10p p

Intent Criminal Int ent 10 10p p

Industry Indus try Night 3p

T raditional Ha waiian Traditional Hawaiian Music

A coustic C overs Acoustic Covers Brunch and Dinner

The Br others Str ong Brothers Strong 7p Dave Dave W Wasted asted 8p-Midnight

Trevor Williams T revor W illiams 9:30p

Santa Jazz Jam S anta Cruz 8-11p 811p Comedy Open C omedy O pen Mic 8p

Open O pen Mic 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

Whitne Monge Whitneyy Monge 7p

Liv Js Livee D DJs

T rivia Trivia

K araoke Karaoke 9:30p

Vinny Johns Vinny Johnson on Band 8p-Midnight

Dennis Dennis D Dove ove 7-11p 7-11p

Ten T een FFoot oot Faces Faaces 8-11p 811p

The Nexties Nexties $40/$50 77p Liv Js Livee D DJs

Tassajara Trio w// T aassajara T rio w W Wee Thr Three ee w w/Tammi /T Taammi Eddie Dan E ddie Mendenhall & D a Br an Brown, own, Steve Steve Robertson Robertson Robbins R obbins Jason Gaulten & Jas on Gault en

At the Rio Theatre May 19 Mir Mireya eya Mayor Pink Boots & A Machete Pr Presented esented By B National Geographic Live Summer Speaker Series 2015

MAY MA Y 1313-19, 19 , 2015 | GT GTWEEKLY.COM G WEEKL LY. C O M | S SANTACRUZ.COM A NTA C R UZ . C O M

June 16 Steve Winters

52

Live Dangerously: Come dine in the ‘Tsunami Zone’

On The T Trail rrail of Big Cats: T Tigers, igers, Sn Snow ow Leopards, Leoparrd ds, and Cougars Pr Presented esented By National Geographic Live Summer Speaker Series 2015

LOCATED ON THE BEACH

June 19 &CXG &CXG /CUQPoU 6TCHƂE ,CO /CUQPooU 6TTCHƂE ,C CO

Amazing waterfront deck views.

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

STAND-UP COMEDY

Three live comedians every Sunday night.

Still the King: 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

|

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

June 27-28 /[ (CKT .CF[ VJG /W UKECN /[ (CKT .CF[ VJG /WUKECN Presented By Br Presented Broadway oadway By The Bayy ~ Celebrating 50 years of presenting presenting Award Aw warrd winning musicals

,WN[ Brian ,WN[ Brian Skerry Ocean Soul Pr Presented esented By National Geographic Live Summer Speaker Series 2015

Aug. 18 Jodi Cobb Stranger in a Strange Land Presented Presented d By National Geographic Live Summer Speaker Series 2015

For F or o T Tickets ickets i www www.GoldenStateTheatre.com w..GoldenStateTheatre.com m 831-649-1070


LIVE MUSIC WED WE ED

5/133 5/1

THU

5/14 5/1 4

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

5 5/15

Don Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers Geezers 6-10p 6-10p p

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

Breeze Breeze Babes Babes 7:30p 7:30p

Trivia w/Roger Trivvia w /Roger

S SUN UN

5/17 5/ /17

MON

5/18

TUE

5/19 9

Tsunami Tssunami 8p

Taco Tac a o Tuesday Tuesday

Crooked Crooked Branches Branches The Night Night Drivers Drivers Free Free 9p p Trivia Trivvia Night 8p

Depot Depot Dogs Doggs Ten O’Clock Teen O ’Clocck Lunch Band Free Freee 5p

Santa Santa Cruz Band Saturday Saturday 77:30p :30p Ten O’Clock Teen O ’Clock Lunch Band 6-9p

Upcoming Shows S hows

5.13 Lecture: The Accelerating Einstein’s Blunde er Universe: Einstein’s Blunder Undone

Karaoke Karaoke w/Eve w/Eve

TROUT TR OUT FARM FARM INN 7701 Zayante Rd, 77 01 E Z ayante R d, FFelton elton

WHALE CITY WHA LE CIT Y 490 Highway Highway 1, Davenport Davenport

5/16 5/1 6

Joe Ferrara Ferrara 6:30-10p 6:30-10p

SUMMIT HOUSE H OU SE BEER B EER G GARDEN ARDEN & GRILL G RILL Hwy,, LLos Gatos 23123 Santa Santa Cruz Hwy os Gat os

UGLY MUG U GL LY M UG Soquel Ave, Soquel 4640 S oquel A ve, S oquel

S SAT AT

Night Creepers C eepers Cr 6:30-10pm 6:30-10pm

SEVERINO’S SEVERINO’ S BAR BAR & GRILL GRILL 77500 500 Old Dominion Dominion Court, Court, Aptos Aptos

FROGGY’S SIR FR OGGY ’ S PUB 4771 Soquel Dr, Soquel 4 771 S oquel D r, S oquel

FRI

5.20 Asleep at the Wheel 5.22 Sam Bush 5.29 Film: Fishing Naked FREE Info on Facebook

5.30 Film: Fishing Naked FREE Info on Facebook

6.06 Rudy Colombini & The Stonees Unauthorized Rolling Stones

Ragtime Anniess Ragtim me Annie 5-7p 5-7p

WHA WHARF RF HOUSE HOUS E Rd, Capitola 11400 400 Wharf Wh f R d Capit d, C itola l

Broken Brokenn Shades Shades w/Jewel’s w/Je J wel’s

Amy Amy LLou ou and the W Wild ild Ones Ones

6.1 6.111 Mason Jennings

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

2Soonn 2Soon

John Michael Band

6.13 Hot Rize

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

Fire Trio Trrio July Fire 6:30-9:30p

ZI ZIZZO’S ZZO’ S COFFEEHOUSE C OFFEEHOU S E & WINE WINE BAR BAR 3555 Clar Clares es St, Capit Capitola ola

Gemini Jazz, Z Amat Amatoo 6:30-9p

6.26 Dalai Lama A wakening Awakening 6.27 Y ellow Submarine Sing-Alo ng Yellow Sing-Along 6.29 Summer Music Camp - 20155 7.27 Summer Music Camp - 20155 8.6

Snatam Kaur

8.16 Sacred Chant Concert T our o Tour with Snatam Kaur 8.26 The Waifs Waifs 9.26 Radical Reels T our o Tour

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

831.423.8209 www.riotheatre.com m www.riotheatre.com

FRIDAY M FRIDAY MAY AY 15 LEGENDARY LEGEND ARY - TRIST TRISTON ON N PALMA, REVIVAL, PACIFIC P ALMA, A REVIV VA AL, P ACIIFIC GROWN GRO WN MC/HOST ROCKY ROC CKY BAILEY & D DJ J SUGERBE SUGERBEAR EAR SA SATURDAY ATU T RDAY M MAY AY 16 MC/HOST ENRIQUE C, D DJS JS WILL B SMOO SMOOTH TH & MIK MIKEY KEY OLD SCHOOL D DJ JS SESSIONS ESSIIONS 393 Salinas St, SALINAS (oldtown) (oldtown) w 831.757.2720 // ccasasorrento.com asasorrento.com o

SANTACRUZ.COM SANT A CR UZ . C OM | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEKL LY. C OM M | MAY MAY 1313-19, 19 , 2015

WEDNESDAY M WEDNESDAY MAY AY 13 3 SOCIAL WEDNESDAYS WEDNESDAY YS S WITH D DJ JL LUNA UNA

53


FILM

OBJECT OF AFFECTION Matthias Schoenaerts plays Gabriel Oak, a sheep farmer in love with Bathsheba Everdene, played by Carey Mulligan in Thomas Vinterberg’s new version of ‘Far From the Madding Crowd.’

Four’s a Crowd MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

Hardy love quadrangle explored in new adaptation of ‘Far From Madding Crowd’ BY LISA JENSEN

54

Y

ou might call Thomas Hardy’s 1874 literary classic “Far From the Madding Crowd” the grandfather (at least one of them) of the modern romance novel. (Along with just about anything written by the Brontë sisters.) Set in a wild, rural landscape—Dorset, in the West Country of England—Hardy’s story features a strong-willed, rule-breaking heroine loved by three very different men who play out the novelist’s recurring themes of love, class, passion and independence. I was an impressionable teenager when I saw John Schlesinger’s 1967 adaptation of the novel with Julie Christie, Alan Bates, and Terence

Stamp. I thought it was the most romantic movie I’d ever seen. I didn’t have quite the same rapturous response to the handsome new Thomas Vinterberg film of Far From the Madding Crowd. For one thing, I’m no longer a teen. For another, Schlesinger’s film was some 49 minutes longer than Vinterberg’s new version, and it’s difficult to compress the scope of Hardy’s 460-page book into a concise, digestible two hours. The plot points tick off right on schedule, but it sometimes feels as if there’s not enough time for the emotional weight of the events to fully resonate with the characters (much less the audience). It’s too bad, because Danish

filmmaker Vinterberg’s excellent last film, The Hunt, was all about emotional nuance. Still, working here from David Nicholls’ script, Vinterberg makes a beautiful piece of craftsmanship out of the film. And the cast is generally persuasive, with a particularly sturdy performance by Matthias Schoenaerts as the aptly-named Gabriel Oak, who becomes the backbone of the film. Carey Mulligan is effectively cast as heroine Bathsheba Everdene. She’s not a conventional heartbreaker, but, orphaned at a young age, she’s been running her small family farm on her own ever since. Steady, plain-spoken Gabriel Oak buys a nearby farm for his sheep, and, taken with Bathsheba’s high spirits, proposes marriage, but

she tells him she doesn’t want to be “a man’s possession.” Their paths entwine again later, when she inherits a larger farm from her uncle, and shocks her staff and laborers by running the place herself, without a husband. When Gabriel loses his own place, and his flock (in a harrowing, heartbreaking scene), Bathsheba hires him to manage her sheep. He continues to care for her from afar as Bathsheba attracts the attentions of Mr. Boldwood (Michael Sheen), the wealthy, but awkward and lonely, 40-something bachelor farmer next door, and Sgt. Frank Troy (Tom Sturridge, last seen as the painter Millais in Effie Gray), a dashing and reckless cavalry officer. It’s in the character of Troy and the subplot concerning him that the movie founders a bit. It’s plausible that Bathsheba might be swept away by the first taste of raw passion she’s ever known, a bit less certain that this independent-minded woman would be married to him within a few scant minutes of screen time, and utterly baffling that she’s regretting her decision (in a heart-to-heart with Gabriel) before the wedding feast is even over. It doesn’t help that the filmmakers can’t decide if Troy is simply a cad or a man wounded by a tragic former love affair. Schoenaerts (the Belgian actor who partnered Marion Cotillard so well in Rust And Bone) imbues Gabriel with shading, depth and complexity. When the willfulness of Mulligan’s Bathsheba occasionally gets tiresome, Schoenaerts holds the film together. Sheen is excellent too, as an insecure man on the edge, struggling to keep up with more clever folk all around him. He and Schoenaerts have a great scene together toward film’s end where we suddenly feel intensely involved with both men and their fates. With a little more time to explore such moments, this film could have been a roaring success. Still, it earns major points as an admirable and gorgeous literary adaptation. FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD *** (out of four)With Carey Mulligan, Matthias Schoenaerts, Michael Sheen, and Tom Sturridge. Written by David Nicholls. From the novel by Thomas Hardy. Directed by Thomas Vinterberg. A Fox Searchlight release. Rated PG-13. 119 minutes.


MOVIE TIMES

May 15-21

All times are PM unless otherwise noted.

DEL MAR THEATRE

831.469.3220

SHOWTIMES S HOW TIMES 55/15 /15 - 55/21 /21

WELCOMEE

FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD Daily 2:00, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 + Sat, Sun 11:20am

Kristen Wiigg

D E L M A R

5 FLIGHTS UP Daily 3:20 5/15 - 5/21: 2:20p, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20 + Sat, Sun 12pm

ANTONY & CLEOPATRA Thu 7:30 POLYESTER in ODORAMA Sun 7:20 PINK FLAMINGOS Fri Midnight CRY–BABY Sat Midnight

NICKELODEON

“uproarious uproarious comedy comedy” - INDIE WIRE W “amusing amusing and genuinely disturbing, disturbbing, bing it defies expectations” - NY Times Tim mes www.thenick.com www .thenick.com

831.426.7500

FELIX AND MEIRA Daily 3:00, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30

R

tthe he

EX MACHINA Daily 2:10, 4:30*, 7:00, 9:30 + Sat, Sun 11:50am *No show Thu MAN + SUPERMAN Sun 11:00am

Starring Kristin Wiig & Wes Bentleyy

TO MEE

WELCOME TO ME Daily 1:20, 5:20, 7:20*, 9:20** + Sat 11:10am *No show Sun, Tue, Thu **No show Tue, Thu

( ) = MATINEE M ATINEE SHOW

OPENS FRI. 5/15

Daily (1:20pm), (5:20), 7:20*, 9:20**+ Sat (11:10am) (111:10am) *No *No 7:20pm show on Sun 5/17, Tues Tues 5/19, Thurs Thuurs 5/21 **No **No 9:20pm show on Tues Tues 5/19 & Thurs Thurs 5/21 PG-13 -13

Daily (2:00pm), (4:40), 7:10, 9:40 + Sat, Sun (11:20am) R

Daily (2:10pm), (4:30*), 7:00, 9:30 + Sat, Sun (11:50am) **No No 4:30pm show on Thurs Thurs 5/21

5 Flights Up

PG-13 1

Once O nce Daily (3:20pm) STARRING RALPH FIENNES National Theatre Live presents

MAN + SUPERMAN N

NR N R

Sun 5/17 @ 11am STRATFORD FESTIVAL presents

SHE’S BEAUTIFUL WHEN SHE’S ANGRY Daily 4:00, 7:00 + Sat, Sun 11:20am

NR

LAMBERT & STAMP Daily 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 + Sat, Sun 11:40am WOMAN IN GOLD Daily 1:50, 4:20, 6:50, 9:10 + Sat, Sun 1:30am

TThurs. hurs. 5/21 @ 7:30pm

CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA Daily 2:00, 9:20

Classsic One Night Only! John Waters Classic

POLYESTER R in ODORAM ODORAMA MA

THE WATER DIVINER Daily 12:40

R

Sun. 5/17 @ 7:20pm

APTOS CINEMA

MIDNIGHTS AT THE DEL MAR presents prese ents JOHN WATERS CLASSICS

831.426.7500

PINK FLAMINGOS (NC-1 (NC-17) 7)

PITCH PERFECT 2 Daily 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:20 + Sat, Sun 11:30am

FFri. ri. 5/15 @ Midnight Midnight

CRY- BABY (PG-13)

HOT PURSUIT Daily 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:10 + Sat, Sun 12:20

S t 5/16 @ Midnight Sat Midnight id i ht

1124 PPACIFIC ACIFIC AVENUE A VENUE | 426-7500 426-77500

GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8

831.761.8200

FOR F OR MORE INFO: THENICK.COM THENICK.C OM

MAD MAX: FURY ROAD Daily 1:30, 3:00, 4:15, 7:15, 8:45, 10:00 + Sat, Sun 10:45am

R

MAD MAX: FURY ROAD 3D Daily 12:15, 5:45

Daily (3:00pm), (5:10), 7:20, 9:30

PITCH PERFECT 2 Daily 12:15, 1:30, 3:00, 4:15, 5:45, 7:00, 8:30, 9:45 + Sat, Sun 10:45am

NR N R

HOT PURSUIT Daily 12:55, 3:05, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 + Sat, Sun 10:45

tthe he

LITTLE BOY Daily 1:45, 4:25* + Sat, Sun 11:05am *No show Tue EX MACHINA Daily 7:05*, 9:45** *No show Tue, Thu **No show Thu AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON Daily 12:30, 3:40, 6:50, 10:00 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 POLTERGEIST Thu 8:00, 10:10

831.438.3260

AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON Daily 11:00am, 11:55am, 1:00, 2:15, 3:30, 4:20, 5:30, 7:00, 7:45, 9:00, 10:15* *No show Thu HOT PURSUIT Daily 11:45am, 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:40 THE AGE OF ADALINE Daily 11:45am, 1:15, 4:00, 6:45, 9:30 PITCH PERFECT 2 Daily 11:15am, 12:15, 2:00, 3:00, 4:45, 5:45, 7:30, 8:30, 10:15 MAD MAX: FURY ROAD Daily 11:30am, 2:20, 4:00 5:15, 8:15 MAD MAX: FURY ROAD DBOX Daily 11:30am, 2:20, 5:15, 8:15 MAD MAX: FURY ROAD 3D Daily 12:30 POLTERGESIT Thu 8:00, 10:30

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

Gourmet Tasting Room and Retail Shop

R

Daily (2:10pm), (4:40), 7:10, 9:40 + Sat, Sun (11:40am) Starring Academy Award winner Helen Mirren and Ryan Reynolds

PG-13

WOMAN in GOLD D Daily (1:50pm), (4:20), 6:50, 9:10 + Sat, Sun (11:30am)

R

Daily (2:00pm), 9:20

R

(expires 5.31.15)

Fresh EV Olive Oils, Aged Balsamic Vinegars, Sea Salts, Body Care and More. Downtown Santa Cruz 106 Lincoln St. 831.458.6457 Aptos Village Square 7960 Soquel Dr., Ste. C TrueOliveConnection.com 831.612.6932

Once O nce Daily (12:40pm)

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A P T O S

CCinemas ine in inema mas

PG-13 3

Daily (2:00pm), (4:30), 7:00, 9:200 + Sat, Sun (11:30am) PG-13 -13

Daily (2:30pm), (4:50), 7:10, 9:100 + Sat, Sun (12:20pm) 122 RANCHO R ANCHO DEL DE L MAR M AR | 426-7500 426- 75000

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA

N I C K

Daily (4:00pm), 7:00 + Sat, Sun (11:20am) (11:20aam)

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FILM NEW THIS WEEK LAMBERT & STAMP When two young aspiring British filmmakers set out in the early 1960s to find a subject for an underground movie, they stumbled upon an aspiring rock band. Ditching their movie plans, Chris Stamp and Kit Lambert wound up managing their new discovery, now known as the Who; this doc from James D. Cooper tells their story. (R) 120 minutes. Starts Friday. MAD MAX: FURY ROAD Tom Hardy takes over the role that made the youthful Mel Gibson a star, and director George Miller takes the helm once again in this continuation of the postapocalyptic action franchise about souped-up, spare-part monster vehicles, huge explosions, and survival of the weirdest. Charlize Theron, Nicholas Hoult, and Zoe Kravitz co-star. (R) 120 minutes. Starts Friday.

MAY 13-19, 2015 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM

FELIX AND MEIRA A young Hasidic Jewish wife and mother and an older French Canadian man at loose ends in his life meet in a Montreal bakery and begin an unexpected friendship in this romantic drama from filmmaker Maxime Giroux. (R) 115 minutes. Starts Friday.

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PITCH PERFECT 2 The sassy women’s a capella singing team that made the first Pitch Perfect such a sleeper hit is back in this sequel, directed by co-star Elizabeth Banks. It’s a big-game movie with songs in which the Barden Bellas choke at a big concert, then try to re-earn their reputation by entering an international competition that no American team has ever won. Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson, Hailee Steinfeld, Brittany Snow, and Skylar Astin head the cast. (PG-13) 118 minutes. Starts Friday. SHE’S BEAUTIFUL WHEN SHE’S ANGRY The history of the early feminist movement, 1966-1971, is explored in this documentary from Mary Dore (The Good Fight), a panorama of vintage archival footage from the era, as

well as round-table discussions with many of the leaders of the movement today, including Susan Brownmiller, Rita Mae Brown, Kate Millett, Trina Robbins, and Linda Frye Burnham. (Not rated) 87 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 costar 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: To celebrate John Waters’ upcoming book-signing appearance at Bookshop Santa Cruz (May 19), the Del Mar presents two classics. PINK FLAMINGOS In Waters’ notoriously disgusting 1972 trash epic, the incomparable Divine heads a cast of Waters regulars (including Mink Stole and Edith Massey) as trailer park denizens exploding middleclass values as they compete for the title of “filthiest person alive.” (NC-17) 85 minutes. At the Del Mar, Friday midnight only. CRY BABY Waters’ 1990 take on ’50s JD movies is even more benign and silly than his ’60s flashback Hairspray. Johnny Depp is perfectly cast as the bad boy courting a good girl in a plot that provides the shortest possible segues between terrific ersatz ’50s rock ’n’ roll numbers. And there’s something charming about Waters’ vision of JD culture as a refuge where even fat and ugly girls, oldsters, little kids, ethnics and other outcasts can be part of a cool crowd. (PG-13) 85 minutes. At the Del Mar, Saturday 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 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 In French filmmaker Olivier Assayas’ smart movie of ideas, a famous French actress (Juliette Binoche) confronts thorny issues of aging, sexuality, and personal relationships when asked to appear in a revival of the same play that made her a star 20 years earlier—except this time, instead of the ingénue, she’ll be playing a conflicted, defeated older woman. It’s an astute premise built on three strong female roles (including Kristen Stewart as her efficient young personal assistant, and Chloe Grace Moretz as the even younger American movie starlet cast in the ingénue role), in the kind of femme-driven story it never even occurs to Hollywood to make anymore. (R) 124 minutes. (***) —Lisa Jensen. 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.

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. FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD Reviewed this issue. (PG-13) 119 minutes. (***)—Lisa Jensen. 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. 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. (PG13) 137 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. 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. (PG-13) 87 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 codirectors 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 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 costars for director Andy Fickman. (PG) 94 minutes. 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 co-star. (R) 93 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.


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FOOD & DRINK for a full cup of each one on future visits. The Himalayan Pink Salt is a major hit. Thick, voluptuous and easy to love. Still ahead of me is the Sipping Flight, featuring “the strong stuff,” made with 70-percent-strength cacao. But in the late afternoon, I figured it was smart to stick with the lighter theobromine. Montezuma—addicted to cacao as legend has it—knew what he was about. Mutari also offers a small assortment of top quality pastries—from Squash & Blossom alternative-flour bakery, as well as Companion Bakeshop—and pretty glass jars of house cacao blends to purchase and make at home. It would be nice to see a slightly expanded menu of offerings, perhaps some light breakfast items, to fill things out. Thanks to sustainably minded entrepreneurs Adam and Matthew Armstrong for this delightful new micro-niche cafe. Ben Franklin loved to hang out in the chocolate and coffeehouses of London and Paris when he wasn’t busy founding the country. Franklin would love Mutari. Check the Mutari Facebook page for details.

CACAO CONNOISSEURS Adam and Matthew Armstrong, co-founders of Mutari Chocolate House and Factory. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER

Open 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, except Monday 5 p.m.-10 p.m, and Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m.-11 p.m. 1001 Center St., Santa Cruz. 687-8184.

Getting Rich Santa Cruz’s pulse-raising gourmet chocolate house, plus Back Porch dinners and wine of the week BY CHRISTINA WATERS For my initial experience at Mutari, I joined Alta and Tatiana already ordering at the bar. They knew what they wanted—the Himalayan pink salt ($4.50), but I needed a broader sampling. Mutari helpfully provides flights of hot chocolate. Seriously. So I ordered tasting portions of the house hit, a lightly roasted Guatemalan Cahabon cacao inflected with a dash of Himalayan Pink Salt, plus two other blends ($10). My new favorite exotic is Spicy Mexican (it’s not what you’re thinking!), a bolder medium roast of the Guatemalan cacao, laced with cinnamon, nutmeg, whole vanilla bean and ... cayenne— stupendous and definitely an adult chocolate. The third item in my

flight was Dark Ecuadorian Mocha, in which lightly roasted Colombian beans had been shot with French press coffee. After the flight came my choice of infant cupcake from Buttercup Cakes. I chose a strawberry gluten-free number with a rosette of, yes, chocolate frosting. We took our potent delicacies into the cozy main room, walled with weathered lumber, and proceeded to discuss issues women have with their mothers. We paused, savoring the sophisticated and yet so easy to enjoy chocolate. All three of the handcrafted blends in the Hot Chocolate Flight—made with 50 percent cacao—were complex and intriguing enough that I will go back

Back Porch Supper club begins their season on Sunday, May 24 at 5:30 p.m. $50 a person for a feisty, fresh four-course all-organic dinner. Greens, berries, almonds and manchego salad. Warm snap peas with brown butter. Chicken and potato dumplings with green garlic. Sabayon with strawberries. BYOB. Check backporchsc.com for details.

WINE OF THE WEEK Quinta Cruz Albariño 2012, $17.99 at Whole Foods. From Bokisch Vineyard come these minerally grapes that winemaker Jeff Emery turns into a refreshing, complex, 12.5 percent alcohol beauty. Crisp, filled with citrus and stone, a melon-scented center, and a salty finish. This go-to white wine goes with everything, especially warm weather and a sense of perspective about the bizarre climate. Get some. No. Get a lot!

SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 13-19, 2015

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arely does anything live up to its hype. Last week I found a rare exception: Mutari Chocolate House and Factory. This pulse-raising, threemonth-old chocolate house specializes in a very narrow bandwidth of rich, velvety flavors. Like an Old World cafe in which adult chocolate beverages hold their own with the finest espresso, Mutari makes handcrafted hot chocolate drinks. From singlesource ethically produced cacao, the knowledgeable cacaoristas behind the bar patiently blend stoneground ingredients into thick delicious experiences. “Our mixes are authentic, rich, and bursting with flavor,” their menu reads. And they are so right!

BACK PORCH SUPPER CLUB

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ercy Vineyards has garnered a wealth of gold medals for its 2010 Pinot Noir, including a double gold at the 2013 San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition, golds at the Critics Challenge, Orange County wine competitions, and another gold at the 2014 Pinot Noir Shootout. These are serious accolades, and most certainly well deserved. Fruit for this velvety Pinot is combined from three contiguous vineyards in the old dry riverbed corridor of the Arroyo Seco AVA (American Viticultural Area), and aged exclusively in French oak. Red raspberry and black cherry fruit mingle with floral, mineral, vanilla, and spice—showcasing the characters of the region’s low-yielding riverbed terrain. For the $28 you spend on this wine, you’ll get a full-bodied mouthful of sensuous Pinot that is worth every penny, and we can give thanks to winemaker Alan Phillips. “Monterey’s Arroyo Seco AVA is many things,� say Mercy Vineyards’ vintners Mark Dirickson and Mike Kohne. “It’s windblown, numbingly cold, fog laden, semi-arid, rock strewn, and austerely beautiful. In essence— the perfect grape source for Mercy Vineyards.� And perfect grapes go a long way toward making a perfect glass of wine. Mercy Wine Sales & Tasting Room, 40 W Carmel Valley Road (Ste A), Carmel Valley, 659-4321. mercywines.com. Open 11:30 a.m. to 4:40 p.m. Thursday through Sunday.

GREEK FOOD FAIRE Don’t tell me you’ve never tasted kourabiedes, loukoumades or koulourakia! Well, now’s your chance. You’ll find all of these and many more delicious traditional Greek dishes at the Eat like a Greek Food Faire on May 15, 16 and 17. Enjoy live Greek music as you’re eating dolmades, gyros and tiropita, and imbibing on Greek spirits, wine and beer. The threeday event is at Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church in downtown Santa Cruz. For hours and more info visit: livelikeagreek.com

SPECIAL DINNER WITH ODONATA WINES AND GARDEN VARIETY CHEESE Chef Zachary Mazi of LionFish SupperClub will be creating an on-the-farm feast using cheese, meat, eggs, and yogurt from Monkeyflower Ranch in Royal Oaks, home of artisan cheese-maker Rebecca King. The evening will include a tour of the dairy and dinner in the garden, where you can watch flatbreads coming straight out of the cob pizza oven. The event is 5 p.m. on Saturday, May 23. Tickets $75, or $100 with wine pairings from Odonata Wines. For info visit gardenvarietycheese.com

EATING AND DRINKING AROUND I had a splendid lunch in downtown Santa Cruz at Assembly a couple of weeks ago, paired with a Quinta Cruz Tempranillo; and I enjoyed a delicious plate of mussels at Salito’s Restaurant in Sausalito with a Bargetto Chardonnay. It was nice to see a local wine north of San Francisco.


FOODIE FILE

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BEST SEAFOOD 3 years running

BEST CLAM CHOWDER 4 years running

WHERE YOU BUN Ricardo Magaña of Watsonville’s new Main Street Burgers

& Brews. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER

Main Street Burgers Downtown Watsonville gets an upscale burger joint BY AARON CARNES

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What do you bring to the burger game? RICARDO MAGAÑA: We make fresh, ground beef, grass-fed hamburgers with fresh local bread that is made every single day from Paulino Bakery in Watsonville. We use fresh local vegetables whenever possible. It makes a huge difference.

What’s your most popular item on your menu? Actually, the chicken burger. That’s the one we sell the most of right now. It’s fresh breast meat, not ground, the whole chicken breast. People like it because they know it’s fresh and healthy.

But the most unexpected item has to be the chorizo burger. Yes. It’s really flavorful. The chorizo is made here. It’s a little spicy. We use garlic, cumin and dried chilis.

Thank You for Voting!

What’s your favorite non-burger item on the menu? My favorite is the calamari. We buy it from Moss Landing, and we do everything ourselves here. The calamaris are great. We serve it with the cocktail sauce that we make here.

Do you have plans to expand the menu past burgers, sandwiches and fries? Yes. Right now we just barely started. Eventually we will extend our menu. We’re going to start having specials, and the ones that sell the most, we’re going to keep on the menu. We will get chicken wings with different flavors eventually. We’re just trying different stuff right now, and seeing what comes out the best. Eventually, besides the french fries, we are going to have macaroni salad, and we are going to have coleslaw. 1116 Main Street, Watsonville, 536-4632.

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urgers and draught beer: they practically sell themselves because they’re awesome. Up until recently, downtown Watsonville was in desperate need of an upscale burger joint. But in April, the need was answered when Main Street Burgers & Brews opened its doors, offering highend ingredients in a casual sports-bar style atmosphere. We spoke with owner Ricardo Magaña about his new joint, good old-fashioned extra thick hamburgers and beer—and lots of it—and some of the odder items on his menu. Chorizo burger anyone?

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+ RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES TAURUS NEW MOON, MERCURY RETROGRADE

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In this last week of Taurus, we have a Taurus new moon festival (Sunday) and Mercury turning stationary retrograde (Monday). New moon times signify new realities, thoughts, ideas and planning. Mercury’s three-week retrograde, creating internal assessments and review, allows us to emerge after the retrograde with new ideas introduced by the new-moon energy. Mercury retrogrades through June 11 (from 13 to 4 degrees Gemini). Mercury is communication, messenger of the sun (gods). When a planet retrogrades, the outer characteristics become hidden. Everything feels upside down, curving into unexpected directions. Mercury rules the lower mind; how we communicate, add numbers, understand directions, and interpret our environments. When Mercury retrogrades, minds turn inward leading to confusion, misrepresentation, miscommunication, and details left out, not remembered. Mercury Retrograde Rules: no large purchases

(car, house, computer, etc.), no signing (or sending) important papers, no new negotiations of business plans, etc. These “no” statements are protections. Why? Because when Mercury turns direct again, the world turns right-side up, it looks and sounds different, what we signed we discover had hidden clauses, what we agreed to actually never occurred. Everyone’s mind has changed! Mercury retro cultivates inner awareness, listening, research, review, and reassessment of all information received since last Mercury retro (Jan. 21 – Feb. 10). Mercury retrograde provides us with a rhythm to review three to four times a year. By the time Mercury retrogrades we’re overwhelmed with too much information. Mercury retro’s gift is the offering of new perspectives, a new look at old problems or situations to achieve greater understanding. Mercury is our personal “star,” our “messenger.”

ARIES Mar21–Apr20

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22

Mercury is your soul ruler, guiding and guarding you into newer and greater reaches of thinking and doing. During the retrograde, when it feels like delays are occurring continuously, take the time to look around, both internally and externally. There are things to look at, new realities to understand and previous issues to review. Careful with all communications. Mistakes can be made easily. You can be misunderstood. Ask people what they heard you say. You will be surprised.

Things legal, travel, education, goals and philosophy of life pass through your mind for review and possible revelations. Observe carefully what your mind of thoughts and ideas presents. Careful at work. Something from the past may need attention. Maintain the highest of ethics. Everything can become delayed and complicated. Know this. Give yourself extra (lots of) time when traveling, communicating, working. Rest a while.

Esoteric Astrology as news for week of May 13, 2015

TAURUS Apr21–May21

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Take no chances on any level during the retrograde. No signing of important documents, no creation of new financial plans or agendas. Simply consider all options, waiting until the retrograde is over to make final decisions. Review all financial budgeting, sources of income and all monetary outlays. Extra care with finances, loved ones, children and all communications will be needed.

Intimate communications, shared resources, sometimes thinking these are too difficult, thinking of higher education instead. This always happens with Scorpio, sign of the nine tests and trials, the deep waters of experiencing, sometimes feeling one is drowning. Mercury is the spiritual guardian of Scorpio. Mercury says to Scorpio, “Practice kindness and do no harm in thoughts and especially in speech which can create or destroy.” You understand this. You take a vow of “ahimsa.”

GEMINI May 22–June 20

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20

Communication, as you well know, when Mercury is retrograde can be upside down and inside out. This retrograde can affect things domestic, all matters in the home, including communications concerning home. You will see your home in a different perspective. Try not to be too distant with everyone, which happens with Gemini when their guide and guardian (Mercury), retrograde, creates an inner focus. Explain Mercury retrograde as it applies to you.

You are sensitive during all Mercury retrogrades. Be aware of and observe this. Laugh about it; yet explain it to everyone who can listen. Careful with negotiations, with one-on-one interactions. Be extra loving and kind to partners and intimates. You will think on past relationships, assessing what was loving about them, what was not, and the parts you played. Use words only for praise and appreciation. All others can destroy.

CANCER Jun21–Jul20 You will go even deeper into your shell during the retrograde. You will be working out the past, seeking to understand in detail what occurred a long time ago, and how to see the entire picture, not just a few memories. Every level of interaction, past, present, and future, as it pertains to you, must be observed with no judgment, no criticism. Let your inner world inform you that all that you are is good. It always has been.

LE0 Jul21–Aug22 Your group life, all communications with groups—observe yourself and groups during this retro of Mercury. What people say may not come to fruition; meetings and agendas may be delayed. What you thought you heard in the group may end up being confusing. Plans may be cancelled. And those you thought were friends may give off uncommunicative signals. Perhaps you’re thinking of someone from the past. They are thinking of you, too.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22

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SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21

All worldly career decisions need to be reassessed and reviewed with care. This is the purpose of Mercury retro times. Mercury is your personal guide and guardian. It’s also Gemini’s. Careful communicating with co-workers, those in charge and in public. Professional matters may become complicated and tricky. Maintain a quiet, low, hidden profile. Think more, act less at this time. You may feel you’re climbing a tall mountain. Get some boots.

CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 In the retro your daily life may feel messy, delayed and frustrating. You may feel you’re making lots of errors, that it’s hard to maintain daily routines, or feel life does not have any order and organization. Mercury retro is upending everything and this has purpose. It teaches us to be more adaptable, to flow with the changes (temporary), to know not much will be completed easily. Call in the templates of harmony and ease. They will help you. Then go out and play.

AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 Gambling is not a good idea for those who gamble. It’s really risky during retros. Focus more on children, romance, creativity, art, music, dance, painting, museums, and becoming nonjudgmental. Re-think romantic alliances, avoid entering spontaneously into new relationships and don’t introduce anything new to anyone. No one can hear. Everything from the past must be revisited to see what’s viable for the future.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 Family relationships are most important. Bring forgiveness and understanding to all past interactions with family. Forgive even if there is no understanding, even if there is no communication. Forgive anyway. Everyone may seem on edge, especially you, Pisces. Do not begin major home improvements (no selling or buying) until the retro is over. Ponder instead. What can you do? Rework and reorganize everything at home.


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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: 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. 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. 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

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 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 20, 2015. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior April 29 & May 6, 13, 20.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0807 The following individual is doing business as SUN CHARTS. 195 SKY RANCH ROAD, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. ERIK BENEDIKT. 195 SKY RANCH ROAD, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: ERIK BENEDIKT. 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. May 6, 13, 20, 27.

ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0632 The following individual is doing business as GABRIELLA CAFE910 CEDAR STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. PAUL COCKING. 833 FRONT STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: PAUL COCKING. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 12/5/1992 This statement was filed with Gail L. 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 CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV181595. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner JOHNATHON TURNER SCHMUCK has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from: JOHNATHON TURNER SCHMUCK to: JOHNATHON TURNER. 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

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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.

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.

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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 name changes described deescribed above must file a writtenn objection that includes the rreasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must m appear at the hearing to show cause s why the petition should should not be granted. If no written writtten objection is timely filed, the court coourt may grant the petition without withouut a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING HEARING June 15, 2015 at 8:30 am, in Department 4 located at Superior Supeerior Court of California, 701 Ocean Ocean Street, Room. 110. Santaa Cruz, CA

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95060. A copy of this order too show cause must be published publisheed in the Good Times , a newspaper newspaaper of General Circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, California, once a week for four successive successsive weeks prior to the date set for foor hearing on the petition. Dated: Datedd: April 27, 2015. John S Salaza ar, Salazar, 6 Judge of the Superior May 6, 13, 20, 27.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME NAM ME STATEMENT FILE NO. 15-0 15-0854 0854 The following Corporation is doing business as DEER

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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

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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 FILE NO. 150797 The following General Partnership is doing 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 Applicant’s name from: SYYUN SOFI MCBROOM to: SIING SOPHI MCBROOM 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 17, 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: May 4, 2015. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior May 6, 13, 20, 27.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 150742 The following General

Partnership is doing business Partnership as HEMPFIELDS. HEMP PFIELDS. 10111 SOQUEL DRIVE, APTOS CA 95003 C ounty of Santa Cruz. Cruz. County JESSIE CAMPBELL, C DAVID KRUG & THOMAS MCMANUS. SOQUEL 10111 S OQUEL DRIVE, APTOS CA 9500 95003. 03. This business is conducted conduccted by a General Partners hip Signed: Signed: JESSIE Partnership CAMPBELL. CAMPBE ELL. The registrant commenced commen nced to transact businesss under the fictitious businesss name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. A ..This This statement statemen nt was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz Cou unty, on April 9 2015. County, May 6, 113, 3, 20, 27. FICTITIO FICTITIOUS OUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT STATEM MENT FILE NO. 15-0883 The follo following wing individual is doing businesss as PACIFIC INN. 330 OCEAN ST., S SANTA CRUZ CA County 95060 C ounty of Santa Cruz. PORAS AHIR. A 3 BROADWAY CIR, KIN KING NG CITY CA 93930. business This bus iness is conducted by a Individual Individua al Signed: Signed:PORAS PORAS AHIR The regis registrant strant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above oonn 5/4/2015. This statemen nt was filed with Gail L. statement Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa County, Cruz Cou unty, y, on Mayy 4,, 2015. May 13, 20, 27 & June 3.

FICTITIOUS BUSINE BUSINESS ESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. N 15-0827 The following Corporation Corporation is doing business as TTHE HE JERK HOUSE. 2525 SOQUEL SOQU UEL DRIVE, SUITE B, SANTA CRUZ CR RUZ CA 95062 County of Santa Saanta Cruz. Cruz. THE JERK HOUSE, HOUSE IINC. INC 2525 SOQUEL DRIVE, SUITE SUIITE B, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. 955062. Al# 3761537. This business businness is conducted by a Corporation Corpporation Signed: AARON BIS STRIN The BISTRIN registrant commenced commencced to transact business un nder the under fictitious business name name listed above is NOT APPL LICABLE. APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Counnty Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on o April 23, 2 & June 3. 2015. May 13, 20, 27

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Cohousing LIVING IN COMMUNITY is a GREA AT way to live! GREAT Condo for sale in Cohousing Community $305k To To ďŹ nd out more, please call (831) www.. 464-3677 or visit www newbrightoncohousing.org

Gardening ROTOTILLNG RO TOTILLNG SERVICE

Soil ppreparation reparation Spring and Summ mer Gardens. Call Happy Happy Summer Gardens Garde ens Rototilling Ser Service vice aatt 831-2 234-4341. 831-234-4341.

Hea Healing/ aling/ Therapeutic The erapeutic Strugggling with pill Struggling addic ction. Come to Pills addiction. Anonymous Anon y ymous Sa Sat.8am. t.8am. Sutter Hospi tal, Sutter Rm. Call Gary Gary Hospital, aatt 831 831-801-9578 1-801-9578

Forr Sale Couchh FFor or Sale. Pink Leather,Antique Wood Lea ther,Antique W ood with Delica ate Flo wer Car vings and Delicate Flower Carvings Upholstery. Pink Upholster U y. $600. Call 831-6 685-3416 (A ptos). 831-685-3416 (Aptos).

SANTA SANT TA CR CRUZ RUZ

“Near “N Near Pleasure Point!�

“Beyond Luxurious!� Luxuriious!�

Renovated 2BR/2BA Renovated A + 1BR/1BA w/sep w/separate arate entrance. Lar Large ge sunny lot. Kitchenn & baths with Granite Counters, 0DSOH F 0DSOH FDELQHWV 7LOH +DUGZRRG ÀRRUV FDELQHWV 7LOH +DUGZRRG ÀRRUV

Elegant 5BR/4BA, 5437sf w/ w/sunset /sunset views on 3 landscaped acres. Giant MB M suite with private bath, country kitchen, kitchhen, lar large rgge LR, family rm, au-pair qrts, pool, pool, Koi Pond.

$799,000

$1,729,9500

Call for open house times or private showing! 831.475.8400 thunderbirdrealestate.com thunderbir drrealestate.com e

FELTON FEL LTON

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“Beautiful f Forest Lakes!�

2BR/1BA A single level in quiet 8-unit complex. +LJK FHL +LJK FHLOLQJV KDUGZRRG ÀRRUV RSHQ ÀRRU LOLQJV KDUGZRRG ÀRRUV RSHQ ÀRRU plan. K Kitchen itchen has custom cabinets, great appliance appliances, es, nice backyard. Quiet & private.

Sweet 3BR/2BA, 1450sf, endd of road privacy. privacy. Borders year round creek, llovely ovely deck for lounging. Community offers offffers swimming s pond, playground & activ activities! vities!

$469,000

$549,000

Call for open house times or private showing! 831.475.8400 thunderbirdrealestate.com thunderbir drealestate.com

Call for open open house times or private show wing! showing! 831.475.840 00 831.475.8400 thunderbirdrealestate.com thunderbir d ealestate.com dr

SANTACRUZ.COM SANT A CR UZ . C OM | GTWEEKLY.COM GT WEEKL LY. C OM M | M MAY AY 1313-19, 19 , 2015

SANTA SA ANT TA CRUZ

Call for open n house times or private show showing! wing! 831.475.8400 831.475.840 00 thunderbirdrealestate.com thunderbir drealestate.com dr

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