YEAR 53, NO. 25 JUNE 24-30, 2015
Local Color
SERVING MARIN COUNTY
PACIFICSUN.COM
Small businesses help create genuine North Bay experience p10
WHISTLESTOP EXPRESS INSIDE
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Herbicide debate p6 Italian street painting p14 Decoding ‘San Andreas’ p15
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Letters Upfront Triva/Hero&Zero Feature Food Arts/Advice Talking Pictures Film Movies Sundial Classified Horoscope
J U LY 1 - 5 | SAN RAFAEL , CA | MAR I N FAI R . O R G
ON THE COVER Photograph of Michele Schwartz, co-owner and artisan at The Shop, by Samir Neffati. Design by Kara Brown
Publisher Rosemary Olson EDITORIAL Editor Molly Oleson (x316) Contributing Editor Stephanie Powell Movie Page Editor Matt Stafford Copy Editor Lily O’Brien (x317) CONTRIBUTORS Amy Alkon, Haley Bollinger, Tom Gogola, Tanya Henry, Stett Holbrook, Leona Moon, Howard Rachelson, Peter Seidman, Nikki Silverstein, Charlie Swanson, David Templeton, Flora Tsapovsky, Richard von Busack ADVERTISING Marketing and Sales Consultants Rozan Donals (x302), Danielle McCoy (x311) ART AND PRODUCTION Art Director Jessica Armstrong (x319) Production Director Phaedra Strecher (x335) Graphic Designer Chelsea Dederick (x336) ADMINISTRATION Accounting Specialist Cecily Josse (x331) Courier Gillian Coder CEO/Executive Editor Dan Pulcrano
PACIFIC SUN (USPS 454-630) Published weekly, on Wednesdays, by Metrosa Inc. Distributed free at more than 550 locations throughout Marin County. Adjudicated a newspaper of General Circulation. First class mailed delivery in Marin available by subscriptions (per year): Marin County $75; out-of-county $90, via credit card, cash or check. No person may, without the permission of the Pacific Sun, take more than one copy of each Pacific Sun weekly issue. Entire contents of this publication Copyright ©Metrosa, Inc., ISSN; 0048-2641. All rights reserved. Unsolicited manuscripts must be submitted with a stamped self-addressed envelope.
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Because Living at Home is the Best Way to Live
Letters
Help your senior loved one live safely and independently at home with top-notch care from Home Care Assistance. 24/7 Live-In Care Specialists. We offer the highest quality around-the-clock care for the most competitive price - guaranteed. Marin’s Top Caregivers. Each has at least 2 years of experience and receives extensive training through our Home Care Assistance University. All applicants are thoroughly screened, including DOJ background checks, drug tests and a proprietary psychological exam designed to assess honesty and conscientiousness. Experienced with Advanced Care Needs. Our caregivers are experienced with caring for clients with special conditions such as Alzheimer’s, stroke and Parkinson’s. We also develop more customized care plans and training for these clients. Brain Health Experts. We are the only home care agency that offers Cognitive Therapeutics, a research-backed, activities program that promotes brain health and vitality in our clients.
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‘In the pipeline … ’ Doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to run a pipeline across the bridge when they are far worse off than we are at the moment. I was here when the last draught weighed in and seemed like everyone in Marin “got it.” Bricks in toilets, dirty cars and dirtier people. And let’s not forget the fabled: “… if it’s yellow, let it mellow… ” saying; I’ll spare the rest. Regardless, I don’t see Marin folk really getting it this time around. Just the other day when I was working on a job in Mill Valley, some woman was out washing her already immaculate white BMW, with a nozzel-less hose. Water was pouring down the street. The project we were working on had a lush green garden and the sprinklers watered the sidewalk as well as the garden. Right now, the reservoirs are near capacity, but this is something of a chimera. Given that much of the state is becoming a dust bowl and it was just blind stupid luck that Marin managed to catch enough water from a few freak storms, isn’t something that can be banked upon. It’s true MMWD customers voted down desalinization but the issue should really be brought back. Desal shouldn’t be used as
a regular supply option. I think if it was pitched to Marin voters as an emergency back stop, it might fair better in the next go round. It is very expensive to produce and also, given the lack of infrastructure where the plan is being proposed means that the produced water will undergo a lot of pumping and pumping equals money. Plus, pulling the water from the bay is like drinking out of Sacramento’s toilet. All the waste of the Central Valley get’s dumped into the river, and let’s not forget about all the refineries (while they don’t dump waste into the bay, whenever it rains on those plants, whatever is on the ground/ facilities gets washed into the bay. A better option might be to build the plant near Kent Lake but run the intake and outflow pipes out into the ocean. The treated water could be put into the lake and right into the system. Guy Palmer
‘If you must … ’ I completely agree with Jai Conley’s letter in the June 17-23 issue. If you must print Sonoma county events from what has always been a Marin paper, please separate them from those in Marin. Also, under Concerts, you omitted the Summer Music
Worry no more, dear readers: The Movies page is back this week!
‘Makes sense to me’ You kindly printed my letter expressing joy to know that the Bohemian had taken over the Pacific Sun and in spite of those who do not [know] how to logically search for music or entertainment, I personally love the layout by venue … makes sense to me. HOWEVER, I cannot find the movie section this week. PLEASE TELL ME YOU ARE NOT DELETING THAT SECTION? And where is it???????????? Your wonderful one-page ad for a movie on page 16 is indeed impressive. Linda Wosskow
‘Please bring it back’ Why are you leaving out the “Movies” page in the “new” Sun? One week there was a note that the printing schedule was such that you didn’t have the info.— this week, no explanation. The “Movies” page was my main
reason for picking up the “Sun.” I read other parts also, but the Movies page was the main reason I got the paper. Please bring it back. P.S. I don't really like the “shiny” paper being used; please bring back the old. Jim Gormley
One-of-a-kind guide Please reconsider and reinstate your “Movies” page, the weekly listing and description of movies, movie times and where they are playing. As an avid moviegoer, the movie section has been the most helpful and a one-of-a-kind guide to my moviegoing. It cuts through having to painstakingly search for movies in the IJ or online listings by theaters. Although your article “The End of TV” [ June 17] predicts the end of movies in theaters, the fact is that has not yet happened. Moviegoing is far from ended, and certainly in Marin County it has not ended any more than has theatergoing or operagoing or concertgoing. I am among the many who like entertainment in a theater setting surrounded by others who enjoy the same. Please reconsider and reinstate the very helpful and deeply appreciated guide to the movies. Mary Van Voorhees, enthusiastic moviegoer
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Festival, an annual series of concerts created by College of Marin’s Paul Smith. These concerts are from June 20 to June 28 at different venues in Marin. Please include future classical music concerts in the listings such as those at the College of Marin, Dominican Guest Series and the Mill Valley Chamber Society. Thanks, Barbara Rozen
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Upfront Proponents of using glyphosate say that it’s the most effective way to control non-native plants. Opponents point to studies that link the herbicide to health hazards.
Coming to a boil Debate about using glyphosate to control plants in Marin heats up By Peter Seidman
A
recent report from an international health organization has bolstered the argument that a commonly used herbicide should be dropped from use on Marin public lands, say opponents of relying on chemicals to control non-native vegetation. The debate about whether the county and the county’s largest
water district should use the herbicide glyphosate to control plants that easily overrun native vegetation in parks and open space has lasted for decades. Proponents of using the herbicide (which routinely is called a pesticide) say that it’s the most effective way to control non-native plants, from a cost-benefit basis as well as a practical basis. Land
managers in the Marin County Open Space District say that it’s nearly impossible to eradicate nonnatives such as broom varieties using mechanical means and hand pulling. The proponents say that applying glyphosate judiciously creates little risk to the environment. Opponents of using glyphosate say that’s just not true. They point
to studies that show a causal relationship between glyphosate and health hazards. Proponents, however, point to studies that show the opposite—that glyphosate is safe. The issue has bubbled for decades, periodically coming to a boil. The temperature of the debate increased recently when the county planned to apply glyphosate judiciously to control vegetation in the Ring Mountain Preserve between Corte Madera and Tiburon. The debate over whether to use glyphosate had focused on the Marin Municipal watershed. Protecting the county’s main watershed and reducing fire danger from non-native plants on Mount Tam is one thing, say opponents of chemical control, but using glyphosate in the Ring Mountain Preserve is unacceptable and endangers visitors. Anti-pesticide proponents are circulating a petition calling on the Board of Supervisors to come out against using the pesticide. At a recent board meeting, Supervisor Katie Rice, who represents the preserve area, said that the county should review its integrated pest management plan. The county is already committed to a reduction of pesticides in parks, but the Open Space District has no such similar mandate, although land managers in the county view using glyphosate as a last resort. The Marin Municipal Water District (MMWD) has been reviewing its non-native control policies, and the district board is expected to take up the issue soon. What makes this time different from all other times is a report from the cancer research group of the World Health Organization. In March, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) said that its most recent investigation of glyphosate data shows that the chemical is a “probable carcinogen.” That’s an increase in the hazard level from the organization’s previous classification of glyphosate as a “possible carcinogen.” That increase adds immediacy to the call to stop using the chemical in Marin. Almost as soon as the report went public, critics from the chemical industry blasted the research, saying that IARC cherrypicked data contained in previous studies. The controversy continues, but opponents of using glyphosate in Marin say the IARC report should be viewed as just one more
that pose the greatest fire threat, as well as damage to the biodiversity of the district’s approximately 22,000 acres of watershed. The issue of how the district should battle non-natives stretches back to 1994, when a consultant delivered a study to the district that formed the basis for a management plan focused on husbanding the watershed. Then, in 2003, spurred by a continuing increase in fire danger on the watershed, the district adopted an integrated pest management policy aimed at keeping the fuel load suppressed, and at the same time maintaining the ecology of the watershed. Using a variety of conventional tools, including hand and mechanical removal and controlled
Bragman points to New York, where the New York attorney general sued Monsanto “for making that claim,” Bragman says, “and Monsanto lost. They were sued for false advertising.” Proponents of using chemical means to control vegetation also say that it’s far more cost effective to use chemicals along with other methods of control than to take the chemical tool out of the toolbox. “It depends on how broadly you analyze the budget,” Bragman says. “It may save the agency some money. But the actual cost is going to be externalized to the community. There’s no doubt that chemicals save public agencies some money.” But assuming the World Health Organization is
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When conflicting viewpoints exist about husbandry on public property, political and scientific, we’ve got to use the precautionary principle. I don’t think we should be rolling the —Larry Bragman dice with public health. burns, the district fought the infesting flora. It also looked at some unconventional methods, including goats that might graze the non-natives. That didn’t work because goats ate every native species they could find before munching on invasive species. The tool that caused the most controversy in the policy was the district’s use of “reduced risk” herbicides. The limited use of those chemicals “in areas away from reservoirs and streams,” was part of the 2003 integrated management policy. An EPA evaluation found that glyphosate degrades quickly in the soil and does not “migrate” and contaminate water easily, findings that make it a good candidate for use on a watershed. Egger, Rothman and others, however, refute the suppositions. Larry Bragman currently serves on the MMWD board and is another strong critic of using glyphosate. He also has a unique take on how the district—and the county—should deal with nonnative species. As for the argument that glyphosate degrades to a safe state,
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correct, he adds, the additional cost of health problems resulting from glyphosate use should be a critical element in a renewed evaluation. “When conflicting viewpoints exist about husbandry on public property, political and scientific,” Bragman says, “we’ve got to use the precautionary principle. I don’t think we should be rolling the dice with public health.” In looking at how the district (and by extrapolation other agencies also) should control non-native species, Bragman says, “We need to change the paradigm from eradication to management. Broom, for example, has been around Marin for a long time and has become part of the county’s ecology. I think land management public agencies should embrace a change in perspective. It’s going to take additional investment, but I think it can be done.” Bragman suggests that managing broom by mechanical means could become a job-creating mechanism. Work “in ecological management needs to be valued,” and can produce local jobs that would add economic benefit to the community.✹
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nail in the glyphosate coffin. Glyphosate is the most commonly used herbicide in the world. It’s a Monsanto product that has made billions for the company. Glyphosate is a common application on lawns and driveways and sidewalks and median strips. Monsanto has engineered glyphosate-resistant crop seeds, which allow farmers to use high doses of the chemical to control weeds and increase crop yields. The high doses also result in glyphosate showing up as residue in crops, as well as animals and humans, critics say. Proponents of its use say that the amounts detected pose no potential harm. Opponents beg to differ. Proponents of using glyphosate say that it can be safely applied topically to plants rather than by spraying, and the topical application is safer. They also say that the chemical has a short halflife. Former Fairfax Mayor and current board member of the Ross Valley Sanitary District Frank Egger disagrees. He’s been a strong glyphosate opponent. “The halflife of glyphosate is much longer than we’ve been led to believe,” he says. “All of the studies that have been done in the past have been industry-run. For years, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has relied on the pesticide industry to determine safety.” The EPA is at the end of a routine re-evaluation of glyphosate and is expected to release its report soon. The agency delayed issuing a report until it could evaluate the results of the World Health Organization’s report citing the increased cancer hazard of glyphosate. The EPA results could come just as the Marin Municipal Water District begins discussing staff recommendations for vegetation management. Egger played a major role in rallying Fairfax behind a move to block herbicide use in the watershed, a strategy that district officials say has resulted in the increased spread of non-native vegetation, creating a high fire danger. Egger and civic activist Bill Rothman played leading roles in the Marin Safe Drinking Water Coalition’s move to convince the district’s board to stop using herbicides in 2005. Egger ran for a spot on the MMWD board in 2008 as a strong anti-pesticide candidate. He was unsuccessful in that bid. The brooms, Scotch, French and Spanish, have infested the watershed along with other flora such as yellow starthistle and pampas grass. But it’s the brooms
Café Sonoma-Marin Fair Trivia 1
CONCERT SERIES Wednesday, june 24
Is Marin a hotbed of baseball? I say yes, as four Marin high school teams recently won the North Coast Section Baseball Championships, in Divisions II, III, IV and V. Congratulations to what four schools?
By Howard Rachelson
2
2 Such nutcrackers are needed to break this nut, hardest of them all. 3 What four NBA teams did our glorious Golden State Warriors defeat on the way to their first NBA championship in 40 years? Also, in how many games in each series?
9
4 Early environmentalists were often given what 10-letter, slightly derogatory nickname, related to their affection for preserving plant life? THursday, june 25 Trivia answers «8
friday, june 26
tanYa tUCKeR
had what four-letter name?
6 The world’s largest, and possibly most envi-
1 Redwood (Division II), Drake
bonus
ronmentally destructive dam project, is located on the Yangtze River in China. Give its numerical name.
7 Identify these very similar four-letter words: a Famous movie dog b Mexican food delight
c Yugoslavian ruler d Indian dwelling
8 What Russian political title is named after a Roman leader? 9 The world’s tallest waterfall, almost one kilometer long, is known locally as Sensunday, june 28
Fiesta Latina: LOs MisMOs anD MORe DestRUCtiOn DeRBY
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dero Salto Ángel. It’s located in what country, and we call it what?
10 Math party time! There are twice as many men as women in a room. After 1/3 of the men and 1/3 of the women leave, 20 more men than women remain. How many of each were in the room originally?
BONUS QUESTION: This district of Seoul, Korea, known for its restaurants, theat-
ers, packed nightclubs and pricey boutiques, has become a popular tourist destination because of what 2013 pop-music hit, by what artist, that’s become YouTube’s most watched video ever? Howard Rachelson invites you to our next team trivia contest: Wednesday, July 1, at the True North Pub in San Anselmo, starting at 8pm; Free, with prizes. Bring a team or come join one. Have a good question? Send it in, and if we use it we’ll give you credit. Contact Howard at howard1@triviacafe.com, and visit www.triviacafe.com, the web’s No. 1 trivia site! ▲ A motorist alerted a California Highway Patrol (CHP) officer that a frantic duck paced back and forth at a storm drain near the Golden Gate Bridge. CHP officers Kenji Burrage and Matt Smith responded to the scene and rescued eight ducklings stuck in the storm drain. Mama was reunited with seven of her babies and relocated next to the bay. Unbeknownst to the officers, one duckling wandered away after being liberated. Once the lone baby was discovered, the officers searched in vain for the rest of the family. Officer Burrage placed the duck in his motorcycle’s saddlebag and rode to San Rafael. At every stoplight, he checked on the little one, who is now doing well at WildCare. We can’t stop quacking about the compassion of those ducky officers.
Answers on page
»24
Zero
(Division III), Justin Siena (Division IV) and Branson (Division V) 2 Macadamia nuts 3 New Orleans Pelicans (4-0), Memphis Grizzlies (4-2), Houston Rockets (4-1), Cleveland Cavaliers (4-2) saTurday, june 27 4 Tree-hugger 5 Argo 6 The Three Gorges Dam 7a Toto 7b Taco 7cTito 7d Tipi 8 Czar, after Julius Caesar, who lived from 101 B.C.—44 A.D. 9 Venezuela; Angel Falls 10 There were 60 men and 30 women. Later, 40 men and 20 women remain. BONUS ANSWER: Seoul's trendy Gangnam district (described as noble in the daytime and crazy at night), after the song “Gangnam Style,” by South Korean musician, Psy. The music video of this song has been viewed 2.5 billion times on YouTube, more than any other.
5 The Oscar-winning Best Picture from 2012
Hero
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▼ The Tiburon Salmon Institute (TSI) received a letter evicting them, by July 1, from their home at the Romberg Tiburon Center for Environmental Studies. The property owner, San Francisco State University (SFSU), remains unresponsive to the public outcry. Perhaps Karina Nielsen, Romberg’s director, has never watched the delight of school children as they release young salmon into Richardson Bay at TSI’s annual Kiss and Release event. Maybe SFSU President Leslie Wong is ignorant about the salmon population’s struggle to survive the drought and human impact. The institute has released more than a million salmon into the bay during the last 42 years and educated thousands of children about salmon and their habitat in creative, hands-on ways. Help TSI by signing the petition at change.org. —Nikki Silverstein
Got a Hero or a Zero? Please send submissions to nikki_silverstein@yahoo.com. Toss roses, hurl stones with more Heroes and Zeros at ›› pacificsun.com
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W
ouldn’t it be great if Google or Facebook moved to the North Bay? Well, yes and no. It would certainly create a lot of jobs, but the impact on housing prices and traffic wouldn’t be great. Anyway, such a move isn’t likely to happen and I say that’s just as well. Folks move to or choose to remain in the North Bay because of the quality of life, open spaces and the slower pace. Silicon Valley, with its crushing traffic, Gold Rush-style development and stratospherically high cost of housing are not things we aspire to. In fact, many bail on Silicon Valley and San Francisco and for those
Small businesses define the North Bay
reasons, present company included. But we still need jobs and economic development. Increasingly, that’s coming from small-scale makers, farmers and artisans, not big corporations. Small and home-based businesses are part of the North Bay experience. Local purveyors, be they farmers, brewers, artisans or apparelmakers, are part of what gives the North Bay its look and feel. And while they don’t have the economic might of a Google, local businesses keep dollars circulating locally, they create local jobs, they reduce reliance on carbon-intensive imports and contribute to the North Bay’s identity. Last year Sonoma County’s GoLocal Cooperative, a network of local businesses, residents and nonprofits that support local, sustainably minded businesses, produced $5.6 million in sales
through its rewards card program. That generated more than $2 million to the North Bay’s economy. Two-year-old North Bay Made, co-founded by farmer Kelley Rajala and weaver Pam Dale, grew out of GoLocal. The membership-based group is helping to unify small North Bay businesses by acting as their sales and marketing team. With more than 50 makers and markets in its portfolio, the group is really a force of private-sector economic development. But instead of trying to attract new business to the North Bay, North Bay Made is cultivating homegrown makers in the North Bay and stoking the benefits of a homegrown economy. “We’re just stacking up win-win scenarios,” Rajala says. In this issue of the Pacific Sun, we’re highlighting several of our favorite
Samir Neffati
Local Motion local purveyors—they can be found from Sausalito to West Marin to the Sonoma Coast to Napa. The good news is that there are more where these came from.—Stett Holbrook
The Shop It’s a hot and delightful Thursday in Olema and there’s really no place to be except eased back on the sun-dappled porch of a new way-West Marin outpost of “uncommon mercantile” called, simply, The Shop. Sit on the porch in a Jane Brooks– designed baseball hat that features the store logo—she’s a co-owner and designer here—as you sip coldpressed iced coffee out of a milk jar and watch a flow of customers peruse the offerings. Repurposed as a shop of local goods, vintage wares, “Northern California classics and practical provisions,” the
sturdy Gumshoe Briefcases by Inverness’ Willis Bigelow are a stand-out product. Then there’s Ray Forbes, also of Inverness, who carves one-of-a-kind, functional mini sailboats that retail starting at around $250. “He’s an off-the-grid craftsman who makes the most delicate and refined pieces of sculpture—and that take a ton of time to make,” Brooks says. “We love handmade, we love vintage and we love new stuff,” she adds, “but mostly we just love community. We’re proud to be representing people who are making things.”Y The Shop, 9960 Highway One, Olema; theshopolema.com—Tom Gogola
lilah b.
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It’s only natural that a natural cosmetic brand Co-owner and maker at The Shop, Liz Lavoie. would come out of Sausalito, where bay views and gorgeous hills give way to thoughts on wellness some strings, tapped into some and bliss. It’s even more natural that professional relationships—and lilah the lilah b. products are shaped like b. was born. The formulations are pebbles—round and asymmetrical. made and produced in Milan, and Open such a white, slick pebble, and the packaging is inspired by Italian inside are silky foundations, bronzers beaches. “I wanted the products to and pops of color that double as cheek look and feel organic and peaceful,” and lip tint. she explains. What’s inside matters, Natural cosmetic lines—no too—lilah b. products swap artificial animal testing, no parabens and preservatives and synthetic fragrances sulfates—are all the rage these days, for agar and aloe, and Yannotti Foland far beyond Marin County. Beauty swears by their “healthy, high-end, giant Sephora lists more than 20 of high-performance formulations.” You them—some are international stars can't launch a product in California like Josie Maran and bareMinerals, and slip on the healthy selling point. while others are niche and hail from As with any well-planned, modernas far as Hungary and South Africa. day venture, solid branding is ever The saturated market doesn’t scare present—lip and cheek colors, ranging founder Cheryl Yannotti Foland, from blush pink to look-at-me coral, whose resume includes more than a are named b.sassy, b.darling and so on, decade of consulting on marketing playing on the brand’s name, which is and branding to huge names such as borrowed from a “very inspirational Benefit and Urban Decay. friend.” Foundation names explore the Ten years ago, as she moved theme further, mobilizing somewhat from New York to San Francisco new-age, and some might say, very and started working with smaller, Californian adjectives—b.natural, independent brands in California, b.pure, b.classic. Effortless and fastYannotti Foland aimed to strip down talking, Yannotti Foland happily her beauty routine and de-clutter embodies lilah b.’s credo—she splits her makeup bag, realizing that “you her time between Sausalito and tend to gravitate to these two, three Napa, and frequently enjoys the special products that will give you an health benefits of running, yoga, amazing look as you’re rushing out fresh produce and other Californian the door.” perks. Not finding what she was looking Yet, not unlike Silicon Valley for on the shelves, Yannotti Foland entrepreneurs, she dreams put her experience to work, pulled »12 big—lilah b. just launched
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fishing reels, old binoculars and camera gear—and a notable collection of old typewriters, which are found in all corners of the store. Schwartz also makes jewelry from old typewriter keys. The quirky factor finds a voice of sorts in the shelves themselves: The post office survived the infamous 1906 earthquake, but the wall-in shelves wound up on a permanent slant after the fact. Hey, it adds character. “We don’t put marbles on those shelves,” Brooks says with a laugh. They do, however, offer five-cent pieces of Double Bubble Gum to the kids. Another anchor product comes from LaVoie: The store is peppered inside and out with simple stencil designs of surfers (and others) rendered on repurposed grape-drying trays; those retail for around $90. Visitors to The Shop are heartily encouraged to hang around until they’ve uncovered every choice niblet of functional nostalgia, utility and the handmade on display here. Oh look, a metal box filled with old matchbooks! Jewelry fashioned from beach flotsam and jetsam, cool. Delicious fudge offered in an old fruit jar, yum. Handmade beaded jewelry and leather bracelets from Sister Sue—beautiful. Brooks tells the story of a recent visitor who was somewhat blown away by the offerings: A 9-year-old walked in and shouted, “I didn’t even know places like this existed! Why didn’t anyone tell me?!” Tell your friends, tell everyone. Brooks says that the shop aims to find appeal with “people who lost luggage at the airport,” to general-issue tourists, locals looking for art and wares to decorate the yurt and whomever else happens to be blowing in with the wind up and down Highway One. The utilitarian emphasis is represented in new products on offer, such as those cool and French-made Opinel knives—they can shuck an oyster, open a bottle of wine or dust off some mushrooms lickety-split. The kind of functional beauty embodied in the knives, says Brooks, “takes away the preciousness factor” that might otherwise run rampant in a boutique-barnyard hybrid such as this. But it’s the well-curated handmade stuff that drives the aesthetic here. The store offers consignments for wares that represent “a new kind of craft that is combining good design with an emphasis on the way it is put together—color, texture, quality, style as fun, beautiful, durable products,” says a cheery Brooks. At the functional end, supple and
Samir Neffati
joint is positively bustling today. Score! A young man of obvious means emerges with a pair of vintage California license plates tucked under his arm. There’s a whole crate of them out back, if you take the time to look. Take the time—it’s worth it. The Shop found its genesis in Fairfax several years ago when a quartet of West Marin women artisans took over the former Good Earth parking garage. “We did a pop-up mercantile that lasted two years,” says Brooks, where she, her partner Val Yandell, Liz Lavoie and Michele Schwartz made stuff, gathered stuff and sold stuff. When the Good Earth building was sold, the women scoped out the Olema property, which last housed an art gallery. An old-time print behind the cash register shows the building— the original Olema post office—as it was way-back-when. Together, the women set out to curate a retail joint that offered and emphasized a particularized aesthetic. The gist is utility with style, preferably repurposed, salvaged or otherwise gathered from the beach, the woods or some old barn somewhere. And, where possible, Brooks says the women set out to keep the preciousness factor at a bare minimum. Preferably, none at all. This is, after all, rugged and wild— and quirky—West Marin. The resultant shop is itself a fascinating set-piece of intersecting interests and emphases—wander around awhile and it emerges as a holistic manifestation of a group vision. It’s a crossroads boutique nestled in the wilderness, with a functional conceit best described as “general purveyor at your service”: The Shop angles to fill the various and sundryseeking needs of the many whom roll through this tourist turnoff. One section of The Shop features lots of kids’ toys, but also Schwartz’s exquisitely soft and luxe cashmere creations, hats, ponchos and scarves repurposed from previous couture incarnations. Elsewhere, vintage hand tools share shelf space with soft and supple handmade Sundog T-shirts that depict old maps of Mt. Tamalpais and other iconic outposts. There are hand-printed greeting cards from Bolinas’ Sirima Sataman, jewelry from Fairfax’s Sarah Roberston and T-shirts and bags with the shop logo, to go along with that baseball cap. The vintage-cool offerings take the form of old tools, vintage flannel shirts, paint-dappled coveralls, old
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Local motion «11 at a couple of Ron Robinson boutiques in Santa Monica and Los Angeles, and there’s more to come. “I’m very particular about my retailers, their location, audience and what they represent,” Yannotti Foland explains. She is currently in talks with additional retailers in Northern California, as well as on the East Coast, and a top-secret spa collaboration is in the works. At the same time, the products already sell at the company’s online store— the selection is as minimalistic as the package, but new shades and products will appear each season, Yannotti Foland promises. “California is so ahead on everything, from food to beauty,” she says, when asked about the benefits of the local market. Now, there’s homebased packaged glow to match all of those healthy, forward-thinking, local faces.Y lilah b., 415/729-9974; lilahbeauty.com—Flora Tsapovsky
Clutch Monkey There’s something very wrong about throwing your leg over a vintage motorcycle wearing a pair of Dockers. It’s not only fashion suicide, it’s not smart. Riding a bike requires a heavy-duty pair of trousers built to withstand hot tail pipes, flying gravel and high-speed asphalt encounters. Jeans are the pants of choice for most self-respecting bikers, but
as Bodega vintage motorcyclist enthusiast Marc Bencivenga discovered, there’s not a lot of heavy-weight denim on the market, especially when you’re 6’3” and 260 pounds of badass biker (note to self: make sure you spell Bencivenga correctly). “There wasn’t anything out there,” Bencivenga says. “That was the inspiration for Clutch Monkey. There was an unmet need.” Clutch Monkey makes burly, selvedge denim jeans and vests for bikers and those who appreciate bulletproof denim. Selvedge is heavy, stiff (at first) denim made on shuttle looms that fell out of favor when denim went mainstream in the 1950s. Newer, projectile looms make more denim, faster and cheaper, but from a durability standpoint it’s inferior to selvedge. Selvedge is made in tightly woven strips of heavy fabric that are finished with tightly woven bands down each side, which prevent fraying and unraveling. Turns out that there is only one mill in the U.S. that makes selvedge to Clutch Monkey’s standards: North Carolina’s Cone Mills. Clutch Monkey also sources its selvedge from Japanese mills that use retooled Draper and Toyota looms. “The Japanese put out the best selvedge on the planet,” Bencivenga says. Clutch Monkey jeans and vests are designed in Bodega and sewn in San
From homemade T-shirts (The Shop, top), to natural cosmetics (lilah b., bottom left) to handmade clay works (NBC Pottery, bottom right), the North Bay has it all.
Francisco’s last denim factory. (The factory is in such high demand that Bencivenga was asked not to divulge its name. Top-secret denim!) As a revival product, selvedge is often expensive, but Clutch Monkey sells most of its goods via crowd funding campaigns and thereby offers it at near-wholesale prices because a production run only begins with cash from backers on hand. No marketing or sales are required, although they lean heavily on Facebook and Instagram. “All the marketing comes to us in real dollars,” Bencivenga says. “People pay for what they believe in.” If you want to handle a pair of Clutch Monkey jeans or a vest for yourself, get on your bad motor scooter and ride to the newly opened Soul Riders in Santa Rosa (404 Mendocino Ave., 707/978-3819), the company’s only retail outlet. Opened by former Brotherhood skate shop owner Kurt Hurley, Soul Riders specializes in Southern California beach culture ware in the form of surf, skate, hot rod fashions and reissues of classic skateboard decks, along with a bin of vintage vinyl in the rear. But Hurley is excited to carry Clutch Monkey denim as the one nod to the North Bay. “The jeans will outlive you,” he says.Y Clutch Monkey, clutchmonkey. com—Stett Holbrook
dhbetty
Spokes, cogs, chains, fenders, rims and valves are all used by Christine Culver, owner of dhbetty Bicycle Gems, in creating jewelry from upcycled bicycle parts. “It’s all about the bicycles,” says the artist, who designs bracelets, earrings, glass pendants and necklaces. Dhbetty Bicycle Gems was the first business to connect with North Bay Made. Culver, a long time cyclist, began her passion for the bicycle in her late teens when she started racing professionally. She moved up to Sonoma County to work at a bike shop and continue bike racing. Culver’s bike love led her to take on a position as executive director of the Bicycle Coalition in Santa Rosa. The group advocates for better bicycle access throughout Sonoma County. “I got involved as a volunteer, then got myself on the board and created a job for myself,” she says. While Culver was running the bike organization, she began creating her jewelry. “The thing that really kicked off
this whole doing-the-jewelry-withthe-bicycle-focus is I just wanted a pendant with a bicycle on it, “she says. “Everything I was finding was really chintzy. It started a quest for looking for one and then finally I started making them.” Bike shops and the Santa Rosa Cycling Club all donate retired bicycle parts for their next lives as jewelry. Culver sells her jewelry at bike-based events, local retailers and the Clif Family Winery in St. Helena.Y dhbetty Bicycle Gems; dhbetty.com —Haley Bollinger
NBC Pottery
Settled in the mountains above St. Helena in the small town of Angwin, husband and wife duo Will and Nikki Callnan create intimately crafted clay works that are redefining everything from plates and vases to sculptures with an emphasis on the rugged beauty inspired by their North Bay surroundings. Under the name NBC Pottery, (named after Nikki Ballere Callnan), the pair specializes in custom-made wares made for private customers, as well as restaurants and wineries throughout the area. “We’ve been in clay and creating as long as we can remember,” Will Callnan says. The two met while studying fine art at Sierra Nevada College in Lake Tahoe. Originally from the East Coast, Will says that they decided to stay and work in California because of the natural wonder of the area, and that’s reflected in their one-of-akind clay works. If you’ve ever dined in the Restaurant at Meadowood in St. Helena, you’ve eaten off of their plates. Often resembling organic materials such as bark or mushrooms, the colorful and unique clay highlights chef Christopher Kostow’s singular cuisine. “They were looking for something different,” Will says. “With each piece, we want to show the qualities of the material.” The unique, flexible qualities of the clay are also on display. In their vessels, vases and bottles, they mimic the fluid movements of waterfalls and birds taking flight. With a world of influence right outside their home studio, Will, Nikki, their young son Gavin, and newest addition Evie, are happy to host guests for a studio visit. Their custom wares are available for order or commission online as well as directly from their studio location.Y NBC Pottery, 707/965-1007; www. nbcpottery.com—Charlie Swanson
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Brothers Graham (left) and Adam Driver are committed to sourcing products directly from farms and small companies.
FOOD & DRINK
Beyond expectations
Brothers behind Sausalito’s Driver’s Market get more than they dreamed of
Meet Ryan Fazenbaker, the founder of Juice It Up. Ryan has a passion for sustainable food systems and supports farmers through his business. Juice It Up sources most of its produce from the market. Ryan purchases organic when available and follows the seasonal varieties of fruits and veggies to create his vibrant juices. “The goal is to offer tasty food that is a healthy alternative.” Come try out one of these rejuvenating juices at our Marin Civic Center Farmers Market on Thursdays.
By Tanya Henry
I
t’s obvious from the “Good mornings,” smiles and nods that Adam and Graham Driver receive from customers walking into their natural and organic grocery store at 200 Caledonia Street that folks are pleased that they are there. After just two years, 35-year-old Adam and his younger brother (by one year) have doubled sales and staff at their Sausalito-based Driver’s Market. “Everything about the store is bigger than we thought it would be,” says Adam, who seems a bit awestruck that the small neighborhood staple— which won the 2014 Business of the Year award from the Sausalito Chamber of Commerce—has become exactly what they hoped it would be and more. Neither brother had imagined that their days would be filled with sourcing products from local purveyors and restocking 100 percent organic produce and bulk food sections. After studying theater, Adam moved to Los Angeles from Ann Arbor, Michigan, and landed acting gigs wherever he could find them. By 2005 he was burnt out and moved to Sausalito, taking a job at the Real Food Company (where Driver’s is today) and began working as a produce-buyer for $12 an hour. Soon he was co-managing the store, but frustrated that he was
unable to implement changes, as the owners were off-site and not invested in making improvements. Before quitting in 2010, Adam began taking business classes at the College of Marin and working on a business plan for his own market. During a pickup basketball game, he serendipitously met Paul Geffner, a longtime Sausalito resident and entrepreneur who had opened Escape from New York Pizza in the mid’80s in San Francisco. The two men became friends, and in 2011 they, along with family members, opened Driver’s Market in the 100-year-old building that had housed grocery stores since the mid-’70s. In the meantime, Graham had left Ann Arbor after completing degrees in photography and psychology and was living with their older brother in Ashland, Oregon. It didn’t take much convincing to get both brothers to Sausalito to help Adam and Paul embark on building a new kind of market. “We had to completely gut the place and get all new electrical and plumbing,” says Adam, who adds that it threw his business plan off by about 100 percent. But he also notes that they have already surpassed their 50year projections. “Our number one goal is to push the industry forward,” Graham says. “If we can have a store that doesn’t source from ‘big food,’ we will.”✹
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AIM Farmers Markets
Advice Q:
By Amy Alkon
Goddess
I have a great circle of female friends, but one of “the group” has a way of making backhanded comments about my appearance that make me feel bad about myself. Her latest topic is my breasts and how much smaller they are than hers. Incredibly, she manages to work this into any conversation—exercising, fashion, shopping, camping. If I confronted her, I know she’d act as though she’s been paying me compliments. (“But you’re SO lucky to have small boobs!”) How can I get her to stop?—Annoyed
A:
Stopping her would be easier if you two were guys: “I don’t like the way you’re talking about my boobs, Marjorie. Let’s take this outside.” But while men will sock each other in the bar parking lot (and can sometimes go back in and have a beer), women engage in what anthropologists call “covert aggression”—attacks that are hard to pinpoint as attacks, like gossip, social exclusion and stabbing another woman in the self-worth. (“Stabracadabra!”—you’re bleeding out, but nobody but you can tell!) Psychologist Anne Campbell, like others who study female competition, explains that women seem to have evolved to avoid physical confrontation, which would endanger their ability to have children or fulfill their role as an infant’s principal caregiver. (Ancestral Daddy couldn’t exactly run up to the store for baby formula.) So while guys will engage in put-down fests as a normal part of guy-ness, even women’s verbal aggression is usually sneaky and often comes Halloween-costumed as compliments or concern: “Ooh, honey, do you need some Clearasil for those bumps on your chest?” The tarted-up put-down is a form of psychological manipulation—a sly way of making a woman feel bad about herself so she’ll self-locate lower on the totem pole. And because men have visually driven sexuality, women specialize in knocking other women where it really hurts—their looks. Like those supposedly minuscule boobs of yours. (Right … you’ll have a latte, and she’ll just have another mug of your tears.) The next time that she, say, turns a trip to the mall into a riff—“Har-har … Victoria’s Secret is that they don’t carry your size!—pull her aside. (In a group of women, conflict resolution is most successful when it’s as covert as female aggression—as in, not recognizable as fighting back.) By not letting the others hear, you remove the emotionally radioactive element of shaming. This helps keep your defense from being perceived as an attack on her—yes, making you the bad guy. Simply tell her—calmly but firmly: “These mentions of my boobs are not working for me. You need to stop.” Be prepared for the antithesis of accountability—a response like, “Gawd … chill” or “I have no idea what you’re talking about.” But she’ll know exactly what you’re talking about, which is that you’ve just become a poor choice of victim. She may float a remark or two to test your resolve, so be prepared to repeat your warning—calmly but firmly—until she starts acting like just one of the girls instead of yet another breast man.
Q:
I’m a successful lawyer in my late 40s doing online dating. I’m active in the Republican Party and philanthropic causes, so I often go to benefit dinners, for which I typically buy two tickets in advance. I’ve asked two women I met online to come to these as a first date, but both canceled by text at the last minute. (The dinner yesterday was $1,000 a plate and for a political cause that means a lot to me.) Maybe I’m just attracting rude women, but I’m beginning to wonder whether I’m doing something wrong.—Empty Chairs
A:
You can learn a lot about a woman on the first date—like that she still hasn’t worked out her drinking problem and that she doesn’t always like to wear panties. Ideally, you find these things out while seated across from her at Starbucks, and not after she climbs on the table at a benefit and starts doing some sort of fertility dance with the centerpiece. Sure, it seems convenient when your need for a plus-one coincides with your desire to go on a first date with some online hottie. But you’re better off coming up with a list of attractive female friends you can take or even male friends who share your politics or just enjoy free meals enough to not challenge your tablemates to a duel over theirs. Not taking a woman you barely know is also an important business safeguard—so that when some conservative client of yours turns to your date and asks, “So how do you two know each other?” he won’t hear something like, “We met in the ‘Republicans Who Like Hot Wax Play’ chat room on Christian Mingle.” Y Worship the goddess—or sacrifice her at the altar at pacificsun.com
Joy Phoenix
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Artist Joel Yau works on a street painting titled, 'Lady with Venetian Mask.'
ARTS
Chalking it up
Artists to brighten the streets of San Rafael By Molly Oleson
‘T
he first time I saw it, it was just kind of mind-boggling,” says local artist Joel Yau, of walking through San Rafael streets that had been transformed to masterpieces by artists toting colorful sticks of chalk. “Art on the street? In two days? Really?!” One stroll, 15 years ago, through the Italian Street Painting Marin event—an annual, two-day tradition that honors the street painters of Italy—and Yau was hooked. Since that first encounter, he’s collaborated on countless 12 ft. by 12 ft. pieces with friends, and has branched out on his own to dream up work for street painting festivals in cities across the country, as well as in places like Mexico, Germany and the Netherlands. This weekend, Yau will join more than 100 artists, or Madonnari (street painters), for the event, which was created in 1994 by Sue and Joe Carlomagno, after the art form first appeared in Santa Barbara in 1987. “It’s their baby; it’s the passion,” Yau says of the couple, noting that they’ve traveled around the world to seek out painters and bring them to Marin. “They really champion the artists.” Yau credits Kurt Wenner, an American artist who spent half his life in Italy, for bringing pavement art to the streets of America. “He’s really the godfather of street painting, and perhaps an art form,” Yau says, noting Wenner’s impressive and
popular 3D work, which appears and then disappears on pavement around the world. Although many disagree about where street painting first began— some say Florence, and others Venice—it is believed that the Madonnari date back to 13th century Italy. Last year’s event in Marin featured street painters illustrating California in the 1940s, and this weekend, Carnevale di Venezia will be the theme. In addition to talented local and international artists, visitors can expect a lively parade of costumes featuring models in Venetian cloaks, and elaborate masks made by Novato artist Veronica Venezia DeMartini. One of Yau’s favorite parts about painting on the pavement en plein air is the dialogue that happens between artists and onlookers. Yau, who is finalizing sketches for this year’s Carnival theme, says that he even invites the most curious admirers to crouch down with him and lend a hand if they like. “It really is something,” he says. Y The Italian Street Painting Marin festival, a program of the EveryLife Foundation for Rare Diseases, takes place on Saturday, June 27 from 10am to 8pm, and on Sunday, June 28 from 10am to 6pm at 5th and A streets in downtown San Rafael. Tickets are $5 on Saturday and $10 on Sunday; children 12 and under are free. For more information, call 415/884-2423, or visit italianstreetpaintingmarin.org.
TALKING PICTURES
The thrill of the hunt North Bay geologist Susan Panttaja decodes San Andreas By David Templeton
‘T
he absolute best thing about San Andreas was Paul Giamatti,” says North Bay geologist and junior college teacher of earth science Susan Panttaja, “because he was so obviously a really good scientist, and in movies like San Andreas, the scientists are not always very good scientists.” San Andreas, the city-rattling blockbuster in which the state of California suffers the biggest recorded earthquake in history, might star action hero Dwayne Johnson (aka “The Rock”) as the film’s steady heart and soul, but it’s Paul Giamatti who provides the movie’s brains. As Cal Tech geophysicist Lawrence Hayes, Giamatti gets to deliver the most intelligent lines, which are pretty much the only intelligent lines in a film that’s riddled with cringe-worthy dialogue but loaded with jawdropping special effects. From Los Angeles to San Francisco,
every major landmark we’ve seen on postcards is either dented, destroyed or seriously threatened— though why Coit Tower survives when the rest of the city crumbles is never explained. Perhaps Panttaja can explain it. She has a knack for taking complex scientific principles and decoding them so that even regular folks can understand. It was once said of her during a science hike in the San Andreas Fault Zone at Point Reyes, “She knows what a rock is thinking.” I confess that I was the one who said that. Panttaja, in addition to being brilliant and insightful, also happens to be my wife. “Part of what makes Paul Giamatti a believable scientist in this movie,” she says, “is the sense he gives at the beginning, before the earthquakes have begun, when he’s displaying that thrillof-the-hunt thing that scientists have when they are working on a problem. The actual science they were doing—something about
Giamatti, in fact, gets to utter what Panttaja believes is the best, most useful lines in the whole film. “The truest, realest thing in San Andreas is when Giamatti says, ‘Take cover, and hold on!’” she says with a laugh. “He tells people what to do when an earthquake happens. Take cover. Hold on. I loved that, and he said it with so many levels of emotion. It takes a great actor to say, ‘Take cover and hold on,’ and make it scary, comforting and beautiful all at once. I just love that character so much. “The rest of the movie,” she goes on, “was kind of ridiculous. Like that huge trench near Bakersfield—that was supposed to be the San Andreas Fault? Really? I don’t think so. That just wouldn’t happen. Were talking about a strike-slip fault. The 1906 quake did have ground shift and separate like that, but for very short distances. We’re not going to see gaping holes in the Earth that run for miles and miles so you can’t drive far enough in either direction to get around it.” Of course, it does give “The Rock” a chance to steal a plane to fly over the trench on his way to save his daughter from a collapsed building in San Francisco, where Coit Tower is still standing. “I’m glad the murals in the tower were saved,” Panttaja says, “but I really think Coit Tower would go down; at least it would in an earthquake big enough to cause all that other damage.” And don’t even get Panttaja started on the tsunami that hits the city in the latter part of the film. “You need vertical displacement to get a tsunami,” she says. “A strike-slip fault is lateral displacement, not vertical, so a tsunami hitting the city after a quake on the San Andreas Fault— that would never happen.” That scientific impossibility aside, as disaster movies go, Panttaja confesses that she had a good time with San Andreas. “I must admit it was lots of fun,” she says, adding that, with sales of earthquake supplies having increased by 300 percent following the release of the movie, “Maybe we need a ridiculous disaster movie every three or four years, just to make people think about what they’d do in an emergency. “And besides,” Panttaja says with a laugh, “sometimes it’s just good fun, and maybe even a little cathartic, to watch everything fall down and go boom.”Y
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In ‘San Andreas,’ California suffers the biggest recorded earthquake in history.
electromagnetic pulses as a way to predict earthquakes—that was very reasonable science. And yet, he and his collaborator were so thrilled and excited when they started getting results, and then they took off on this adventure to get more data, to go and look at stuff, which is a lot of what science is. It’s looking at stuff. The joy of the science they were doing was so believable and fun to watch. I’ve seen that a million times. “A lot of people think scientists are boring and serious,” she adds, “but as a scientist myself, I’d say that one of the best things about science is the excitement of the lab, with all the grad students scurrying around in the cramped little offices, and the incredible joy that happens when you’re pulling the data together and starting to see a pattern, and then you just want to run out and get more data. It feels like the best thing in the world, and I thought it rang really true in this movie.” Ultimately, Panttaja observes, what’s most moving about Giamatti’s character—“mild spoiler alert ahead”—is that he loses his partner when the quakes start happening, and that loss, pardon the pun, shakes him up pretty badly. “It happens,” Panttaja says. “Science can be dangerous. Certain scientists do take risks, certain geologists go out and investigate things where there are very real dangers. I think of the scientists who died at Mount St. Helens when it erupted. We do occasionally put ourselves in dangerous places to do what we do.” Though Panttaja’s current work is rarely more hazardous than her drive on 101 to Santa Rosa Junior College, she did her graduate work in Antarctica, where she scaled mountains, dangled into crevasses and trekked through sub-zero temperatures. “Geologists do die doing their work,” she acknowledges. “They get injured. But they also work as safely as they can. They are not reckless, but they are trying to figure something out, and sometimes that means you lose a good scientist, as happens in the film. I thought Giamatti’s reaction to that was one of the best things in the movie. And when he recognizes that there’s going to be another quake, having just lost somebody, all of that grief turns to heart, and he starts doing everything he can to save people. His humanity comes out in the movie, beautifully, I think.”
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HHHH
A MASTERPIECE!”
“
– Mara Reinstein,
“ONE OF THE YEAR’S BEST FILMS. Funny, hip, touching and UTTERLY IRRESISTIBLE.” – Lou Lumenick,
In ‘A Little Chaos,’ Kate Winslet plays a talented landscape designer who is building a garden at Versailles.
FILM
The Constant Gardener Director Alan Rickman stars as Louis XIV in A Little Chaos By Richard von Busack EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENTS
NOW PLAYING
MILL VALLEY SAN RAFAEL CinéArts Sequoia Century Regency (415) 388-1190 (415) 479-6496
MARIN SHAKESPEARE COMPANY 2015 SEASON - June 26 - September 27 TICKETS:
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06/26
2 COL. ( 3.45" ) X 5" ALL.MED.0626.TPS Cymbeline
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W
e’re at the creation of Versailles in 1682. Here we find much flarednostril romance between Kate Winslet as the garden designer Sabine de Barra, a gloveless worker who grubs and prunes, and Matthias Schoenaerts as André Le Notre, the stern official landscape architect. What impedes the courtship in A Little Chaos is Sabine’s longstanding trauma over the way she was widowed. More trouble comes from the objections of the witchily unfaithful Madame Le Notre (frequent villainess Helen McCrory). King Louis XIV (director and cowriter Alan Rickman) moved to an estate carved out of swampland, the better to escape the Parisian mobs. The film suggests this move as a semi-religious mission, the seeking of a “window into perfection.” Rickman directs in a way that the king himself—who was only about 40 at the time—is the center of this film. The romantic dialogue is badly stilted. If there’s chaos here, it’s
a chaos of accents, most of them British. The best scenes are the ones that Rickman reserves for himself and Winslet. His majesty has a pleasingly candid friendship with the lady. Winslet’s curves and untidy golden hair are flattered by the outfits. She looks businesslike, ever-weary, with heavy eyelids and parted lips. Maybe she’s just shortwinded from the tight corsets. It is always fun watching other people work, but the landscape plans aren’t quite clear and Schoenaerts is too grim to fantasize about. Still, the supporting work is adept. Jennifer Ehle is beguiling as the discarded royal favorite Madame de Montespan. Stanely Tucci is the King’s well-liked homosexual brother “Monsieur” who frets about life in the country (“Muck, or beasts making muck …”). Rupert Penry-Jones stands out as an ironical chevalier, taking Sabine on her first tour of court; he has such suaveness, one wonders why Sabine doesn’t run off with him instead of with her lovesick Le Notre. Y
By Matthew Stafford
Wed. June 24 - Tues. June 30
About Elly (1:59) Moody suspense thriller about a group of vacationing friends whose seemingly innocent lies and deceptions lead to a child’s mysterious disappearance. Charlie’s Country (1:48) Aging aborigine David Gulpilil, fed up with the modern world and its invasive white culture, heads into the Outback to rediscover the old ways. The Connection (2:15) Transatlantic cousin to “The French Connection” (based on the same true-life events) follows a dogged Marseilles cop as he takes on the biggest drug cartel in history. Dope (1:52) Sundance fave about a geeky teen who attains utter coolness during a wild night at an underground party. Entourage (1:45) Studio head Jeremy Piven, movie star Andrian Grenier and their sleazy band of boozers and bimbos hit the big screen, moving and shaking their way through the Hollywood jungle. Far from the Madding Crowd (1:59) Thomas Vinterberg directs a sumptuous new version of the earthy Thomas Hardy novel; Carey Mulligan stars as headstrong, passionate Bathsheba Everdene. Gemma Bovery (1:39) Cheeky comedy about a young British expat in rural France who begins to live the life of Flaubert’s heroine. The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared (1:54) Darkly comic Swedish mega-hit about a seen-it-all centenarian who escapes from his retirement home with a cache of drug money, cops and crooks in hot pursuit. I’ll See You in My Dreams (1:32) Widow Blythe Danner begins a new life with friends old and new, a newly disestranged daughter and hunky beau Sam Elliott; Mary Kay Place costars. Inside Out (1:42) Pixar cartoon about the five conflicting emotions guiding a young girl through the vagaries of life; Lewis Black voices Anger. In the Name of My Daughter (1:56) True-life French crime thriller based on the unsolved case of a casino owner’s daughter who disappeared 30 years ago amid rumors of crooked croupiers and the Mob; Catherine Deneuve stars. Iris (1:18) Documentarian extraordinaire Albert Maysles trains his camera on the flamboyant Iris Apfel, the 93-year-old style maven who continues to dominate New York’s fashion scene. Jurassic World (2:04) As gate receipts at the dino DNA amusement park peter, backers cook up a new (less cuddly) attraction…uh-oh. Kiss Me Kate 3D (1:50) Dazzling three-dimensional version of the great Cole Porter musical features Ann Miller, Bob Fosse and other top talent taking on Shakespeare’s “Taming of the Shrew.” A Little Chaos (1:53) Sumptuous period piece stars Kate Winslet as a 17th century landscape architect and Alan Rickman as Louis XIV, her number-one client. Love & Mercy (2:00) Biopic stars Paul Dano and John Cusack as mercurial Beach Boy extraordinaire Brian Wilson; Elizabeth Banks costars. Macbeth (1:47) Orson Welles’ atmospheric, low-budget, German Expressionist take on the Bard’s moody horror show. Mad Max: Fury Road (2:00) Part 4 of the post-apocalyptic saga finds Tom Hardy hooking up with Charlize Theron, on the run
from a savage warlord; George Miller directs, of course. Magic Mike Double Feature (3:45) Catch “Magic Mike” and “Magic Mike XXL” for one relatively low admission price. Magic Mike XXL (1:55) The stripper kings of Tampa, Florida cook up one last no-holdsbarred performance before they retire for good. The Mask You Live In (1:30) Documentary looks at how our skewed concept of masculinity has had a negative impact on men, boys and society as a whole; Jennifer Siebel Newsom directs. Max (1:51) A military dog home from Afghanistan bonds with the grieving family of his dead handler. Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (1:44) An awkward teen learns about life when he spends quality time with a classmate recently diagnosed with cancer. National Theatre London: The Audience (2:15) Peter Morgan’s new play imagines the weekly conversations Elizabeth II has had with every PM from Churchill to Cameron during the 60 years of her reign; Helen Mirren revisits her Oscar-winning role as the Queen. The Overnight (1:20) Swinger comedy focuses on two couples who get to know each other more than they thought they would during one lascivious drug-fueled evening. The Penguins of Madagascar (1:32) Cartoon caper comedy about a waddle of penguin superspies on a mission to save the world from John Malkovich. Pitch Perfect 2 (1:55) The Barden Bellas are back and bowed but not broken after a disastrous concert at Lincoln Center; Anna Kendrick and Hailee Steinfeld star. The Salt of the Earth (1:49) Wim Wenders’ documentary pays tribute to the photographs of Sebastião Salgado and his primary subjects: suffering humanity and the beauty of the Earth. San Andreas (1:54) The Big One finally rocks California into rack and rubble; luckily, Dwayne Johnson is around to rescue his estranged daughter. Spy (2:00) Comedy thriller stars Melissa McCarthy as a CIA analyst who has to go undercover when top agents Jude Law and Jason Statham go missing. Ted 2 (1:55) The foulmouthed teddy bear is back and trying to prove in court that he’s worthy of Amanda Seyfried’s hand in marriage. Testament of Youth (2:09) Vera Brittain’s classic memoir of WWI hits the big screen with Alicia Vikander as the shattered, lovelorn heroine. Wild Tales (2:02) Rollicking Best Foreign Film Oscar nominee dovetails six morality tales of lust, greed and anger in modern-day Argentina. Terminator Genisys (2:02) With future forces converging on beleaguered A.D. 1984, it’s up to a humble sergeant to reset a dangerously fractured time-space continuum; Arnold Schwarzenegger stars, of course. When Marnie Was There (1:43) Winsome anime about a lonely orphan girl who discovers friendship in a seaside village. The Wolfpack (1:24) Eye-opening documentary about the Angulo brothers, six home-schooled Manhattan shut-ins with no experience of the outside world except the movies they study and imitate.
About Elly (Not Rated) • Charlie’s Country (Not Rated) The Connection (R) Dope (R) Entourage (R) Far from the Madding Crowd (PG-13) • Gemma Bovery (R) The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared (R) I’ll See You in My Dreams (PG-13)
Inside Out (PG)
In the Name of My Daughter (R) Iris (PG-13) Jurassic World (PG-13)
• Kiss Me Kate 3D (Not Rated) • A Little Chaos (R) Love & Mercy (PG-13)
• Macbeth (Not Rated) Mad Max: Fury Road (R) • Magic Mike Double Feature (R) • Magic Mike XXL (R) The Mask You Live In (Not Rated) • Max (PG) Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (PG-13) National Theatre London: The Audience (Not Rated) • The Overnight (R)
• The Penguins of Madagascar (PG) Pitch Perfect 2 (PG-13) The Salt of the Earth (Not Rated) San Andreas (PG-13) Spy (R) Ted 2 (R)
• Terminator Genisys (PG-13) Testament of Youth (PG-13)
• When Marnie Was There (PG) Wild Tales (R) The Wolfpack (R)
Lark: Mon 3; Wed 5:45 Lark: Sat 4:45; Mon 5:50 Lark: Fri, Tue 8:30 Northgate: Fri-Mon 11:40, 2:20, 5, 7:40, 10:10 Northgate: Fri-Mon 11:25, 2, 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 Lark: Sat 7:25; Thu 5:45 Regency: Fri-Sat 11:20, 1:55, 4:35, 7:15, 9:50; Sun-Thu 11:20, 1:55, 4:35, 7:15 Lark: Fri 5:45; Tue 3:35 Marin: Fri-Sat 1:40, 4:15, 7:15, 9:35; Sun 1:40, 4:15, 7:15; MonTue 1:45, 4:35, 7:30 Regency: Fri-Sat 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10; SunThu 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30 Fairfax: Fri-Mon 1, 1:45, 3:30, 4:15, 6:05, 7:05, 3D showtimes at 12, 2:30, 4:55, 7:30; Tue 1, 1:45, 3:30, 4:15, 7:05, 3D showtimes at 12, 2:30, 4:55 Marin: Fri-Sat 2, 7, 3D showtimes at 4:30, 9:30; Sun 2, 7, 3D showtimes at 4:30; Mon-Tue 2, 7:15, 3D showtime at 4:30 Northgate: Fri-Mon 10:55, 12:45, 1:40, 4:20, 6:10, 7, 9:40; 3D showtimes at 11:50, 2:35, 3:30, 5:10, 7:55, 8:50, 10:30 Playhouse: Fri-Sat 12:30, 1:30, 3:30, 4:30, 6:45, 8, 9:30; Sun-Tue 12:30, 1:30, 3:30, 4:30, 6:45, 8 Lark: Mon 8:30 Lark: Sun 3:35; Tue 6:20 Fairfax: Fri-Mon 12:15, 1:15, 3:25, 4:30, 6:55, 8, 9:50; Tue 12:15, 1:15, 3:25, 4:30, 8 Northgate: Fri-Mon 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 9:15, 10:15; 3D showtimes at 11:15, 12:15, 2:15, 3:15, 5:15, 6:15, 8:15 Playhouse: Fri-Sat 1, 4, 7, 9:45; Sun-Tue 1, 4, 7 Sequoia: Fri-Sat 1:30, 7:30, 3D showtimes at 4:30, 10:25; Sun 7:30, 3D showtimes at 1:30, 4:30; Mon-Tue 7; 3D showtime at 4:30 Rafael: 4:30 daily Rafael: Fri-Sun, Wed-Thu 1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:45; Mon-Tue 4, 6:15, 8:45 Regency: Fri-Sat 10:25, 1:15, 4:05, 7, 10:05; Sun-Thu 10:25, 1:15, 4:05, 7 Sequoia: Fri-Sat 1:10, 4:05, 7, 9:55; Sun 1:10, 4:05, 7; Mon-Tue 4:05, 7 Rafael: Sun 7 Northgate: Fri-Mon 11:20, 4:55, 10:30 Northgate: Tue 4:45 Fairfax: Tue 7, 9:40 Northgate: Tue 7, 9:45 Rowland: Tue 7, 9:45 Lark: Thu 3:30 Northgate: Fri-Mon 11:10, 1:55, 4:35, 7:20, 10 Regency: Fri-Sat 10:25, 11:30, 1, 2:10, 3:40, 4:50, 6:30, 7:40, 9:10, 10:20; Sun-Thu 10:25, 11:30, 1, 2:10, 3:40, 4:50, 6:30, 7:40 Lark: Sat 1 Rafael: Fri 2:30, 4:15, 7:30 (star Jason Schwartzman via Skype at 7:30 show); Sat-Sun, Wed-Thu 2:30, $;15, 7, 9; Mon-Tue 4:15, 7, 9 Rowland: Tue, Thu 10am Northgate: Fri-Mon 2:10, 7:45 Lark: Thu 8:30 Northgate: Fri-Mon 10:45, 1:25, 4:10, 7:05, 9:55 Northgate: Fri-Mon 10:50, 1:35, 4:25, 7:25, 10:25 Fairfax: Fri-Mon 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 8:30, 9:35, 9:55; Tue 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:35, 9:55 Marin: Fri-Sat 1:20, 4, 6:45, 9:25; Sun 1:20, 4, 6:45; Mon-Tue 1:30, 4:15, 7 Northgate: Fri-Mon 11, 11:55, 12:50, 1:50, 2:45, 3:40, 4:40, 5:35, 6:30, 7:30, 8:25, 9:20, 10:20 Fairfax: Tue 7, 9:50; 3D showtime at 7:30 Northgate: Tue 8, 10:50; 3D showtimes at 7, 9:50, midnight Rowland: Tue 8:30; 3D showtimes at 7, 10 Regency: Fri-Sat 10:30, 1:25, 4:20, 7:25, 10:25; Sun-Thu 10:30, 1:25, 4:20, 7:25 Lark: Fri, Wed 3:10; Sun 1 Lark: Sun 5:45; Wed 8:30 Rafael: Fri-Sat, Wed-Thu 2, 6:30, 8:30; Sun 2; Mon-Tue 6:30, 8:30
Showtimes can change after we go to press. Please call theater to confirm. CinéArts at Marin 101 Caledonia St., Sausalito, 331-0255 CinéArts at Sequoia 25 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley, 388-4862 Cinema 41 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera, 924-6505 Fairfax 9 Broadway, Fairfax, 453-5444 Lark 549 Magnolia Ave., Larkspur, 924-5111 Larkspur Landing 500 Larkspur Landing Cir., Larkspur, 461-4849 Northgate 7000 Northgate Dr., San Rafael, 800-326-3264 Playhouse 40 Main St., Tiburon, 435-1234 Rafael Film Center 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael, 454-1222 Regency 80 Smith Ranch Rd., Terra Linda, 479-5050 Rowland 44 Rowland Way, Novato, 800-326-3264
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Movies
• New Movies This Week
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Sundial Concerts MARIN Chuck Prophet & the Mission Express San Francisco alt country songwriter brigs the band and performs on the lawn. Jun 28, 4pm. $20. Rancho Nicasio, 1 Old Rancheria Rd, Nicasio, 415.662.2219. Robert Earl Keen Texas songwriter and storyteller performs off his new bluegrass album, “Happy Prisoner,” with a bevy of his classic hits redone in bluegrass style. Jun 24, 8pm. $55-$60. Sweetwater Music Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley, 415.388.1100. Marin Baroque Marin Baroque Chamber Choir and Orchestra present Henry Purcell’s baroque opera, Dido & Aeneas, with soloists and the San Francisco Renaissance Dancers in a courtyard under the stars. Friday and Saturday night, June 26 and 27, 8pm, First Presbyterian Church, 72 Kensington Rd., San Anselmo. 415.497.6634.
SONOMA Ben Folds Platinum-selling pianist, bandleader and songwriter makes his Santa Rosa debut. Jun 29, 8pm. $40-$55. Wells Fargo Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.546.3600. Deathstock San Francisco indie label Death Records
celebrates their inaugural year with a weekend camp out featuring 25 bands and plenty of good vibes. www. longlivedeathrecords.com. Jun 26-28. $25 and up. Camp Outback, 16101 Neeley Rd, Guerneville, 707.869.3102.
The Cabin Creekside Fridays. Jun 26, Mojo Rising. Free Friday Night Concert Series Opens at 5:30pm, food at 6pm, music from 6:30 8pm. 60 Tennessee Valley Road, Mill Valley. 514.388.6393.
Fairground Saints Los Angeles-based trio craft a emotional mix of folk and pop songs that are both gritty and harmonic. Jun 26, 9pm. $10. HopMonk Sebastopol, 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol, 707.829.7300.
Dance Palace Jun 25, Onye Onyemaechi of Village Rhythms. Jun 28, Marin Chamber Players. 503 B St, Pt Reyes Station, 415.663.1075.
NAPA Leo Kottke Evening with the classic folk songwriter and acoustic guitarist is presented by the Americana Music Association as part of their “State of the Union” series. Jun 28, 8pm. $35$45. City Winery Napa, 1030 Main St, Napa, 707.260.1600. Viva Vivaldi! Symphony Napa Valley, led by violinist and conductor Michael Guttman, performs a playful season-ending concert. Jun 28, 3pm. $25-$55. Lincoln Theater, 100 California Dr, Yountville, 707.944.9900.
Clubs&Venues MARIN Belrose Theater Thurs, open mic night. 1415 Fifth Ave, San Rafael, 415.454.6422.
Fenix Jun 25, Urban Outlaws. Jun 26, the 415s. Jun 27, Silver Moon Big Band. Jun 28, Domestic Harmony. Jun 30, acoustic night. Wed, Pro blues jam. 919 Fourth St, San Rafael, 415.813.5600. George’s Nightclub Wed, Rock and R&B Jam. Sat, DJ night. Sun, Mexican Banda. 842 Fourth St, San Rafael, 415.226.0262. Marin Art & Garden Center Jun 25, 5pm, Mojo Rising. 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Ross. Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church Jun 28, 4pm, North Star Vocal Artists. 410 Sycamore Ave, Mill Valley. 19 Broadway Club Jun 24, Peter Arwen and Eddie Show. Jun 25, Miles Ahead Group. Jun 26, Scarub of Living Legends. Jun 27, Fenton Coolfoot & the Right Time. Jun 28, MC Radio Active. Jun 30, Tam Valley All Stars. Mon, open mic. 17 Broadway Blvd, Fairfax, 415.459.1091. No Name Bar Jun 24, Soul Syncopators. Jun 25, Michael Myers and friends. Jun 27, Four and More. Jun 28, 3pm, Flowtilla. Jun 28, 8:30pm, Rob Dietrich. Fri, Michael Aragon Quartet. Mon, Kimrea and Dreamdogs. Tues, open mic. 757 Bridgeway, Sausalito, 415.332.1392. Old St Hilary’s Landmark Jun 28, 4pm, Bossa Zuzu. 201 Esperanza, Tiburon. Osteria Divino Jun 24, Noel Jewkes Duo. Jun 25, Susan Sutton Trio. Jun 26, Ken Cook Trio. Jun 27, David Jeffrey’s Jazz Fourtet. Jun 28, James Moseley Trio. Jun 30, Lilan Kane. 37 Caledonia St, Sausalito, 415.331.9355. Panama Hotel Restaurant Jun 24, River Town Trio. Jun 25, C-JAM with Connie Ducey. Jun 30, Dale Polissar Trio. Jul 1, EMK solo acoustic. 4 Bayview St, San Rafael, 415.457.3993.
Swing Fever, with jazz vocalist extraordinaire Denise Perrier, perform this Thursday at the Sausalito Seahorse from 7-10pm.
Peri’s Silver Dollar Jun 24, Twangfest. Jun 25, Mark’s Jam Sammich. Jun 26, Junk Parlor. Jun 27, Sucker MCs. Jun 28, Charley Crockett. Jun 30, Fresh
CALENDAR Baked Blues. Jul 1, the Weissmen. Mon, Billy D’s open mic. 29 Broadway, Fairfax, 415.459.9910. Rancho Nicasio Jun 26, Gary Vogensen’s Ramble. Jun 27, Lavay Smith & Her Red Hot Skillet Lickers. 1 Old Rancheria Rd, Nicasio, 415.662.2219. Sausalito Seahorse Jun 25, Swing Fever with Denise Perrier. Jun 26, Olive & the Dirty Martinis. Jun 27, Wobbly World with Freddy Clarke. Jun 28, Candela with Edgardo Cambon. Wed, Tango with Marcello and Seth. Tues, Jazz with Noel Jewkes and friends. 305 Harbor View Dr, Sausalito, 415.331.2899. Smiley’s Schooner Saloon Jun 24, Midnight on the Water. Jun 26, Sunhaze. Wed, Larry’s karaoke. Sun, open mic. Mon, reggae. 41 Wharf Rd, Bolinas, 415.868.1311. Spitfire Lounge Fourth Friday of every month, DJ Beset. Last Thursday of every month, the North Bass DJ night. 848 B St, San Rafael, 415.454.5551. Station House Cafe Jun 28, Doug Adamz. 11180 State Route 1, Pt Reyes Station, 415.663.1515. Sweetwater Music Hall Jun 25-26, Pre-Dead with Moonalice and Jason Crosby. Jun 27, Duran Duran Duran. Jun 28, Crossroads school showcase. Jun 30, Crossroads Music School concert. Jul 1, Jinx Jones and the King Tones with Mad Mama and the Bona Fide Few. Mon, Open Mic. 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley, 415.388.1100. Terrapin Crossroads Jun 24, “Grateful Dead Funk Night” with Scott Law. Jun 25, Scott Law and friends. Jun 26, Lucy Arnell and friends. Jun 26, Stu Allen & Mars Hotel in the Grate Room. Jun 27, Terrapin All-Stars with Scott Guberman and Cochrane McMillan. Jun 28, Darren Nelson and Danny Uzi. Jun 29, Grateful Monday’s decompression party. Jun 30, HowellDevine. 100 Yacht Club Dr, San Rafael, 415.524.2773. Town Center Corte Madera Jun 28, 2pm, Allegra. 100 Corte Madera Town Center, Corte Madera, 415.924.2961. True North Pizza Tues-Sun, live music. 638 San Anselmo Ave, San Anselmo, 415.453.1238.
SONOMA 755 After Dark (Aubergine) Jun 25, Capitalist Casualties with Savage and XTOM HANX. Jun 30, Dirty Kid Discount with the Lucky Boys and Car 87. 755 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol, 707.829.2722.
A’Roma Roasters Jun 26, Tai Shan. 95 Fifth St, Santa Rosa, 707.576.7765.
Aqus Cafe Jun 24, bluegrass and old time music jam. Jun 25, Jacob Green. Jun 26, Crosby Tyler. Jun 27, Kayla Gold. Jun 28, 2pm, Ken Roy Berry. 189 H St, Petaluma, 707.778.6060. Arlene Francis Center Jun 27, Kyle Martin. Wed, Open Mic. Tues, Open Didgeridoo Clinic. 99 Sixth St, Santa Rosa, 707.528.3009. Atlas Coffee Company Jun 26, the New Trust with Hang the Old Year and Hautahuah. 300 South A St, Santa Rosa, 707.526.1085. Bergamot Alley Jun 30, Junk Parlor. 328-A Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg, 707.433.8720. The Big Easy Jun 24, Tracy Rose and friends. Jun 26, John Kalleen Group. Jun 27, the doRian Mode. Jun 28, Jeff Ervin Jazz Quartet. Jun 30, the American Alley Cats. 128 American Alley, Petaluma, 707.776.4631. BR Cohn Winery Jun 28, 2pm, JMB & the Big O. 15000 Sonoma Hwy, Glen Ellen, 707.938.4064. Brixx Pizzeria Jun 27, Second Line. 16 Kentucky St, Petaluma, 707.766.8162. Burgers & Vine Jun 27, DJ Isak. Tues, “Reggae Market” DJ night. 400 First St E, Sonoma, 707.938.7110. Christy’s on the Square Wed, Casa Rasta. Thurs, Throwback Thursdays with DJ Stevie B. 96 Old Courthouse Square, Santa Rosa, 707.528.8565. Coffee Catz Jun 25, 3:30pm, Jazz Duet with Randall Colleen and Todd Smith. Mon, open mic. Tues, 12pm, peaceful piano hour. 6761 Sebastopol Ave, Sebastopol, 707.829.6600. D’Argenzio Winery Jun 25, Mimi Pierce. 1301 Cleveland Ave, Santa Rosa, 707.280.4658. Epicurean Connection Jun 25, Jon Emery’s Drivin Like the Devil Tour. Jun 27, Clusterfolk. Jun 28, 1pm, Elisbeth Summersgill. 122 West Napa St, Sonoma, 707.935.7960. Finley Community Center Mon, 11am, Proud Mary’s ukulele jam and lessons. Fourth Friday of every month, Manny Gutierrez. 2060 W College Ave, Santa Rosa, 707.543.3737.
HopMonk Sebastopol Jun 24, Jantsen with Dirt Monkey and Stephan Jacobs. Jun 29, Monday Night Edutainment with DJ Jacques and DJ Guacamole. Tues, open mic night. 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol, 707.829.7300. HopMonk Sonoma Jun 26, Dawn Angelosante. Jun 27, Joe Price. Jun 28, 1pm, Sean Carscadden. 691 Broadway, Sonoma, 707.935.9100. Hotel Healdsburg Jun 27, Lee Charlton Trio with Norris Clement and Richard Saunders. 25 Matheson St, Healdsburg, 707.431.2800. Ives Park Jul 1, 5pm, Joe Craven & Sometimers. Willow Street and Jewell Avenue, Sebastopol. Jamison’s Roaring Donkey Jun 26, the Grain. Jun 27, Laura Benitez and the Heartache. Jun 28, Paul Knight and friends. Wed, open mic night. 146 Kentucky St, Petaluma, 707.772.5478. KRSH Jun 25, 6pm, Backyard Concert with Calico the Band and Victor Krummenacher. 3565 Standish Ave, Santa Rosa, 707.588.0707. Lagunitas Tap Room Jun 24, Aqua Velvets. Jun 25, Timothy O’Neil Band. Jun 26, Mercuryville. Jun 27, the Del-Novas. Jun 28, the Gravel Spreaders. Jun 30, 5:30pm, “Hops & Hounds” benefit show with the Thugz. Jul 1, Joe and Vicki Price. 1280 N McDowell Blvd, Petaluma, 707.778.8776. Last Record Store Jun 28, 5pm, the Velvet Teen record release party. 1899-A Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa, 707.525.1963. Main Street Bistro Jun 25, Susan Sutton Jazz Piano. Jun 26, Jess Petty. Jun 27, Don Olivet Jazz Trio. Jun 28, Cazadero Jazz Project. Jul 1, Greg Hester. 16280 Main St, Guerneville, 707.869.0501. Mc T’s Bullpen Jun 26, Motor Inn with Louie Pain and Hazel’s Wart. Jun 27-28, George Heagerty & Never the Same. Jun 29, DJ Miguel. Tues, Thurs, karaoke with Country Dan. 16246 First St, Guerneville, 707.869.3377. Medlock Ames Jun 28, 5pm, Dan Imhoff and the Cahoots. 3487 Alexander Valley Rd, Healdsburg, 707.431.8845. Murphy’s Irish Pub Jun 25, Richard Sumberg. Jun 26, Highway Poets. Jun 28, One Eyed Riley. Jun 30, David Thom. 464 First St E, Sonoma, 707.935.0660.
Flamingo Lounge Jun 26, Lovefool. Jun 27, Fog City Swampers. 2777 Fourth St, Santa Rosa, 707.545.8530.
Mystic Theatre Jun 25, Robin Trower. 23 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma, 707.765.2121.
Forestville Club Jun 27, Hot Zone. 6250 Front St, Forestville, 707.887.2594.
Quincy’s Jun 26, Paulie’s Garage. 6590 Commerce Blvd, Rohnert Park, 707.585.1079.
French Garden Jun 26, Solid Air. Jun 27, Mama Loshn. 8050 Bodega Ave, Sebastopol, 707.824.2030.
Redwood Cafe Jun 26, Chime Travelers. Jun 27, 3pm, Gold Coast Jazz Band. Jun 27, 8pm, Mood Swing. Jun 28, 11am, Richard Torres. Jun 28, 6pm, Irish jam session. Thurs, Open Mic. 8240 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.795.7868.
Friar Tuck’s Fri, DJ Night. Wed, Sat, karaoke. 8201 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.792.9847.
Rio Nido Roadhouse Jun 27, Soulshine Blues Band. 14540 Canyon 2 Rd, Rio Nido, 707.869.0821. Rocker Oysterfeller’s Jun 28, Mikie Lee Prasad. 14415 Hwy 1, Valley Ford, 707.876.1983. Rossi’s 1906 Jun 26, DJ Izak. Jun 27, the Bluesbox Bayou Band. Jun 28, Cannon Scool of Music concert. Thurs, What’s Shakin’ jam session. 401 Grove St, El Verano, 707.343.0044. Ruth McGowan’s Brewpub Jun 27, Tone Bent. Sun, Evening Jazz with Gary Johnson. 131 E First St, Cloverdale, 707.894.9610. Green Music Center Schroeder Hall Jun 24-28, ChamberFest. 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040. Sebastopol Community Center Jun 26, 6pm, Final Fridays: Young Talent Showcase. 390 Morris St, Sebastopol, 707.874.3176. Sonoma Community Center Jun 28, kitchen concert with Mary Sue Ulven-Rank. 276 E Napa St, Sonoma, 707.938.4626. Spancky’s Jun 26, Levi Lloyd. Jun 27, 30 Yr Anniversary with the Fryed Bros. Thurs, 7pm, Thursday Night Blues Jam. Thurs, 11pm, DJ Selecta Konnex. 8201 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.664.0169. Sugarloaf Ridge State Park Jun 26, the Bluesburners. 2605 Adobe Canyon Rd, Kenwood, 707.833.5712. Taft Street Winery Jun 28, 3pm, the Harvest Band. 2030 Barlow Ln, Sebastopol, 707.823.2049. Tradewinds Fri, Country music night. Wed, Sonoma County Blues Society. Thurs, DJ Dave. Tues, Open Mic. 8210 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.795.7878. Twin Oaks Tavern Jun 25, Black Cat open mic night. Jun 26, Stagefrite. Jun 27, 5pm, Hot Grubb. Jun 27, 8pm, Third Rail. Jun 28, 5pm, Blues & BBQ with A Case Of The Willys. Jul 1, Dallis Craft Band. Mon, Blues Defenders Pro Jam. 5745 Old Redwood Hwy, Penngrove, 707.795.5118.
2000 Main St, St Helena, 866.708.9463. Billco’s Billiards Jun 25, Amber Snider. 1234 Third St, Napa, 707.226.7506. City Winery Napa Jun 24, Allen Stone with Brynn Elliot. Jun 25, Frank Bey and Anthony Paule with the Lucky Losers. Jun 26, George Winston. Jun 27, Rudy Colombini and the Unauthorized Rolling Stones. Jul 1, Emerging Artist Showcase with Shelby Lanterman. 1030 Main St, Napa, 707.260.1600. Downtown Joe’s Brewery & Restaurant Jun 25, the Voice. Jun 26, Walter Hand and the Blue Hand Band. Jun 27, the Last Resort. Sun, DJ Aurelio. 902 Main St, Napa, 707.258.2337. FARM at Carneros Inn Jun 24, David Ronconi Duo. Jun 25, Dan Daniels Trio. 4048 Sonoma Hwy, Napa, 888.400.9000. Farmstead at Long Meadow Ranch Jun 28, 2pm, Fruition with One Grass Two Grass. 738 Main St, St Helena, 707.963.4555. Goose & Gander Jun 28, Pion 2 Zion. 1245 Spring St, St Helena, 707.967.8779. Hydro Grill Sun, 7pm, Swing Seven. Fri, Sat, blues. 1403 Lincoln Ave, Calistoga, 707.942.9777. Methode Bubble Bar and Restaurant Fri, Sat, David Ruane. 1400 First St, Napa, 707.254.8888. Molinari Caffe Thurs, Open Mic. 828 Brown St, Napa, 707.927.3623. River Terrace Inn Jun 25, Smorgy. Jun 26, Craig Corona. Jun 27, Smorgy. 1600 Soscol Ave, Napa, 707.320.9000. Silo’s Jun 25, Brian Coutch. Jun 26, Midnight North with the Painted Horses. Jun 27, Blue Collar Men. Jul 1, Craig Corona. 530 Main St, Napa, 707.251.5833. Uncorked at Oxbow Thurs, open mic night. Fri, live music. 605 First St, Napa, 707.927.5864.
Whiskey Tip Jun 26, North Bay Cabaret One Year Anniversary. 1910 Sebastopol Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.843.5535.
Uva Trattoria Jun 24, Tom Duarte. Jun 25, Dan & Margarita. Jun 26, Deluxe. Jun 27, Nicky DePaola. Jun 28, Nate Lopez. 1040 Clinton St, Napa, 707.255.6646.
Wells Fargo Center for the Arts Jun 24, Transcendence Theatre Company presents “Oh, What a Night!”. 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.546.3600.
Art
Windrush Farm Jun 27, 2pm, Sean Hayes with Arann Harris and the Farm Band. 2263 Chileno Valley Rd, Petaluma.
OPENING SONOMA
Zodiacs Jun 24, Pato Banton. Jun 25, the Incubators with Alex Koford acoustic concert. Jun 26, Volker Strifler with Chrissy Lynne Band. Jun 27, Glen David Andrew with the Pulsators. 256 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma, 707.773.7751.
NAPA Beringer Vineyards Jun 27, Blues Box Bayou. Jun 28, Trio Solea.
Graton Gallery Jun 30-Aug 9, ““Chiaroscuro,” works by Marylu Downing with guests Patrick Fanning and others. Reception, Jul 11 at 2pm. 9048 Graton Rd, Graton. Tues-Sun, 10:30 to 6. 707.829.8912. Redwood Cafe Jun 24-Jul 14, “Tatiana Castillo & Edo Pradini,” the local artists display their original paintings, sketches and watercolors. Reception, Jun 24 at 5pm. Free. 8240 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati. 707.795.7868.
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Annex Wine Bar Thurs-Sat, live music. 865 W Napa St, Sonoma, 707.938.7779.
Graffiti Jun 26, the Peter Welker Sextet with Deborah Winters. 101 Second St, Petaluma, 707.765.4567.
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Upstairs Art Gallery Jun 29-Jul 26, “Vines & Vistas,” paintings by Laura Roney display the vivid wine country landscapes she knows so well. Reception, Jul 11 at 3pm. 306 Center St, Healdsburg. SunThurs, 10 to 6; Fri-Sat, 10 to 9. 707.431.4214.
CONTINUING THIS WEEK MARIN Art by the Bay Weekend Gallery Fridays-Sundays. through Aug 9, “Ever Changing Earth,” artworks inspired by the beauty of West Marin. Reception, Jun 28 at 3pm. 18856 Hwy 1, Marshall. 415.663.1006. Art Works Downtown Through Jul 24, “The Art of Rock Legends,” works by Jerry Garcia, Grace Slick, Carlos Santana and others display. 1337 Fourth St, San Rafael. Tues-Sat, 10 to 5. 415.451.8119. Corte Madera Library Through Jul 9, “Marin Meanderings,” an exhibit of watercolors by members of Marin County Watercolor Society, celebrating 45 years. 707 Meadowsweet Dr, Corte Madera. 707.924.6444. Desta Art & Tea Gallery Through Aug 9, “Line, Form and Texture,” summer exhibit features paintings and ceramic sculptures from local Bay Area artists. Reception, Jun 19 at 6pm. 417 San Anselmo Ave, San Anselmo. Gallery Route One Through Jul 19, “Art Works!” art by the gallery’s artist members. 11101 Hwy 1, Pt Reyes Station. Wed-Mon, 11 to 5. 415.663.1347. Marin Community Foundation Through Sep 25, “Black Artists on Art,” legacy exhibition features over 40 African American fine artists, spanning three generations. 5 Hamilton Landing, Ste 200, Novato. Open Mon-Fri, 9 to 5. Marin Society of Artists Gallery Through Jul 3, “Artist’s View of the News,” art inspired by articles in the Marin Independant Journal, an open juried show. 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Ross. Mon-Thurs, 11am to 4pm; Sat-Sun, noon to 4pm. 415.454.9561. MarinMOCA Through Jul 5, “Summer National Juried Exhibition,” artist from around the country display. Novato Arts Center, Hamilton Field, 500 Palm Dr, Novato. Wed-Sun, 11 to 4, 415.506.0137. Red Barn Gallery Through Jun 30, “Connections,” women environmental artists encourage care for our habitat. 1 Bear Valley Rd, Pt Reyes Station. 415.464.5125. Robert Allen Fine Art Through Jul 30, “Realism: Architecture and Landscape,” group show features Everett Jensen, Davis Perkins, Victoria Ryan and others. 301 Caledonia St, Sausalito. 415.331.2800. Seager Gray Gallery Through Jun 28, “Contemporary Lyrical Abstraction,” sensuous and imaginative works from artists Leslie Allen, Tim Craighead, Frances McCormack and others. 108 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. Throckmorton Theatre Through Jun 30, “Legends & Superstars,” Dan Dion presents a career’s worth of
his photos of celebrities and Bay Area venues. 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.9600. Toby’s Gallery Through Jun 24, “Tree Peoples,” works by GRO’s Artists in the Schools program tackles the question, what do trees and people have in common? 11250 Hwy 1, Point Reyes Station.
SONOMA Art Museum of Sonoma County Through Sep 20, “SLANG Aesthetics: The Art of Robert Williams,” brings together a collection of paintings, drawings and sculpture from the godfather of surreal pop art. 505 B St, Santa Rosa. 707.579.1500. Burgers & Vine Through Aug 31, “Gil Kofman: Surfers,” famed photographer displays. 400 First St E, Sonoma. We are currently open for lunch from 12 Noon to 3pm, with dinner service starting at 5pm until 9pm. Our bar is open from 12 noon to 12 midnight. 707.938.7110. Charles M. Schulz Museum Through Oct 18, “Animating Comics,” exhibition celebrates the art of bringing comics to life and features rarely displayed production cels from award-winning animated comics, including Peanuts. 2301 Hardies Lane, Santa Rosa. Mon-Fri, noon to 5; Sat-Sun, 10 to 5. 707.579.4452. Chroma Gallery Through Jul 10, “METAMORPHOSiS: The Art of Change and Rebirth,” group show explores transformative changes in appearance, character or substance, such as the profound changes in our lives. 312 South A St, Santa Rosa. 707.293.6051. Cutting Edge Salon Through Jun 30, “Close” showing works from eight young photographers. 7773 Healdsburg Ave, Sebastopol. 707.823.3307. Finley Community Center Through Jul 16, “A Course Neither Bitter Nor False,” Kristen Throop’s paintings use cows, bears and repetitive song lyrics to find the humor of life in suburbia. Through Sep 3, “Mariko Irie,” a solo exhibit of watercolor and oil paintings from the artist, Mariko Irie. 2060 W College Ave, Santa Rosa. Mon-Fri, 8 to 7; Sat, 9 to 11am 707.543.3737. Gaia’s Garden Through Jul 31, “Kimberly McCartney Solo Show,” the mixed-media artist utilizes discarded and found objects in her expressive works. Reception, Jun 20 at 2pm. 1899 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa. Lunch and dinner, Mon-Sat. 707.544.2491. Gallery One Through Sep 2, “California Colors,” with featured artists Laura Culver, Judy Klausenstock, Alan Plisskin and Terry Sauve. Reception, Jun 20 at 5pm. 209 Western Ave, Petaluma. 707.778.8277. Graton Gallery Through Jun 28, “three,” oil, glass and pastels from Sandra Rubin, Carla Sarvis, E Ryder Sutton plus guests. 9048 Graton Rd, Graton. Tues-Sun, 10:30 to 6. 707.829.8912. Healdsburg Center for the Arts Through Aug 16, “Clay & Glass,” sculpture works by more than a dozen artists display. 130 Plaza St, Healdsburg. Daily, 11 to 6. 707.431.1970.
Occidental Center for the Arts Through Jul 5, “Summer Solstice,” the OCA’s gallery shows this juried group exhibit. 3850 Doris Murphy Ct, Occidental. 707.874.9392. Petaluma Arts Center Through Jul 26, “Edgar Degas: The Private Impressionist,” works on paper by the artist and his circle. Reception, Jun 20 at 5pm. 230 Lakeville St, Petaluma. 707.762.5600. Riverfront Art Gallery Through Jul 5, “Wine Country Retrospective,” photographs by Lance Kuehne and Jeff G. Allen. 132 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma. Wed, Thurs and Sun, 11 to 6. Fri-Sat, 11 to 8. 707.775.4ART.
9:30pm. Murphy’s Irish Pub, 464 First St E, Sonoma, 707.935.0660. Boomer Humor Featuring comedians Richard Stockton, Dan St Paul and Will Durst. Jun 27, 8pm. Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley, 415.383.9600. Comedy Night Queenie T T headlines a night of laughs. Every other Thurs, 7pm. Bui Bistro, 976 Pearl St, Napa, 707.225.5417. Comedy Showcase Last Sun of every month. Spancky’s, 8201 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.664.0169.
Sebastopol Center for the Arts Through Jul 31, “Mainly Black and White,” showing varied, multimedia artwork, in mainly black and white or with tolerance for a minimal sidestep of color. Reception, Jun 19 at 6pm. 282 S High St, Sebastopol. Tues-Fri, 10 to 4; Sat, 1 to 4. 707.829.4797.
Mort Sahl Social Satire from Sahl. Thurs. $15-$20. Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley, 415.383.9600.
Shige Sushi Through Aug 2, “Seiko Tachibana: Elements,” the artists work distinctively balances Asian tradition with minimalist modernity. 8235 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati. hours vary 707.795.9753.
Pride Comedy Spectacular Standups Marga Gomez, Karinda Dobbins and others deliver the laughs. Jun 26, 8pm. $20-$35. Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley, 415.383.9600.
Slaughterhouse Space Through Aug 15, “The Battle of Mara,” new paintings from artist Laine Justice. Reception, Jun 20 at 5pm. 280 Chiquita Rd, Healdsburg. Sat, noon to 5, and by appointment. 707.431.1514.
Small Town Comedy Festival Now in its third year, the fest brings big names in standup, like Rory Scovel and Karen Kilgariff, with shows at various Healdsburg hot spots. smalltowncomedyfestival.com. Jun 2526. $25. Sonoma Cider Mill, 36A Mill St, Healdsburg, 707.433.8212.
Sonoma Valley Museum of Art Through Aug 23, “The Intimate Diebenkorn,” presents works from artist Richard Diebenkorn’s career, from abstractions to landscapes. 551 Broadway, Sonoma. Wed-Sun, 11 to 5. 707.939.SVMA. Stones Throw Through Sep 15, “Art of the Mystical Divine,” artist Suzanne de Veuve displays striking paintings of worldly images and influence. 15 Charles Street, Cotati. Tues-Sat, 11am to 5:30pm. Sun, Noon to 5pm. 707.242.6669. Wells Fargo Center for the Arts Through Aug 30, “Root 101,” new outdoor Sculpture Garden and Art Walk opens with a show featuring redwood sculptures by highly acclaimed local artist Bruce Johnson. 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa. Daily, noon-6pm 707.546.3600.
NAPA
Open Mic Comedy Wed. Spancky’s, 8201 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.664.0169.
So Your Friends Think You’re Funny Amatuer comedy competition features guest judge and headliner Scott Capurro. Jun 26, 8pm. $5. Sally Tomatoes, 1100 Valley House Dr, Rohnert Park, 707.665.0260. Stand Up Comedy at the Donkey Hosted by Nick Hoffman. Jun 25, 8pm. Jamison’s Roaring Donkey, 146 Kentucky St, Petaluma, 707.772.5478. Tuesday Night Comedy Mark Pitta hosts ongoing evenings with established comics and up-andcomers. $15-$20. Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley, 415.383.9600.
Dance
di Rosa Through Jul 19, “Tongue-in-Cheek,” group show employ humor as a critical tool to explore complex social themes and illuminate the follies of daily life. 5200 Sonoma Hwy, Napa. Wed-Sun, 10am to 6pm. 707.226.5991.
Belrose Theater Sundays, 4pm, Argentine Dance. 1415 Fifth Ave, San Rafael 415.454.6422.
Napa Valley Museum Through Aug 30, “do it” Traveling exhibit is a conceptual and interactive experience built upon enacting artists’ written and drawn instructions. Reception, Jun 19 at 6pm. 55 Presidents Circle, Yountville. Tues-Sun, 10am to 4pm. 707.944.0500.
Dance Palace Wednesdays, 6pm, Women’s Collaborative Dance. $5 / $15 per month. First Wednesday of every month, 6pm, First Wednesday Line Dancing, with Carol Friedman 503 B St, Pt Reyes Station 415.663.1075.
Club 101 Wednesdays, 8:20pm, salsa dancing with lessons. 815 W Francisco Blvd, San Rafael 415.460.0101.
Comedy
Ellington Hall Fridays, Friday Night Swing. 3535 Industrial Dr, Santa Rosa 707.545.6150.
Back Alley Comedy With headliner Joe Klocek. Jun 27, 7 and
Finnish American Home Association Wednesdays, 5:30pm, African dance and drum workshop, all ages and skill levels are
welcome to move and groove with Sandor Diabankouezi, world-class Congolese master drummer. $15. 191 W Verano Ave, Sonoma.
George’s Nightclub Thursdays, 8pm, Salsa y Sabor Thursday, lessons followed by DJs spinning the best of salsa and jazz tunes. 842 Fourth St, San Rafael 415.226.0262.
Drop-In Meditation Classes for all levels include guided meditation and brief commentary. Kids welcome. Ongoing. $10. Mahakaruna Buddhist Center, 304 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma, 707.766.7720.
Hermann Sons Hall Mondays, 7pm. through Aug 3, Summer Folk Dancing, all are welcome to get together for weekly dances that explore worldly styles from Serbia, Turkey, Israel and others. $5. 860 Western Ave, Petaluma 707.762.9962.
Fiber Arts Forum Informal gathering of fiber artists for idea sharing. All disciplines and experience levels, ages 15 and up. Last Fri each month, 1 to 3. $5 donation. Sebastopol Center for the Arts, 282 S High St, Sebastopol, 707.829.4797.
Meridian Sports Club Monthly, last Fri at 7, Elemental Dance, Constantine Darling leads conscious movement dance using earth’s alchemy followed by sound healing. $15-$20, 415.454.2490. 1001 Fourth St, San Rafael.
Game Tournaments Various card and role-playing games including Yu-Gi-Oh, Dungeons and Dragons and Magic: The Gathering. Mon-ThursSun. Outer Planes Comics and Games, 526 Seventh St, Santa Rosa, 707.546.2000.
Monroe Dance Hall Wednesdays, Singles and Pairs Square Dance Club. Thursdays, Circles ‘n Squares Dance Club. Sundays, Country-Western dancing and lessons. Mondays, Scottish Country Dancing. Tuesdays, Razzmataz folk dance club. 1400 W College Ave, Santa Rosa 707.529.5450.
Heirloom Craft Hub Each evening includes instruction for a specific craft. Last Thurs of every month. $5. Marin History Museum, Boyd Gate House, 1125 B St, San Rafael, 415.454.8538.
Santa Rosa Central Library Jun 27, 2pm, Hula, Heartbeat of the Hawaiian People. 211 E St, Santa Rosa 707.545.0831x539. Sebastopol Senior Center Fridays, Beginning Line Dancing. 167 High St, Sebastopol 707.829.2440. Songbird Community Healing Center Wednesdays, Biodanza. 8297 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati 707.795.2398. Wischemann Hall Tuesdays, 6pm, Square Dance Beginner Class, put on by Redwood Rainbows. 707.478.6409. 465 Morris St, Sebastopol.
Events The Barlow Street Fair The Barlow takes over McKinley St every Thursday this summer with local food, beer and wine, as well as live music and familyfriendly activities. Thurs, 5pm. through Sep 24. Barlow Event Center, 6770 McKinley Ave, Sebastopol. Beginning Tai Chi Classes Learn the relaxing techniques that increase energy, flexibility and balance. Mon, 10:30am. Christ Church United Methodist, 1717 Yulupa Ave, Santa Rosa. Calistoga Art Walk Follow the signs and view art with strolling tour of shops and galleries. First Wed-Thurs of every month, 5pm. Free. Downtown Calistoga, Lincoln Ave, Calistoga, 707.225.1003. Community Meditation Practice Sitting and walking meditation with free instruction. Followed by tea and snacks. Sun, 9am. Free. Santa Rosa Shambhala Meditation Center, 709 Davis St, Santa Rosa, 707.545.4907.
Italian Street Painting Marin Live music and over a hundred artists highlight this family-friendly Venetian Carnival-themed weekend. Jun 27-28, 10am. $5-$10. Downtown San Rafael, Fifth and A streets, San Rafael. Trauma Recovery Exercises Shed chronic emotional stress with Kristi Doden. Tues, 7:30pm. Sonoma County Healing Academy, 6741 Sebastopol Ave, Sebastopol, 707.799.8080. Kundalini Meditation Tues, 7pm. Free. Keene Acupuncture, 7 Fourth St, Ste 50, Petaluma. Low-Cost Physicals Family physicals for adults and children by appointment. Ongoing. $20-$65. Sonoma State University, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 707.664.2880. Marin County Fair Reflecting Marin County in all of its colorful traditions and innovations, the fair features family activities, popular concerts, thrilling rides, exhibits and fireworks displays each night. Jul 1-5. $15-$20. Marin Fairgrounds, Marin Center, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. Meditation Group for Mothers Mindful meditation and sharing experiences for benefit of mothers and their children. Wed, 8:30am. $10. Shambhala Meditation Center, 255 West Napa St, Ste G, Sonoma. A Mines to Vines Exclusive evening of music and fine dining benefits Roots of Peace. Jun 29, 7pm. $150. Fenix, 919 Fourth St, San Rafael, 415.813.5600. Music in the Vines DSLC annual fundraiser includes music from Deluxe, gourmet food and local wines and silent auction items, all benefiting disabled homeless and their families. Jun 25, 6pm. $50-$65. Paradise Ridge Winery, 4545 Thomas Lake Harris Dr, Santa Rosa, 707.636.3073.
Organic Nursery Open House Sat-Sun through Jun 28. Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, 15290 Coleman Valley Rd, Occidental, 707.874.1557. Perfect Pairing Local and international pianists Jason Serfling and Van-Anh Nguyen come together for a workshop that matches fine wine with classical selections. Jun 27, 8pm. $15-$35. Live Musicians Co-Op, 925 Piner Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.527.8845. Plant Nursery Work Day Volunteer at the Sonoma Garden Park. Thurs, 9am. Sonoma Ecology Center, 20 E Spain St, Sonoma, 707.996.0712.
Lunch & Dinner Sat & Sun Brunch
D i n n e r & A S h ow Let’s Ramble Jun 26 gary vogenSen, Fri
Big John Main, gary Silva, Sean allen 8:00 / No Cover
avay SMith & Jun 27 l her r ed hot Skillet liCkerS Sat
Classic 40s & 50s Jazz & Blues 8:30
BBQS on the lawn Sunday, June 28
Resource Clinic Get info on housing, transit, food stamps and Medi-Cal. Wed, 11am. Free. Petaluma Health Center, 1301 Southpoint Blvd, Petaluma, 707.559.7500. San Anselmo Art & Wine Festival The small town’s signature event includes entertainment, arts and crafts, wine and food and family activities. Jun 27-28. Free. Downtown San Anselmo, San Anselmo Avenue, San Anselmo. Senior Bridge Meet up and play a few hands, no partner required. Fri. Napa Senior Center, 1500 Jefferson St, Napa, 707.224.2055. Sunday Cruise-In Last Sun monthly at noon, fire up your hot rod and bring the kids for day of live music, food, prizes and more. Last Sun of every month. Free. Fourth and Sea Restaurant, 101 Fourth St, Petaluma, www.sundaycruisein. com.
Outdoor Dining 7 Days a Week
ChuCk ProPhet and the MiSSion exPreSS Saturday, July 4
the ZydeCo FlaMeS Sunday, July 5 Peter rowan A Bluegrass Birthday
Sunday, July 12
danny CliCk and the hell yeahS ! Shana MorriSon
+ special guest Jerry hannan
Sunday, July 19
the subdudes Sunday, July 26
ruthie FoSter PluS howelldevine Sunday, aug 2 Two Blues Legends
elvin BiShoP and Charlie MuSSelwhite g ateS at 3 / MuSiC at 4 Reservations Advised
415.662.2219
On the Town Square, Nicasio www.ranchonicasio.com
Teen Health Clinic Thurs, 3:30pm. Phoenix Theater, 201 Washington St, Petaluma, 707.762.3565. Tie Dye Event Fun for all ages, this event is a fantastic introduction to tie dye. Jun 27, 1pm. $5. Napa Valley Art Supplies, 3250 California Blvd, Napa, 707.224.2775. Toyota/Save Mart 350 Weekend long Nascar racing event will also be Jeff Gordon’s final green flag as a fulltime driver at Sonoma Raceway. Jun 26-28. Sonoma Raceway, 29355 Arnold Dr, Sonoma, 800.870.RACE. Weaving Camp Spend a week with Silvia Schroeder creating magical treasures from nature. Through Jun 26. $265. Circle of Hands, 6780 McKinley St, Ste 120, Sebastopol, 707.634.6140. Wooden Boat Show Fundraiser features classic sailing vessels on display, live music, model boat building for kids and more. Jun 28, 10am. $20. Corinthian Yacht Club, 43 Main St, Tiburon, 415.435.4771.
Field Trips Afternoon Community Service Participate in center restoration projects. First Wed of every month. Richardson Bay Audubon Center, 376 Greenwood Beach Rd, Tiburon, 415.388.2524. Ellis Creek Walk Petaluma Wetlands Alliance leads a walk. Jun 27, 9am. Ellis Creek Water Recycling Facility, 3890 Cypress Drive Ave, Petaluma.
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Flamingo Lounge Sundays, 7pm, salsa with lessons. Tuesdays, swing dancing with lessons. 2777 Fourth St, Santa Rosa 707.545.8530.
Divorce Options Workshop Volunteer group of attorneys, financial specialists and mental-health professionals offer four-hour workshops on divorce. Last Sat of every month, 9am. $45. Family Service Agency, 555 Northgate Dr, San Rafael, 415.492.9444.
Arizona’s battle over ethnic studies in public schools. Jun 25, 7pm. $10. Arlene Francis Center, 99 Sixth St, Santa Rosa, 707.528.3009.
PACI FI C SUN | JU NE 2 4 - 3 0 , 2 0 1 5 | PA CI FI CS U N. COM
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Welles 100 Weekly retrospective of Orson Welles’ classic films honors the legendary artist on the 100th anniversary of his birth. Sun through Jun 28. Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St, San Rafael, 415.454.1222. Witness for the Prosecution Tuesday Night Flicks screening is hosted by Richard Miami. Jun 30, 7pm. $7. City Winery Napa, 1030 Main St, Napa, 707.260.1600.
Food&Drink The 32nd Annual San Anselmo Art & Wine Festival happens on Sunday, June 27 and 28, 10am to 6pm, Tamalpais Avenue to Bolinas Ave., San Anselmo. Garden Volunteer Day Sink your hands into the beautiful, rich soil at the Center’s garden and learn from the diversity of plant life. Wed. Free. Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, 15290 Coleman Valley Rd, Occidental, 707.874.1557. Glen Ellen Green Tour In cooperation with Quarryhill Botanical Gardens and Benziger Winery, the Park offers a day-long tour of all three properties with food and wine tastings included. Reservations required two weeks in advance. Ongoing. $59. Jack London State Park, 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen, 707.938.5216. Hiking for Fitness Designed to promote fitness and fun while learning the basics of hiking. Sat, 8:30am. through Jul 18. $15. Jack London State Park, 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen, 707.938.5216. MALT BioBlitz Wrap Session Spend a day as a citizen scientist, collecting plant and wildlife data to help MALT conserve Millerton Creek Ranch. Preregistration required. Jun 27, 12pm. Free. Dance Palace, 503 B St, Pt Reyes Station, 415.663.1075. Organic Garden Tour Includes an introduction to the center’s organic gardens and bordering wild lands, educational programs and resident intentional community. Sun, Jun 28, 1pm. Free. Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, 15290 Coleman Valley Rd, Occidental, 707.874.1557. Overnight Stweardship Trip Give nature a helping hand while camping out in a stunning location, with food and beverages provided. Registration required. Jun 27-28. Bohemia Ecological Preserve, 8759 Bohemian Hwy, Occidental. Plein Air Poetry & Printmaking Join Barry Ebner and Sharon Coleman for a weekend of hiking, printing, and poetry in beautiful Point Reyes National Seashore. Jun 27-28. $250. ink.paper.plate studio and shop, 11401 State Route 1, Point Reyes Station, 415.873.6008. Sugarloaf Trail Work Day Add your helping hand to improve lower Bald Mountain Trail. Every other Thurs,
9am. Sugarloaf Ridge State Park, 2605 Adobe Canyon Rd, Kenwood, 707.833.5712. Sunset Hike & Dine Meet at parking area across from inn for two-hour hike on moderate-to-steep trails with midhike wine and cheese overlooking Pacific Ocean. Last Sat of every month. $15. Mountain Home Inn, 810 Panoramic Dr, Mill Valley, RSVP, 415.331.0100. WATER Institute: Beaver Tour & Talk Tour the dams and beaver–created habitat. Jun 24, 5pm. Maxwell Farms Regional Park, 100 Verano Ave, Sonoma.
Film Almost There A coming-of-old-age story about Peter Anton, living in isolated conditions, whose world changes when two filmmakers discover his art. Jun 27, 7pm. $10. Sebastopol Center for the Arts, 282 S High St, Sebastopol, 707.829.4797. Dalai Lama Awakening Powerful documentary plays in a double feature with “Compassion in Action” and is followed by Q&A with director Khashyar Darvich. Jun 30, 7pm. $20. Rialto Cinemas, 6868 McKinley St, Sebastopol, 707.525.4840. A Father’s Journey Screening of the new drama is followed by Q&A with director David Fernandez Jr and members of the cast, Lou Pizzaro and Mayra Leal. Jun 27, 8pm. $20. Cameo Cinema, 1340 Main St, St Helena, 707.963.3946. The Girls in the Band Award-winning documentary tells the untold stories of female jazz and big band instrumentalists and their groundbreaking work. Jun 24, 7:30pm. $10. SHED, 25 North St, Healdsburg, 707.431.7433. Mind Reels Weekly series presents notable documentary films as well as guest speakers and performers bringing the film’s ideas to life. Tues-noon. $25-$30. Lark Theater, 549 Magnolia Ave, Larkspur, 415.924.5111. Precious Knowledge Screening and discussion of Tucson,
All-American Zin Day Five wineries celebrate with tastings and BBQ. Jun 27, 11am. $45. Dry Creek Valley, various locations, Healdsburg, 888.433.6555. Bodega Bay Community Certified Farmers Market Sun, 10am. through Oct 25. Bodega Bay Community Center, 2255 California 1, Bodega Bay, 707.875.9609. Calistoga Farmers Market Sat, 9am. Sharpsteen Museum Plaza, 1235 Washington St, Calistoga. Cheese Making Workshop A home cheese making class led by Louella Hill, The San Francisco Milk Maid. Jun 28, 12pm. $75. SHED, 25 North St, Healdsburg, 707.431.7433. Cheese Tasting 101 Join Louella Hill, the San Francisco Milk Maid, for a guided tour of the wonderful world of cheese. Jun 28, 5pm. $50. SHED, 25 North St, Healdsburg, 707.431.7433. Cloverdale Certified Farmers Market Fri, 5:30pm. through Aug 28. Cloverdale Plaza, Cloverdale Blvd between First and Second St, Cloverdale, 707.893.7211. Corte Madera Farmers Market Year-round. Wed-noon. Town Center, Tamalpais Drive, Corte Madera, 415.382.7846. Wed-noon. Town Center Corte Madera, 100 Corte Madera Town Center, Corte Madera, 415.382.7846. Cotati Community Farmers Market Thurs, 4:30pm. through Aug 27. La Plaza Park, Old Redwood Highway, Cotati, 415.999.5635. Demystifying Wine & Food Interactive discussions on pairings with delectable demonstrations. Sat-noon. $75. Hall Winery, 401 St Helena Hwy S, St Helena, 707.967.2620. Dinner Magic Show A dinner event with close up illusions and fine food. Jun 27, 7pm. $75. Shuffle’s Magical Ice Cream Shoppe, 528 Seventh St, Santa Rosa, 707.544.3535.
Fairfax Community Farmers Market Wed, 4pm. through Sep 30. Peri Park, 124 Bolinas Rd, Fairfax, 415.999.5635. Farmers Market at Long Meadow Ranch Fri, 9am and Sat-Sun, 11am. Long Meadow Ranch Winery, 738 Main St, St Helena, 707.963.4555. Forestville Certified Farmers Market Tues, 4pm. through Oct 27. Corks Restaurant, 5700 Gravenstein Hwy N, Forestville, 707.887.3344. Harvest Market Selling local and seasonal fruit, flowers, vegetables and eggs. Sat, 9am. Harvest Market, 19996 Seventh St E, Sonoma, 707.996.0712. Healdsburg Certified Farmers Market Sat, 9am and Wed, 3:30pm. through Oct 7. Healdsburg Farmers Market, North & Vine St, Healdsburg, 707.431.1956. Healing Through Food This hands-on course looks at medicinal herbs and oils, gardening as a practical and spiritual practice, and food as medicine. Jun 26-28. $495. Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, 15290 Coleman Valley Rd, Occidental, 707.874.1557. Indian Valley Farm Stand Organic farm and garden produce stand where you bring your own bag. Wed, 10am. College of Marin, Indian Valley Campus, 1800 Ignacio Blvd, Novato, 415.454.4554. Japanese Tea Ceremony Introductory event is hosted by Kaoru Sohkun Henderson, a tea-teacher of the most popular school of the “Way of Tea,” the Urasenke School. Jun 27, 10am. $15. Desta Art & Tea Gallery, 417 San Anselmo Ave, San Anselmo. June Vikings Dinner This month, Vikings go Cajun with special guest chef Jake Martin. Jun 28, 6pm. Bergamot Alley, 328-A Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg, 707.433.8720. Kenwood Community Certified Farmers Market Sun-noon through Sep 13. Kenwood Plaza Park, 200 Warm Springs Rd, Kenwood, 415.999.5635. Last Sunday at Brew Monthly series features a rotating roster of DJs spinning, while craft beers and tasty treats are served. Last Sun of every month, 1pm. through Aug 30. Free. Brew, 555 Healdsburg Ave, Santa Rosa, 707-303-7372. Locals Night Special menu items, musical performances and activities. Tues, 5pm. Free. Oxbow Public Market, 610 First St, Napa. Marin Country Mart Sat, 9am. Marin Country Mart, 2257 Larkspur Landing Circle, Larkspur, 415.461.5715.
Downtown Napa Farmers Market Tues-Sat, 8am. through Oct 31. Oxbow parking lot, 500 First St, Napa, 707.501.3087.
Marinwood Farmers Market Sat, 9am. Marinwood Plaza, Marinwood Ave & Miller Creek Rd, San Rafael, 415.999.5635.
Downtown Novato Community Farmers Market Tues, 4pm. through Sep 29. Downtown Novato, Grant Ave, Novato, 415.999.5635.
Mill Valley Farmers Market Fri, 9:30am. CVS parking lot, 759 E Blithedale Ave, Mill Valley, 415.382.7846.
Downtown San Rafael Farmers Market Thurs, 5:30pm. through Oct 1. Downtown San Rafael, Fourth St, San Rafael, 415.492.8007.
Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog-Eating Contest Qualifier Win a chance to travel to Coney Island by scarfing down the most dogs in this popular
Oakmont Certified Farmers Market Sat, 9am. Berger Center, 6575 Oakmont Dr, Santa Rosa, 707.538.7023. Occidental Bohemian Certified Farmers Market Fri, 4pm. through Oct 30. Occidental Farmer’s Market, 3611 Bohemian Hwy, Occidental, 707.874.8478. Petaluma Certified Farmers Market Sat, 2pm. through Nov 21. Walnut Park, Petaluma Blvd & D St, Petaluma, 707.762.0344. Petaluma East Side Certified Farmers Market Tues, 10am. Petaluma Community Center, 320 N McDowell Blvd, Petaluma, 415.999.5635. Petaluma Evening Certified Farmers Market Wed, 4:30pm. through Aug 12. farmers market, Second Street between B and D streets, Petaluma, 707.762.0344. Pt Reyes Farmers Market Sat, 9am. through Nov 21. Toby’s Feed Barn, 11250 Hwy 1, Pt Reyes Station, 415.456.0147. Redwood Empire Farmers Market Sat, 8:30am and Wed, 8:30am. Veterans Memorial Building, 1351 Maple Ave, Santa Rosa. Rohnert Park Certified Farmers Market Fri, 5pm. through Aug 28. City Center Plaza, 500 City Center Dr, Rohnert Park, 707.581.8282. Roseland Lions Certified Farmers Market Sat-Sun, 10am. through Nov 1. Roseland Plaza, 665 Sebastopol Rd, Santa Rosa, 415.215.5599. Ross Valley Farmers Market Thurs, 3pm. through Oct 1. Downtown Ross Post Office, Ross Commons & Lagunitas, Ross, 415.382.7846. Russian River Certified Farmers Market Thurs, 3pm. through Sep 24. Sonoma Nesting Company, 16151 Main St, Guerneville, 707.953.1104. Russian River Valley Passport Visit more than 30 acclaimed wineries and enjoy world-class wines, barrel samples and special offers in the rugged beauty of the valley. Jun 27-28. $40 and up. Russian River Valley Winegrowers, various locations, Santa Rosa. Ruthy’s Real Meals Open House Learn about Ruthy’s new spot, home delivery and catering services and more, with free appetizers. Jun 24, 4pm. Ruthy’s Real Meals, 8492 Gravenstein Hwy, Ste. O, Cotati, 707.888.0128. Santa Rosa Original Certified Farmers Market Sat, 9am and Wed, 9am. Wells Fargo Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.522.8629. Santa Rosa West End Certified Farmers Market Sun, 9am. through Dec 13. West End Farmers Market, 817 Donahue St, Santa Rosa, 707.477.8422.
Sebastopol Certified Farmers Market Sun, 10am. Sebastopol Plaza, Weeks Way, Sebastopol, 707.522.9305. Sonoma Mountain Marketplace Certified Farmers Market Sat-Sun, 10am. Sonoma Mountain Village, 1400 Valley House Dr, Rohnert Park, 707.588.9388. Sonoma Valley Certified Farmers Market Fri, 9am. Arnold Field parking lot, 241 First St W, Sonoma, 707.538.7023. St. Helena Farmers Market Fri, 7:30am. through Oct 30. Crane Park, Crane Ave & Grayson Ave, St Helena. Summer Solstice BBQ With live music by Dya Tribal and a talk on the Redwoods by UC Berkeley’s Cameron Williams. Jun 27, 3pm. $40. Anderson Hall, 5240 Bohemian Hwy, Camp Meeker. Sunday San Rafael Farmers Market Sun, 8am. Marin Farmers Market, 3501 Civic Center Drive, San Rafael, 415.472.6100. Tam Valley Farmers Market Tues, 3pm. through Nov 24. Shoreline Shopping Center, 219 Shoreline Highway, Mill Valley, 415.382.7846. Thursday San Rafael Farmers Market Thurs, 8am. Marin Center, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael, 415.472.6100. Totally Truckin’ Thursdays Four food trucks park in the O’Reilly parking lot, donate 10 percent of sales to a monthly selected nonprofit. Thurs. O’Reilly & Associates, 1005 Gravenstein Hwy N, Sebastopol, 707.827.7190. Vintner Vinyl Tastings and tunes come together in the tap bar and restaurant. Mon, 6:30pm. City Winery Napa, 1030 Main St, Napa, 707.260.1600. Valley of the Moon Certified Farmers Market Tues, 5:30pm. through Oct 27. Sonoma Plaza, First St E, Sonoma, 707.694.3611. West End Wednesdays West End merchants offer wine, coffee and food tastings. Wed, 5pm. Free. Downtown Napa, First Street and Town Center, Napa. Windsor Certified Farmers Market Sun, 10am and Thurs, 5pm. through Aug 27. Windsor Town Green, Market St and McClelland Dr, Windsor, 707.838.5947. Wine Down Friday Wine and live music to wind down after the week. Fourth Fri of every month. $10. Muscardini Cellars Tasting Room, 9380 Sonoma Hwy, Kenwood, 707.933.9305. Wine Up Award-winning wines and delicious food make for a perfect combination. Sat. Free. Stephen & Walker Trust Winery Tasting Room, 243 Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg.
For Kids American Canyon Library Preschool storytime. Tues, 10:30am. Free. American Canyon Library, 3421 Broadway (Highway 29), American Canyon, 707.644.1136.
Babytime Stories, songs and more for kids ages 3 to 5. Wed, 10am. Petaluma Library, 100 Fairgrounds Dr, Petaluma, 707.763.9801. Bay Area Discovery Museum Ongoing, “Animal Secrets.” Hands-on art, science and theater camps, art studio, tot spot and lookout cove adventure area. WedThurs at 10 and 11, music with Miss Kitty. $5-$6. Fri at 11, aquarium feeding. Ongoing. Admission, $8-$10. Bay Area Discovery Museum, Fort Baker, 557 McReynolds Rd, Sausalito, 415.339.3900. Belvedere-Tiburon Library Mon at 10:30 and 11, songs and fingerplays for kids under two. Wed at 11, toddler storytime; at 4, read-along program for ages seven and up. Mon. Belvedere-Tiburon Library, 1501 Tiburon Blvd, Tiburon, 415.789.2665. Breakfast with Enzo Bring clapping hands, singing voices, dancing feet and breakfast for weekly family music show. Sun at 10 and 11. Mill Valley Golf Clubhouse, 267 Buena Vista, Mill Valley, 415.652.2474. Calistoga Library Storytime with “Library Grandparent,” Mon and Thurs at 2:30. Bilingual storytime for ages three and up, second and fourth Wed at 10:30. Ongoing. Free. Calistoga Library, 1108 Myrtle St, Calistoga, 707.942.4833. Carolyn Parr Nature Center Learn about Napa County habitats and birds of prey through tours, dioramas, games, hands-on activities and books. Ongoing. Free. Carolyn Parr Nature Center Museum, Westwood Hills Park, 3107 Browns Valley Rd, Napa, 707.255.6465.
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Wed 6/24 • Doors 7pm • ADV $55 / DOS $60
Robert Earl Keen
Thu 6/25 • Doors 7pm • ADV $17 / DOS $19
Live: Pre-Dead, with Moonalice, Jason Crosby & Friends feat. Lebo, Steve Adams, Brian Rashap, Jay Lane and more! Sat 6/27 • Doors 8pm • ADV $17 / DOS $19
Duran Duran Duran With Flock of Seagirls Wed 7/1 • Doors 7pm • FREE
Free Show! Jinx Jones and the King Tones with Mad Mama & The Bona Fide Few Fri 7/3 - Sun 7/5• Doors 4pm • ADV $20 / DOS $25
Grateful Dead Fare Thee Well Live Stream + Concerts from Moonalice, Grateful Bluegrass Boys & Jelly Bread Mon 7/6 • Doors 7pm • ADV $22 / DOS $27
Morgan Heritage With Jemere Morgan
www.sweetwatermusichall.com 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley Café 388-1700 | Box Office 388-3850
Children’s Garden Whimsical environments for kids’ exploration. Hours: Mon, noon to 4; TuesSun, 9 to 5. Ongoing. Free. Cornerstone Sonoma, 23570 Arnold Dr, Sonoma, 707.933.3010. Chops Teen Club Hang-out spot for Santa Rosa teens ages 12 to 20 offers art studio and class, open gym, tech lounge, cafe, recording studio and film club. Hours for high schoolers: Mon-Thurs, 3 to 9; Fri, 3 to 11; Sat and school holidays, noon to 11. For middle school kids: Mon-Fri, 3 to 7; Sat and school holidays, noon to 7. Film club meets Tues at 4. Ongoing. Membership, $5$10 per year. Chops Teen Club, 509 Adams St, Santa Rosa, 707.284.2467.
DON’T FORGET…WE SERVE FOOD, TOO!
McNear’s Dining House Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner THU 6/25 • 7PM DOORS • 21+ ROCK
ROBIN TROWER
PLUS STRANGE VINE SAT 7/18 • 8:30PM DOORS • 21+ R&B
AN EVENING WITH
PRIDE & JOY
Cloverdale Library Tues at 10:30, preschool storytime. Ongoing. Cloverdale Library, 401 N Cloverdale Blvd, Cloverdale, 707.894.5271.
DURAN DURAN DURAN
Corte Madera Library Preschool storytime. Wed, 11am. Corte Madera Library, 707 Meadowsweet Dr, Corte Madera, 707.924.6444.
DEVON ALLMAN
Fairfax Library Tues at Sat at 11, storytime for ages three and up. Tues-Sat, 11am. Fairfax Library, 2097 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Fairfax, 415.453.8092. Mad Science spectacular: Movie Special Effects In this thrilling, high energy science presentation, children will learn how to create special effects sounds and watch how science can create super heros! Jun 24, 11am. Guerneville Library, 14107 Armstrong Woods Rd, Guerneville, 707.869.9004.
FRI 8/14 • 8PM DOORS • 21+ DURAN DURAN TRIBUTE BAND PLUS CHOPPIN' BROCCOLI FRI 9/4 • 7:30PM DOORS • 21+ BLUES/ROCK
PLUS TBD SAT 9/5 • 7:30PM DOORS • 21+ ROCK
THE CHURCH
PLUS TBD FRI 9/25 • 8:45PM DOORS • 21+ 80'S, 90'S AND NOW HITS
AN EVENING WITH
WONDERBREAD 5 No Children Under 10 to All Ages Shows 23 Petaluma Blvd, Petaluma
707.765.2121
www.mcnears.com
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tradition coinciding with the SaveMart 350, with World Champion eater Joey Chestnut on hand. Jun 28, 10am. Sonoma Raceway, 29355 Arnold Dr, Sonoma, 800.870.RACE.
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Messy Mucking About Every Saturday, 9:30 to 11:30, toddlers and their parents are invited to a drop-in, free-form art studio to create with paint, ceramics, collage, construction, found objects and feathers. Sat. $15. Nimbus Arts, St Helena Marketplace, Ste 1-B, 3111 St Helena Hwy, St Helena, 707.965.5278. MidSummer Broadway MusiCamp For boys and girls K-college with interest in singing, dancing, acting. Led by Anna Combs Johnson, top professional performing artist and voice teacher for Napa Valley Music Associates. Registration ends July 3. Jun 24-Jul 31. $450. Napa Christian Campus of Education, 2201 Pine St, Napa, 707.322.8402. Petaluma Library Tues at 10, storytime for ages three to five; at 3, read to a specially trained dog from PAWS for Healing. Wed at 10, babytime; at 7, evening pajama storytime in Spanish and English. Fri at 10, storytime for toddlers. Sat at 4, parent-child reading group for secondand third-graders. Tues-Wed-Fri. Petaluma Library, 100 Fairgrounds Dr, Petaluma, 707.763.9801.
Trivia answers «8 1 Redwood (Division II), Drake
(Division III), Justin Siena (Division IV) and Branson (Division V) 2 Macadamia nuts 3 New Orleans Pelicans (4-0), Memphis Grizzlies (4-2), Houston Rockets (4-1), Cleveland Cavaliers (4-2) 4 Tree-hugger 5 Argo 6 The Three Gorges Dam 7a Toto 7b Taco 7cTito 7d Tipi 8 Czar, after Julius Caesar, who lived from 101 B.C.—44 A.D. 9 Venezuela; Angel Falls 10 There were 60 men and 30 women. Later, 40 men and 20 women remain. BONUS ANSWER: Seoul's trendy Gangnam district (described as noble in the daytime and crazy at night), after the song “Gangnam Style,” by South Korean musician, Psy. The music video of this song has been viewed 2.5 billion times on YouTube, more than any other.
Lectures Art Rising Workshop Local artists Gayle Madison and Lorrie Ragozzino lead. Thurs, 4pm. Phoenix Theater, 201 Washington St, Petaluma, 707.762.3565. Baba Harihar Ramji Babaji of Sonoma Yoga Ashram offers monthly satsang, “Living Fully in Each Moment.” Fourth Thurs at 7. Church of the Oaks, 160 W Sierra Ave, Cotati, 707.996.8915. Bicycling Street Skills Class Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition’s Bicycling Street Skills 101 class. Jun 27, 9am. Free. Sonoma Community Center, 276 E Napa St, Sonoma, 707.938.4626.
Cavallo Point Jun 27, 3pm, “A Taste of Cowboy” with Kent and Shannon Rollins, part of Book Passage’s ‘Books & Bites’ series, includes a meal and signed cookbook. $125. 601 Murray Circle, Fort Baker, Sausalito 415.339.4700. Petaluma Copperfield’s Books Jun 25, 7pm, “Gumption” with Nick Offerman. Jun 26, 7pm, “The Diver’s Clothes Lie Empty” with Vendela Vida. Jun 27, 7pm, “In” with Nikki McClure. 140 Kentucky St, Petaluma 707.762.0563. Healdsburg Center for the Arts Jun 27, 6pm, An evening with James Boyle, author reads select passages from his work and discusses the place of horror and suspense in literature. Free. 130 Plaza St, Healdsburg 707.431.1970. By Howard Rachelson
Trivia Café
Rebound Bookstore
Jun 24, 6:30pm, Hand to Mouth/ WORDS 1CityZen Is Marin a hotbed of baseball? Evening of sitting meditation, tea and I say yes, as SPOKEN OUT, Rebecca Foust reads from
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four Marin teams dharma talk. high All areschool welcome. Mon,recently 7pm. won the her new book. 1611 Fourth St, San Rafael North Coast Section Baseball Championships, Free. Glaser Center, 547 Mendocino Ave, 415.482.0550. in Divisions II, III, IV and V. Congratulations to Santa Rosa, 707.568.5381. what four schools? San Rafael Copperfield’s Books Extra Fine Watercolor Demo
Jun 26, 7pm, “Reclaiming the Wild Soul” 2Katherine Such nutcrackers needed to break this with Mary Reynolds Thompson. Jun 30, Taylor will beare introducing
Preschool Storytime A lap-sit program for infants, one day to 17 months old, accompanied by a parent or caregiver. Fri, 10:45am. Free. Petaluma Library, 100 Fairgrounds Dr, Petaluma, 707.763.9801.
everything associated with nut, hardest of them all.watercolor. Jun
Readers of the Pack A chance for new readers to get together. Tues-Sat. Free. Petaluma Library, 100 Fairgrounds Dr, Petaluma, 707.763.9801.
Tom Killion and Gary Snyder, evening of art culture there and how other cities can often adopt given and poetry reading is preceded by optional 4 Early environmentalists were
Rincon Valley Library Wed at 10:30, storytime for toddlers; at 11:30, for preschoolers. Wed, 10:30am. Free. Rincon Valley Library, 6959 Montecito Blvd, Santa Rosa, 707.537.0162. Rohnert Park-Cotati Library Toddler storytime, Tues at 10 and 11; preschool storytime, Wed at 10:30. TuesWed. Free. Rohnert Park-Cotati Library, 6250 Lynne Conde Way, Rohnert Park, 707.584.9121. Saddle Club Children six and up are welcome for horseand stable-related games and a casual dinner. Fri, 5:30pm. $20. Sunrise Stables, 1098 Lodi Lane, St Helena, 707.333.1509. STEM Gravity Race Car Challenge This Saturday, as part of the NASCAR race weekend, kids from ten schools in Marin who constructed gravity-powered cars will battle for victory at Sonoma Raceway on Saturday, June 27, in the Wine Country Winner’s Circle. The event is a partnership between Kid Scoop News and Sonoma Raceway. racessonoma.com. St Helena Library Free film series, story and craft time. TuesWed-Fri. St Helena Library, 1492 Library Lane, St Helena, 707.963.5244. Toddler Storytime High-energy storytime for toddlers 18 months to three years old. Fri, 10am. Free. Petaluma Library, 100 Fairgrounds Dr, Petaluma, 707.763.9801.
7pm, “Things You Won’t Say “ with Sarah
1pm. Free. Napa Valley Art Supplies, 3250 Pekkanen. 850 Fourth St, San Rafael 328, What four did our glorious GoldCalifornia Blvd,NBA Napa,teams 707.224.2775. 415.524.2800.
9
en State Warriors defeat on the way to their Gayle McLaughlin first NBA championship in 40 years? Also, inWest Marin School Former Mayor of Richmond about Jun 27, 7:30pm, “California’s Wild Edge” with how many games in eachtalks series? how neighborhood groups changed the
this program. Junslightly 27, 4pm.derogatory $15. Sonoma nickname, dinner event at Toby’s Feed Barn at 5:30pm. what 10-letter, Community Center, 276 E Napa Sonoma, plant $40 and up. 11550 Hwy 1, Pt Reyes Station. related to their affection for St, preserving 707.938.4626. life? in Conversation 5Jacob The Needleman Oscar-winning Best Picture from 2012Theater The author, professor and philosopher
had what four-letter name?
probes a world of ideas with Michael Lerner
of the School. Reservations required.most envi-Cymbeline 6 TheNew world’s largest, and possibly
bonus
Marin awardingJun 26, 2pm. Free. Commonweal, Mesa is located ronmentally destructive dam 451 project, on Shakespeare the YangtzeCompany’s River in China. winning outdoor summer festival begins Rd, Bolinas, 415.663.1542. Give its numerical name.
with this magical, romantic comedy which
Series 7Speaker Identify these very similar four-letter words: follows a pair of lovers on an medieval Lectures first Wed of every month at 7:30 in
adventure. Jun 26-Jul 26. $10-$35. Forest a Famous movie dog c Yugoslavian ruler Creekside Room. Firstdelight Wed of every month. d Indian Meadows Amphitheatre, 890 Belle b Mexican food dwelling Free. Mill Valley Library, 375 Throckmorton Ave, Dominican University, San Rafael, What Russian political title is named after415.499.4488. a Roman leader? Ave, Mill Valley, 415.389.4292. The world’s tallestofwaterfall, almost one kilometer Veganism: Message Hope Falstaff long, is known locally as Sendero Ángel. It’s locatedbyinguest what country,Cinnabar’s and we call it what? Join inSalto the discussion facilitated season ends on a high note speaker Ray Cooper, sharing insight into the with this irreverent in After English, party time! There twice as many men as womenopera, in a sung room. 1/3 VeganMath lifestyle and support for theare Vegan that combines Verdi’s glorious score with of the men and 1/3 of the women leave, 20 more men than women remain. How community. Jun 30, 7pm. Aqus Cafe, 189 H Shakespeare’s uproarious rogue. Through many of each were in the room originally? Jun 28. $25-$40. Cinnabar Theater, 3333 St, Petaluma, 707.778.6060. Petaluma Blvdfor N, Petaluma, 707.763.8920. BONUS QUESTION: This district of Seoul, Korea, known its restaurants, theat-
8 9
10
Readings
ers, packed nightclubs and pricey boutiques, has a popular tourist destinaLesbecome Misérables tion because of what 2013 pop-music hit, by what artist, that’s become YouTube’sis One-night-only live concert performance most watched video ever? presented by the North Bay Stage Company. Book Passage Jun 24, 1pm, “Sunken Cathedral” with
Jun 30, 7:30pm. Wells Fargo Center for the
According to Us” with Annie Barrows. Jun 27, 7pm, “The Good Gut” with Justin & Erica Sonnenburg. Jun 28, 4pm, “Trompe l’Oeil” with Nancy Reisman. Jun 28, 7pm, “In Place of Me” & “Where Was I?” with Doreen Stock & Stephen Kessler. Jun 29, 7pm, “Naked at Lunch” with Mark Haskell Smith. Jun 30, 7pm, “The Cost of Courage” with Charles Kaiser. 51 Tamal Vista Blvd, Corte Madera 415.927.0960.
ages. Through Jul 3. $29 and up. Jack London State Park, 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen, 877.424.1414.
Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa, Howard Rachelson you to our next team trivia contest: Kate Walbert. Jun 24,invites 7pm, “The Diver’s Answers Wednesday, July 1,with at the True North Anselmo, starting at Clothes Lie Empty” Vendela Vida. Pub in San 707.546.3600. on page Jun 25,Free, 7pm,with “Unfair: TheBring New Science 8pm; prizes. a team of or come joinOh one.What HaveaaNight! good Criminal Injustice” with Adam question? Send it in, and if weBenforado. use it we’ll give youTranscendence credit. Contact Theatre’s “Broadway»24 Under Jun 26, 7pm, “Your Health Destiny” withand visit www.triviacafe.com, Howard at howard1@triviacafe.com, the The Stars” kicks off summer season with a Dr EvaNo. Selhub. Junsite! 27, 4pm, “The Truth web’s 1 trivia journey of music and dance through the
South Pacific Set in a tropical island paradise, this beloved Roger & Hammerstein musical is presented by SRJC Summer Rep. Through Aug 8. $15-$25. Burbank Auditorium, SRJC, 1501 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa.✹
Seminars&Workshops To include your seminar or workshop, call 415/485-6700 x 311. SINGLE & DISSATISFIED? Tired of spending weekends and holidays alone? Join with other singles to explore what’s blocking you from fulfillment in your relationships. Nine-week Single's Group, OR weekly, ongoing, coed Intimacy Groups, all starting the week of June 29, 2015. Groups meet on Mon, Tues, & Thurs evenings. Space limited. Also, Individual and Couples sessions. Central San Rafael. For more information, call Renee Owen, LMFT #35255 at 415-453-8117 A safe, successful MOTHERLESS DAUGHTERS GROUP for women who have lost their mothers through death, separation, illness, or estrangement in childhood, adolescence, or adulthood meets every other Tuesday, 6:30 – 8:00 PM in San Anselmo. In a supportive environment, women address and explore relevant issues in their lives, current and past, including relationships, self-identity, the many consequences of mother loss, other loss, and trauma. The group provides opportunities for healing and growth, deepening self-empowerment, gaining acknowledgement for “normal” responses, and support for pursuing individual goals. Facilitated and developed since 1997 by Colleen Russell, LMFT (MFC29249), CGP (41715) with over 20 years experience, whose mother’s death at 15 was a pivotal event in her life. Individual, couple, and family sessions also available. Phone: 415/785-3513. Email: crussellmft@earthlink.net. Website: www.colleenrussellmft.com . OVER 55 WITH AN EMPTY NEST? STAY OR MOVE? Please join me for a discussion of living options in the Bay Area: Staying at home? Downsizing to a smaller home? Senior communities: what should I know regarding costs, qualifications, and medical? There is no “one size fits all” so come learn what option may be best for you or your loved ones. Call now to sign up for next presentation: Sue at (415) 297-1554 Do you have a son or daughter, age 14 to 27, struggling to finish school, find a job, become more independent? ROCK STAR PARENTING workshop will show you ways to turn your young person from failure toward success. I have over 30 years experience with over 70 young people now living fulfilling lives. Contact me for news of upcoming workshops in San Rafael. Or call for free 15-minute session to explore one-on-one consultations. maryannmaggiore@ gmail.com or 415-577-6627 SMARTPHONE VIDEO WORKSHOP - Imagine what you can do when you know how! The workshop is designed for anyone interested in learning how to make movies with a mobile phone. Let the iPhone Video Guru make it easy for you. We’ll show you everything you need to know in this 3-hour hands-on session including; planning, shooting, and editing. July 8th - 6 to 9 PM at the San Geronimo Valley Community Center. To register or information go to: http://bit.ly/1GqH52Z
Community Spanish Language Learning Center In Downtown San Rafael www.spanishindowntown sanrafael.com Clothing $$ For Women & Men’s Clothing
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Jobs Jobs
FURNITURE REPAIR/REFINISH FURNITURE DOCTOR Ph/Fax: 415-383-2697
GARDENING/LANDSCAPING GARDEN MAINTENANCE OSCAR - 415-505-3606
Mind&Body HYPNOTHERAPY Thea Donnelly, M.A. Hypnosis, Counseling, All Issues. 25 yrs. experience. 415-459-0449.
Home Services CLEANING SERVICES ADVANCED HOUSE CLEANING Licensed. Bonded. Insured. Will do windows. Call Pat 415-310-8784 All Marin House Cleaning Licensed, Bonded, Insured. Will do Windows. Ophelia 415-717-7157 Do you need someone you can trust for house cleaning? Please call Julieta, 415-685-9965
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We are now hiring EXPERIENCED CAREGIVERS for Live-In & Hourly Shifts. Top Pay! Flexible Hours! 401K, Health Insurance and Signing Bonus! Best Training! Requirements: 3 professional references, Proof of eligibility to work in the US. Interested candidates should apply in person on weekdays between 9am and 5pm at: Home Care Assistance, 919 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. Ste. 107, Kentfield, CA 94904. Contact Francie Bedinger 415 532-8626.
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Real Estate HOMES/CONDOS FOR SALE AFFORDABLE MARIN? I can show you 40 homes under $400,000. Call Cindy @ 415-902-2729. Christine Champion, Broker. ENGLISH HOUSESITTER Will love your pets, pamper your plants, ease your mind, while you’re out of town. Rates negotiable. References available upon request. Pls Call Jill @ 415-927-1454
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TO PLACE AN AD: Call our Classifieds and Legals Sales Department at 415/485-6700.Text ads must be placed by Monday Noon to make it into the Wednesday print edition.
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26
PublicNotices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2015-137364 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: INFUSION, 1100 SIR FRANCIS DRAKE BLVD, KENTFIELD, CA 94904: AMY LITTLE PAGE, M.O. INC, 393 SONGBIRD WAY, PETALUMA, CA 94954. The business is being conducted by A CORPORATION. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 12,2015. (Publication Dates: June 03,10,17,24 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2015-137302 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: MINARET, 398 MEADOW WAY, SAN GERONIMO, CA 94963-0222: JENNIFER HENDERSON, 398 MEADOW WAY, SAN GERONIMO, CA 94963-0367. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County ClerkRecorder of Marin County on May 05,2015. (Publication Dates: June 03,10,17,24 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2015137314 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: RIDERS CHOICE TAXI, 557 EAST FRANCSICO BLVD, GATE 7, SLIP C, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: KIRK KNUTSON, 557 EAST FRANCISCO BLVD, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County ClerkRecorder of Marin County on May 06,2015. (Publication Dates: June 03,10,17,24 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137466 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: THE MARIN POST, 73 SURREY AVE, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941: COMMUNITY VENTURE PARTNERS, INC, 73 SURREY AVE, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941. The business is being conducted by A CORPORATION. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on June 1,2015. (Publication Dates: June 03,10,17,24 of 2015)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137460 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: BARBARY BAY SECURITY, 225 CAMELLIA CIRCLE, LARKSPUR, CA 94939: GARY P. DELAGNES, 225 CAMELLIA CIRCLE, LARKSPUR, CA 94939. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 29,2015. (Publication Dates: June 03,10,17,24 of 2015 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137417 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: CALIFORNIA TIRES & WHEELS, 825 FIFTH AVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: IRFAN NAZIR, 825 FIFTH AVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County ClerkRecorder of Marin County on May 21,2015. (Publication Dates: June 03,10,17,24 of 2015 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137432 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: 1) CAMPOTERRA, 2) SPECTRUM IMPORTS 3) TASMANIAN PURE, 1325 MONTE MARIA AVENUE, NOVATO, CA 94947: SPECTRUM IMPORTS LLC, 1325 MONTE MARIA AVE, NOVATO, CA 94947. The business is being conducted by A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 26,2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 10,17,24, Jul 1 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137440 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: EBA CONSULTING, 220 APOLLO COURT, NOVATO, CA 94947: JOSEPH DERUVO, 220 APOLLO COURT, NOVATO, CA 94947.The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 27,2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 10,17,24, Jul 1 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137399 The following individual(s) is
(are) doing business: ERIK’S HOME SERVICES, 57 WREDEN AVE, FAIRFAX, CA 94930: ERIK ORTMAN , 57 WREDEN AVE, FAIRFAX, CA 94930.The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 18,2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 10,17,24, Jul 1 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137405 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: MATISON REPAIR SERVICES, 345 CATALINA BLVD #20, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: ANGEL RODAS, 345 CATALINA BLVD #20, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901.The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 20,2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 10,17,24, Jul 1 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2015137507 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: BIOTECHURE, 68 MADRONE AVE, PO BOX 1154, WOODACRE, CA 94973: WARREN ARCHITECTS , INC. 68 MADRONE AVE, WOODACRE, CA 94973. The business is being conducted by A CORPORATION. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on Jun 5,2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 17,24, Jul 1,8 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137539 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: CLASSIQUE NAIL ATELIER, 903 C IRWIN ST, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: MARISSA N. FOuRNIER MULLY, 300 LINCOLN VILLAGE CIR # 219, LARKSPUR, CA 94939. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on Jun 10,2015.(Publication Dates: Jun 17,24, Jul 1,8 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137551 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: A.V.LANDSCAPING SERVICES, 335 BAHIA LN, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: ANTONIO VELASQUEZ, 335 BAHIA LN, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901.The business is being conducted by
AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County ClerkRecorder of Marin County on Jun 12,2015.(Publication Dates: Jun 17,24, Jul 1,8 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137561 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: JUST NAIL SPA, 935 SIR FRANCIS DRAKE BLVD, KENTFIELD, CA 94904: NHUNG NGUYEN, 2666 LAS GALLINAS AVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903.The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant is renewing filing with changes and is transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on Jun 15,2015.(Publication Dates: Jun 17,24, Jul 1,8 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137471 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: MARIN HOBBY + GIFT, 224 GREENFIELD AVE #2, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960: CARYN GUTHRIE, 224 GREENFIELD AVE #2, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on Jun 01, 2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 17,24, Jul 1,8 of 2015) STATEMENT OF WITHDRAWAL FROM PARTNERSHIP OPERATING UNDER FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME FILE NO. 201158 The following person(s) have/has withdrawn as a general partner(s) from the partnership operating under the fictitious business name of: THE GARAGE, 2000 SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, FAIRFAX, CA 94930. The fictitious business name statement , FILE NO: 2013132730 for the partnership was filed on 07.29.2013 in the County of Marin. The full name and residence of the person(s) withdrawing as a partner(s):MICHELLE SCHWARD, 89 ANGELA AVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960.This statement of withdrawal of general partner was filed with the County Clerk of Marin County on Jun 2, 2015, indicated by file stamp. RICHARD N. BENSON, MARIN COUNTY CLERK, S.OLIVA,DEPUTY CLERK. (Publication Dates: Jun 24, Jul 1,8,15 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137546 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: MINDFUL YOUTH PROJECT, 85 RIDGE RD,
FAIRFAX, CA 94930: JEREMY HOWARD JENSEN, 85 RIDGE RD, FAIRFAX, CA 94930. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on Jun 12,2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 24, Jul 1,8,15 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2015137576 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: THE ANTIQUE SUN, 32 OAKLAND AVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960: KENT W BLODGETT, 32 OAKLAND AVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein.This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on Jun 16,2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 24, Jul 1,8,15 of 2015) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 137595 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business: 1) PROVIDERS- WEB,2) SPECIAL CARE SERVICES, 1115 CUNNINGHAM ST, VALLEJO, CA 94590: ROLANDO ANTONIO AGUILERA, 1115 CUNNINGHAM ST, VALLEJO, CA 94590. The business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. Registrant is renewing filing with changes and is transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on Jun 18 ,2015.(Publication Dates: Jun 24, Jul 1,8,15 of 2015)
OTHER NOTICES ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF MARIN. No: CIV 1502067. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner 1)DELIA ARALI MALDONADO VASQUEZ 2) WALTER ALEXANDER CHAVEZ RAMOS filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: JUNIOR ALEXANDER CHAVEZ MALDONADO to DAVID ALEXANDER CHAVEZ MALDONADO. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition
should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: 07/31/2015 AT 09:00 AM, DEPT E,ROOM E, Superior Court of California, County of Marin, 3501 Civic Center Drive, San Rafael, CA 94903. A copy of this ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in the county of Marin: PACIFIC SUN. Date OF FILING: JUN 5, 2015 (Publication Dates: Jun 10,17,24, Jul 1 of 2015) Notice Content SUMMONS - FAMILY LAW CASE NUMBER: FL 1500300 NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: BRADLEY RAE You have been sued. PETITIONERS NAME IS: REGINA SHUFLITOWSKI You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this Summons and Petition are served on you to file a Response (form FL-120 or FL-123) at the court and serve a copy on the petitioner. A letter or phone call will not protect you. If you do not file your Response on time, the court may make orders affecting your marriage or domestic partnership, your property, and custody of your children. You may be ordered to pay support and attorney fees and costs. For legal advice, contact a lawyer immediately. Get help finding a lawyer at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www. courts.ca.gov/selfhelp), at the California Legal Services website (www.lawhelpca.org), or by contacting your local county bar association. NOTICE RESTRAINING ORDERS ARE ON PAGE 2: These restraining are effective against both spouses or domestic partners until the petition is dismissed, a judgment is entered, or the court makes further orders. They are enforceable anywhere in California by any law enforcement officer who has received or seen a copy of them. FEE WAIVER: If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the clerk for a fee waiver form. The court may order you to pay back all or part of the fees and costs that the court waived for you or the other party. The name and address of the court are: SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF MARIN, 3501 CIVIC CENTER DRIVE, P.O. BOX 4988,SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903. The name, address, and telephone number of the petitioners attorney, or the petitioner without an attorney, are: REGINA SHUFLITOWSKI, 84 MARTENS BLVD, APT B, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. TELEPHONE: 208.695.8344 Clerk, by /s/ KIM TURNER,Court Executive Officer, Marin County Superior Court, By E.CHAIS , Deputy Date: JAN 26,2015
NOTICE CONTENT: SUMMONS (CITACION JUDICIAL) NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): JANIS STURDEVANT; and Does 1-100, inclusive YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: (LO ESTÁ DEMANDANDO EL DEMANDANTE): D & O PARTNERS LLC. CASE NUMBER: (Numero del Caso): CIV-1501264. NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo. ca.gov/selfhelp), your county law library, or the courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may want to call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and costs on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. AVISO! Lo han demandado. Si no responde dentro de 30 dias, la corte puede decidir en su contra sin escuchar su version. Lea la informacion a continuacion. Tiene 30 DÍAS DE CALENDARIO despues de que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles legales para presentar una respuesta por escrito en esta corte y hacer que se entregue una copia
al demandante. Una carta o una llamada telefonica no lo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estar en formato legal correcto si desea que procesen su caso en la corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta. Puede encontrar estos formularios de la corte y mas informacion en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www. sucorte.ca.gov), en la biblioteca de leyes de su condado o en la corte que le quede mas cerca. Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentacion, pidel secretario de la corte que le de‚ un formulario de exencion de pago de cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y la corte le podra quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin mas advertencia. Hay otros requisitos legales. Es recomendable que llame a un abogado inmediatamente. Si no conoce a un abogado, puede llamar a un servicio de remision a abogados. Si no puede pagar a un abogado, es posible que cumpla con los requisitos para obtener servicios legales gratuitos de un programa de servicios legales sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro en el sitio web de California Legal Services, (www.lawhelpcalifornia. org), en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California, (www.sucorte. ca.gov) o ponidrindose en contacto con la corte o el colegio de abogados locales. AVISO: Por ley, la corte tiene derecho a reclamar las cuotas y los costos exentos por imponer un gravamen sobre cualquier recuperacion de $10,000 o mas de valor recibida mediante un acuerdo o una concesion de arbitraje en un caso de derecho civil. Tiene que pagar el gravamen de la corte antes de que la corte pueda desechar el caso.The name and address of the court are (El nombre y direccion de la corte son): SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF MARIN, 3501 CIVIC CENTER DRIVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903 The name, address, and telephone number of plaintiff ’s attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney, is: (El nombre, la direccion y el numero de tele fono del abogado del demandante, o del demandante que no tiene abogado, es):CARLE MACKIE , POWER & ROSS LLP, PHILIP J. TERRY Esq. (SBN 148144), 100 B STREET, SUITE 400, SANTA ROSA, CA 95401.Telephone: 707.526.4200. DATE (Fecha): April 07, 2015. (Publication Dates: Jun 24,Jul 1,8,15 of 2015)
Publish your Legal Ad • Fictitious Business Name Statement • Change of Name • Summons • Public Sale • Lien Sale • Trustee Sale • Withdrawal of Partnership • Petition to Administer Estate For more information, call 415/485.6700
WHAT’S YOUR
Sign?
By Leona Moon
For the week of June 24
Aries
(March 21 - April 19) Looks like you can finally stop binge-watching The Bachelorette, Aries! You’ve met your match and romance is in the air on June 28. Forget the one rose: If you want this one to stick, shell out the big bucks and go for the dozen. Otherwise, don’t bother canceling your Match.com account.
Taurus (April 20 - May 20)
You’re the hostess with the mostess, Taurus! Bring out the nice china and throw those paper plates away—you’re hosting a get-together with all of your friends and more on June 29. Give into your domestic side—your friends will be over-delighted for a taste of your funfetti cake recipe.
Gemini
(May 21 - June 20) Show you the money, Gemini, er, show the cashier the money. You’ve been on a bit of a spending spree lately. While it may feel like you’re living like a Kardashian—sipping kale juices for breakfast and taking preliminary steps to install a helicopter pad in your backyard, you just don’t have the funds. Don’t spend any money on June 25.
Cancer (June 21 - July 22) Pack
your bags, Cancer! It’s time to sell, sell, sell! Selling your home has never been better than on June 24. You have Jupiter on your side—you may have to act quickly. Take a trip to Goodwill and drop off all of the trinkets you’ve horded, er, collected over the past few years. Quit your reminiscing and move on up!
Leo (July 23 - Aug. 22) Surprise,
Leo! You’re going skydiving on June 28! Venus and Uranus meet for a weekend full of spontaneity and fun. Leave your cautious self at home, and channel your innate wild lion or lioness. Listen to your inner daredevil, even if it’s saying, “Quit your job and tell your boss how you really feel about her or him.”
Virgo (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22)
With Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert moving on to new ventures, someone has to be the funnyman (or funnywoman), Virgo! Looks like on June 28, it’s you. You’ve got the sass and charm to make nearly anyone laugh— from client to ex-spouse. It’s prime time to try out your most offensive jokes.
Libra (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22)
Newsflash: You’re in love, Libra! This weekend is all about romantic surprises. Not to ruin the surprise, but on June 27 your beloved might have something up his or her sleeve. If you planned a dinner date, you might wind up dining on the bay, overlooking the Golden Gate and all of its greatness, or bungee jumping off of it.
Scorpio (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21) Skip
town, Scorpio! Mars enters Cancer, fellow water sign, on June 24—allowing you ample time to travel, relax and focus on a special someone. It’s just the right time to check out a destination you’ve been yearning for—head to Santa Cruz for the weekend and take in the waves (and fog) with your partner.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22 - Dec.
21) Time to get playful, Sagittarius! Maybe head to the park, literally, for a boot camp-style workout or hit the local dive bar scene for some groovin’ tunes and Happy Hour-priced drinks. The county is your oyster this weekend, so go with your gut and live it up!
Capricorn
(Dec. 22 - Jan. 19) Your schedule should be clearing up very soon, Capricorn! Mars is entering Cancer on June 24—giving you a little extra hint of romance. It seems that you may be taking a few lessons from Pepé Le Pew—romancing at every turn you get. Leaving love notes here, picking up week-old dirty socks there.
Aquarius
(Jan. 20 - Feb. 18) The sun is out and so are all of your feelings, Aquarius. You can’t hide how you feel for your significant other on June 27. Who would want to, with a smile like that and wit that keeps your side aching. Show him or her how you really feel with a little sentimental surprise on June 28.
Pisces
(Feb. 19 - March 20) You keep piling on the projects, Pisces! On June 29, sign on to work with a team, even if the project seems more like an obscure Craigslist red flag posting. It’s bound to bring the bucks, and your bank accounts will thank you.✹
27 PA CI FI C S U N | JU NE 2 4 - 3 0 , 2 0 1 5 | PA CI FI CSUN.CO M
STANDARD FAMILY LAW RESTRAINING ORDERS Starting immediately, you and your spouse or domestic partner are restrained from: 1. removing the minor children of the parties from the state or applying for a new or replacement passport for those minor children without the prior written consent of the other party or an order of the court; 2. cashing, borrowing against, canceling, transferring, disposing of, or changing the beneficiaries of any insurance or other coverage, including life, health, automobile, and disability, held for the benefit of the parties and their minor children; 3. transferring, encumbering, hypothecating, concealing, or in any way disposing of any property, real or personal, whether community, quasi-community, or separate, without the written consent of the other party or an order of the court, except in the usual course of business or for the necessities of life; and 4. creating a nonprobate transfer or modifying a nonprobate transfer in a manner that affects the disposition of property subject to the transfer, without the written consent of the other party or an order of the court. Before revocation of a nonprobate transfer can take effect or a right of survivorship to property can be eliminated, notice of the change must be files and served on the other party. You must notify each other of any proposed extraordinary expenditures at least five business days prior to incurring these extraordinary expenditures and account to the court for all extraordinary expenditures made after these restraining orders are effective. However, you may use community property, quasi-community property, or your own separate property to pay an attorney to help you or to pay court costs. NOTICE ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE HEALTH INSURANCE: Do you or someone in your household need affordable health insurance? If so, you should apply for Covered California. Covered California can help reduce the cost you pay towards high quality affordable health care. For more information, visit www.coveredca.com. Or call Covered California at 1-800300-1506. WARNING IMPORTANT INFORMATION California law provides that, for purposes of division of property upon dissolution of a marriage or domestic partnership or upon legal separation, property acquired by the parties during marriage or domestic partnership in joint form is presumed to be community property. If either party to this action should die before the jointly held community property is divided, the language in the deed that characterizes how title is held (i.e., joint tenancy, tenants in common, or community property) will be controlling, and not the community property presumption. You should consult your attorney if you want the community property presumption to be written into the recorded title to the property. (Publication Dates: Jun 24, Jul 1,8,15 of 2015)
©
2015 Steve Emery ©
2015 Steve Emery ©
2015 Steve Emery
MarinScapes MarinScapes MarinScapes MarinScapes
©
2015 Steve Emery
Buckelew
BuckelewProgramsBuckelew presents ProgramsBuckelew presents Programs presents
June 25 -28,2015
June25 -28,2015 25 -28,2015 June
Programs presents
June 25 -28,2015
MarinScapes MarinScapes MarinScapes
MarinScapes
Present coupon or enter promo code 241 online Present coupon or enter promo code 241 online
June 25 -28,2015 Present coupon or enter promo code 241 online June 25 -28,2015 Present coupon or enter promo code 241 online June -28,2015 25 An exhibition & sale of Marin County landscape art benefitting
June 25 -28,2015
Buckelew Programs, including Family Service Agency of Marin An exhibition & sale of Marin County landscape art benefitting An exhibition & sale of Marin County landscape art benefitting and the Helen Vine Recovery Center Buckelew Programs, including Family Service Agency of Marin Buckelew Programs, including Family Service Agency of Marin and the Helen Vine Recovery Center and the Helen Vine Recovery Center An exhibition & sale of Marin County landscape art benefitting
All events at Escalle Winery
Buckelew Programs, including Family Service Agency of Marin 771 Magnolia Avenue, Larkspur All events at Escalle Winery and the Helen Vine Recovery Center All events at Escalle Winery 771 Magnolia Avenue, Larkspur
FEATURING ARTWORK BY 30 FINE ARTISTS! 771 Magnolia Avenue, Larkspur FEATURING ARTWORK BYNight 30 FINE ARTISTS! Opening Gala
All events atFEATURING Escalle Winery Thursday, June 25 | 5:30-9:30 pm Opening Night Gala ARTWORK BY 30 FINE ARTISTS! 771 Magnolia Avenue, Larkspur Al Fresco Dinner by Insalata’s Thursday, June 25 | 5:30-9:30 pm
& Sun Sat Noon-6pm SAVE $ 15 SAVE $ 15 Noon-6pm
Al Fresco Dinner by Insalata’s Opening Night Gala
Meet the Artists FEATURING ARTWORK BY 30 FINE ARTISTS! Thursday, June 25 | 5:30-9:30 pm Meet the Artists Friday, June 26 | 5:30-8:00 pm Friday, June 26 | 5:30-8:00 pm $15 per person Al Fresco Dinner by Insalata’s
Opening Night Gala $15 per person
2 for 1 2 for 1 2 for 1 Admission 2 for 1 Admission Admission & Sun Sat Sat & Sun Admission Noon-6pm Sat & Sun Noon-6pm
New! The Taco Guys will have their food truck
New! The Taco Guys will have their food truck on site for those who wish to purchase dinner. Thursday, June 25 | 5:30-9:30 pm Meet the Artists on site for those who wish to purchase dinner. Friday, June 26 | 5:30-8:00 pm Al Fresco Dinner by Insalata’s Art Exhibit & Benefit
SAVE $15
Exhibit & Benefit Sat, June 27 & Sun, June 28 | 12:00-6:00 pm Art $15 per person Sat, June 27 & Sun, June 28 | 12:00-6:00 pm $15 per person Meet the Artists New! The Taco Guys will have their food truck $15 per person Includes Friday, June 26 | 5:30-8:00 pm on site for those who wish to purchase dinner. More information: 415.491.5705 Includes wine/beverages Not valid More information: 415.491.5705 wine/beverages 6/25, 6/26 $15 per person Tickets: buckelew.org
& Benefit New! The Art TacoExhibit Guys will have their food truck Painting: “Loma Alta”, 30"x 52" acrylic on canvas 2015 Steve Emery Painting: “Loma Alta”, 30"x 52" acrylic on canvas 2015 Steve Emery Sat, June 27 & Sun, June 28 | 12:00-6:00 pm on site for those who wish to purchase dinner. $15 per person Tickets: buckelew.org
Art Exhibit & Benefit
©
©
SAVE $15 Includes
Not valid 6/25, 6/26
Not valid