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INSIDE Volume 42, No.49 March 8-14, 2017
DOG FIGHT Bay Area activists score major victory in dog access battle P11
BIRTH RIGHT Santa Cruz’s midwife tradition, from the 1970s to today P16
PUNK MANIFESTO Pussy Riot’s Maria Alyokhina on ‘Pussy Riot Theatre Presents: Revolution’ P22
Opinion 4 News 11 Cover Story 16 A&E 22 Events 26
Film 38 Dining 42 Risa’s Stars 48 Classifieds 49
Cover photo of midwife training at the Santa Cruz Birth Center in the early 1970s. Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal. Good Times is free of charge, limited to one copy per issue per person. Entire contents copyrighted © 2017 Nuz, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form is prohibited without publisher’s written permission. Good Times is printed at a LEED-certified facility.
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FEATURES
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OPINION
EDITOR’S NOTE The popular history of Santa Cruz in the 1970s is that it was some kind of progressive utopia, a safe haven for countercultural ideals. But when you talk to the people who helped to establish those ideals, you learn the secret history underneath them: it was a struggle every step of the way. Certainly an SCPD bust of a midwife birth center doesn’t fit neatly into the romanticized image of this city’s history. And yet, that’s exactly what happened in 1974, and Santa Cruz didn’t have an alternative birth center for the next four decades—another fact that will blow the minds of
LETTERS
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
RAINY DAYS AND PLUMBING CODES
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Great article on the potential for rural residents to contribute to a sustainable water future through rainwater reuse and groundwater recharge (GT, 3/1)! Kudos to individuals like Mr. Haskins, Mr. Schultz and to UCSC, our proactive local water districts and nonprofits like the RCD for forwarding these multi-benefit solutions. If urban residents and businesses are wondering what they can do, the good news is that California plumbing code changed in 2016 to allow urban residents and businesses to use rainwater for indoor nonpotable uses such as toilet flushing, laundry and dishwashing machines. What’s exciting about that is it allows us to use the water during the rainy season when we get it, filling and emptying the storage tank(s) several times, which decreases the cost/gallon over the lifetime of the system. This is especially beneficial in areas like South County, which has overdrafted aquifers, as it allows the aquifers to rest in winter. In all cases it is great to reuse the water and reduce stormwater runoff in urban areas, which reduces pollutant transfer to our creeks and ocean. Ecology Action recently completed a grant-funded installation and research
those who consider our progressive credentials bulletproof. Now the Full Moon Birth and Family Wellness Center on Mission Street is picking up where the Santa Cruz Birth Center raid left off, which is an excellent opportunity to take a look at a tradition that was forced underground, in many way, for years. Laws around midwifery in California have changed, and so have attitudes about the birth experience. In his cover story this week, Mat Weir talks to women from two generations of Santa Cruz midwives to take a closer look at how the secret history paved the way for the popular history. Will midwife Kate Bowland, who was arrested in the Santa Cruz Birth Center raid and has gone on to deliver hundreds of babies as a midwife, be your new Santa Cruz hero? She’s definitely mine. STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
project on eight such systems in the region, from homes to commercial spaces like UCSC’s East Fieldhouse and the Live Oak Grange. Case studies including a ROI and water quality study can be seen at centralcoastgreywater.org/rainwater-casestudies. And how-tos and more info on setting up your systems are available at green-gardener.org. KIRSTEN LISKE | ECOLOGY ACTION
SALAD DAYS Re: Letters: Don Honda wrote (GT, 2/15) a typically uninformed, attention seeking (vis-a-vis “except mine”) male take on the Women’s March. To edify what might be others’ takes on that event, the only anger the women had was directed at our pussygrabbing orange president. His image is so antithetic to any woman, even the antichoicers, that all males-in-the-know and women of any genetic predisposition are horrified to be thought as his subjects! We marched in greater numbers than ever had gathered before worldwide, to give notice that we do not identify with his ways, attitude, opinion, paternalism, etc. It was in answer to the mood of tolerance of such despicable mindsets, and was permanently on the women’s and most intelligent men’s side of favoring equal education, equal pay, and no subservience or prejudice on any level. >8
PHOTO CONTEST ART WORK The MAH during Abbott Square construction. Photograph by Tom Skeele.
Submit to photos@goodtimes.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250 dpi.
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The Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History is launching its first spring camp for students in grades 3-5. The weeklong adventure, titled “Santa Cruz From Top to Bottom,” aims to educate kids about local watersheds, the majesty of redwood forests and mysteries of the ocean—all with on-location, hands-on, learning. The program runs the week of Monday, April 3, and scholarships are available.
Jennifer Hastings, a physician and champion of transgender rights, has received the 2017 Person of the Year designation for the 29th Assembly District from Assemblymember Mark Stone. Hastings is founding director of the Transgender Health Care Program and Planned Parenthood Mar Monte. A trailblazer on transgender care and reproductive rights, Hastings works to increase medical access and understanding about the gender journey.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“To rediscover midwifery is the same as giving back childbirth to women.” — MICHEL ODENT CONTACT
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LOCAL TALK
Would more cameras everywhere make us safer? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT
I’ve always felt that cameras on Pacific Avenue would improve behavior. JEFF PAPPAS SANTA CRUZ | BARTENDER
Definitely not. I think people coming together as a community will make us safer. MELINDA PHOENIX SANTA CRUZ | ACUPUNCTURIST
I believe they would. It doesn’t have to be Orwellian. WYATT JOHNSON SANTA CRUZ | DJ
DUSTIN OXFORD MOUNTAIN VIEW | HANDYMAN
It could make us safer, but there is a little bit of Big Brother in there, too. DENNIS REAGAN SANTA CRUZ | SELF-EMPLOYED
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
I don’t think so. I think it would just make people more neurotic and ratting out others for weird things.
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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of March 8 ARIES Mar21–Apr19
LIBRA Sep23–Oct 22
As soon as you can, sneak away to a private place where you can be alone—preferably to a comfy sanctuary where you can indulge in eccentric behavior without being seen or heard or judged. When you get there, launch into an extended session of moaning and complaining. I mean do it out loud. Wail and whine and whisper about everything that’s making you sad and puzzled and crazy. For best results, leap into the air and wave your arms. Whirl around in erratic figure-eights while drooling and messing up your hair. Breathe extra deeply. And all the while, let your pungent emotions and poignant fantasies flow freely through your wild heart. Keep on going until you find the relief that lies on the other side.
Let’s talk about a compassionate version of robbery. The thieves who practice this art don’t steal valuable things you love. Rather, they pilfer stuff you don’t actually need but are reluctant to let go of. For example, the spirit of a beloved ancestor may sweep into your nightmare and carry off a delicious poison that has been damaging you in ways you’ve become comfortable with. A bandit angel might sneak into your imagination and burglarize the debilitating beliefs and psychological crutches you cling to as if they were bars of gold. Are you interested in benefiting from this service? Ask and you shall receive.
TAURUS Apr20–May20 “I’ve always belonged to what isn’t where I am and to what I could never be,” wrote Portuguese writer Fernando Pessoa (1888-1935). That was his prerogative, of course. Or maybe it was a fervent desire of his, and it came true. I bring his perspective to your attention, Taurus, because I believe your mandate is just the opposite, at least for the next few weeks: You must belong to what is where you are. You must belong to what you will always be.
GEMINI May21–June20 Nothing is ever as simple as it may seem. The bad times always harbor opportunities. The good times inevitably have a caveat. According to my astrological analysis, you’ll prove the latter truth in the coming weeks. On one hand, you will be closer than you’ve been in many moons to your ultimate sources of meaning and motivation. On the other hand, you sure as hell had better take advantage of this good fortune. You can’t afford to be shy about claiming the rewards and accepting the responsibilities that come with the opportunities.
CANCER Jun21–Jul22 Seek intimacy with experiences that are dewy and slippery and succulent. Make sure you get more than your fair share of swirling feelings and flowing sensations, cascading streams and misty rain, arousing drinks and sumptuous sauces, warm baths and purifying saunas, skin moisturizers and lustrous massages, the milk of human kindness and the buttery release of deep sex—and maybe even a sensational do-it-yourself baptism that frees you from at least some of your regrets. Don’t stay thirsty, my undulating friend. Quench your need to be very, very wet. Gush and spill. Be gushed and spilled on.
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Would you like to live to the age of 99? If so, experiences and realizations that arrive in the coming weeks could be important in that project. A window to longevity will open, giving you a chance to gather clues about actions you can take and meditations you can do to remain vital for 10 decades. I hope you’re not too much of a serious, know-it-all adult to benefit from this opportunity. If you’d like to be deeply receptive to the secrets of a long life, you must be able to see with innocent, curious eyes. Playfulness is not just a winsome quality in this quest; it’s an essential asset.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 You’re ripe. You’re delectable. Your intelligence is especially sexy. I think it’s time to unveil the premium version of your urge to merge. To prepare, let’s review a few flirtation strategies. The eyebrow flash is a good place to start. A subtle, flicking lick of your lips is a fine follow-up. Try tilting your neck to the side ever-so-coyly. If there are signs of reciprocation from the other party, smooth your hair or pat your clothes. Fondle nearby objects like a wine glass or your keys. And this is very important: Listen raptly to the person you’re wooing. P.S. If you already have a steady partner, use these techniques as part of a crafty plan to draw him or her into deeper levels of affection.
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 Evolved Scorpios don’t fantasize about bad things happening to their competitors and adversaries. They don’t seethe with smoldering desires to torment anyone who fails to give them what they want. They may, however, experience urges to achieve total, cunning, dazzling, merciless victory over those who won’t acknowledge them as golden gods or golden goddesses. But even then, they don’t indulge in the deeply counterproductive emotion of hatred. Instead, they sublimate their ferocity into a drive to keep honing their talents. After all, that game plan is the best way to accomplish something even better than mere revenge: success in fulfilling their dreams. Please keep these thoughts close to your heart in the coming weeks.
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 “The noble art of music is the greatest treasure in the world,” wrote Martin Luther (1483-1546), a revolutionary who helped break the stranglehold of the Catholic Church on the European imagination. I bring this up, Sagittarius, because you’re entering a phase when you need the kind of uprising that’s best incited by music. So I invite you to gather the tunes that have inspired you over the years, and also go hunting for a fresh batch. Then listen intently, curiously, and creatively as you feed your intention to initiate constructive mutation. It’s time to overthrow anything about your status quo that is jaded, lazy, sterile, or apathetic.
CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 “Either you learn to live with paradox and ambiguity or you’ll be six years old for the rest of your life,” says author Anne Lamott. How are you doing with that lesson, Capricorn? Still learning? If you would like to get even more advanced teachings about paradox and ambiguity—as well as conundrums, incongruity, and anomalies— there will be plenty of chances in the coming weeks. Be glad! Remember the words of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Niels Bohr: “How wonderful that we have met with a paradox. Now we have some hope of making progress.”
AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 Lichen is a hardy form of life that by some estimates covers 6 percent of the Earth’s surface. It thrives in Arctic tundra and rainforests, on tree bark and rock surfaces, on walls and toxic slag heaps, from sea level to alpine environments. The secret of its success is symbiosis. Fungi and algae band together (or sometimes fungi and bacteria) to create a blended entity; two very dissimilar organisms forge an intricate relationship that comprises a third organism. I propose that you regard lichen as your spirit ally in the coming weeks, Aquarius. You’re primed for some sterling symbioses.
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 If you normally wear adornments and accessories and fine disguises, I invite you not to do so for the next two weeks. Instead, try out an unembellished, what-you-see-is-whatyou-get approach to your appearance. If, on the other hand, you don’t normally wear adornments and accessories and fine disguises, I encourage you to embrace such possibilities in a spirit of fun and enthusiasm. Now you may inquire: How can these contradictory suggestions both apply to the Pisces tribe? The answer: There’s a more sweeping mandate behind it all, namely: to tinker and experiment with the ways you present yourself . . . to play around with strategies for translating your inner depths into outer expression.
Homework: For an hour, act as if you’re living the life you've always wanted to. Testify at freewillastrology.com.
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The attitude was congenial, positive and not resembling the angst of the founders of early feminists. I’m old enough (almost 80) to have been in what for me was an eye-opening consciousness-raising group. Until then, I reassured myself that my marriage would survive if I could just cook to my hard-to-please husband’s satisfaction, and get dinner on the table by exactly 6 p.m. After attending a few sessions of consciousness-raising, my husband complained that very thinly sliced radishes were not in his obligatory assortment of at least a dozen things in his salad. My answer— and first indication of marital displeasure—
was to upend the salad bowl on his head. Our now-middle-aged children refer to their young years as “our parents always had food fights.” LOIS KLEIN | SANTA CRUZ
ONLINE COMMENTS RE: ICE RAIDS Thank you to SCPD and to Sheriff Hart for defending our communities. This is a terrible betrayal of trust between our law enforcement agencies and agents of the federal government. — JUDY
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NEWS ABOUT SPACE Are there alternatives to a downtown five-story parking structure? BY JACOB PIERCE
GAME OF WAG Dogs frolic on the beach in a recent weekend in Santa Cruz. The issue of whether or not dogs belong on certain
beaches has become a contentious one in cities all along the Northern California coast. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
When in Roam
‘WoofieLeaks’ activists dig up dirt on Park Service in attempt to preserve dog access BY NIKKI SILVERSTEIN
I
t was nearly two years ago that more than 20 dogs and their owners, leashes in hand, wended down curvy paths in an unsuccessful effort to beg UCSC administrators to let them continue visiting a coastal refuge near Santa Cruz’s Westside. The dog owners protested a decision to bar pooches from the UCSC-owned trails near the school’s Long Marine Lab and Seymour Center, but the school refused to reverse it. It’s a familiar battle in Santa Cruz, Live Oak, and other California cities, but one that may shift after canine advocates scored a major victory
over the National Park Service (NPS) this year. With a few hours to spare, two determined Marin women helped stop the NPS from making major cuts to dog walking in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA), which stretches from the county of San Carlos to Marin County. The very day that the NPS was scheduled to finalize a restrictive Dog Management Plan, the agency capitulated, halting the plan until further notice—in part due to the work of Laura Pandapas and Cassandra Fimrite, who say they simply want to keep walking their
dogs in the recreation area. Neither activists nor rabblerousers, Pandapas, an artist from Muir Beach, and Fimrite, a Tamalpais Valley mom of two teenagers and one black lab, stood against the NPS and its plan, which would have slashed off-leash dog walking by 90 percent and on-leash dog walking by 50 percent. Although park experts provided no site-specific data, the NPS had given various reasons for the sweeping changes, including the protection of wildlife and newly planted native species. The women, who have been fighting the >12
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
It’s only 3 p.m. on a Friday and frustrated drivers are already circling through downtown Santa Cruz in search of the last few remaining parking spots. On most weekday afternoons, the city’s parking structures nearly fill up, hovering around 90 percent of full capacity. The downtown concrete buildings, which range from two to four stories, have wait lists several months long, with requests for almost 1000 permits, according to a city report from December. On top of that, as many as three downtown Santa Cruz parking lots could disappear in the not-so-distant future, as they are privately owned. So it may come as no surprise that the city manager’s office is looking at building a new parking structure at a site long discussed for such a project—the parking lot between Lincoln and Cathcart streets, along Cedar Street. But some environmentalists contend that the city hasn’t been listening to its own consultants, and that staffers have not adequately begun transportation demand management efforts—essentially incentives to get people to drive less—in order to cut back the demand for parking. Rick Longinotti, co-chair of the Campaign for Sensible Transportation, points to Stanford University, where administrators scaled back car trips dramatically, reducing the number of employees who drive alone to work from 72 percent to 46 percent over the course of seven years. “The county of Santa Clara really made the conditions clear to Stanford to continue to grow,” Longinotti says. “If they were going to grow, they needed to limit the amount of new trips during commute hours to zero. Under those circumstances, Stanford really had to do something. So I want to give credit to the citizens of Santa Clara County. We could do something similar here.” Longinotti and his fellow co-chair, Bruce Van Allen, organized a meeting on the morning of Saturday, March 4 with Brodie Hamilton, Stanford’s former director of transportation and parking, to explain how he helped shift a culture in sustainable >14
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NPS for years, say they wanted to ensure that the agency ran a fair planning process and complied with the law. They lobbied lawmakers, requested NPS documents under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), hired a lawyer and filed a lawsuit. For now, at least, they have won in a bizarre saga that’s at least a little embarrassing for Park Service staffers. “It’s the birthright of everyone here to use the public lands of the GGNRA in the way that Congress intended,” Pandapas says. An act of Congress established the GGNRA in 1972, designating the land as a recreation area rather than a national park. A pet policy followed in 1979, allowing dog walking on select portions of the GGNRA, which amounted to less than 1 percent of the land. The NPS has bandied about the idea of further restricting dog walking in the GGNRA for 15 years. In 2005, courts aborted such an attempt, citing lack of proper public notice. The NPS began the necessary public process the following year. At meetings and in public comment periods, dog devotees cried foul. They argued that the NPS was not providing the public with adequate scientific studies to demonstrate the need for a change, and that the agency had a heavy bias against dog walking. The NPS decision, they said, was a fait accompli. “There are tried and true conservation methods such as a
land buffer, seasonal buffers and time-of-use restrictions,” says Pandapas. “The NPS could have given the public a buy-in, but they didn’t. Instead, the only tool they employed was the removal of dogs.” NPS presented a draft plan with extensive changes in the dog rules last February, banning all off-leash dog walking on the fire roads and trails in Marin and left only Rodeo Beach for dogs to play off-leash. Concerned that the plan was too restrictive, the Marin County Board of Supervisors, Mill Valley City Council, Muir Beach Community Services District and Marin Humane Society opposed the plan. Congressman Jared Huffman suggested off-leash access in some areas before 10 a.m., as well as other compromises, but the GGNRA refused to budge. The final Dog Management Plan rolled out last month and was almost identical to the draft. On-leash trails in Marin had been cut from 24 miles to just 8 miles. Then, on Jan. 10, when the NPS was to sign the Record of Decision and publish the Final Rule for Dog Management at GGNRA, they issued a press release stating that they were halting the plan until further notice. Why the unexpected change? Perfect timing, according to Pandapas and Fimrite. “We showed that the NPS had a systemic pattern of bias and inappropriate relations with external groups,” Fimrite says. When the NPS initially provided its draft plan, a coalition of dog and recreation advocate groups,
including Marin County DOG (Dog Owners Group), an organization founded by Pandapas and Fimrite, requested public records from the NPS under FOIA. The NPS refused to comply. The groups filed a FOIA lawsuit to obtain the information and a federal court recently ordered the NPS to produce the documents. More than 260,000 heavily redacted pages trickled in and were methodically combed through by the four plaintiff groups: Marin County DOG, Save Our Recreation, SFDOG and Coastside DOG of San Mateo County, and their attorney Chris Carr, of Mill Valley, a partner with Morrison & Foerster. On Jan. 4, less than a week before the final plan would be signed into the official record, the plaintiffs revealed examples of unethical and perhaps illegal conduct on the part of senior GGNRA officials and staff. They posted more than 40 damning documents on a website they called WoofieLeaks. In one instance, former GGNRA Director of Communications and Partnerships Howard Levitt, who retired last October, used his personal email account to conduct business regarding the dog management plan. The decision-making process was required to be unbiased, but Levitt had worked with several private organizations to stack the deck against dog walking. Levitt also directed staff to destroy emails and discuss aspects of the plan offline. “Everyone: Please delete this and the previous message,” Levitt wrote in >15
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As idealists gaze into the clouds, yearning for a day when the electoral college ceases to exist, some Californians—including ones here in Santa Cruz—are dreaming up a different kind of election reform. A local group called Yes on Ranked Choice is not just imagining a different kind of election, but also working to create it from the ground up.
Ranked choice is a system that allows voters to bubblein selections for their first, second and third choices on their ballots. The local group is holding a meeting on March 19 at the Garfield Park Community Church to discuss creating such a balloting system in the city of Santa Cruz. One advantage to this instant-runoff system, supporters suggest, is that voters may be more likely to pick their favorite candidate,
instead of reluctantly supporting a politician who’s more likely to win. Of course, in Santa Cruz—at least for the City Council—voters already get to vote for three or four people each cycle. Ranked choice is already in place in the Bay Area cities of San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, and San Leandro. The idea seems intuitive enough—it’s how sports writers vote for most valuable players—but it still has
high-profile opposition. Gov. Jerry Brown has criticized it for making voting more complicated. He vetoed a bill to extend ranked-choice voting to the state’s general law cities, if they chose to implement it, this past fall. Because Santa Cruz is a charter city, it’s still eligible. The ranked-choice meeting will be from 2-3:30 p.m. on Sunday, March 19 at the Garfield Park Community Church at 111 Errett Circle. JACOB PIERCE
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RIDE WING A meeting on Saturday, March 4 explored options for managing transportation demand and alternatives to driving. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
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transportation. Hamilton told activists at the Santa Cruz Police Department Community Room that one challenge was figuring out how to get workers to stop coming up with excuses for driving. “The approach I took at Stanford was to address the ‘yes, buts,’” recalled Hamilton, who retired in 2014. “People say, ‘Well, I use alternative transportation, but … it costs too much.’ All right, we’ll make it free. ‘Oh. Well … when I get to work, sometimes I need to run errands.’ That’s fine—we’ve got car-sharing. We’ll give it to you for free. And there were all kinds of other things that we ended up addressing because we were looking at all the ‘yes buts’ to alternative transportation.” Under Hamilton’s guidance, Stanford partnered with local train systems and began a massive marketing campaign. Stanford parking permits cost $700 annually, and if someone didn’t purchase one, the university would give them $300 each year instead. By 2002, the university had fewer parking spots
than it did 10 years earlier, despite growing by more than 4,000 students. Here in Santa Cruz, it’s hard to say exactly how long it will be before the supply of parking spots starts dropping, as more than 100 spaces are in lots that the city doesn’t own—some of which could soon be developed. According to a strategic plan from 2015, city leaders would like to consolidate parking into one lot near the center of downtown and free up single-story lots for mixed-use buildings, presumably with new housing. The current rough draft proposal for the Cedar Street lot is to put a library on the ground floor, using money from Measure S, which voters approved in June. City Manager Martín Bernal estimates that it would be cheaper to build a brand-new, state-of-the-art library than to renovate the old one. Five stories of parking—plus a little office space—would go up above. At a meeting in December, Transportation Manager Jim Burr said the city already does a lot to encourage alternative transportation, as 19 percent of
people already bike or walk to work in the city. Longinotti has pressed the city to do more, including build more bike lockers, but the city’s lockers—which cost a nickel an hour—have garnered notoriously little use, something a city committee is studying. Generally, planners like to start building a new parking structure before they absolutely need it, because once they break ground, the city will lose all 135 spots in the current lot until the project’s finished. It isn’t clear how the city would pay for the $35 million, 632-space building, although a separate subcommittee is looking into it. Parking permits are currently $37 a month, and most city councilmembers have shown little interest in hiking up rates because many workers make meager wages and pay steep rents. At Saturday’s meeting, George Dondero, executive director of the Regional Transportation Commission, asked the speakers about the differences between doing transportation demand management for a university and doing it on a municipal level. UCSC’s transportation and parking
director Larry Pageler, who spoke after Hamilton, conceded that part of the problem seems to be one of people living farther and farther away—sometimes out of the county—due to a lack of affordable housing. He also noted that the city doesn’t have the same authority over downtown employees that UCSC has over its community. “We are very different,” Pageler said. Alan Schlenger, who attended the meeting, serves as board treasurer for Santa Cruz Community Farmers Markets, which holds its popular weekly Wednesday event downtown on that same Cedar Street lot that may turn into a parking structure. Although he isn’t ready to support or oppose the plan, he has felt encouraged by Bernal’s commitment to finding a permanent location for the market. Bernal has even talked about building a pavilion for the market to use, and city leaders are forming a working group to discuss it. “You don’t have a definite proposal,” he says, “and you’ll have to see when they come back.”
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a September 2013 email. “These conversations are best done by phone.” A GGNRA wildlife ecologist urged staff in a 2006 email to leave out data from the Dog Management Plan Environmental Impact Statement, because it did not jibe with their desired outcome, specifically, to virtually eliminate dogs in the GGNRA. It also seemed that Levitt had a personal bone to pick with dogs. In April 2014, he wrote to Kimberly Kiefer of San Francisco Recreation and Parks about his broken finger: “Ironically, it’s my middle finger … probably broke it expressing my opinion of out-of-control off-leash dog visitors.” The documents that came to light on WoofieLeaks spurred the decision by the NPS to halt the signing of the plan and conduct an internal investigation. Congresswoman Jackie Speier believes that doesn’t go far enough and has called for a “truly independent inquiry into whether NPS employees acted improperly with regards to their work on the GGNRA Dog Management Plan.” Speier also said that the use of personal email to improperly coordinate with outside advocacy groups is potentially illegal. The possibly incriminating emails were among 260,000 pages that the NPS recently dumped on the plaintiffs. Though the federal magistrate who is presiding over the document production aspect of the lawsuit warned the plaintiffs that they wouldn’t find a smoking gun, they ended up uncovering an arsenal of information that they say demonstrates a clear bias on the part of the GGNRA staff. The NPS declined to comment on the documents. Carr says they are just the tip of the iceberg. “The records belong to us, the people,” says Carr, who adds that he and his clients will move ahead with the FOIA lawsuit against the NPS. Fimrite considers the emails as proof that the entire plan must be thrown out. “Someone has to address what happened in the GGNRA,” Pandapas says. “The NPS can’t seem to engage in an honorable process. What’s happening in the Bay Area is nothing to be proud of.”
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16 MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Born Free
BY MAT WEIR MIDWIFE CRISIS Clockwise from top: The story on the 1974 birth center bust by Santa Cruz alt-newspaper Sundaz!; midwife Kate Bowland on the day after she was arrested in the sting operation; inside the Santa Cruz Birth Center; boxes are carted off from the SCBC during the raid. PHOTOS COURTESY OF KATE BOWLAND
S
itting in a comfy, flowerprint upholstered chair, Sunshine Tomlin asks if I want any water or hot tea. The soft colored walls are inviting and homely, welcoming guests to sit back and relax. The air is filled with the sweet smell of scented candles. It’s the calm, warm environment one would expect a loving home to be, so it makes sense this is how Tomlin would want to design her birthing center. Located on the corner of Mission Street and Chrystal Terrace, the Full Moon Birth and Family Wellness Center is Santa Cruz’s first birthing center in more than four decades. The original Santa Cruz Birth Center was shut down in 1974, following a sting operation and raid by police resulting in the arrests of three local midwives. However, midwifery and home birthing have made strides in the past decades, with better laws and clearer understandings of what midwives actually do. Recent public interest in the commercial side of the medical industry has also led to a resurgence in natural and home birthing—inspired in part, it seems, by The Business of Being Born, a 2008 documentary produced by Ricki Lake. “We really can thank Ricki Lake,” says Tomlin, a midwife for 12 years. “She knew the exact things to say, and the right way to say them. I’m still getting phone calls from people saying they just saw it and don’t want a hospital birth.” As the name implies, the Full Moon Birth and Family Wellness Center is more than just a place for soon-to-be parents. The center currently has 18 employees— midwives, chiropractors, massage therapists and even an
acupuncturist—along with weekly, monthly and single-day classes. Ranging from couples retreats to classes on topics like the natural development of babies and how to utilize chemicals released in the brain during birthing, Tomlin hopes Full Moon can be an alternative health center for the community. “I want this to be a Wellness Center,” she says. “It’s not just about the births.” Throughout human history, midwives have been assisting women throughout prenatal, childbirth and aftercare, usually in the home. Traditionally, their knowledge was passed down to apprentices through hands-on learning. Because of changing times and laws, there are now two kinds of midwives in the U.S.: Certified Professional Midwives (CPM) and Certified Nurse Midwives (CNM). Both have to attend midwifery schools, but CNMs must also graduate from a registered nursing program. According to the Santa Cruz Chapter of the Certified Nurse Midwives Association, approximately 1,200 CNMs are working in California, with Santa Cruz employing 35-40. Most practice out of Dominican Hospital and the Sutter Maternity and Surgery Center, but some also work with the downtown Planned Parenthood and the Salud Para la Gente Center in Watsonville. To fully grasp why a new Birth Center and the changing times are so important to California midwives, it’s essential to understand their history of practicing under fear of arrest.
BUSTED FOR BIRTHING “Every baby has a birth story,” Kate Bowland says with a hearty smile and chuckle. “We just don’t know what it is at first.” With more than 43 years of midwifery under her belt, Bowland has “caught” (the preferred midwife term) her fair share of babies—“a little over 1,000” she estimates. Retired in 2015, Bowland was one of the midwives arrested in 1974 for practicing medicine without a license at the original Santa Cruz Birth Center. Established in 1971 by midwife, birthing advocate and Doctor of Oriental Medicine Raven Lang, the Victorian house located on Capitola Road near 7th Avenue employed 6-12 midwives at any given time and administered classes and prenatal care. “It was never a freestanding birth center,” she explains. “We did a lot of home births.” Bowland began her lifelong profession almost accidentally. While she was living in Oregon, Lang—a friend from college—invited her down to Santa Cruz to hang out. Little did she know she would be participating in her first birth, which set her on a life path that often skirted the law. “When laws are unjust or immoral,” she wrote in the 2011 book Into These Hands: Wisdom From Midwives, “it is our responsibility to disobey.” While she knew she was violating the law, Bowland also believed midwifery was essential to women’s rights. Even though the Santa Cruz Birth Center would not allow births within, Bowland estimates they still attended roughly 20 home births a month while active.
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
In the 1970s, Santa Cruz midwives were arrested for operating the first Santa Cruz Birth Center. Four decades later, laws and attitudes are changing as the Full Moon Birth and Family Wellness Center gets up and running
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<17 It was Bowland who first felt that client Terry Johnson’s chart was suspicious. In the book, Bowland explains how Johnson had missed prenatal visits, would not turn in her blood work and went into labor before her child was due. While most of the women did not want to work with Johnson, they sent two midwives out during her supposed labor anyway, out of good faith. Johnson turned out to be an undercover police officer. “Thirty minutes later I looked out the window over the shoulder of the woman I was examining to see two cars pull up across the street,” she writes. “I knew immediately that they were plainclothes police.” The midwives’ work at the center was illegal under California law,
and Bowland—along with Jeanine Walker and Linda Bennett—were arrested. Over the course of the next three years, the women would fight their case to the California Supreme Court, where the judges returned the case to the municipal court. In 1977, the district attorney threw out the case over lack of evidence and, by that time, the laws had already begun to change. The year the women were busted in Santa Cruz, California passed a law allowing the legal certification and practice of Nurse Midwifery in hospitals. Seeing the slow changing of the times, Bowland became a CNM in 1983, and continued her practice in hospitals. It wasn’t until 1993 that California legalized the licensed practice of midwifery.
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Like Bowland, Tomlin didn’t always know she wanted to be a midwife. The daughter of an ER nurse and the mother of three, Tomlin didn’t begin looking into having an at-home birth until her third pregnancy. “I was happy enough with my OB, but they tried to assign me a midwife through Medi-Cal, which I declined, because I wanted a “real doctor,’” she remembers. “When I finally learned about home birth, it was this ‘ah-ha!’ moment … Birth is normal. Birth is natural. Why are we messing with it?” It was then she decided to enroll at the National Midwifery Institute, completing her certification in 2005. Throughout her training, she continued to work as a doula, participating in her first birth at Sutter Maternity Center in 2001. Unlike a midwife, doulas are there for emotional and physical support. As current doula and midwife-in-training Ashley Shea describes it, “a doula is a cheerleader and the midwife is the lifeguard.” Since doulas and midwives are so different by profession, a person can be a certified doula, but it is not required by law since there is no medical aspect. After graduating, Tomlin opened Sunshine Midwifery in Ben Lomond, where she had an office for 11 years and delivered roughly 400 babies, along with participating on the board of the California Association of Midwives and as a membership director for the Bay Area Birth
Information, or BABI. However, being located in Ben Lomond proved difficult for many of her clients throughout the county, so she decided to look closer to town. In May 2016, she signed the lease for the Mission Street office, and closed Sunshine Midwifery the following June. “We’re closer to the hospital than some people in the county might live,” Tomlin says. Sometimes, complications arise during a midwife-assisted birth, and a hospital is needed. “Also, there are so many people [in Santa Cruz] who can’t afford to live in their home by themselves. They have roommates, or moved back with their parents, or their place is so small they aren’t comfortable in it. This gives them an option to have a home birth somewhere else, with the care they deserve to receive, and feel safe.” Shea—who is in her second year of acquiring a Bachelor’s in Science from the Midwives College of Utah— agrees, with a first-hand experience. “For my birth, I was living in a second-story apartment that was super tiny. I was so self-conscious about noise because my neighbors were right there,” she remembers. “To have a place where you can just go without worrying about pets, or your roommates or neighbors is so awesome for families to have that option.” Shea says she always wanted to be a midwife, ever since one gave a presentation to her elementary school class. As she grew older, the idea always remained in the back of her mind, but she never knew how to find her way into the world of birthing. In 2008, she finally enrolled in doula training classes in Colorado, but thought she wasn’t prepared to do it because—at the time—she didn’t have a child of her own. “I wish I knew then what I know now—that it’s much easier to be a doula while not being a parent,” she says with a laugh. “You can sleep all day after!” As fate would have it, when Shea’s best friend asked her to be her doula, it was not only Shea’s first time, but Tomlin was also the midwife. Since then the two have formed a close relationship, working side by side to give women
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Even then, however, all midwives had to be supervised by a doctor until 2014, when the state removed that stipulation, but added others, restricting midwives from delivering twins or breech births. But despite the struggles, Bowland remains firm in her views of the benefits of midwifery. “Birth is one of the most important events in a person’s life,” she tells me. “Birth can be very empowering for a woman, or it can be disempowering and traumatic. While there are no guarantees a birth will be natural, midwifery supports a process of birth.”
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BORN FREE <19 an alternative in how they want to bring life into the world. “She’s a champion,” Tomlin says of Shea. “She’s vocal [about midwifery and home birthing], and you have to be.” Since opening Full Moon last September—the grand opening also marked Tomlin’s 200th birth—the birthing center has made strides in becoming fully functional. Money has been raised through a threeday fundraiser, a benefit show at Don Quixote’s last month, and even a GoFundMe campaign. However, they estimate they’re still shy some $50,000 in funding, needed to install a shower, a permanent birth tub and other amenities for women in labor. “When you think about how many people there are that want this,” Tomlin says. “Even if they gave just a little bit, it would add up so fast.” Santa Cruz native Heidi Olson says she chose to have a home birth with midwives over going to the hospital for several reasons. When she was pregnant with her daughter two years ago, she sought out Tomlin’s care after hearing of her reputation, philosophy and care. “I knew I couldn’t birth the way I wanted in a hospital,” Olson says. “Unfortunately we didn’t have any birth centers then … I didn’t necessarily want a home birth either, but I knew I wanted a hospital birth even less.” She believes the birth center will open up a large array of new opportunities for soon-to-be parents, but that it might not be for everyone. “I think women should talk to practitioners at both [hospitals and birth centers],” says Olson. “I think doing what feels right in your gut is what’s best for women. I’m just glad there’s another option here for those that want it.”
HOSPITAL BLUES America is currently the most expensive country to give birth in. According to one study released last September by the U.K. medical journal The Lancet, out of 14 developed nations, the U.S. is “disproportionately more expensive” for hospital births than other high-
income countries. Vaginal births are roughly $10,232 on average, and cesareans are $15,500 compared to Australia which is $6,775 and $10,500, respectively. A separate study released last November by The Lancet found that not only are childbirths 25 percent of all hospital discharges, but between 1996 and 2013, the cost of having a hospital birth within the country has tripled. “My friend went to the hospital for a one-day stay, and her bill was $40,000,” says Brooke March, who teaches the Full Moon Mother’s Support Group. “Women used to give birth at home all the time. It used to be a beautiful thing where women were honored.” Last July, the financial website marketwatch.com published a report from the healthcare information company Castlight Health that the San Francisco Bay Area is the secondmost expensive place to have a child in the country—either vaginally or through cesarean—after Sacramento. Which is one of the reasons the women at Full Moon Birth are so adamant about the center. “It’s amazing, because so many women are already afraid, because we haven’t grown up in this culture where it’s natural and normal and beautiful,” says March, whose first child was born over 52 hours in a hospital; her second was born at home in three hours. “This is what our bodies are designed for. Even when you go to the doctor for your prenatal care, it sets you up for a ‘doctor-patient’ relationship. There’s a hierarchy that’s not there with an at-home birth.” Tomlin agrees. “It’s protocol and fear,” she says. “As far as the place of litigation goes, it’s always safer to do the C-section than it is to allow someone to go 50 hours. That’s risky. What if something bad happens and they get sued?”
IN CASE OF EMERGENCY A 2015 U.S. study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that perinatal mortality is higher among out-of-hospital births; however, the
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DELIVERING FOR TWO GENERATIONS Sunshine Tomlin and Kate Bowland at
Full Moon. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER “Also, midwives know not to take ‘high risk’ pregnancies,” March says. “There’s a screening process they give to determine whether the pregnancy is healthy.” Because of the nature of her certification, and the way the laws are written, Tomlin has several restrictions, which is another reason to be located closer to a hospital. Tomlin, who graduated from the National Midwifery Institute in 2005, cannot administer epidurals or pain medication, nor perform cesareans. However, she is fully trained and equipped to resuscitate a newborn, stop hemorrhages and other complications that may occur. “It’s almost never an emergency ‘right now,’” she says. “It’s more nutritional and preventative based. If the baby begins to breech, we get them to a chiropractor to see if we can fix it instead of doing a C-section.” She estimates that of the 36-48 births a year that she administers throughout the Bay Area, about 5 percent (or two to three a year) need to be transferred to the hospital. “It’s the spectrum of what birth could look like,” she says. “But if you start at the hospital, there are many things you can never experience.” “The best-kept secret,” says Bowland, “is that home births are as safe as, or safer than, hospital births.”
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study was criticized for not taking into account factors such as lack of health insurance. It also found maternal mortality rates were at an all-time high in the last 25 years, regardless of whether the birth was in a hospital or at home. Full Moon Birth asserts that at-home and natural births are well attended and safe, with their midwives following the pregnancy from start to finish. A typical birth is measured in 40 weeks, and the prenatal care the expecting mother receives is the same whether they go to an obstetrician or a midwife. Yet, unlike a doctor who might only spend small periods of time with a patient, the midwife makes time to get to know the patient and discover what other stresses are in their life, Tomlin says. She spends at least an hour in each face-to-face appointment with her patients, discussing dietary needs or restrictions, checking their blood pressure, measuring the uterus and feeling out their general well-being. She also does home visits on the first, third and seventh day after a birth, and then again two weeks after. “Taking time to check in, see if they have any questions and even see how their family is doing,” she says. “The relationship that I build with people is part of what makes my care so special.”
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
RIOT OF PASSAGE One of Pussy Riot’s top hooligans brings her punk manifesto to the Rio in Santa Cruz as the music-theater-memoir ‘Revolution.’
Head Lock MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Why we wouldn’t have the pussy hat without Pussy Riot
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I
n the Pussy Riot documentary A Punk Prayer, there’s a clip of Vladimir Putin railing against the utter disgrace that the band has brought on Russia. Why, just look at their name! It has the word “pussy” in it. “These people made all of you say
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it out loud,” he intones creepily in Russian, sounding like he trained under the narrator for one of those old pot-panic flicks from the 1930s. What’s funny is that he’s actually right. Pussy Riot did bring the word “pussy” to the people—when mainstream media outlets began
MUSIC Russ Liquid Test makes first contact P24
BY STEVE PALOPOLI
reporting on the band in 2012, it was the first time it had been said on the evening news in reference to anything besides a cat. Jump ahead four years, to news images of millions of women in bright pink pussy hats, marching on Washington D.C. and in cities around
FILM Hugh Jackman returns for bleak, violent Wolverine finale P38
the world. It’s not hard to connect the dots—even the hats themselves resemble the bright pink knitted balaclavas that became so associated with the band that they were sold to raise money for their defense after two members were sentenced to two years in jail by a Russian court for
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
starts at that moment.” The parallels run deeper than just the marches, says Alyokhina. She knows all-too-well what it’s like to try to stand up to a cult-ofpersonality petty tyrant in a time of shrinking civil rights. “The story is not about 2012. The situation in the United States looks really, really similar compared to our situation. What we’re going to say is that this is a story about now. We really want people to wake up and to do as much as they can,” she says. Pussy Riot’s extreme style and music drew an equally extreme reaction, especially in Russia, leading many to assume it was orchestrated purely for shock value. But Alyokhina doesn’t agree. To her and her bandmates, she says, it was an organic process of expressing themselves. “I don’t know how it looked from outside, but it was just a feeling of life, of freedom,” she says. The band members were influenced by American riot grrrl bands like Bikini Kill, not only in their brutal sound and feminist lyrics, but also in their brightcolored, art-directed look and theatrical performances. In many ways, Revolution seems like a next logical step for Alyokhina; her collaborators on this project include Belarus Free Theatre’s Kiryl Kanstantsinau, experimental Russian “junk-punk” band Asian Women on the Telephone (AWOTT), director Yury Muravitsky and more. “It’s a punk manifesto. It’s a mix of music and words and theater,” she says. “I’m a friend of experiment. I don’t want to be stuck in one form of art. Theater for me is a new form, which I really like. I hope everybody will like it, too. We should speak in all languages we have: Music, videos, theater, street protests, everything. We can just try to do and act.” Pussy Riot Theatre will perform ‘Revolution’ at 8 p.m. on Saturday, March 11 at the Rio Theatre in Santa Cruz. Tickets are $26.50, $40 gold circle, available at Streetlight Records and at pulseproductions.net.
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
“hooliganism” in August of 2012. The balaclavas and the pussy hats will meet this week in Santa Cruz, as I hear fans are planning to wear both to the show at the Rio on Saturday, March 11, where Pussy Riot member Maria Alyokhina will bring music and her personal story for Pussy Riot Theatre Presents: Revolution. Alyokhina became one of the most visible members of Pussy Riot—which is a loose collective of a dozen or so women who began playing explosive punk songs like “Kill the Sexist!” in disguise at short impromptu concerts—when she served prison time, along with bandmate Nadia Tolokonnikova, on the “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred” charges which stemmed from a Pussy Riot performance in Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior. They were released in 2014 under an amnesty bill passed by the Russian legislature. Revolution is a music-and-theater piece based on Alyokhina’s memoirs as published in Pussy Riot! A Punk Prayer for Freedom. It would seem like a fine time to consider the impact Pussy Riot has had on protest culture, especially in light of the worldwide pink-hatted marches, but when I reach her by phone from Moscow, she laughs when I assert that there could not have been a pussy hat without Pussy Riot. “Well, of course for me that was a dream that became real,” she says of the Women’s Marches. “It’s not only about me, all of us were very excited.” Her only disappointment was that there were no such marches in Russia. “I think we will someday have this march as well,” she says. While that activist structure may not yet exist in Russia in the same way, I tell her that the antiTrump marches remind me of the widespread Russian protests when Putin was returned to power in 2012. “Yeah, the situation was very similar,” she says. “The protests which we had in the beginning of 2012 were really incredible and huge. We started Pussy Riot when [then-president Dmitry] Medvedev and Putin decided to change places. The show we are bringing
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MUSIC
THIS IS A TEST Russ Liquid Test performs at the Catalyst on Wednesday, March 15.
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Beings There
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We’re not saying the secret to Russ Liquid Test’s music is aliens, but it’s aliens BY AARON CARNES
H
ow does New Orleans’ Russ Liquid Test sound so futuristic, but also so old-school—“Vintage Future,” as the group’s Russell Scott describes it? Long answer: Russ Liquid Test’s music is driven by hard-hitting dance beats—electronic, but also organic. The grooves bounce while shooting moody chills down your spine, and while it’s certainly danceable, the subtle complexity of the songwriting merits listening on headphones. Short answer: aliens.
The subject was first brought up 10 minutes into my phone interview with Scott, when I asked him how he and his creative partner Andrew Block met. That’s when things took an unexpected turn. “An alien visited me this one time I was in Asheville, North Carolina, and told me that I was supposed to make music with Andrew Block. I met him three months later. So that was pretty trippy,” Scott says. “Every time I tell people that they go, ‘something’s wrong with you.’ I keep saying it. Maybe someone will believe me.” At first, I thought he was pulling
my leg, but he insisted to the point where he had to either be 100 percent serious, or was so committed to his prank that he was willing to seem crazy. Either way, I was on board. “Vintage Future,” I learned, isn’t just a snappy way to describe Russ Liquid Test’s penchant for combining old-school funk and jazz, and mixing it with cutting-edge, inventive psychedelic electronic sound design. It goes right back to the aliens. “The aliens from the future came to the present—which would be the vintage of the future—to implant the ideas of futuristic music, like little
seeds to influence the future of music. These new beings take a little piece of that back to the past, the vintage part, sprinkle a little bit more of that in. It’s a feedback loop,” Scott explains, not stopping to take a breath. “It’s easier if I could draw a diagram, but I don’t have a piece of paper, and you can’t see through my phone.” What I can verify is that Scott, who’s previously been a solo electronic musician and a trumpet player and saxophonist in jazz bands, met guitarist Andrew Block while they both toured in electronic/ hip-hop artist Gramatik’s band. They immediately clicked, so much so that Scott moved to New Orleans to work with Block on the Russ Liquid Test project. Scott handed the phone to Block, who talked with me for a little while. “There’s so many more things you can do in the electronic genre that you really can’t do in jazz. There’s like a hardcore contingent—that if your jazz doesn’t sound like this, nobody wants to hear it,” Block says. “The thing about playing with Russ is I’m just able to use the language of jazz, but through this filter of electronic music, so that it gets heard by people that maybe wouldn’t necessarily pick up a jazz record.” As he spoke, all I could think about was aliens. There was something eerie I couldn’t quite put my finger on about the debut Russ Liquid Test EP, which is oddly titled 1984. I asked if the title was a reference to the George Orwell book or the Van Halen record. Scott and Block immediately jumped into an a capella rendition of Van Halen’s “Panama.” Then Scott told me it was about a potential end of the world that we’re spiraling toward. “I want to take credit for these things, but it’s not me. Somebody told me inside of my brain to name it that. Plus, we had this really sweet sample of this robot chick going ‘1984.’ It just felt right, you know, like the first time you eat a grilled cheese sandwich with a tomato.” As much as I had a hard time believing time-traveling aliens existed, I didn’t doubt Scott’s warning about the end of the world. Just look around. At least we’ll have good music to dance to in the apocalypse. INFO: 9 p.m., Mar. 15, Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $14/adv, $17/door. 429-4135.
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Thursday, March 16, 7-9 pm (bilingual) at the Beach Flats Community Center (1333 Lebrandt Ave. Santa Cruz)
Community survey: English surveymonkey.com/r/TM3VF99 Spanish surveymonkey.com/r/B9SXTVW If you have any questions, please contact the City at 420-5010.
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
Upcoming public meeting dates and times: Wednesday, March 15, 7-9pm in the Police Department Community Room (155 Center St Santa Cruz)
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CALENDAR
GREEN FIX
See hundreds more events at santacruz. com.
Free calendar listings in print and online are available for community events. Listings show up online within 24 hours. Submissions of free events and those $15 or less received by Thursday at noon, six days prior to the Good Times publication date, will be prioritized for print (space available). All listings must specify a day, start time, location and price (or ‘free’ if applicable). Listings can be set to repeat every week or month, and can be edited by the poster as needed. Ongoing events must be updated quarterly. It is the responsibility of the person submitting an event to cancel or modify the listing. Register at our website at santacruz.com in order to SUBMIT EVENTS ONLINE. E-mail calendar@goodtimes.sc or call 458.1100 with any questions.
‘TIDES’ READING Venture through the Bay of Fundy, Mont Saint-Michel, Schelt Narrows, the Qiantang River and beyond with author, sailor, surfer, and conservationist Jonathan White. For decades, White has chased the tides of the world, doing extensive research, travel and reflection on the spirit of water’s movement along estuaries and the coast, up tidal rivers and through narrow passages. White will read from his book Tides: The Science and Spirit of the Ocean on Tuesday, March 14 to share his personal accounts alongside astronomical basics of Earth, moon and sun through tides, predictions and more. Info: 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 14. Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History, 1305 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. Free.
ART SEEN
WEDNESDAY 3/8 ARTS STEAM IN NATURE Create STEAM-based nature art while learning about the science of our natural environment in this weekly class with educator Sue Creswell. Sue Creswell has been a primary teacher, with an emphasis on environmental education, for 26 years. 3 p.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery, 1855 41st Ave., Capitola. 888-424-8035. ‘I AM A GIRL’ FILM SCREENING ‘I Am a Girl’ is an inspirational feature-length documentary that paints a clear picture of the reality of what it means to be a girl in the 21st century. 7:30 p.m. The Nickelodeon, 210 Lincoln St., Santa Cruz. 426-7500. $11.
CLASSES SALSA RUEDA CLASSES Cuban-style dance at the Tannery. Introductory and beginning classes 7-8 p.m. Intermediate and advanced classes 8-9 p.m. Tannery, 1060 River St., Suite #111, Santa Cruz. Cesario, Danny, Gilberto. $7/$5.
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
‘WE WHO WORK’ PRINTS AND TAPESTRIES
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Hung Liu was raised in China during the Industrial Revolution and through her tapestries and mixed-media prints honoring workers—shoemakers, soldiers, farmers—has become one of the most renowned Chinese artists living in the United States. Her famous prints explore what it means to work and have earned her the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Southern Graphics Council International and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in painting. Hung’s work will be displayed until June 6, alongside tools from community members and photos of local day workers by Edward Ramirez and Natalie Alas of Working For Dignity. Info: Through June 6 at the Museum of Art & History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz, 429-1964. $10/general admis-
ARGENTINE TANGO Argentine tango classes and practice every Wednesday with John and Nancy Lingemann. Beginners 7 p.m., Intermediate/Advanced 8:15 p.m., and all levels at 9:15 p.m. Calvary Episcopal Church, 532 Center St., Santa Cruz. 469-3288. $3. HAS SMOKING POT STOPPED BEING FUN? Come join a fellowship of men and women inspired to live a life free from the possession of marijuana addiction. This group uses the 12 steps to achieve personal freedom and spiritual awakening. 7 p.m. 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. 420-6177. Free.
BEGINNING BALLET WITH DIANA ROSE Ballet for the beginning adult student with little or no ballet training. Learn ballet terminology and fine tune placement, posture and technique. Noon-1:15 p.m. 320 Encinal St., Santa Cruz. 466-0458. $10.
BLOOM OF THE PRESENT WEEKLY WEDNESDAY MEDITATION Insight Meditation teacher Carla Brennan leads a drop-in meditation group every Wednesday
WEDNESDAY 3/8 ‘THE GODDESS PROJECT’ SCREENING In 2015, only 22 percent of main characters in films and 19 percent of writers, producers, editors and cinematographers were women. Determined to empower the feminine voice, filmmakers Sara Landas and Holli Rae packed their lives into a school bus and collected stories of more than 100 women across the country to piece together what women in the United States face in their day-to-day lives. Their resulting film, The Goddess Project, is being shown to celebrate International Women’s Day. Info: 7:30 p.m. Regal Riverfront 2, 155 South River St., Santa Cruz. gathr.us/screening/19370. $11.
at Noon at the Pacific Cultural Center in Santa Cruz. These groups are open to both experienced and beginning meditators. Noon-1:15 p.m. Pacific Cultural Center, 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-8893. Free.
CRYSTAL SOUND INFUSION Sacred sound raises your vibrational level, increases spiritual awareness, releases energy blocks and increases flow. 8:15 p.m. Divine Tree Yoga, 1043-B Water St., Santa Cruz. 333-6736. $10. SALSA CRASH COURSE FOR
BEGINNERS Enjoy Caribbean dance and music. This popular four-week crash course is for anyone who wants to learn partner salsa dancing with easy, cool looking moves using Cuban-style techniques. No partner required, ages 16 and up, limited space. 7 p.m. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. salsagente.com. ESSENTIAL OILS FOR WOMEN’S HEALTH Celebrate International Women’s Day by exploring how essential oils can support your health, beauty, and balance. 5-7
CALENDAR
SATURDAY 3/11 ‘SINGING THROUGH PRISON WALLS’ CONCERT First-generation Lebanese-American performing artist and educator Naima Shalhoub blends African and Middle Eastern culture with improvisation and rhythm. Shalhoub uses her songs to advocate for freedom, social justice and inspiration for healing—her first album, Borderlands, was recorded in the San Francisco County Jail. “The voice cannot be contained by metal bars,” says Shalhoub. “Music can break the barriers of the injustice and the pain that people go through when they are isolated and confined.” Shalhoub will perform a mix of her own songs and songs of resistance with Tarik Kazaleh on March 11. Info: 7:30 p.m. Resource Center for Nonviolence, 612 Ocean St., Santa Cruz. naimarcnv. brownpapertickets.com. $15.
p.m. Mountain Spirit, 6299 Hwy. 9, Felton. 3357700. Free.
From Las Vegas, celebrity chef and author Mark Anthony will be demonstrating how to prepare whole plant-based vegan cooking. 6 p.m. Watsonville SDA Church, 700 S. Green Valley Road, Watsonville. 325-7993. Free.
FOOD & WINE TRIVIA NIGHT Trivia night at 99 bottles. 21 and up. 8 p.m. 110 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. 459-9999. DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ FARMERS MARKET In addition to a large variety of farm products, this market offers a great selection of local artisan foodstuffs, delicious baked goods, and lots of options for lunch and dinner. 1:30 p.m. Cedar and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. 454-0566.
NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA—APTOS/SANTA CRUZ A 12-step group for those who have been affected by the addiction or drug problem of another. Nar-Anon’s program is adapted from Narcotics Anonymous and uses Nar-Anon’s 12 Steps. 7-8:30 p.m. Freedom Roads Church, 7200 Freedom Boulevard, Aptos. saveyoursanity@aol.com. Free/donations. OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS Come join us for a friendly 12-Step support group with the solution. Teens and adults welcome. Includes compulsive overeating, anorexia, and bulimia. Meets in the church Youth Room, two doors down from the corner of Poplar and Melrose. 10:30-11:30 a.m. Trinity Presbyterian Church, 420 Melrose Ave., Santa Cruz. santacruzoa. org. Free. BNI NETWORKING MEETING The
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LIVE MUSIC AT ZIZZO’S COFFEEHOUSE AND WINE BAR Enjoy live music at the area’s only built in piano bar with the biggest mirror ball on the Central Coast! Our bar serves a variety of wines and local craft beer along with tasty small-plate appetizers and desserts. 7-9:30 p.m. Zizzo’s Coffeehouse & Wine Bar, 3555 Clares St., Capitola. 477-0680 or zizzoscoffee.com. $5.
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WOMENCARE: LAUGHTER YOGA Laughter yoga for women with cancer meets the first and third Thursdays. Call WomenCARE to register. 12:30-1:30 p.m. WomenCARE, 2901 Park Ave., Suite A1, Soquel. 457-2273. Free.
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ARTS STORYTIME Join us for storytime. Free with museum admission and for MOD Members. 10:30-11 a.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888-424-8035. Free. BANFF MOUNTAIN FILM FESTIVAL WORLD TOUR Join UCSC Recreation and get set to explore the edge of the believable with some of the best films from the Banff Mountain Film Festival as it brings amazing stories to the big screen. 7 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. 459-2806. $18.
CLASSES KOREAN BEGINNING CLASS Join us and explore your Korean language skills as we cover fundamentals of the language including Hangul (Korean alphabet). Also, K-pop, drama and food will be introduced. 6 p.m. Santa Cruz High School, 415 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. 408507-5454. $23. BONE BROTH WORKSHOP Join Kitchen Witch Bone Broth Co-Founder and Kitchen Director Magali Brecke.Learn how to choose, roast, boil, simmer and chop your way to a deeply nourishing pot of bone broth you can make at home. Followed by a tasting. 6-7:30 p.m. New Leaf Market, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-1306. $20.
FOOD & WINE TRIVIA NIGHT This festive event brings together trivia aficionados, boneheads and the chic geek for a night of boisterous fun. 8:30 p.m. Woodstock’s Pizza, 710 Front St., Santa Cruz. 427-4444.
SUPPORT GROUP FOR SURVIVORS OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE: WOMEN’S GROUP We provide a safe and supportive environment for healing from child sexual abuse. Together we break through isolation, develop healthy coping skills, reduce shame, and build healthy boundaries. 6 p.m. Family Service Agency of the Central Coast, 2901 Park Ave. Suite A3, Soquel. 423-7601. SURVIVORS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Walnut Avenue Family & Women’s Center offers free drop-in socio-educational support groups open to those who have or are currently experiencing domestic violence and that identify as female. 6:30-7:45 p.m. Walnut Avenue Women’s Center, 303 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-3062. SLV CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP Connect with others, find out about services to help you, plus get valuable information and support. There have been presentations on Alzheimer’s, dementia and veterans issues. 2 p.m. Highlands Park, 8500 Hwy. 9, Ben Lomond. facebook.com/valleywomensclub. Free. SCHOOL DAY TOURS AT GATEWAY SCHOOL Prospective families are invited to tour Gateway School’s campus to see firsthand how our program inspires children to become passionate scholars and compassionate citizens. 9 a.m. Gateway School, 126 Eucalyptus Ave., Santa Cruz. gatewaysc.org. Free. WOMEN IN CANNABIS We are very excited to announce this month's meet ups of Women In Cannabis. Our topic this month: How to Make an Impact in Local and State Governments. 21+. 5-6:30 p.m. Hollins House Restaurant, 20 Clubhouse Road, Santa Cruz. facebook.com/ bayareawomenincannabiz. Free. >30
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CALENDAR dance for all. Come out and do-si-do and sashay to your heart’s content with dance caller Andy Wilson and a room full of friendly people. 6-8 p.m. Live Oak Grange, 1900 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. 650-879-0864. $10. MINDFULNESS BASED STRESS REDUCTION Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction has helped improve the ability of hundreds of participants to live better with daily stress by learning to actively participate in the management of health and well being. 5:30-7 p.m. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. 325-5177. $350.
FOOD & WINE WATSONVILLE FARMERS MARKET This market is in the heart of the famously bountiful Pajaro Valley. Peaceful and familyoriented, the Hispanic heritage of this community gives this market a “mercado” feel. 2-7 p.m. 200 Main St., Watsonville.
SATURDAY 3/11 YARR OPEN HOUSE & TRAINING This Saturday, March 11, Your Allied Rapid Response (YARR) will host an open house and two-hour Migra Watch training to teach participants how to document and monitor U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement officials during raids. Roles include everything from legal support to tech help to direct action and fundraising. This event is led by lawyers from the Immigrant Liberation Movement, is free to the public, and childcare will be provided. Info: 1-4 p.m. Peace United Church, 900 High St., Santa Cruz. rapidresponseSC@riseup.net. Free.
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FRIDAY 3/10
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
ARTS
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BAG OF BOOKS FOR $5 Grey Bears Book Store has a special price on books every Friday: Just $5 for a bag of books. Come and browse through all sorts of books, large and small, for all readers. Good prices also available the other 6 days per week. Sales help support the weekly delivery of food bags to seniors. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 479-1055. $5. ART TWISTORY: THE MERRY WIDOW In honor of National Women’s History Month, we will “uncover” who she is and how her legend endures everywhere from the bedroom to the boardroom in modern art, politics, and business. 7-9 p.m. Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. 498-9079. $10/$5.
CLASSES CHAIR YOGA WITH SUZI Instructor Suzi Mahler, CMT NE will guide you through a series of gentle seated yoga postures that are performed slowly and with breath awareness. This wonderfully therapeutic practice will help you increase strength and range of motion. 9:30 a.m. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 234-6791. $5. CIRCLE TIME We are so happy to present this weekly program offering—Circle Time! Join us in the MOD Toddler Area at 10:45 a.m. for rhythm and song, in both English and Spanish. Let your littles explore musical instruments and finger puppets while everyone sings. Developmentally designed for ages 0-3. 11-11:30 a.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery, 1855 41st Ave., Capitola. 888-424-8035. FAMILY BARN DANCE Family-friendly barn
EQUINOX WINERY FUNDRAISER Fundraiser for the Santa Cruz-Monterey Bay Area Subunit of the American Fisheries Society, hosted at Equinox Wines. Bring your friends and join us for a night of wine. 5-7 p.m. Equinox Winery, 334 Ingalls St., Santa Cruz. equinoxwine.com. Free.
GROUPS CLUTTERERS ANONYMOUS SUPPORT GROUP Is clutter getting you down? Feeling discouraged about all your stuff? There is hope. Come to this weekly 12-step group for understanding and support. 5:30 p.m. Sutter Maternity and Surgery Center, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 477-2200. Free.
HEALTH VITAMIN B12 FRIDAY Receiving B12 via injection means that people can increase their energy. B12 Fridays are a fun time for people to meet and mingle. 3-6 p.m. Thrive Natural Medicine, 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. 515-8699.
SATURDAY 3/11 FOOD & WINE APTOS FARMERS MARKET AT CABRILLO COLLEGE Voted Good Times best farmers market in Santa Cruz County. With more than 90 vendors, the Aptos Farmers Market offers an unmatched selection of locally
grown produce and specialty foods. 8 a.m.-Noon, Saturdays, Cabrillo College. montereybayfarmers.org or akeller@ montereybayfarmers.org. Free. WESTSIDE FARMERS MARKET The Westside Farmers Market takes place every week at the corner of Highway 1 and Western Drive, situated on the northern edge of Santa Cruz’s greenbelt. This market serves the communities of the west-end of Santa Cruz including Boony Doon, North Coast, UCSC Campus and is a short trip from downtown. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mission Street and Western Drive, Santa Cruz. 454-0566. SCOTTS VALLEY FARMERS MARKET Started in 2009 with the City of Scotts Valley, the market represents farmers and specialty food purveyors along with cookedto-order food. This local market is the place for the Scotts Valley community to get their fill of fresh, healthy, locally grown fruits and vegetables. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 360, Kings Valley Road, Scotts Valley. 454-0566.
OUTDOOR LIGHT UP THE NIGHT Looking for free bike lights and a night of cycling fun? Bike Santa Cruz County invites you to the third annual Light Up the Night community ride, a bike light giveaway, and well-lit community ride. 4:30-8 p.m. The Bicycle Trip, 1001 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. facebook.com/ events/1352544834819617. Free.
SUNDAY 3/12 CLASSES SWING DANCING EVERY SUNDAY Come join Swing Set Lounge every Sunday for all things swing. Lessons and social dancing. Snacks provided. All ages welcome. No partner needed. No experience necessary. 6-10 p.m. 1122 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. 4718142. $10. SUBUD INTRODUCTION Subud is an international spiritual community whose members experience an active moving exercise that can lead to deep inner healing and an experience of the divine.11 a.m.Noon. Subud Santa Cruz, 3800 Old San Jose Road, Soquel. 476-3020. Free.
FOOD & WINE LIVE COMEDY AT THE CROW’S NEST Crow’s Nest features live comedy, with talent from the national circuit, every Sunday night
CALENDAR CALENDAR year-round. 21 and up. 2218 E. Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. 476-4560. $7.
OUTDOOR YOUNGER LAGOON RESERVE TOUR Part of the UC Natural Reserve System, Younger Lagoon contains diverse coastal habitat and is home to birds of prey, migrating sea birds, bobcats, and other wildlife. Come and see what scientists are doing to track local mammals, and learn about the workings of one of California’s rare coastal lagoons. 2-3:30 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 Shaffer Road, Santa Cruz. 4593800. $6.
.. PART
SPIRITUAL
FRATRES
SUNDAY CELEBRATION SERVICE This is a New Thought, Science of Mind event. Our Sunday Service is an alternative to traditional worship in an atmosphere of joyful praise, conscious music, and inspirational teachings relevant to your life. 10:30 a.m. Center for Spiritual Living, 1818 Felt St., Santa Cruz. 462-9383. Free.
HAYDEN CELLO CONCERTO IN D OLIVER HERBERT CELLO
MONDAY 3/13
SCHUBERT/MAHLER
ARTS
DEATH AND THE MAIDEN
TUESDAY 3/14 FOOD & WINE TRIVIA NIGHT Trivia Night at New Bohemia Brewing Company every Tuesday. 21 and up. 6 p.m. 1030 41st Ave., Santa Cruz. nubobrew. com/events. Free.
MUSIC SHERRY AUSTIN WITH HENHOUSE Sherry Austin reminds us in silky, smooth tones about life’s simple pleasures. 6-9 p.m. Davenport Roadhouse, 1 Davenport Ave., Davenport. 426-8801. Free.
MARCH 25, 2017 SANTA CRUZ CIVIC AUDITORIUM
7:30pm
Sponsored by: Plantronix
2:00pm Sponsored by: Anonymous
SantaCruzSymphony.org
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
MUSIC TOGETHER—MUSICAL ME MusicalMe brings the essential Music Together Early Childhood Music & Movement class (for ages birth to 5 years, and the adults who love them) to the MOD Workshop. Pre Registration required. 10 a.m. 438-3514 or musicalme.com. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery, 1855 41st Ave., Capitola.
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MUSIC CALENDAR
LOVE YOUR
LOCAL BAND
ERIC MORRISON AND THE MYSTERIES Eric Morrison has been playing music for a decade. But in the span of the year that his new band Eric Morrison and the Mysteries has been together, he’s gotten an overwhelming response unlike any previous group he’s played in. Already the band’s performed somewhere in the neighborhood of 30-40 shows. The offers came in quick, and he’s been happy to take them. This week, he’ll even have a fulllength album for sale at shows.
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Part of the group’s success is that everyone is enthusiastic—they started working on the album a week after their first show. To make this record, the members have been in the studio four times, with Morrison going in alone on several more occasions.
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The studio work helped the group work out its sound, which Morrison calls “Americana soul”—a fitting description, as it blends together elements of Americana and soul. One area they tinkered with was whether to be an acoustic or an electric band; they ultimately settled on electric, because it gave them a better range. “I think it’s the dynamics, the energy, just being able to control the volume. It gets away from that folky sound,” Morrison says. “We could easily be a folk band with these songs, too, if we kept it mellow. I don’t want that at all, because I’m a real dynamic singer. It’s nice to move up above and beyond the acoustic guitar range.” AARON CARNES INFO: 8 p.m. Saturday, March 11. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $10. 335-2800.
AARON DIEHL
WEDNESDAY 3/8 BLUES-ROCK
IAN MOORE Rock ’n’ roll is dead, says Ian Moore’s bio. “It’s a toothless old woman. It’s really embarrassing.” It’s a Bowie quote, actually. This inherent irony is to be expected from Ziggy Stardust, but it’s a little weirder coming from Moore, who got his start in the early ’90s. When all the young guitar-slingers were playing moody alt-rock, he was giving the people blues-rock. Nothing fancy, just plain ol’ rock ’n’ roll coming back from the grave for the umpteenth time. We can look back now 25 years later and see how much of a thing blues-rock has become for indie kids, so maybe Moore was right to kick the corpse when it was down. AARON CARNES INFO: 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $10. 429-6994.
THURSDAY 3/9 ELECTRONIC
PHUTUREPRIMITIVE Since before his 2004 debut album,
Sub Conscious, dropped on Waveform Records, Phutureprimitive has been exploring the darker sides of electronic music. His songs are introspective and inquisitive, leaving the listener with a sense of deeper connection and understanding through this strange language called music. He even called his 2013 and 2015 EPs Searching For Beauty in the Darkest Places, Parts 1 & 2, respectively. But that’s not to say he doesn’t also know how to bring the party. Phutureprimitive feeds the dance floor with creatively constructed melodies, breaks and time changes to get everybody sweating to his primitive sounds from the phuture. MAT WEIR INFO: 9 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $20/door. 479-1854.
FRIDAY 3/10 FOLK
JUDY COLLINS Since 1959, legendary singer-songwriter Judy Collins—who inspired the Crosby, Stills & Nash hit “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes”—has been crafting heartfelt songs spanning genres from folk, rock and standards to show tunes and pop. Collins is also a lifelong social activist who has championed a diverse array of causes, including UNICEF and the aboli-
tion of landmines. Her recording of Stephen Sondheim’s “Send in the Clowns” garnered her a Grammy nomination. Last time Collins was in Santa Cruz, the show sold out, so get your tickets early. CAT JOHNSON
INFO: 8 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $36/gen, $51/gold. 423-8209.
REGGAE
MATISYAHU In 2005, Matisyahu made a splash as a reggae-singing, beat-boxing Hasidic Jew. His breakout hit, “King Without a Crown,” made the U.S. charts and Matisyahu became a cultural phenomenon. Over the next two decades, he grew a global fanbase, releasing four studio albums and two live records. A multi-faceted artist whose spirituality is never far from his music, Matisyahu has since redefined himself as simply an artist. In 2011, he posted a beardless photo of himself along with the following note to his fans: “No more Chassidic reggae superstar. Sorry folks, all you get is me ... no alias.” However he self-identifies, Matisyahu is one of the most extraordinary and thoughtful artists around. CJ INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $28/door. 423-1338.
MUSIC
BE OUR GUEST CHARENEE WADE
JUDY COLLINS
SATURDAY 3/11 ROCK
LOST BOYS
INFO: 8 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $30/adv, $35/door. 429-4135.
SAT 3/11-SUN 3/12 BLUES
WALTER TROUT Before starting his own band in 1989, Walter Trout spent nearly two decades playing with some blues heavyweights, including Canned Heat, John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, and John Lee Hooker. Since then, he’s been solo,
INFO: 4 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. 479-1854.
SUNDAY 3/12 FUSION
GYPSY SOUL Gypsy Soul blends roots music, blues and jazz into a mesmerizing musical fusion. Twenty years into a celebrated career that includes a Top 40 hit with “Silent Tears” and over 1,000 performances, the duo—comprised of Roman Morykit from the U.K. and Cilette Swann from the U.S. and Canada—traverses styles and human experiences, from heartache and love to struggle and joy. The members of Gypsy Soul met and honed their sound in Scotland, where they made a commitment to “make both their living and their lives from their art.” CJ INFO: 7 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $15. 335-2800.
MONDAY 3/13 JAZZ
AARON DIEHL Since graduating from Juilliard a decade ago, Aaron Diehl has cut a brilliant path as a composer, arranger, bandleader and most visibly, accompanist and music director for the nonpareil vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant. For this show, he brings his new project exploring the music of George Gershwin and Jelly Roll Morton, composers who defined the rise of jazz and America’s popular music in the 1920s. He’ll play piano duets with Adam Birnbaum (who finished his Juilliard studies a few years before Diehl), and feature Salvant’s supremely imaginative interpretations of standards and his sextet arrangements for bassist Paul Sikivie, drummer Lawrence Leathers, trombonist Corey Wilcox (son of trombone great Wycliffe Gordon), rising trumpeter Bruce Harris, and clarinetist Evan Christopher, a master of classic New Orleans jazz. ANDREW GILBERT INFO: 7 and 9 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $40/adv, $45/door. 427-2227.
INFO: 7 p.m. Monday, March 20. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $30/door. 427-2227. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/ giveaways before 11 a.m. on Wednesday, March 15 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.
IN THE QUEUE GARCIA PROJECT
Jerry Garcia tribute band from Saratoga Springs, New York. Wednesday at Don Quixote’s DELHI2DUBLIN
Electronic/live world music fusion. Friday at Catalyst B-SIDE PLAYERS
Afro-Latin-Reggae-Cumbia-Funk band. Saturday at Moe’s Alley MASTERS OF HAWAIIAN MUSIC
Beloved island musicians George Kahumoku Jr., Nathan Aweau and Kawika Kahiapo. Sunday at Kuumbwa DREAD MAR I
Argentina’s “king of reggae music.” Tuesday at Moe’s Alley
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
There will never be a day when Santa Cruz doesn’t love James Durbin with all its heart. Fortunately, Durbin wields his power for good. The group he fronts, the Lost Boys, is playing a benefit show on Saturday, with proceeds going to Jacob’s Heart, which funds children’s cancer support services. The Lost Boys is the perfect project for rock-loving Durbin. The group does rock covers from the ’60s to present. It’s all local Santa Cruz musicians. Durbin, of course, will bring the house down with an earnest passion for this music, and a voice that can cause an armadillo to melt. AC
with various bands backing him. His take on the blues has a particularly desperate quality to it. It’s the combination of an almost-falling-apartat-the seams voice, and his spastic rip roaring guitar fills. It’s the kind of blues that reminds you why there’s different sections in the record store for blues and rock. AC
Jazz and soul vocalist, composer and educator Charenee Wade has some nice feathers in her musical cap: she was a participant in Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead program, she was first runner-up in the Thelonious Monk International Vocal Competition, she was selected for the Dianne Reeves Young Artist Workshop, and she’s a regular at New York hotspots Dizzy’s Club Coca Cola, Smalls, and the Zinc Bar. Known for her innovative arrangements and what has been described as “singular and assertive vocal textures,” Wade is a standout in the genre. Her most recent offering is a tribute to the music of Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson. CAT JOHNSON
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LIVE MUSIC
Wednesday March 8th 8:30pm $5/8
Live Reggae & World Music Showcase
CRUZAH, PAN DULCE & NOMALAKADOJA Thursday March 9th 9pm $15/20 Presented By Euphoric Styles
PHUTUREPRIMITIVE Friday March 10th 9pm $9/12
Bluegrass, Americana, Soul & Swing
STEEP RAVINE + ROYAL JELLY JIVE Saturday March 11th 9pm $15/20
Afro/Latin/Cumbia/Reggae Favorites
B-SIDE PLAYERS Sunday March 12th 4pm $20/25 Afternoon Blues Series
WALTER TROUT Tuesday March 14th 8:30pm $25/30
Argentina’s King Of Reggae Debuts Moe’s
DREAD MAR I + YERBA RUDA & DJ MOI Wednesday March 15th 8:30pm $15/20
WED
3/8
THU
3/9
FRI
APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos St, Aptos
3/10
SAT
3/11
Beach Sunset Paint Session 6p
THE APPLETON GRILL 410 Rodriguez St, Watsonville
Al Frisby 6-8p
AQUARIUS RESTAURANT Santa Cruz Dream Inn 175 W Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz
Mark “Porkchop” Holder & MPH 6-8p
Preacher Boy Trio 1p Lloyd Whitley 5p
Minor Thirds Trio 6:30-9:30p
Minor Thirds Trio 7-10p
St. Patrick’s Day Bash With
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
MARTY O’REILLY + BATTLEHOOCH
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March 18th SPIRIT OF 76 w/ Sunshine Becker March 19th BOB CORRITORE March 22nd COSMIC PINBALL + SPACE HEATER March 23rd RIBSY’S NICKEL + ANIMO CRUZ March 24th HARRY & THE HITMEN March 25th MONOPHONICS March 26th DAVY KNOWLES (afternoon) March 26th ROCKER T, LUV FYAH, 7th ST BAND (eve) March 28th GRATEFUL DEAD EXPERIENCE: THE SCHWAG March 29th MIKE STINSON + JAY LINGO March 31st CON BRIO + 7 Come 11 April 2nd ROY ROGERS April 6th BOOMBOX April 7th DUMPSTAPHUNK April 9th WEBB WILDER April 12th SCOTT PEMBERTON
WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854
3/13
A.C. Myles 6-8p
Broken Shades 6-8p
Live Jazz & Wine Tasting 6-9p
Salsa Bahia 6-9p
DJ
BLUE LAGOON 923 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Bad Dog, F.Dupp, Hard Run $5 9p
Comedy Night/80s Night Free 8:30p
Funkanauts, Mike Fish, Karen Less & More $5 9p
Proudest Monkeys $5 9p
The Box (Goth Night) 9p
Post Punk Night 9p
THE BLUE LOUNGE 529 Seabright Ave, Santa Cruz
Punk Night
Karaoke
Karaoke
Comedy
Karaoke
BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, Santa Cruz
Karaoke 8p-Close
D’oh Bros 9-11:45p
BOCCI’S CELLAR 140 Encinal St, Santa Cruz
Live Music Free 8p
Swing Dance $5 5:30p Light the Band & more $5-$8 9p
Karaoke Free 8p
Karaoke 9p
BRITANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey Ave, Capitola CASA SORRENTO 393 Salinas St, Salinas
Isaiah Rashad $15/$65 Matisyahu 8:30p The Loft: Frank $25/$28 8p Ocean Tribute Free 9p Jackie Zealous $8/$10 8:30p
International Music Hall and Restaurant
FINE MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOOD ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET M-F $7.95 Wed Mar 8
The Garcia Project
Classic Jerry Garcia Band Set Lists $17 adv./$20 door 21 + 8pm Thu Helm, Persephone, Malia, and Belly Dance Mar 9 International with Helene Live Music &Belly Dance Spectacular $17 adv./$20 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm
Fri Mar 10
Sat Mar 11
EXTRA LARGE
Reggae, Latin, hip-hop, funk, & rock $10 adv./$10 door 21+ 8pm
Eric Morrison & The Mysteries plus Puffball Collective Collective non-stop dancing $10 adv./$10 door 21 + 8pm
Sun Mar 12
Banana Slug String Band 2pm Matinee Music for Kids and Families $12 adv./$12 door <21 w/parent 2pm
Sun Mar 12
Gypsy Soul
Wed Mar 15
California Guitar Trio
Thu Mar 16
3/14
Mojo Mix 6-8p
Marshall House Project Free 9p
Death Monk, Spell, Witchstone $5 9p
Karaoke 8p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
Jazz Society Donation 3:30p Dead Conduit Free 8p
Joey Hudoklin Free 8p
Comedy w/Shwa Free 8:30p
Social Distortion Sold Out 7p
Isaiah Rashad Sold Out 7p
Karaoke 9p
DJ Luna 9p
CATALYST 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz CATALYST ATRIUM 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
TUE
Tango Ecstasy 6-9:30p
Quinn XCII $12/$37 8:30p
Delhi 2 Dublin $15/$18 8:30p
Andre Nickatina $23/27 8p Up Bar: Whiskey West Free 9p The Lost Boys, James Durbin $30/$35 7p
Thursday March 16th 8pm $20/25
Friday March 17th 9pm $12/15
MON
BAYVIEW HOTEL 8041 Soquel Dr, Aptos
NEW ORLEANS SUSPECTS WILLIE K
3/12
Morgan Frikz, Mokosos, CFA $5 7p
New Orleans Super-group
Hawaii’s Musical Treasure
SUN
Brilliant Soaring Vocals & Guitar 7pm Concert $15 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7pm Super Acoustic Guitar Explorations $15 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm
Santa Cruz Reggae All Stars
$10 adv./$10 door s <21 w/parent 7:30pm
COMING RIGHT UP
Fri. March 17 St. Paddy’s Party Molly’s Revenge Sat. March 18 Foreverland Electrifying 14 Piece Tribute to Michael Jackson Sun. March 19 The Reunion Beatles Fantasy Tribute To The Beatles Mon. March 20 Buck Johnson Band AN EVENING WITH BUCK JOHNSON OF AEROSMITH Reservations Now Online at www.donquixotesmusic.com Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am
OPEN LATE EVERY NIGHT! wednesday 3/8
IAN MOORE
w / MISHKA SHUBALY w / LITTLE PETIE AND THE MEAN OLD MEN Advance Tickets at www.ticketweb.com
Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $10 Door
thursday 3/9
SUMMER CANNIBALS w / CHEAP HORSE
Advance Tickets at www.ticketweb.com
Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $10 Door
FRIday 3/10
THE GOOD BAD w / CASCADE CRESCENDO
Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $10 Door
saturday 3/11
VAN GOAT w / FULMINANTE w / WATER COLOR WEEKEND
Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $8 adv $8 door
TUESday 3/14
7 COME 11 Show 9pm $5 Door
wednesday 3/15
western wednesday
sponsored by Tomboy and tourMore Booking:
PINE STREET RAMBLERS Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $10 Door ($8 with boots on!)
MIDTOWN SANTA CRUZ 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz
429-6994
Kat Myers, The Buzzards $5 8p
Norma Jean $18/$20 7p
LIVE MUSIC WED
3/8
THU
3/9
FRI
3/10
SAT
3/11
CAVA WINE BAR 115 San Jose Ave, Capitola
Steve’s Kitchen Jazz 6:30-9:30p
CILANTROS 1934 Main St, Watsonville
Hippo Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p
CREPE PLACE 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz
Ian Moore, Mishka Shubaly, Little Petie $10 9p
Summer Cannibals, Cheap Horse $10 9p
The Good Bad, Casdcade Crescendo $10 9p
Van Goat, Fulminante, Water Color Weekend $8 9p
CROW’S NEST 2218 E. Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz
West Coast Soul $3 7:30p
Blue Summit $5 8:30p
South 46 $6 9p
Joint Chiefs $7 9:30p
Alex Lucero 6:30-9:30p
Cameron Jones 6:30-9:30p
Dave Muldawer 6:30-9:30p
SUN
3/12
MON
3/13
Alex Lucero 5-8p
Helm, Persephone, Malia, Extra Large Belly Dance Int’l $17/$20 $10 8p 7:30p
THE FISH HOUSE 972 Main St, Watsonville
Eric Morrison & the Mysteries, Puffball Collective $10 8p
7 Come 11 $5 9p Live Comedy $7 9p
Reggae Party Free 8p Sherry Austin w/ Henhouse
Banana Slug String Band $12 2p Gypsy Soul $15 7p
Flingo 7:30p
Money for Helicopters 8p
HINDQUARTER BAR & GRILLE 303 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz
Broken Fences 9p
Kevin Hamm 9p
Claudia Villela Group, Painted Mandolin Vitor Goncalves & more $20/$25 8p $25/$30 7p
MALONE’S 4402 Scotts Valley Dr, Scotts Valley
Live Music 5:30-9p
MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 2591 Main St, Soquel
Mofongo 7-10p
Joint Chiefs 7-10p
PAINTED MANDOLIN
Tickets: TheWheelCompany.com Sunday, March 12 • 6 & 8 pm
MASTERS OF HAWAIIAN MUSIC
Tickets: TicketFly.com Monday, March 13 • 7 & 9 pm | No Comps
CECILE MCLORIN SALVANT AND AARON DIEHL PRESENT “JELLY & GEORGE” Tickets: CelticSociety.org
TV Show 4p
Roadhouse Karaoke 7:30p
Thursday, March 16 • 7 pm
MATTHEW STEVENS
Rising star guitarist navigates between jazz, indie-rock and soul! Boomer Humor Trio $20/$25 7:30p Karaoke w/Ken 9p
The Spell 7-10p
Extradordinary Brazilian Vocalist
DERVISH
Karaoke 10p
KUUMBWA 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz
CLAUDIA VILLELA GROUP LIVE RECORDING CONCERT!
Wednesday, March 15 • 7:30 pm
Greyhound
HENFLING’S 9450 Hwy 9, Ben Lomond
Thursday, March 9 • 7 pm
Friday, March 10 • 8 pm
Blue The Garcia Project $17/$20 8p
3/14
KPIG Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p
DAV. ROADHOUSE 1 Davenport Ave, Davenport DON QUIXOTE’S 6275 Hwy 9, Felton
TUE
Celebrating Creativity Since 1975
Breeze Babes 7-10p
Masters of Hawaiian Music $30/$35 6, 8p
Jelly & George, Adam Birnbaum & more $40/$45 7p 9p
1/2 PRICE NIGHT FOR STUDENTS
Fri.–Sat. March 17, 18, 24, 25 • 8 pm
YONIVERSE MONOLOGUES Tickets: BrownPaperTickets.com Sunday, March 19 • 7:30 pm
LAURENCE JUBER
Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com Monday, March 20 • 7 pm
CHARENEE WADE
Amazing young talent singing up a storm with the music of Gil Scott-Heron Thursday, March 23 • 7 pm
SAMMY MILLER & THE CONGREGATION
BRITANNIA ARMS IN CAPITOLA 110 Monterey Avenue, Capitola Village
7-10pm Free and open to everyone registration starts at 6pm
To guarantee a time slot, please pre-register at
831.688.8435 mars-studios.com
Raffling off Boulder Creek Guitar Raffle proceeds go to Guitars Not Guns
MUSIC ARTS
RECORDING STUDIO
Guitar Works
DANILO BRITO
Brazilian mandolin sensation! Monday, March 27 • 7 & 9 pm | No Comps
STILL DREAMIN’ WITH JOSHUA REDMAN Thursday, March 30 • 7 pm
LIVE & LOCAL: SANTA CRUZ WOMEN OF JAZZ CELEBRATE ELLA FITZGERALD Apr 6 DAVE HOLLAND TRIO WITH SPECIAL GUEST CHRIS POTTER Apr 10 JOE LOVANO CLASSIC QUARTET Apr 12 STANLEY JORDAN Apr 14 LEE RITENOUR & DAVE GRUSIN Sunday, April 30 • 7:30 pm
ZAKIR HUSSAIN & RAHUL SHARMA
at the Rio Theatre | No Comps
tabla and santoor virtuosos!
Unless noted advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records. Dinner served one hour before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wines & beer. All ages welcome.
320-2 Cedar St x Santa Cruz 831.427.2227
kuumbwajazz.org
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
For contest rules, raffle tickets, information & registration, contact Mars Studio.
Sunday, March 26 • 7 pm
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1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135
LIVE MUSIC
Wednesday, March 8 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
JACKIE ZEALOUS
Thursday, March 9 • Ages 18+
QUINN XCII
plus Kolaj also Don Cody
Friday, March 10 • Ages 16+
MATISYAHU Friday, March 10 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
DELHI 2 DUBLIN
Saturday, March 11 • Ages 16+
ANDRE NICKATINA Saturday, March 11 • In the Atrium • Ages 21+
THE LOST BOYS featuring James Durbin Sunday, March 12 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
KAT MYERS & THE BUZZARDS
Tuesday, March 14 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
NORMA JEAN
plus He Is Legend
Mar 15 Julieta Venegas (Ages 21+) Mar 18 The Holdup (Ages 16+) Mar 21 The Kills/ Dream Wife (Ages 16+) Mar 23 Big Wild/ Phantoms (Ages 18+) Mar 24 Fortunate Youth (Ages 16+) Mar 25 Chronixx/ Jah 9 (Ages 16+) Mar 28 Badfish A Tribute To Sublime (Ages 16+) Mar 30 STRFKR/ Psychic Twin (Ages 16+) Apr 1 Red/ Wolves At The Gate (Ages 16+) Apr 5 Moderatto XV (Ages 16+) Apr 6 & 7 Descendents (Ages 16+) Apr 8 Philthy Rich/ G Val (Ages 16+) Apr 11 Crystal Castles (Ages 16+) Apr 12 of Montreal (Ages 16+) Apr 14 Tech N9ne (Ages 16+) Apr 15 Joseph/ Paul Arend (Ages 16+) Apr 17 DJ Shadow (Ages 16+)
Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating. Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online
WED MISSION ST. BBQ 1618 Mission St, Santa Cruz MOE’S ALLEY 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz MOTIV 1209 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
3/8
Virgil Thrasher & Rick Stevens 6p Cruzah, Nomalakadja, Pan Dulce $5/$8 8p Crunkcertified 9:30p-2a
THU
3/9
FRI
Phutureprimitive $15/$20 8p Libation Lab w/ Syntax 9:30p-2a
NEW BOHEMIA BREWERY Pint and Pottery 6-8p 1030 41st Ave, Santa Cruz 99 BOTTLES 110 Walnut Ave, Santa Cruz
3/10
3/11
3/12
SAT SUN Chris James & Virgil Thrasher & Joe Filisko & Eric Noden Patrick Rynn 1p Coyote Rick Stevens 6p Slim 5p 6p Royal Jelly Jive, Steep B-Side Players Walter Trout Ravine, Pat Hull $15/$20 8p $20/$25 3p $9/$12 7p
Al Frisby 6p
D-Roc 9:30p-2a
DJ Juan Burgandy 9:30p-2a
Matt Masih & the Messengers 7-9p
Nomalakadoja 6-8p
MON
3/13
Rob Vye 6p
Dread Mar $25/$30 8p
Rasta Cruz Reggae Party 9:30p-Close
Hip-Hop w/DJ Marc 9:30p-Close Tacos & Trivia 6-8p
Claudio Melega 6p
Vinny Johnson 2-5p
Ho’Omana 2-5p
THE POCKET 3102 Portola Dr, Santa Cruz
Comedy 9p
POET & PATRIOT 320 E. Cedar St, Santa Cruz
Frooty Flavors 9p
35th Anniversary Party, Bulletproof Hearts 7p Wild Rovers 9p
Comedy Open Mic 8p
THE RED 200 Locust St, Santa Cruz
Open Mic 8-11:30p ‘Geeks Who Drink’ Trivia Night 8p
Toby Gray Acoustic Calssics 6:30p
RIO THEATRE 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz ROSIE MCCANN’S 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
3/14
Preacher Boy 6p
Trivia 8p
PARADISE BEACH 215 Esplanade, Capitola
THE REEF 120 Union St, Santa Cruz
TUE
Moshe Vilozny Acoustic/World 6:30p
Traditional Hawaiian Music 6:30p Judy Collins $36/$51 8p
Brunch Grooves 12:30p Featured Acoustic 6:30p Pussy Riot Theatre ‘Revolution’ $25/$38 8p
Brunch Grooves 1:30p Chas Cmusic Krowd Karaoke 6p
Acoustic Classics 6:30p
Wednesday Comedy Night 7:30p
James Murray Soulful Acoustic 6:30p
Open Mic 7:30p
www.catalystclub.com
Look Younger in 4 days! Call Dr. Ana to book your $10/unit Botox visit
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Mar 10 The Beach Boys 7:30pm
36
Good Times Ad, Wed. 03/08 A truly memorable dining experience.
(limit: 1 experience per customer)
LOCATED ON THE BEACH
Amazing waterfront deck views.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
See live music grid for this week’s bands.
STAND-UP COMEDY
Three live comedians every Sunday night.
HAPPY HOUR
Mon–Fri from 3:30pm. Wednesday all night!
VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET
Wood-fired pizza, ice cream, unique fine gifts.
DEAL WITH A VIEW
$9.95 dinners Mon.-Fri. from 6:00pm.
NOW SERVING BREAKFAST
Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily
(831) 476-4560
crowsnest-santacruz.com
Mar 17 Los Lobos with Jonah Smith 8pm Mar 25 In the Mood Botox $10Review per unit 1940s Big Band Music 2pm Dermal Fillers • Chemical Peels Mar 30 (((folkYEAH))) & KPIG present Yonder Mountain String Band and The Lil’ Smokies 8pm April 26 David Crosby 8pm Jun 2 Los Lonely Boys 8pm Jul 22 Ozomatli 8pm
Ask about fillers for instant results
BeautyWithin 7492 Soquel Dr., Suite D Aptos, CA 95003 831-313-4844
visit Tannery the
Arts Center
For Tickets www.GoldenStateTheatre.com 831-649-1070
TA N N E R YA R T S C E N T E R . O R G 1050 RIVER STREET SANTA CRUZ, CA
LIVE MUSIC WED
3/8
THE SAND BAR 211 Esplanade, Capitola
THU
3/9
Don Karuth 7-11p
FRI
3/10
SAT
3/11
The T.V. Show 7-11p
Live Again 8p-Midnight
SANDERLINGS 1 Seascape Resort, Aptos
Ultrasonics 8-11p
We Three 8-11p
SEABRIGHT BREWERY 519 Seabright, Santa Cruz
Aki Kumar 1-5:30p
SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 7500 Old Dominion Court, Aptos
Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers 6-10p
Live Again 7:30-11:30p
Beach Cowboy Band 8-11:30p
SHADOWBROOK 1750 Wharf Rd, Capitola
Ken Constable 6:30-9:30p
Joe Ferrara 6:30-10p
Claudio Melega 7-10p
UGLY MUG 4640 Soquel Ave, Soquel
Jug Band Sing Along Free 6p
SUN
3/12
Alex Lucero 7-11p
MON
3/13
TUE
3/14
Upcoming Shows
Alex Lucero 7-11p
MAR 10 Judy Collins MAR 11 Pussy Riot Theatre MAR 17 Film Screening: “The Catalyst “ MAR 18 Paula Poundstone MAR 24 The Nexties MAR 25 Greg Brown
Open Mic w/Tim 5:30p
APR 07 APR 15 APR 22 APR 29 APR 30
IT’S WINE TYME 321 Capitola Ave., Capitola WHALE CITY 490 Highway 1, Davenport YOUR PLACE 1719 Mission St, Santa Cruz
Daniel Martins 9-11p
Scott Cooper & the Barrelmakers 5-7p
Steve Abrams 5-7p
Daniel Martins 9-11p
Daniel Martins 9-11p
Daniel Martins 9-11p
The Leftovers 9:30p
Santa Cruz Reggae All-Stars 9:30p
Matias 7-9:30p
Just Judy 7-9:30p
ZELDA’S 203 Esplanade, Capitola ZIZZO’S COFFEEHOUSE & WINE BAR 3555 Clares St, Capitola
Aaron Avila 7-9:30p
Andy McKee Las Cafeteras Zep Live Elvin Bishop Zakir Hussain & Rahul Sharma
MAY 16 Straight Outta Oz MAY 20 House of Floyd MAY 31 Deva Premal and Miten
Pure Beauty ESTHETICS
Permanent Cosmetics for BROWS EYES & LIPS
Plus a lot more Boomer Humor
The hilarious Will Durst will join Richard Stockton and Dan St. Paul. Durst is arguably America’s finest standup journalist and he brings scathing political comedy to our Boomer Humor show, which has evolved from a walk down Memory Lane to a real examination of what’s changing with our generation. We’ll also delve into our bodies, our dreams, and our senior discounts.
Tickets at PlanetCruzComedy.com or Streetlight Records $20 advance | $25 door
Follow the Rio Theatre on Facebook & Twitter! 831.423.8209 www.riotheatre.com
Ombré Brows
Book a complimentary consultation online at www.purebeautyesthetics.com
349 GAULT ST SANTA CRUZ 831.426.4321
Will Durst, Richard Stockton & Dan St. Paul 5pm & 7:30pm • Saturday, March 11 Kuumbwa Jazz Center 320 Cedar Street, Santa Cruz
OCT 15 Snatam Kaur
WE' VE MOVED!
Fran Chavez
Mireya Garcia
$5 OFF HAIRCUTS Reg. $20 exp. 3/31/17
Plaza Barber Shop 706 Capitola Ave., #D, Capitola Fran (831) 588-7894 Mireya (831) 235-5515
TUESDAY DINNER SPECIAL 2-TOPPING LARGE PIZZAS 1/2 PRICE DINE IN ONLY 6-9 Friday March 10th DJ NIGHT with SIR ELEGANCE, MADONNA, & LAW Saturday March 11th TOMMY MOON BAND Classic Rock 393 Salinas St, SALINAS (oldtown) 831.757.2720 // casasorrento.com
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
MAKE AMERICA IRATE AGAIN!
JUNE 10 Hurray for the Riff Raff
37
FILM
THE FAMILY THAT SLAYS TOGETHER Dafne Keen and Hugh Jackman in ‘Logan.’
Who’s Your Daddy? MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Bloodshed overwhelms family bonding in ‘Logan’
38
H
ugh Jackman has been trapped in the Wolverine character since his starmaking debut in the first X-Men movie back in 2000. The franchise has had its ups and downs since then, so when Jackman announced last year that the next Wolverine movie would be his last in the role, who could blame him? The question was: could the filmmakers come up with an exit strategy for their indestructible mutant hero that obeyed the rules of the X-Men mythos and gave Jackman a satisfying send-off? The answer is yes and no, in Logan. Yes, the storyline is plausible
enough (well, as plausible as anything ever is in the X-Men universe). But satisfying? Not so much. Previous franchise films have explored weighty themes like racism, xenophobia, intolerance, and whether or not social outsiders would choose to be “normal” if they could. But Logan is one interrupted chase melodrama from beginning to end, with an endless parade of faceless bad guys to be dispatched in endlessly gruesome ways. (This is the first X-Men movie to get an R rating, and it’s not only for the f-bombs.) Jackman is as watchable as ever. But in a film almost entirely unburdened by humor or emotional
LISA JENSEN
connections—two attributes at which he excels in other movies— his uber-brooding Logan (aka Wolverine) has nowhere to grow. The new movie was directed and co-scripted by James Mangold, who delivered a shot of adamantium to revive the series with The Wolverine in 2013 (after the fiasco of X-Men Origins: Wolverine). This time out, Mangold seems to think he’s keeping the focus on Logan’s tormented psyche and (often inconvenient) moral decency, mainly by introducing a new little mutant, Laura (Dafne Keen) for him to look after. But the constant, vicious fighting—as Logan faces off
against carjackers, a lynch mob, convoys of sinister government ops, and his own genetically engineered doppelganger—leaves little time for further character development. In the year 2029, Logan is holed up in an abandoned desert water tower on the Tex-Mex border caring for the ailing, elderly Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart), attended by the albino mutant Caliban (Stephen Merchant). Mutants have been eradicated, and Logan moonlights driving a limo across the border hoping to save enough to buy a boat and take Professor X out to sea to live out his last days in peace. But trouble arrives when a Mexican nurse brings them Laura. Grown in a secret clinic in Mexico by shady agents who plan to make a new generation of “more efficient” mutant weapons (by breeding them without human souls), Laura has adamantium claws of her own—and, boy, does she know how to use them. Soon besieged by an army of evildoers out to nab Laura before Logan can drive her cross-country to join her friends at a sanctuary for new mutant kids in Canada—a place that may only exist in the pages of the X-Men comics the kids all read. This self-referential idea is an interesting subtext, as is the comparison to a sinister corporation raising genetically modified super corn. But like everything else, these themes are overwhelmed by brutal action as Logan and Laura slice and dice their way through the villains. It would be helpful, story-wise, if they found another way to bond besides shredding bad guys. A moment when they compare nightmares (Laura dreams that “people hurt me,” Logan, that “I hurt people”) is a step in the right direction—but then, the script delivers another platoon of nasty adversaries to be decimated by the family that slays together. Jackman is up to the task, as usual. But he, the character, and the fans might have wished for the saga to go out with a little less bang, and a lot more heart. LOGAN **1/2 (out of four) With Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart and Dafne Keen. Written by Scott Frank, James Mangold, and Michael Green. Directed by James Mangold. Rated R. 137 minutes.
MOVIE TIMES
March 8-14
All times are PM unless otherwise noted.
DEL MAR THEATRE
“THE ‘CITIZEN KANE’ OF CAT DOCUMENTARIES!” - Eric Kohn, INDIEWIRE
KEDI Fri-Tue 2:00, 4:15, 7:00, 9:00 + Sat-Sun 11:30am LA LA LAND Wed-Thu 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40 MOONLIGHT Daily 2:10, 4:40, 7:10*, 9:35 + Sat 11:40am *No Mon show HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN Fri-Sat 11:59pm A Film By CEYDA TORUN
DECONSTRUCTING THE BEATLES: REVOLVER Wed 7:00 831.426.7500
KEDIFILM.COM
STARTS FRIDAY!
2017 OSCAR-NOMINATED SHORT ANIMATED FILMS Wed-Thu 2:10
Daily: (2:00, 4:15), 7:00, 9:00 Plus Sat-Sun: (11:30am) ( ) at discount
2017 OSCAR-NOMINATED SHORT LIVE ACTION FILMS Wed-Thu 4:20 A UNITED KINGDOM Wed-Thu 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 Fri-Tue 4:20, 9:20* + Sat-Sun 12:00 *No Tue show LAND OF MINE Fri-Tue 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 11:30am
MY LIFE AS A ZUCCHINI Fri-Tue 1:30*, 4:00*, 6:45, 8:45 + Sat-Sun 11:45 *Dubbed THE SALESMAN Wed-Thu 9:40 + Wed 7:05 TABLE 19 Wed-Thu 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:15 Fri-Tue 2:15, 7:15* *No Tue show ROYAL OPERA HOUSE: WOOLF WORKS Tue 7:00
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE
FIFTY SHADES DARKER Wed 7:20, 10:00 FIST FIGHT Wed-Thu 12:55, 3:15, 5:35, 7:55, 10:15 Fri-Tue 1:40, 3:50, 6:00 GET OUT Daily 2:00, 4:45, 7:30, 10:00 + Sat-Sun 11:15am
R
(2:10, 4:40), 7:10*, 9:35 + Sat (11:40am) *no shows Mon 3/13 PG13
(2:30, 4:50), 7:15*, 9:20 + Sat, Sun (12:10) *no shows Weds 3/15
PG13
(2:00, 4:15), 7:00, 9:00 + Sat, Sun (11:30am) Midnights @ The Del Mar PG13
Deconstructing the Beatles:
Revolver
Wednesday 3/15 at 7:00pm
Anna Kendrick, Craig Robinson, Lisa Kudrow & June Squibb
- LEONARD MALTIN
PG13
NOTHING SHORT OF A
MIRACLE!”
(2:15), 9:45pm* *no shows 3/14
- BOYD VAN HOEIJ, THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
THE GREAT WALL Daily 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 + Sat-Sun 11:00am KONG: SKULL ISLAND Thu 7:00, 9:45 Fri-Tue 1:45, 3:05, 4:30, 7:15, 8:35, 10:00 + Sat-Sun 11:00am KONG: SKULL ISLAND 3D Fri-Tue 12:20, 5:50 THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE Wed-Thu 1:15, 4:00, 6:45, 9:30 Fri-Tue 3:45, 6:15 + Sat-Sun 10:40am
WENT STRAIGHT TO
‘‘
THE HEART!”
- JOE MORGENSTERN, WALL STREET JOURNAL
LA LA LAND Wed-Thu 12:50, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20 Fri-Tue 1:15, 6:25 LION Wed-Thu 12:30, 3:00, 5:30 Fri-Tue 1:00, 8:45
ROCK DOG Wed-Thu 12:50, 3:00, 5:10* Fri-Tue 4:10, 9:15 + Sat-Sun 11:00am *No Thu show THE SHACK Daily 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 831.438.3260
R
the
N I C K
(2:00, 4:30), 7:00, 9:30 + Sat, Sun (11:30am) PG13
(1:50, 4:40), 7:20*, 9:50 + Sat, Sun (11:15am) *no shows 3/16
PG13
(4:20), 7:15pm* + Sat, Sun (12:00pm) *no shows 3/14
Call theater for showtimes.
CINELUX 41ST AVENUE CINEMA 831.479.3504
PG13
Call theater for showtimes.
REGAL SANTA CRUZ 9
Dubbed (1:30, 4:00) + Sat, Sun (11:45) Subtitled 6:45pm , 8:45pm
844.462.7342
Call theater for showtimes.
REGAL RIVERFRONT STADIUM 2
.
Call theater for showtimes
SCREENS IN BOTH ENGLISH AND ORIGINAL FRENCH W/ SUBTITLES 844.462.7342
STARTS FRIDAY, MARCH 10TH LANDMARK THEATRES
NICKELODEON THEATRES
210 LINCOLN STREET (831) 426-7500 SANTA CRUZ
Santa Cruz Weekly Wednesday, 3/8
Royal Opera House: Woolf Works
NR
Tuesday 3/14, 7:00 pm
210 LINCOLN STREET | 426-7500
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
LOGAN Daily 12:30, 3:35, 6:40, 8:10, 9:45 + 10:45am
NR
1124 PACIFIC AVENUE | 469-3224
A MUST-SEE!”
“
WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS Including BEST PICTURE!
Fri & Sat @ Midnight Next Week: Idiocracy
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
“
831.761.8200
CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA
D E L M A R
®
LION Daily 1:50, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50 + Sat-Sun 11:15am
GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8
FRI. 3/10/17 – THURS. 3/16/17
the
831.469.3220
I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO Daily 2:30, 4:50, 7:15, 9:20 + Sat-Sun 12:10
NICKELODEON
SANTA CRUZ SHOW TIMES FOR
39
FILM NEW THIS WEEK KEDI If you’ve been to Istanbul, you’ve seen the cats that own the streets. This is their city, through their eyes. Ceyda Torun directs. Bülent Üstün co-stars. (Unrated) 80 minutes. KONG: SKULL ISLAND King Kong, a dangerous island, and an overly ambitious crew of explorers played by a cast of gorgeously recognizable faces. Is it a prequel or sequel? Are we still keeping track? Jordan VogtRoberts directs. Tom Hiddleston, Samuel L. Jackson, Brie Larson costar. (PG-13) 120 minutes.
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
LAND OF MINE At what age is a soldier still a child, forced into a bitter, unavoidable nightmare, and at what age is a soldier an adult, responsible for the crimes they commit? Land of Mine is based on the true story of around 2,000 German POWs, many of them still teenagers, who were sent to Denmark to clear the beaches riddled with thousands of landmines. Nearly half of them lost limbs or their lives. German and Danish with English subtitles. Martin Zandvliet directs. Roland Møller, Louis Hofmann, Joel Basman co-star. (R) 100 minutes.
40
MY LIFE AS A ZUCCHINI Zucchini’s mother is gone, but when he moves to the foster home and meets the girl whose eyes go right through him, he begins to learn what love is. Nominated for Best Animated Feature Film, it’s a stop-motion work of genius based on the 2002 novel Autobiographie d’une Courgette. Claude Barras directs. Gaspard Schlatter, Sixtine Murat, Paulin Jaccoud co-star. (PG13) 70 minutes. THE OTTOMAN LIEUTENANT Not to say that Josh Hartnett isn’t a phenomenal actor (clarification: we are saying that he is not a phenomenal actor—and, oh hey, he still makes movies?) but really, another film about a non-European country’s history without a single leading role played by someone of that country? There are definitely Turkish actors, even Turkish cats (see ‘Kedi’), more qualified than
the Dutch-born Michiel Huisman, however dreamy he may be. And, no, Ben Kingsley does not count as Turkish. Joseph Ruben directs. Huisman, Hera Hilmar and Hartnett co-star. (R) 106 minutes. SPECIAL SCREENINGS: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Midnight, Friday, March 10 & Saturday, March 11, Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Deconstructing the Beatles: Revolver, 7 p.m., Wednesday, March 15, Del Mar Theatre. Royal Opera House: Woolf Works 7 p.m., Tuesday, March 14, Nickelodeon, 210 Lincoln St., Santa Cruz. CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. to downtown Santa Cruz, where each week the group discusses a different current release. For location and discussion topic, go to https:// groups.google.com/group/LTATM.
NOW PLAYING BEFORE I FALL Groundhog Day for the 18 and younger set, with a time loop of the popular girls picking on the weirdos. Sex, drugs, and lots of adolescent hormones … oh, help. Ry Russo-Young directs. Zoey Deutch, Halston Sage, Cynthy Wu co-star. (PG-13) 99 minutes. A DOG’S PURPOSE Well if you’ve seen TMZ’s video of Hercules the German Shepherd being forced into a pool of rushing water, it’s a little difficult to believe the happy, smiling doggie vibes this movie is trying to send. Producer Gavin Polone did respond to the leaked video, saying it “portrays an inaccurate picture of what happened,” so, we really hope that no animals were hurt in the making of this film? Lasse Hallström directs. Britt Robertson, Dennis Quaid, Josh Gad co-star. (PG) 120 minutes. FIFTY SHADES DARKER Anyone seen The Fall? Because that show makes Jamie Dornan as Christian Grey such a creepy casting choice … Oh, and this soundtrack sounds pretty cool. James Foley directs. Dakota Johnson, Jamie Dornan, and Eric Johnson co-star. (R) 115 minutes.
FIST FIGHT Ali vs. Frazier, 2Pac vs. Biggie, Batman vs. Superman. This Friday, it’s Mr. Campbell vs. Mr. Strickland. Richie Keen directs. Christina Hendricks, JoAnna Garcia Swisher, Charlie Day. (R) 91 minutes. GET OUT White suburbs: the real hell. Jordan Peele directs. Allison Williams, Daniel Kaluuya, Lakeith Stanfield co-star. (R) 103 minutes. THE GREAT WALL Matt Damon with a ponytail. The Great Wall, but with zombie hell monsters trying to break through it. White dudes swooping in like they know better. So many conflicted feelings right now. Yimou Zhang directs. Matt Damon, Tian Jing, Willem Dafoe co-star. (PG-13) 103 minutes. HIDDEN FIGURES Finally, the untold story of the AfricanAmerican women who calculated how to shoot a man into space (something they were probably hoping to do for a long time). Theodore Melfi directs. Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, Janelle Monáe. (PG) 127 minutes. I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO Writer James Baldwin’s story of race in modern America is told through the words of Samuel L. Jackson and archival footage. Raoul Peck directs. Jackson, James Baldwin, Dick Cavett co-star. (PG-13) 95 minutes. JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 2 He stabbed the devil in the back and now the devil wants justice. Chad Stahelski directs. Ruby Rose, Keanu Reeves, and Bridget Moynahan costar. (R) 122 minutes. LA LA LAND Old Hollywood whimsy, musical magic à la Rogers and Astaire that’s getting Emma Stone early Oscar buzz—it’s just the kind of la la land we needed during a post-Nov. 8 season. Damien Chazelle directs. Ryan Gosling, Stone, Amiée Conn costar. (PG-13) 128 minutes. THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE Batman is revelling in his stardom … except, he has no one to share it with! Very sad. In order to soften his hardened heart, he has to take responsibility for the orphan he adopted and build his
own family, Lego style. Chris McKay directs. Jenny Slate, Ralph Fiennes, and Channing Tatum co-star. (PG) 104 minutes. LION Saroo is starting to remember losing his mother and brother on a train platform in Calcutta at the age of 5. Now, worlds away living a very different Australian life, he’s decided to find his family. Garth Davis directs. Dev Patel, Nicole Kidman, Rooney Mara co-star. (PG-13) 118 minutes. LIVE BY NIGHT With Ben Affleck directing and starring, it’s a bangbang Prohibition-era gangster’s delight with a cast of so-perfect rugged types and their sultry muses. Elle Fanning and Brendan Gleeson co-star. (R) 128 minutes. LOGAN Reviewed this issue. James Mangold directs. Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart co-star. (R) 137 minutes. MANCHESTER BY THE SEA What do you do when you’re suddenly faced with the responsibility of becoming a teenager’s legal guardian, but your own life is hard enough to handle? Kenneth Lonergan directs. Casey Affleck, Michelle Williams, Kyle Chandler co-star. (R) 137 minutes. PATERSON One week in Paterson’s life as a bus driver in a city of the same name—his name is really Paterson—through his quiet and triumphant daily poems. Jim Jarmusch directs. Adam Driver, Golshifteh Farahani, Nellie co-star. (R) 118 minutes. RINGS If you missed The Ring and The Ring Two, don’t worry because this is all the rings. All the rings! F. Javier Gutiérrez directs. Vincent D’Onofrio, Laura Wiggins, Aimee Teegarden co-star. (PG-13) 102 minutes. ROCK DOG Leaving home to become a musician really only works when your mentor is the animated cat rockstar version of Eddie Izzard. Ash Brannon directs. Luke Wilson, Izzard, J.K. Simmons co-star. (PG) 80 minutes. THE SALESMAN A young
couple moves into a house that was inhabited by a woman who allegedly pursued a career in sex work. Throughout their performance of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, their relationship begins to fray. Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Language Picture. Asghar Farhadi directs. Taraneh Alidoosti, Shahab Hosseini, Babak Karimi costar. (PG-13) 125 minutes. THE SHACK After grieving the loss of his daughter, a man learns how to run on water, meets people who don’t leave tracks in the snow, and finds God (who’s a black woman, thank you very much) in a Shake Shack—I mean shack, just a normal shack. Stuart Hazeldine directs. Sam Worthington, Octavia Spencer, Tim McGraw co-star. (PG13) 132 minutes. SPLIT Dealing with one kidnapping psychopath is bad enough, but trying to figure out which one of 24 personalities will set you free sounds like a mmmnightmare. M. Night Shyamalan directs. James McAvoy, Anya Taylor-Joy, Haley Lu Richardson co-star. (PG-13) 117 minutes. TABLE 19 Ah, the humiliation of being relegated to the farthest table from the bridal couple at a wedding—left only for those who should have known to send their regrets before sending something nice off the registry. You know, the table that could disappear in the middle of the wedding and nobody would notice. This is the story of that table. Jeffrey Blitz directs. Anna Kendrick, Lisa Kudrow, Craig Robinson co-star. (PG-13) 87 minutes. A UNITED KINGDOM Against the decree of a kingdom and the will of a nation, Prince Seretse Khama of Botswana and his white British bride, Ruth Williams, fought against everything for their love. Keep the tissue box near, the film trailer is enough to inspire sobs. Amma Asante directs. David Oyelowo, Rosamund Pike, Jack Davenport co-star. (PG-13) 111 minutes.
ltations u s n o c Our 8th Year
Sound Healing with Randy Masters, PhD
Same Great Location • Same Great Reputation
501 River St, Santa Cruz • 831-466-9551
$79 New patients $59 Renewals Sound Healing Level 1 Growrs e Lettb a le dto avail ifie qualie pat nts
We’ll matc h any local clinic ad specia l! w/copy of th is ad
Starts March 23 – May 11 Thursday 6:30-9:30pm, Cost $480 Learn the principles of sound healing, along with protocols for treating the body with tuning forks…
Call Susan 423-2455 to register
MON-SAT 12-6PM ONE STEP EVALUATION PROCESS WALK-INS WELCOME GET APPROVED OR NO CHARGE!
Imagine a trail through Santa Cruz County
Our mission is to end hunger and malnutrition by educating and involving the community.
support Become a Sustainable Partner
www.thefoodbank.org/partner
santacruztrail.org
Community Clinic! Students provide 1hr massage for only $25 • Come join us!
April 1-5pm, Mondays-3rd, 17th & 24th 9-1pm Fridays- 7th, 14th & 21st 1-5pm Saturdays-1st, 8th & 15th 1-5 Sundays- 2nd, 9th, 16th, 23rd & 30th
may 1-5pm Mondays- 1st, 8th & 15th 9-1pm Fridays-12th & 19th
1119 Pacific Ave, Suite 300 Santa Cruz 831.476.2115 admin@cypresshelathinstitute.com
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
FEED HOPE
Prop 64 takes effect in 2018!
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FOOD & DRINK
SO CAPITOLA Ashley Bernardi is the co-owner of Sotola Bar & Grill, the newest spot on the Esplanade. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Grill Thrill
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Newly opened Sotola Bar & Grill brings farm-to-table concept to Capitola BY CHRISTINA WATERS
I
f location is everything, then the newly opened Sotola Bar & Grill already has a tasty advantage. With its wrapped balcony overlooking both the ocean and the Soquel Creek estuary, the new dinner house and lounge is sure to attract a steady stream of summer visitors. But already the new destination—in the site of the former Stockton Bridge Grille—is busy winning local fans, thanks to the seasoned skills of chef Anthony Kresge. The brainchild of locals Ashley and Adam Bernardi,
Sotola boasts a gleaming new dining room—attractive furniture, lavish plants, Mediterranean windows—and a separate, spacious bar area. Katya and I were ready for a serious dinner, and the Sotola menu fit the bill. Farm-to-table is the central theme of this short but exciting menu of new American cuisine. And while the cocktails seem destined to spark excitement, we opted for glasses of La Honda Sauvignon Blanc 2015, filled with grassy citrus and minerals, and a
velvety Syrah from Zaca Mesa 2012 ($10 each). A generous order of frito misto provided plenty of pre-dinner foreplay—calamari, broccoli, zucchini, batter-fried and drizzled with excellent garlicky rouille ($13). But it was the intricate entrees that made the biggest impact. I ordered the evening’s line-caught special yellow tail, which arrived richly aromatic, seared to perfection ($28). Surrounding the fish was a ring of distinctive and spicy chimichurri
and a bouquet of golden beets sliced paper-thin. But there was more textural interest, as well. A generous band of earthy wild rice/barley pilaf nestled next to the fish, along with a distinctive salsa of micro-diced pineapple and fresh thyme. The dramatic creation was crowned with a froth of infant sprouts. Yes, it does sound like a lot going on, but it all worked, each sauce and accompaniment flattering the central point—the spectacular piece of fish. Even though pineapple is not my favorite item, I had to admit it made a brilliant flavor note along with the rich yellow tail. Katya’s incredibly huge pastureraised New York steak (40-day aged Black Angus weighing in at $38) came with its own opulent array of enhancements. On top were crisp clouds of onion rings, plus a beautiful saute of mushrooms and cipollini dripping the sort of mushroom reduction that beef adores. Under the gorgeous piece of steak—which arrived exactly rare as requested— lay a delicious though mysteriously unwarm layer of potato and spinach gratin. Tiny rosettes of garlic and basil aioli had been piped along one side of the plate—lots of fun to dredge each forkful of beef into. The message was clear: here was a serious dish living up to its serious price tag. Even in the dimly lit dining room, we enjoyed every bite of our generously portioned entrees, both of which supplied enough high-quality items for another dinner the next night. I admit we ordered the pastureraised steak just to see what might justify such a hefty price tag. The proof was in every juicy bite. It was easily the best steak I’ve had west of Manhattan. Tempted as we were by the idea of a flourless chocolate torte called Heaven on Earth, we absolutely couldn’t manage another bite. Next time; the menu’s listing of bouillabaisse linguine studded with fresh local seafood sounds like an excuse for another visit all by itself. Sotola was packed the evening we went, and given that service finetuning is ongoing, I’m betting this attractive labor of love finds a strong clientele of regulars. Kudos to the Bernardis and their ambitious dinner house on the Capitola Esplanade. Sotola Bar & Grill is open open daily from 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m. 854-2800, sotolabarandgrill.com.
GOOD TASTES
ST. PATTY'S DAY CELEBRATION March 17, 2017
A Great Way to Start Your Day! “Best eggs benedict!”
Open 8am-2pm Everyday (Closed Tuesdays) 427 Capitola Ave., Capitola 831-515-7559 avenuecafecapitola.com
Corned Beef & Cabbage, Shepherd's Pie & Guinness Braised Lamb Shanks
Food • Spirits • Entertainment
Irish Drink Specials!
live music Wed thru Sun Sat & Sun Brunch 9am
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8 Entrées for
Open for Lunch & Dinner • Tues - Sun, closed Mon 830 41st Avenue in Pleasure Point • Santa Cruz (831) 464-2586 • smilekaito.com
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ON THE SANTA CRUZ WHARF
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1534 Pacific Ave. Downtown Santa Cruz 831.423.1711 | zoccolis.com Open Mon - Sat 8-6, Sun 10-6
Umawan Thai Cuisine mention this ad to receive
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Delicious and Authentic
Brunch Sat & Sun 10am–Noon 831.477.9384 655 Capitola Rd, Santa Cruz
Full Bar Happy Hour 3-6 Daily Open Daily at 11:30 110 Church Street, Downtown Santa Cruz • 831.454.8663 mozaicsantacruz.com
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
AUTHENTIC NEW YORK STYLE PIZZA
How do you
Local, Organic Seasonal Produce from Farmers Markets Amazing salads Niman Ranch Meats
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1711 Mission St. Santa Cruz • 425.1807 (next to Coffeetopia)
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ON TAP
FOODIE FILE
Meine Stein! Eight German Beers on Tap Hand-Pulled, Cask-Conditioned Ales 21517 East Cliff Drive @ 17th Ave
(831) 713-5540
eastcliffbrewing.com Mon & Tues 3-9 pm Wed-Fri 3-10 pm Saturday 12-10 pm Sunday 12-9 pm
Happy Hour Tues.-Thurs. 5-7 pm Fri. 4-6:30 pm $2 off Beers 1/2 Off Appetizers
TYROLEAN INN 9600 Hwy 9 - Ben Lomond (831) 336-5188
AROMA OF SUCCESS For Roberto Petruzzi, opening Café aRoma was a longtime dream come true. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
Café aRoma
New Soquel spot brings Italian café experience BY AARON CARNES
R
oberto Petruzzi has dreamed of opening an Italian café for years—having grown up in Rome, he always felt he had a lot to offer Santa Cruz diners. Along with his wife and children, he made that dream a reality on Jan. 2 of this year in the former location of D’Anna’s Deli. The café is open for breakfast and lunch, and includes a variety of offerings: sandwiches, pizza, pasta, pastries, frittatas. But as Petruzzi explained to us, their menu is a work in progress.
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Downtown Santa Cruz
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Growing up, your family owned a café in Rome. How is this Café aRoma shaped by that?
Tuesdays - Pint Nights 7:30SANTA CRUZ’S 10 pm FINEST Wednesdays - Trivia Night ALE HOUSE Organic Brewing Supply 8pm Equipment, Ingredients Thirsty Thursdays - Happy Choose From & Supplies to make your own Hour All Day Long! 45 TAPS AND OVER BEER • WINELive • COFFEE Music 10 pm - Midnight . 200 BOTTLES AND CANS MEAD • CHEESE • SPIRITS • VINEGAR No Cover
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- 831Mon - Sat 10am-6pmwww.99bottles.com Sun noon-4pm
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In the beginning, with the food, with the drinks, I made it like the way I grew up. I’ve been here 32 years. I’ve gotten to know the way people eat here for a long time, what they want. I like the way they eat, too. So now I try to make it the way they like, and the way I grew up. My focaccia where I grew up, we warmed the bread, then we’d press it a little bit. It wasn’t crispy. Now after a month and a half, they wanted it their way, crispy. I liked the way they wanted it. I do it the way they want it. Now I use American cheeses, Italian
cheeses, American sausage, Italian sausage. I use all kinds of food.
What about the drinks? The drinks are a little bit of a challenge for me because when I was doing it in Italy, we didn’t have many choices. We had the basics, like the cappuccino, café latte, café macchiato, espresso, cioccolato. Here you’re doing the mocha, the double latte, the white chocolate, the chai. There’s a lot to remember. I’m getting my coffee from Danesi. It’s good coffee.
What are your breakfast options? We have sandwiches, burritos, pizza, everything from pastries to cookies. We have focaccia bread if you want it already made in the morning, pizza if you want it. We make basically everything in the morning. If you want a burrito, the one with the sausage, we make it. We are not open for dinner. We want to open for dinner later. We don’t have the right things yet. We want to do it in May, June, you know, summertime. We have a nice patio. It’s a nice outdoor thing. 2841 Porter St., Suite B, Soquel, 475-1436, cafearoma.it.
B I R T H D AY BAS H
NEW Lunch
11:30am to 2:00pm Wednesday through Saturday
Cocktail Hour
4:30pm to 6:00pm Tuesday through Saturday $5-8 Bar Bites | $6 Wine $8 Cocktails | $8 Whiskey w/ Draft Beer
OswaldRestaurant.com 121 Soquel Avenue at Front Street, Santa Cruz 831.423.7427 CLOSED MONDAY
Thursday, March 16th @ 4pm
Born in the month of March? Join us on Thursday, March 16th, 2017 and enjoy a FREE Prime Rib Dinner, a 1/2 Rack of Baby Back Ribs or Linguini Pomodoro. Just make reservations, show a Photo ID & make a purchase with your dinner.
FOOD BIN & HERB ROOM ALWAYS OPEN LATE HERB ROO MAR.SPECIAM LS
DAILY DINNER DEALS STARTING AT 5PM
:
NORDIC NATURALS 25% OFF
ENER-C 1000 MG POWDERED VITAMI NCREG. $16.95 - SALE $9.95 - 41% OFF
Food Bin Grocery Store 9am - 11pm Herb Room 9am - 10pm Every Day
$11.95 Baby Back Ribs {Sunday & Monday} $13.95 Local Favorites {Tuesday} $15.95 Live Maine Lobster {Wednesday} $15.95 Prime Rib {Friday} $5.95 Breakfast Special {Weekends 8-10am}
OP E N DAI LY @ 11AM
1130 Mission St. Santa Cruz
Food Bin • 831.423.5526
Herb Room •831.429.8108
106 Beach St. at the Santa Cruz Wharf 831- 423-5271 • www.idealbarandgrill.com Make your reservation on Open Table
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
DR. BRONNER’S ORGANIC COCONUT OIL - 30 OZ VALUE SIZE REG. $21.99 - SALE $13.99 - 36% OFF
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VINE TIME
VINE & DINE
WINE TASTING SATURDAYS ALL YEAR SUNDAYS ALL SUMMER
420 HAMES RD. CORRALITOS 831.728.5172 | ALFAROWINE.COM
New Release 2013 Grenache
MEET THE MAKERS John Overstreet (left) and Neil Perrelli, owners of
Villa Del Monte Winery. PHOTO: CARL JONES
Handcrafted in the Santa Cruz Mountains
Wed-Fri 3-6 Sat & Sun 1-6 334-C Ingalls Street • Santa Cruz www.equinoxwine.com • 831.471.8608
1100 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz (831) 818-9075 Open Fridays 5-9 Saturdays 2-7 stockwellcellars.com
Live Music Every Friday!
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Tastings every 3rd Saturday & Sunday of the month 12-4pm
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2 for 1 Tastings with this ad BottleJackWines.com | 831.227.2288 1088 La Madrona Drive, Santa Cruz
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TASTING ROOM OPEN: MON-FRI NOON-5PM, SAT-SUN NOON-5:30PM 334-A INGALLS ST. 831-426-6209
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SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL WINEMAKERS!
ooking for a terrific Malbec? Then head to Villa del Monte Winery’s tasting room and try the 2013 single-varietal, singlevineyard, 100-percent Malbec from Pedregal Vineyard in San Benito County. Warm weather blesses the Pedregal Vineyard in the Paicines American Viticultural Area (AVA) and helps to create a rich, lush Malbec that is chock-full of red and black fruit, and bursting with flavor. Gallons of Malbec are imported from carne-loving Argentina, so it’s not surprising that this wine pairs very well with meat. Throw a couple of steaks on the grill and enjoy a locally made Malbec ($34) from Villa del Monte that is deeply concentrated in both color and flavor. Villa del Monte is open only once a month on weekends, but you can try their wines at Shadowbrook’s Wine Wednesday on March 15. Villa del Monte Winery, 23076 Summit Road, Los Gatos, 408-353-0995 or 888788-4583. villadelmontewinery.com.
TRUE OLIVE CONNECTION Spring is around the corner—the clocks “spring” forward Sunday,
March 12—and we tend to turn toward lighter foods, eating less of the heavier stuff we crave in winter, such as meat and starch. My cooking, be it spring, summer, autumn or winter, always involves an abundance of olive oil. Having lived in Greece for nearly 13 years, where olive oil is king, I don’t use anything else. Why use bottled dressing on salads, when all you need is EVOO (extra virgin olive oil) and good balsamic vinegar? Most Greeks would be horrified at some of the sugary-sweet dressings poured on salads. The True Olive Connection carries an impressive assortment of olive oils and balsamic vinegars from all over the world, and you can try them in the store. While you’re there, check out other interesting items they carry, such as gourmet salts, Olivella body-care products and unique gift items. Co-owner Susan Pappas can also custom-make a gift basket. True Olive Connection, 106 Lincoln St., Santa Cruz, and 7960 Soquel Drive, Suite C, Aptos. trueoliveconnection.com.
Pizza the Way it Oughta Be GLUTEN FREE crusts available on all pizzas
40% OFF
ANY LARGE PIZZA ON MONDAYS & TUESDAYS Pick-up and Dine-in only. Not valid on delivery. Santa Cruz location only. Cannot be combined with any other offers. Expires 3/29/17. Must present coupon
3715 Portola Dr., Santa Cruz 831.477.7760 MountainMikes.com
Fill’er up!
Breakfast & Lunch Daily Steaks • Chicken • Pasta Beer & Wine Breakfast favorites and generous por tions All You Can Eat Brunch Buffet Sat & Sun 8-2
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438-8313 Mon-Sat: 6am-3pm • Sun: 7am-3pm
Basic Breakfast Exp. 3/17/17 Tues-Fri with coupon
Open Tues–Sun, 7-2:30p
819 pacific ave., santa cruz 427.0646
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
These are NO wimpy burgers!
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Sun. Night
"LOCALS NIGHT"
Mon. Night
HAPPY HOUR
"GARY'S RIB NIGHT" ALL NIGHT HAPPY HOUR
Tues. Night "ITALIAN NIGHT"
Tuesday – Friday, 4pm – 6pm EAST END BEER $4
Weds. Night "SURF AND TURF"
Thurs. Night "DATE NIGHT"
HOUSE WINE $4 OVEN BAKED OLIVES $4
CONFIT BUFFALO WINGS $8
PEPPERONI PIZZA $10
Open 7 days | 476.4900 215 Esplanade, Capitola Village paradisebeachgrille.com
I make It easy to
rollover your 401(k).
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Call today for more information or to schedule a consultation.
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OPEN TUES–SUN LUNCH & DINNER 1501 41ST AVENUE CAPITOLA 831.475.8010 EASTENDPUB.COM
VENUS RETROGRADE Esoteric Astrology as news for week of March 8, 2017
Venus is retrograde in Aries. Retrogrades are times of re-evaluation and review. Venus represents our possessions, values and relationships (lovers, partners, intimate friends). Aries is all things new. When planets retrograde, the past reappears often for completion. During retrogrades decisions are to be delayed, plans set aside for reflection, contemplation and assessment. We follow the same rules for Mercury retrogrades when Venus retrogrades. We pay more attention to our money, resources, finances and relationships. Know that in Venus retrograde times, the values of things are not known. Therefore, it is especially important to not purchase anything of value during this time. Venus, retrograde until April 15, returns to 27 degrees Pisces (sign of “saving the
ARIES Mar21–Apr20
EAST END CAESAR $6
MOZZA CHEESE PIZZA $8
H RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES
Brian Cooke Financial Advisor CA Insurance #0D63585 1500 41st Ave Suite 244 Capitola, CA 95010 (831)476-7283 brianm.cooke@lpl.com Member FINRA/SIPC MKT-07147-0311 Tracking #728496
There is a focus upon the self. This self-focus is an important and needed developmental stage. One must know the self, one’s needs, behaviors, abilities, gifts, etc. before we can know others. There will be a looking inward to assess how you present yourself to the world. You might redefine yourself, create a new image, change your appearance, seek the Soul’s essence of yourself. And see that you are valuable as a self.
TAURUS Apr21–May21 Spiritual values, religion, things behind the scenes, veiled and hidden come into internal view. Venus will penetrate into these depths, find secret desires and aspiration and gradually unfold them, like a lotus, to your inner heart. The world may seem quite nebulous for you for about six weeks. This is good. You’re not to be looking outward. You’re to be looking inward, discovering yourself as a resource for the world to come.
GEMINI May 22–June 20 You ponder upon friends (old, new, present ones), groups, hopes, wishes, dreams. You assess who your friends really are, the quality of your social life and what groups you are part of, asking yourself who belongs to you, who doesn’t. Things surface from the past in order to complete themselves. Do it with love. You must select like-minded people now creating the new world. You don’t want to be left behind.
CANCER Jun21–Jul20
Independence Powered By LPL Financial.
There’s a need to be thorough and responsible in all things you accomplish in the world. You ponder upon your life’s purpose, reconsider your career, and think upon the past when you were in a place of power and recognition. You think about your parents—the gifts they offered. And all of the people in the past who helped you climb the ladder. Now you help others.
LE0 Jul21–Aug22
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Fran Chavez
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There’s a reconsideration of things in your life. Your ideas on justice, travel, the past and people you believed in and trusted. You think on those you neglected or didn’t treat well. We learn through retrogrades. Remembering helps us become sensitive and compassionate. Sometimes there’s a crisis of awareness where we make life changes and remedy all situations where perhaps we fell short. We didn’t know then. But now we do.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Finances and resources are to be evaluated. Shared money, loans, gifts, stocks, insurance, inheritances, too. Consider past uses for money and resources. Do you want to change how you use money and resources now? Are there resources not tended to? Now is the time to care for them. Interest in things psychological, sexual, mysterious and occult may be renewed. Is there something that needs research?
LIBRA Sep23–Oct22 You may feel the need to restore a magical presence
world”). This 40 days and 40 nights of retrograde Venus follows the us through tax time and through Lent, culminating (stationary direct) on Holy Saturday in the early morning and Easter (Resurrection) Sunday morning. The simultaneity of Lent and Venus retrograde is purposeful. Venus rules the Aquarian Age. Venus is Earth’s elder sister. Our God came from Venus. There is an awakening happening within humanity. We ponder these things during the Venus retrograde. Venus brings forth the “appearance of expanded awareness and consciousness to all of humanity—the awareness of group responsibility to ‘save our world.’” to all relationships and interactions, especially intimate ones. You can do this with a whisper, a smile, a touch, small gift, or with your presence. Allow no doubt to come between you and your intimate “other.” Instead, review and then renew the past, asking each other how to deepen the commitment. For those unattached, do not make long-term commitments. So much changes after Venus retro is over.
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 There’s a review of all the relationships you’ve been in, encountered, hoped for and remained in for too long. All relationships and your desires (fulfilled and unfulfilled) were important developmental stages. In reviewing past relationships, we can complete them with good wishes, goodwill, forgiveness (self and others) and gratitude. Every relationship teaches us something. Every relationship is valued and valuable. Every relationship heals us.
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20 There may be creative plans, projects, ideas, that fell by the wayside in the past years. Perhaps they were put aside for the future, perhaps considered not valuable, important or worth it. Now is the time to review and renew what was set aside and bring them to the forefront. There needs to be some sort of romance brought forth, too. And a bit more fun. What is in the past can inspire a greater beauty and creativity to emerge.
CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 Are there childhood events being remembered? Perhaps a home or grandparent from long ago. Were there plans for your present home put on hold? It’s good now to study research home design plans, your personal creative design work (art) and garden designs for the areas around the home. There may be thoughts about mother and/or father. And childhood situations affecting present relationships. A family member may need special loving care.
AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 We communicate according to Mercury in our charts. And how we experienced communication in early family life. Proceed slowly with all communications. Attempt to observe if others are understanding you. Ask them. It’s a good time to be in touch with siblings, relatives, friends. It’s also good to fix things—bikes, boats, cars. Make no major purchases at this time. Focus on your creativity. And loving more.
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 It is important to consider, in detail, what you value in your life—physical, emotional, mental, material, spiritual. Create a Values Journal during the six weeks of this Venus retrograde. Write down all things of value to you and explain why. This includes people in your life and material objects that surround you. When something is of value we cherish it. When it is not of value, it’s best to give it away. During this retro time, create a practical monetary budget. Save money for a rainy day. And tithe generously.
Classifieds classifieds PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0085 The following Individual is doing business as FIELD TO FEAST. 4601 PRESCOTT RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. CHRISTIE KISSINGER. 4601 PRESCOTT RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: CHRISTIE KISSINGER. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/03/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Jan. 13, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8.
SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: KENNAN WARD. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/26/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Jan. 30, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8.
2, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0211 The following Individual is doing business as PRECISION POINT CONSTRUCTION. 118 MENTEL AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062 County of Santa Cruz. MARC LEBOURBEAU. 118 MENTEL AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MARC LEBOURBEAU. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/1/1994. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 2, 2017. Feb. 15, 22, & Mar. 1, 8.
24-7. 4061 SOQUEL DRIVE A2, SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. ONYX FITNESS, LLC. 302 PALMETTO AVE. #107. AI# 1110105. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company signed: JEROD HOFFMAN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/18/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Jan. 18, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8.
BRAVO, ELIAS GUSTAVO HERNANDEZ, GERARDO HERNANDEZ. 1002 SOQUEL DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by a General Partnership signed: JOSE BAUDELIO HERNANDEZ BRAVO. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 6/1/1996. Original FBN number: 2012-0000348. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 6, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8.
business is conducted by an Individual signed: LILLI COLBASSO. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. Original FBN number: 2015-0001428. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Jan. 30, 2017. Feb. 22 & Mar. 1, 8, 15.
statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 7, 2017. Feb. 22 & Mar. 1, 8, 15.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0406 The following Individual is doing business as THE PEOPLE'S BEVERAGE COMPANY. 1214 FAIR AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. DAVID JAMES KING. 1214 FAIR AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: DAVID JAMES KING. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 28, 2017. Mar. 8, 15, 22, 29.
real estate
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0243 The following Individual is doing business as COMPLETE WELLNESS. 5905 SOQUEL DRIVE, APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. LINDA PIPER DREISBACH. 5905 SOQUEL DRIVE, APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: LINDA PIPER DREISBACH. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 3, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0231 The following Individual is doing business as LOTUS TRADITIONAL MASSAGE. 1440 41ST AVENUE, SUITE G, CAPITOLA, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. FURONG ZHAN. 1440 41ST AVENUE, SUITE G, CAPITOLA, CA 95010. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: FURONG ZHAN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 2/2/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0230 The following Individual is doing business as DEEP TRADITIONAL MASSAGE. 1515 CAPITOLA ROAD, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. FURONG ZHAN. 1515 CAPITOLA ROAD, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: FURONG ZHAN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/1/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 2, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0120 The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as ONYX FITNESS
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0261 The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as ROYAL ORPHAN DESIGN. 610 CAYUGA STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. ROYAL ORPHAN DESIGN, LLC. 610 CAYUGA STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. AI# 2310279. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company signed: AMBER SLANKARD, BEN CARVEY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 7, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8. REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT WITH CHANGE FILE NO. 17-0257[/b] The following General Partnership is doing business as TAQUERIA SANTA CRUZ #2. 1002 SOQUEL AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. JOSE BAUDELIO HERNANDEZ
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0277 The following Corporation is doing business as INFYNITI DISTRIBUTION, INFYNITI GROWN. 335 ICE CREAM GRADE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. UA HOLDINGS, INC. 335 ICE CREAM GRADE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. Al# 3912670. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: DANIEL GOSS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 2/9/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 9, 2017. Feb. 22 & Mar. 1, 8, 15. REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT WITH CHANGE FILE NO. 17-0200 The following Individual is doing business as HARMONY WITHIN COUNSELING. 4401 HILLTOP RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. LILLI M COLBASSO. 4401 HILLTOP RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0239 The following General Partnership is doing business as CONDE FARMS, MELLO-DY RANCH. 460 TRAVERS LANE, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. County of Santa Cruz. KYLE A. CONDE, STEVEN A. CONDE. 460 TRAVERS LANE, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. This business is conducted by a General Partnership signed: STEVEN CONDE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 2/3/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 3, 2017. Feb. 22 & Mar. 1, 8, 15. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0271 The following Individual is doing business as CARPET MEDICS. 318 GAULT STREET #18, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. WILLIAM KIRK KINTZEL. 318 GAULT STREET #18, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: WILLIAM KIRK KINTZEL. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 2/5/1999. This
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]FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0275 The following Individual is doing business as LEAP2THREE PUBLICATIONS. 515 DAVIDSON WAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. County of Santa Cruz. JULIA HORNER. 515 DAVIDSON WAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: JULIA HORNER. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 2/1/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 8, 2017. Mar. 1, 8, 15, 22.
REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT WITH CHANGE FILE NO. 17-0428 The following Corporation is doing business as DWELL LANDSCAPE. 190 ATHERLY LANE, BONNY DOON, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. I.M.S. MARINE CORPORATION. 23800 MORRELL CUT OFF RD., LOS GATOS, CA 95033. AI# 1506970 This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: DJANGO R. DAWSON. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/1/1992. Original FBN number: 2009-0000215. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Mar. 2, 2017. Mar. 8, 15, 22, 29.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING (ORDINANCE NO. 2017-06) ORDINANCE NO. 2017-06 AN UNCODIFIED ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ RELATING TO THE CITYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PROCEDURES CONCERNING FEDERAL IMMIGRATION LAW AND REAFFIRMING ITS DECLARATION OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ AS A SANCTUARY FOR ALL ITS RESIDENTS
This uncodified ordinance pertains to the Cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Procedures Concerning Federal Immigration Law and the Cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s declaration as a Sanctuary City. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION on this 28th day of February, 2017, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Krohn, Mathews, Watkins, Brown, Noroyan; Vice Mayor Terrazas; Mayor Chase. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/Cynthia Chase, Mayor. ATTEST: ss/Bren Lehr, City Clerk Administrator. This ordinance is scheduled for further consideration and final adoption at the Council meeting of March 14th, 2017.
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0202 The following Individual is doing business as KENNAN WARD PHOTOGRAPHY. 348 FREDERICK STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. KENNAN WARD. 348 FREDERICK STREET,
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0274 The following Individual is doing business as STEAMER LANE DESIGN. 2879 MISSION STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. SEAN CURRENS. 2879 MISSION STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SEAN CURRENS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 2/1/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 8, 2017. Feb. 15, 22 & Mar. 1, 8.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 17-0284 The following Individual is doing business as RUBICON RENTALS. 614 PLEASANT VALLEY RD., APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. BRYAN STARN. 614 PLEASANT VALLEY RD., APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: BRYAN STARN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 2/9/2017. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Feb. 9, 2017. Feb. 22 & Mar. 1, 8, 15.
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Classifieds classifieds PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM
HELP WANTED Direct Care Work with developmentally disabled. All shifts available. Promotional opportunities. $11 an hour within 90 days of hire. Signing bonus of $100 at 6 month employ. Call (831) 475-0888, M - F 9 am - 3 pm.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING (ORDINANCE NO. 2017-04)
HELP WANTED! Doc Auto is growing and has immediate openings in sales and service. We’re looking for professionals in these areas with a heart to serve! If you’re a professional with a high level of integrity and want to work in a family style, team environment, Doc Auto is the right place for you. Doc Auto offers a work environment where you’ll be appreciated and have the weekends off. So if you’re a professional with a high level of integrity and a heart to serve, go to docauto.biz to apply!
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Program Director Want to make a lasting impact on food and nutrition? Community Bridges is hiring a Program Director for our Child and Adult Care Food Program. 40 hr/wk, exempt position; to apply please visit http:// communitybridges.org/employment/ or contact Sergio Velazquez at (831)688-8840 x200.
Production Manager
Fox Factory Inc seeks Production Manager in Watsonville, CA to plan & oversee production activities & establish production priorities for products in keeping w/ effective operations & cost factors. Mail resume to Fox Factory, Inc. Attn: Christina Amezcua, 130 Hangar Way, Watsonville, CA 95076. EOE.
MASSAGE Call Curt feel good now! Muscles relaxed and moods adjusted. De-stress in my warm safe hands. 2 or 4 hand massage.Days and Evenings, CMP FeelGoodNowMassage.com. Call 831.419.1646 A*wonderful*Touch. Relaxing, Therapeutic, Light to Deep Swedish Massage for Men. Peaceful environment. 14 yrs. Exp. Days/Early PM. Jeff 831.332.8594.
MARCH 8-14, 2017 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Place your legal notice in Good Times
50
Fictitious Business Name $52 Abandon Fictitious Business Name $52 Order to Show Cause (Name Change) $80
ORDINANCE NO. 2017-04 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ AMENDING SECTION 24.08.1380 OF TITLE 24, PART 14 “RESIDENTIAL DEMOLITION/CONVERSION AUTHORIZATION PERMITS” OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ MUNICIPAL CODE This ordinance authorizes the implementation of a Community Choice Aggregation Program. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION on this 28th day of February, 2017, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Krohn, Mathews, Watkins, Brown, Noroyan; Vice Mayor Terrazas; Mayor Chase. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/Cynthia Chase, Mayor. ATTEST: ss/Bren Lehr, City Clerk Administrator. This ordinance is scheduled for further consideration and final adoption at the Council meeting of March 14th, 2017.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING (ORDINANCE NO. 2017-05) ORDINANCE NO. 2017-05 AN UNCODIFIED ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ AUTHORIZING IMPLEMENTATION OF A COMMUNITY CHOICE AGGREGATION PROGRAM
This ordinance authorizes the implementation of a Community Choice Aggregation Program. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION on this 28th day of February, 2017, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Krohn, Mathews, Watkins, Brown, Noroyan; Vice Mayor Terrazas; Mayor Chase. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/Cynthia Chase, Mayor. ATTEST: ss/Bren Lehr, City Clerk Administrator. This ordinance is scheduled for further consideration and final adoption at the Council meeting of March 14th, 2017.
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Second Location Now Open At 140 Dubois you’ll find the same quality, service and variety that you’ve come to expect from KindPeoples in a building renovated from the ground up to provide the best dispensary experience California has ever seen.
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MARCH 8-14, 2017
140 Dubois, Suite C Santa Cruz, CA (831) 824 - 6200
9
51
Where the locals shop since 1938. VOTED BEST BUTCHER SHOP BEST WINE SELECTION BEST CHEESE SELECTION BEST LOCALLY OWNED GROCERY STORE BEST MURAL /PUBLIC ART
Family owned & operated 78 years. 622 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz
OUR 78 TH YEAR
WEEKLY SPECIALS
BUTCHER SHOP
A WINE & FOOD PAIRING Slow-Cooker Corned Beef and Cabbage Ingredients
– 4 large carrots, peeled and cut into matchstick pieces – 10 baby red potatoes, quartered – 1 onion, peeled and cut into bite-sized pieces – 4 cups water – 1 (4 pound) corned beef brisket with spice packet – 6 ounces beer
LL NATURAL USDA Choice beef & lamb only corn-fed Midwest pork, Rocky free-range chickens, Mary’s air-chilled chickens, wild-caught seafood, Boar’s Head products.
MEAT
BEEF ■ TOP SIRLOIN STEAK, U.S.D.A Choice/ 6.98 LB ■ SKIRT STEAK, Plain or Teriyaki/ 12.98 LB ■ COULOTTE STEAKS, U.S.D.A Choice/ 6.98 LB ■ VEAL RIB CHOPS, Pasture Fed/ 12.98 LB LUNCH MEATS ■ HONEY HAM, Sweet Slice/ 8.49 LB ■ BLACK FOREST HAM, Smoked Flavor/ 8.49 LB ■ DANISH HAM, Boars Head/ 8.49 LB MARINATED TUMBLED MEATS ■ BLACK PEPPER PORK CHOPS, Boneless/ 3.98 LB ■ SANTA MARIA PORK CHOPS, Boneless/ 3.98 LB ■ BLOODY MARY PORK CHOPS, Boneless/ 3.98 LB FISH ■ PAIFIC RED SNAPPER FILLET, Fresh/ 6.98 LB ■ CAJUN CATFISH FILLETS, Fresh/ 9.98 LB ■ SALMON LOX TRIMMINGS/ 9.98 LB
PRODUCE
– 1/2 head cabbage, coarsely chopped
Butter & Iceberg/ 1.79 EA
Cook the brisket for about 8 hours. An hour before serving, stir in the cabbage and cook for 1 more hour.
■ POTATOES, Red and Yukon/ .89 LB ■ CLUSTER TOMATOES, Ripe on the Vine/ 2.69 LB ■ ORGANIC AVOCADOS, Ripe and Ready to Eat/ 1.99 EA ■ APPLES, Fujis, Granny Smith, Gala,
JAMESON 750 ml - $18.99
Braeburn and Pink Lady / 1.89 LB
■ SEEDLESS GRAPES, Red and Green/ 2.99 LB ■ LEMONS, Blemish Free Lemons/ .69 EA ■ GRAPEFRUIT, Pink Flesh Grapefruit/ .59 EA ■ ROMA TOMATOES, Ripe and Firm/ 1.19 LB ■ RED ONIONS, Peak Quality/ .89 LB ■ LARGE TOMATOES, Great for Slicing/ 1.49 LB
St. Patrick’s Day Beers
24oz/ 3.89 ■ WHOLE GRAIN, Great White, 30oz/ 4.19 ■ GAYLE’S, Organic Capitola Sourdough Sandwich, 30oz/ 4.79 ■ KELLY’S, Sweet Baguette, 8oz/ 2.19 ■ SUMANO’S, Ciabatta Mini Baguette, 24oz/ 2.99
■ GUINNESS, “Nitro IPA”, 6 Pack, 12oz Can/ 8.49 + CRV ■ BODDINGTON, “Pub Ale”, 4 Pack, 16oz Can/ 7.49 + CRV ■ SMITHWICKíS, “Irih Red Ale”, 6 Pack,
Delicatessen
■ GUINNESS, “Draught”, 4 Pack, 16oz Cans/ 7.99 + CRV ■ GUINNESS, “Extra Stout”, 6 Pack, 11.2oz Bottle/ 8.99 + CRV
11.2oz Bottle/ 7.99 + CRV
Irish Whiskey
■ JACQUET BELGIAN WAFFLE, “Authentic”, 3.5oz/ 1.99 Ea
■ RUSSIAN STANDARD, “Saint Petersburg Edition”/ 14.99 ■ HUMBOLDT, “Certified Organic, Gluten Free”/ 18.99 ■ PAU, “Distilled from Pineapple, 92BTI”/ 19.99 ■ CHOPIN, Potato Vodka/ 19.99 ■ KETEL ONE/ 19.99
■ BOLD BEAN DIP, “Gluten Free”, 10oz/ 5.69 Ea ■ CALABRO FRESH RICOTTA, “Best Ricotta, Super Fresh”, 1.5oz/ 8.99 Ea
■ OLLI SALUMERIA, “Slow Cured, Gluten Free”, 4oz/ 4.69 Ea
Incredible Reds
■ DI STEFANO MARSCARPONE CHEESE, “Premium Italian Cheese”, 8oz/ 5.49 Ea
■ 2008 ANIMA LIBERA, Toscana, (Reg 24.99)/ 11.99 ■ 2011 ESTANCIA Pinot Noir Reserve, (Reg 29.99)/ 12.99 ■ WISCONSIN SHARP CHEDDAR, ■ 2014 ROTHSCHILD Bordeaux, (Reg 21.99)/ 11.99 “rBST Free” Loaf Cuts/ 5.09 Lb, Average Cuts/ 5.49 Lb ■ 2010 CHATEAU LA GORRE Medoc, ■ BLACK RIVER GORGONZOLA, “A Mild Blue, (90WA, Reg 22.99)/ 12.99 with Great Flavor”/ 6.09 Lb ■ 2007 OLIVIERO TOSCANI Toscana, (Reg 45.99)/ 14.99 ■ CALIFORNIA SHARP CHEDDAR,
Cheese
Wines Under $5
■ 2013 RED DIAMOND, Mysterious Red, (Reg 12.99)/ 4.99 ■ NV RAVENSWOOD MUCKRAKER, (Reg 13.99)/ 4.99 ■ 2013 MOTTO, Cabernet Sauvignon, (Reg 14.99)/ 4.99 ■ 2011 RAVENSWOOD, Shiraz, (Reg 10.99)/ 4.99 ■ 2012 CRAFTWORK, Chardonnay, (Reg 19.99)/ 4.99
“Imported from Italy”/ 15.09 Lb
■ CUCUMBERS, Always Fresh/ .59 EA ■ EGGPLANT, Premium Quality/ 1.29 EA ■ BROCCOLI CROWNS, Delivered Fresh Daily / 2.29 LB ■ YELLOW ONIONS, A Kitchen Must Have/ .59 LB ■ AVOCADOS, Table Ripe Ready/ 1.99 EA ■ RUSSET POTATOES, Top Quality/ .59 LB ■ TANGELOS, Sweet and Juicy/ 1.29 LB ■ MANDARINS, Ripe and Seedless/ 2.19 LB ■ NAVEL ORANGES, Large Size, Super Sweet/ 1.29 LB ■ CELERY, Fresh and Crisp/ 1.19 EA. ■ LEAF LETTUCE, Red, Green, Romaine,
Place the carrots, potatoes, and onion into the bottom of a slow cooker, pour in the water, and place the brisket on top of the vegetables. Pour the beer over the brisket. Sprinkle on the spices from the packet, cover, and set the cooker on High.
■ BECKMANN’S, “Big” California Sour Round,
Best Buys, Local, Regional, International
Bakery
■ PARMIGIANO REGGIANO,
Organic: Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organic
Prep time, 15 minutes. Cook, 9 hours. Ready in 9 hours and 15 minutes.
BEER/WINE/SPIRITS
Local, Organic, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet
“A Customer Favorite”/ 6.09 Lb
CALIFORNIA-FRESH, Blemish–free, Local/
Directions
GROCERY
Compare & Save
■ CLOVER MILK, 1/2 Gallon/ 2.59 ■ CLOVER GREEK YOGURT, 5.3oz/ .89 ■ BEN & JERRY’S, Ice Cream, Pint/ 4.29 ■ SANTA CRUZ ORGANIC LEMONADE,
Wines of Spain- Huge Selection
Cherry, 32oz/ .99 ■ CRYSTAL GEYSER SPARKLING WATER, 1.25L/ .99
Shop Local First
■ TWINS KITCHEN MUSTARD, “Hand Crafted”, 9oz/ 5.99
■ 2013 HECULA, Monastrell, (91WA)/11.99 ■ 2012 CRETA ROBLE, Tempranillo, (90V)/ 13.99 ■ 2012 BORSAO BEROLA, Red Blend, (91WA)/ 14.99 ■ 2010 PALACIO DEL BURGO, Rioja Reserva, (93WS)/ 19.99
■ WONNIES, “Marinades and BBQ Sauce”, 12oz/ 3.99 ■ 2010 MARQUES DE MURRIETA, Rioja Reserva, ■ KGWANS, Double F-Medium Hot Sauce, 5oz/ 6.99 (93WA)/ 24.99 ■ BONNY DOON FARMS, Unfiltered Honey, 8oz/ 8.99 Connoisseur’s Corner- Zinfandel ■ BELLE FARMS, Extra Virgin Olive Oil, 17oz/ 22.99 ■ 2014 SEGHESIO, Sonoma County, (93WS)/ 22.99 Gourmet Mustards ■ 2013 GREEN & RED, Chiles Mills, (92W&S)/ 29.99 ■ EDMOND FALLOT, “Made in France since 1840”, ■ 2012 RAVENSWOOD, Belloni, (95CG)/ 34.99 7.4oz/ 3.29 ■ SIERRA NEVADA, 3 Kinds, 8oz/ 3.49 ■ 2014 RIDGE Geyserville, (93AG)/ 39.99 ■ BONE SUCKIN’ MUSTARD, “Sweet & Spicy”, ■ 2014 LIMERICK LANE, Russian River, (94WE)/ 41.99 9oz/ 5.49
■ STONEWALL KITCHEN, 4 Kinds, 7.75 oz/ 5.29 ■ MENDOCINO MUSTARD, “Small Batch, Family Owned”, 9oz/ 5.49
TONY RAMOS, 20-Year Customer, Santa Cruz
SHOP PER SPOTLIG HT
Occupation: Manager, Outdoor World, Santa Cruz Hobbies: Fishing, golf/all sports, hanging out with my kids, barbecuing Astrological Sign: Pisces What or who got you interested in Shopper’s? I moved closer to the neighborhood so I shop here almost daily. I healed myself from diabetes by eating Shopper’s meats, vegetables and fruit. I have no cholesterol issues, no diabetes, no nothing, and I attribute a lot of that to shopping at Shopper’s Corner the last two years. I stopped eating fast food, I try to avoid processed foods, and I walk here. I stopped drinking alcohol and got into a workout routine and lost 40 pounds. Shopper’s meats are such good quality that when I was testing for diabetes, my “numbers” became lower and lower. No one believes I’m 60... I feel great! I’m lean and fit. I did this for my kids. And they enjoy Shopper’s too.
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Oh? They can walk around the store feeling safe. That’s important. Shopper’s is a good environment for children; everyone looks out for everyone. And their customer service —it reminds me of my store — is great as there’s always someone available to assist you. It’s nice be on the receiving end. I love it! It seems like everyone is happy here, customers and employees. I can’t go anywhere within the market without being recognized. You would never get that at the big box stores. I think it’s important to shop local, like at Shopper’s. One thing I love about Santa Cruz is its support of local business.
What would say about Shopper’s to someone who is new to the community? This is what’s up with Shopper’s Corner: great meat department; great butchers; great store! The checkers are super nice and I know them by name or face. Shopper’s carries the best local breads from Beckmann’s and all the other great bakeries — we like them all. I know good produce: I’ve been around fruit and vegetables my whole life because my grandparents on both sides were farmers. We had apricot, prune, and walnut trees, and lots more. Shopper’s produce not only looks beautiful but always tastes fantastic! I buy both organic and conventional, and the pricing is excellent. Shoppers feels like family.
“I healed myself from diabetes by eating Shopper’s meats, vegetables and fruit. I’m lean and fit. I did this for my kids.”
Corner: Soquel & Branciforte Avenues 7 Days: 6am-9pm
| Meat: (831) 423-1696 | Produce: (831) 429-1499 | Grocery: (831) 423-1398 | Wine: (831) 429-1804
Superb Products of Value: Local, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet ■ Neighborly Service for 78 Years