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June 24-July 1, 2009 Vol. 1, No. 8

Skim City Internet literacy and the end of deep reading

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Contents. P OSTS

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CURRENTS L O C A L LY

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HOMEGR OWN

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COVER STORY

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A&E

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S TA G E , A R T & EVENTS

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B E AT S C A P E CLUB GRID FILM

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EPICURE

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DINER’S GUIDE ASTR OLOGY

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CLASSIFIEDS

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ON THE COVER Illustration by Mott Jordan

115 Cooper St, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831.457.9000 (phone) 831.457.5828 (fax) 831.457.8500 (classified) SCW@santacruz.com Santa Cruz Weekly, incorporating Metro Santa Cruz, is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the current issue of Santa Cruz Weekly may be purchased for $1, payable at the Santa Cruz Weekly office in advance. Santa Cruz Weekly may be distributed only by Santa Cruz Weekly’s authorized distributors. No person may, without permission of Metro Publishing, Inc., take more than one copy of each Santa Cruz Weekly issue. Subscriptions: $40/six months, $76/one year. Entire contents Š 2009 Metro Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form prohibited without publisher’s written permission. Unsolicited material should be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope; Santa Cruz Weekly is not responsible for the return of such submissions.


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EDITOR B@/17 6C97:: (traci@santacruzweekly.com) STAFF WRITERS @716/@2 D=< 0CA/19 (richard@santacruzweekly.com) 1C@B7A 1/@B73@ (curtis@santacruzweekly.com) 83AA71/ :CAA3<6=> (jessica@santacruzweekly.com) CONTRIBUTING EDITOR 16@7AB7</ E/B3@A CALENDAR EDITOR >/C: E/5<3@ (calendar@santacruzweekly.com) PROOFREADER 83/<<3 A16CAB3@ EDITORIAL INTERN 9/B :G<16 (kat@santacruzweekly.com) CONTRIBUTORS @=0 0@3HA<G ;/C@33< 2/D72A=< >/C: ; 2/D7A ;716/3: A 5/<B /<2@3E 57:03@B 83<< 7@3:/<2 AB3>63< 93AA:3@ A1=BB ;/11:3::/<2 4CBH73 <CBH:3 AB3D3 >/:=>=:7 >3B3 A63/ 1/@:73 AB/BA9G >/C: E/5<3@ ;=::G H/>>

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Send letters to Santa Cruz Weekly, letters@santacruz.com or to Attn: Letters, 115 Cooper St., Santa Cruz, 95060. Include city and phone number or email address. Submissions may be edited for length, clarity or factual inaccuracies known to us.

075 47A6 B/:3 YOUR STORY “Big Fish� (Currents, June 17) contains glaring errors that further confuse this complex issue. I am a member of Santa Cruz County’s Fish and Game Advisory Commission and I’m also a conservation activist for three organizations. The statements made about forestry regulation are wrong. The rules that Big Creek Lumber and every other logging interest in this county follow are the same, and they are not voluntary. The 50 percent canopy cover rule on intermittent streams now applies across the entire state, and the proposal is not for 85 percent but instead is actually less. Width would be determined by slope steepness and other factors. I’ve looked at the temperature data you apparently refer to. It was collected as a condition of Regional Water Quality Control Board permits required of logging plans. It shows higher temperatures downstream,

NUTZLE

according to the Regional Board, though few useful conclusions can be drawn from it. As for the claims made about the condition of coho salmon, it is alarming to see such incorrect statements coming from a scientist for NOAA. Last winter the coho recovery project on Scott Creek captured only three male fish at their weir, not “30 to 40,� which would itself still be a dangerously low number. The breeding female coho came from fresh water captivity in a tank at the NOAA lab at Terrace Point. In the winter of ’07–’08 coho crashed across the entire state and very few showed up in Scott Creek or anywhere else. Scott Creek is not the only place coho survive. They are also in Waddell, San Vincente and Laguna, according to recent records. NOAA surveyors and other scientists found juvenile coho in the San Lorenzo River in 2005 and in Soquel Creek in 2008. In 2008 the site densities in Soquel Creek were higher than in Scott Creek.

These fish need a group of adjacent watersheds as healthy habitat so they can survive catastrophic events. They are not going to survive based solely upon a fish hatchery on Scott Creek. These desperate measures will not succeed unless these fish can repopulate several county steams with healthy numbers. This is possible, but it will not happen without vigorous habitat protection rules that everyone from logging companies to homeowners follow. Kevin Collins, Felton

>3/9 @3/27<5 3F>3@73<13 THANK YOU so much for publishing the piece on Transition theory and peak oil


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THE BULLHORN EEE A/<B/1@CH40 1=; A/<B/1@CHE339:G

(“It’s the End of the World As We Know It,� Cover Story, June 17). It’s time the world wakes up, and it’s going to take publications such as yours to start the ball rolling. Margret Raines, Tallahassee, Fla.

E3:: 2=<3 THANKS FOR the great piece about Transitioning. It was informative and clearly written. Anina Marcus, Carmel

/< C<³4/7@G B/:3 IT IS VERY interesting to hear peak oil believers start their own communities and actually get something done. I believe that Washington will give us no help in this matter, and I’m going to try to get my small town to actually begin thinking about it. We have a small group of people who I think would be the leaders. However, to get the populace to go along with us will be kind of like the Three Little Pigs story—they will only believe when it starts blowing down around them. Any help would be appreciated. Jerry Grabarek, Preston, Conn.

;327D/1 A63</<75/<AIN THE LAST few weeks there have been two accident reports and a stabbing where the victims were taken by helicopter to another county trauma center—fairly routine, in that people who are gravely wounded or torn up must be f lown to a highly responsive trauma team. Trouble is that these injuries as reported were hardly “life-threatening.� In the last decade this combat-style Air MediVac is called upon almost as standard ambulances. Every day there are two or three birds f lying out of Dominican with victims who have minor injuries. I guess someone really likes to use these

helivacs so much they aren’t going to wait for the severely injured victims to come around. There has to be an explanation why this helivac is so common now. I have narrowed it to three possibilities: (1) Dominican has reduced its emergency room capabilities to the point it’s a first aid station with a helicopter referral desk; (2) air pollution and food additives have made people frail and weak so bruises and sprains must be treated as life-threatening; (3) groups of physicians invest in the helivac coppers so attending friend doctors are authorizing plenty of the $1,600-a-pop f lights. Kind of an inside deal with docs helping fellow docs get returns for their investments. The unnecessary f lights are costing insurance companies and the county social services millions, and that’s passed on down to you and I in increased rates. Physicians authorizing unnecessary air evacuations? It’s gotta be either abuse of public trust or just plain dishonesty. Theodore F. Meyer III, Santa Cruz

=>3< :3BB3@ B= 2719 163<3G THE GEORGE W. Bush administration had eight years to make things right, but screwed everything up (lying to the U.N. and the American people and propagating the Iraq War). Now the American people want to make sure the world opinion of our country is mended. Please take your Halliburton and Brown & Root stock profits from the Iraq War and shut up! Lee E. Tolbert, Cloverdale

RUNNING METER 4OfSa b] ;]\\W\U

We Can Save Our State Parks as Part of the Budget Solution 0G /AA3;0:G;3;03@ 07:: ;=<<7<5

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DID NOT run for state office to cut education and eliminate social safety net and health care programs or to close our state park system. Unfortunately, I entered government at a time when the world is suffering the ravages of an economic crisis that has afflicted California with unprecedented budget deficits. Although deep cuts are necessary to balance the budget, how we make those cuts and how we advance alternatives will reflect our values as a state. While I have stated that I will not vote to eliminate programs that may result in the loss of human life, I believe there is an alternative budget solution that will preserve essential programs and maintain the California State Parks system. I strongly disagree with the governor’s proposal to close 220 California state parks, because their safe operation is essential to sustaining local economies and to the very preservation of life. California’s state parks are economic engines that generate over $4.2 billion in jobs and revenues to local communities. Park staff also provide life-saving interventions and last year engaged in 133 aquatic rescues and 47 major medical incidents in Santa Cruz County alone. Elimination of these services will most certainly result in the loss of human life. Additionally, CalFire officials report that the risk of wildfire will skyrocket if our parks are left unattended. Adjacent properties and neighborhoods would also be placed in greater jeopardy. Many Central Coast residents agree with me. To date my office has received over 3,600 messages imploring me, my colleagues and the governor to “save the state parks.� Because of this groundswell of support, the Conference Committee is recommending keeping the state parks open with a $15-per-vehicle registration fee, an idea first hatched by former Assemblymember John Laird. This proposed fee, which would generate $420 million dollars, would pay for all the expenses associated with operating the parks statewide and permit any vehicle with a valid California license plate to enter a state park. A similar program in Montana quadrupled income to its parks the year it was implemented and also resulted in a large jump in park visits from state residents. This option represents a reasonable alternative to the closure of parks, and I encourage those who would like to keep the state parks open to contact the governor to let him know they support this targeted fee increase. The Budget Conference Committee has presented sound alternate solutions that will minimize human suffering, maximize protection of federal matching funds and preserve essential services including the state parks system. We must act quickly and together to convey a strong and united voice for budget fairness. There are no easy solutions to resolving the deficit, but I am committed to continuing the dialogue to find solutions that will protect programs that are essential to the vitality and future of our region and our state. Assemblymember Bill Monning represents the 27th Assembly District. You can reach him through his website: www.assembly.ca.gov/monning.

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) AGREE? DISAGREE? TALK BACK TO THE BULLHORN AT ( WWW.SANTACRUZ.COM/NEWS


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Currents. 7B¸A / AE7<5 B67<5 Tim Houchin tees off on hole 6 at the city-owned De Laveaga Golf Course.

Matters of Course

Economic downturn may force city to relinquish once-profitable golf course

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which tacked on an extra $250,000 in annual repayments and killed revenues by turning the course into a ghost town for 18 months while the repairs took place. By 2006, De Laveaga had begun recovering. Revenues climbed back to “normal� levels of roughly $2 million per year, and by mid-2008 it looked like the course would pay itself off after all. Then, last year, thanks mostly to the recession and a nationwide slump in golf play, the course saw its out-of-county clientele drop from 60 to 40 percent and its revenues drop by roughly a half-million dollars. Santa Cruz City Manager Dick Wilson says he thinks the course could rebound, but until the recession lifts he says he won’t know for sure. “We’ve always had the working assumption that the course would work financially,� says Wilson. “But the industry has changed too, and the fact is that there are too many golf courses with too few golfers playing too few rounds. The market will recover somewhat, but until we know how much it will recover, I just don’t know the answer to most of

the questions out there.� Meanwhile, Santa Cruz Parks and Recreation Director Dannette Shoemaker has six months to investigate options for outsourcing the course before the City Council takes action. “If I had my druthers, it would definitely stay as a municipal golf course,� she says. “We’ve just had some things come up that are outside of our control, and citywide we’re in a terrible spot financially—though I’d still say there is enough concern from residents and councilmembers that the jury is still out. I’m going to do my darnedest to keep the course as it is.�

Par for the Course There’s nothing new about cities outsourcing the management of golf courses. San Francisco has been considering it for 10 years, Pacific Grove came close very recently and Salinas went through with the idea two years ago. So what changes could the golfing community expect if the course is

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OU COULD play dozens of public golf courses in America and be hard pressed to find one better maintained than Santa Cruz’s city-owned De Laveaga Golf Course. With 6,010 yards of expertly manicured fairways and greens that you could eat eggs off of, the course is the handiwork of a top-notch, well-paid group of unionized golf course professionals. So since June 8, when city leaders announced they would look into possibly outsourcing the course’s business operations to a private management company, more than a few club swingers have been calling for a mulligan. “This is the best muni course in the nation,� says Santa Cruz golfer Larry Keast

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after teeing off a rocket drive on hole 1. “If they privatize it they’re gonna bring someone in for a lot less money that may not know a thing about golf course maintenance. What these guys do here is a science.� Science, however, is expensive. And De Laveaga has lost more than $2.5 million over the last five years. The losses aren’t necessarily the fault of overpaid workers, although full-time labor accounts for the biggest figure on the course’s expense sheet—$662,000 of the last fiscal year’s $2.2 million in expenses. In fact, until five years ago, the golf course ran steadily in the black. It was even saving some extra profit in a rainy day fund. But in 2005, the city spent some $2.3 million on a near-complete renovation of the course,

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outsourced to a private firm? The answer depends on whom you ask. “When we signed Sierra Golf Management to run Salinas Fairways, there were some concerns that the course would suffer,� says Salinas Parks and Recreation Superintendent Jim Pea. “We were bringing in $1.1 million per year, but we were spending $1.8 or $1.9 [million]. In the end, they were able to do things that we weren’t, and so far there have been very few complaints from the golfing community.� San Francisco’s Golf Program director Sean Sweeney disagrees with Pea. And while admitting that two of the city’s public courses are a drain on the budget, he says keeping them city-owned is crucial to the reputation of the local game. “I’m convinced that bringing in a private management company will degrade the maintenance of the course until the new staff learns what they’re doing,� says Sweeney. “This is a very contentious issue that’s been discussed every year since 1998.� Well-kept greens are considered essential for fast and accurate putts, so the much-lauded course

PHIL ANTHR OPIST

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Number of people from Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Luis Obispo counties who completed the Workforce Development Services training through Goodwill last year.

grooming at De Laveaga is not just easy on the eyes but good for the game as well. But aside from worries over whether the grass trimming will suffer should a private company take over, there are concerns that the club’s reasonable rates could be jacked up over the heads of casual players. It currently costs $19 to walk on after 5:30pm and $71 to ride a cart in the primetime early weekend hours at De Laveaga. It’s a much cheaper alternative to the renowned Pasatiempo Golf Course, which runs a steep $222 per round, plus reservation and cart fees. It’s also in line with other public courses in the area, like Scotts Valley’s nine-hole Valley Garden Course, which charges $18; Aptos’ Seascape course, which runs $46 to $71; and Watsonville’s Spring Hills Golf Course, which costs $35 to $45, depending on

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the day. Shoemaker says rates at the course are already slated to go up slightly come July 1, and that an outside firm could potentially raise them further. But she also says that’s unlikely, as higher prices usually mean fewer golfers. Among many De Laveaga golfers and employees, there is a hope that the course’s head golf pro, Tim Loustalot, will step up and take over the course as a business venture. Many say he’s the one responsible for the course’s immaculate grooming and friendly atmosphere. On hole 18, a foursome of ladies finishing up their round agree that Loustalot has “done wonders� for local golf. “Tim treats ladies who play here like royalty,� says Pat Davis, a self-described loyal De Laveaga golfer of more than 10 years. “I think he, if anyone, could run the course if the city can’t.� But Loustalot has been silent on the matter and did not return several phone calls seeking comment. So for now, golfers are enjoying the finely trimmed grass of Santa Cruz’s favorite budget golf course in the knowledge that months from now, hitting into the rough might be a bit rougher. “People who work this course take pride in what they do,� says Keast, climbing into his golf cart and heading after his drive. “Everyone who plays here loves it, and I’d hate to see that change.� 0


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Feelin’ Fee

Volunteers just say no to state parks closures 0G 9/B :G<16

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RED electric wheelchair flies down the road to the beach at a blistering two miles an hour. There, groups of children dig the classic tunnel to Australia or sculpt mermaid bodies on friends buried up to their necks in sand. At the end of the pier, families stare in awe of the cement World War I tanker. All this could change if Gov. Schwarzenegger and the state Legislature close 80 percent of California’s 279 state parks to help balance the budget deficit. The immense closure would include all of the 19 state parks and beaches in Santa Cruz County. Saturday afternoon, Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks gathered at Seacliff State Beach to solicit support and signatures from beachgoers in support of a proposed solution. While still in office last year, former District 27 Assemblyman John Laird proposed increasing the cost of annual car registration by $15. As a permanent solution, the $420 million generated annually would cover the approximately $250 million parks budget and chip away at a $1.5 billion backlog of deferred maintenance—all while creating free day admission to state parks for Californians with a current license plate. “Montana does this and it works,� Laird said in his opening remarks, adding that he speaks not only as an advocate but as a fellow parks-goer. “I

touch three states parks on my bike route,� he said. Volunteers with Friends and offduty state park employees patrolled the beach, petitions in hand, asking for support of Laird’s proposition. Meanwhile, other volunteers were collecting signatures at New Brighton Beach, as well as Henry Cowell, Wilder and Nisene Marks state parks. On Monday the group announced its grand total of signatures: 1,205 people from 145 communities across the state. “When you say state park,� said Kat Bailey, an employee at Natural Bridges State Beach, “it sounds kind of abstract. But it’s really not. It’s this beach.� Many longtime beachgoers were shocked to hear what the volunteers had to say. Scott Valencia has come to Seacliff every year since he was a child and has continued the tradition with his family. “You can’t get any better than this,� he said. “You’re close to the beach and you can watch your kids play. We bring our family and everyone else.� Bobbie Havers, an interpretive guide at Wilder Ranch State Park for the past 12 years, says that her park would also be closed. She recalled that some visitors asked if they could sign more than once. “Get your friends to sign and send a postcard,� Havers answered. For more information, visit the Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks at www.thats mypark.org.


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0:==2 A7;>:3 Greg Avilez, senior criminalist at the Freedom Crime Lab in Watsonville, processes evidence.

Analyze This

Police and sheriffs dismayed at thought of losing free crime lab service 0G 83AA71/ :CAA3<6=>

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CAN tell just by looking at this that this is cocaine,� says senior criminalist Meghan Kinney. She’s pointing to a computer readout of numbered lines, each corresponding to different chemicals found in a sample that’s just gone through the gas chromatography-mass spectrometry meter at the Freedom Crime Laboratory in Watsonville. They’ve got everything here: a coffinlike water tank for firing guns and studying the ballistics, a massive microscope for doing side-byside comparisons of bullets, a huge refrigerator filled with biological evidence taped up with neon orange biohazard tape, a hydraulic lift for cars

plus the cumulative know-how of their five criminalists. “Everything we do has to be perfect,� says Kinney. Since state-run labs like this one first opened in the early ’70s, local law enforcement has been getting that perfection gratis. But the free ride may be over. With the Department of Justice staring down the barrel of a mandated $20 million budget reduction, the Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO) is recommending that all state labs begin charging fees to law enforcement departments for each test they request. “It’s a fiscal nightmare,� says Sheriff Phil Wowak. “Any increased fees at this

time is detrimental to the citizens of Santa Cruz County. It would severely impact our ability to do serious criminal prosecutions.� Though some counties, like Santa Clara, and some police departments, like LAPD, have their own crime labs, 46 of California’s 58 counties rely on state labs for all their forensic science. None of the law enforcement agencies in Santa Cruz County has its own lab; each sends all its evidence to the Freedom lab or to another state lab in Sacramento. The labs handle everything from blood samples taken in DUI cases to rape kits to evidence gathered at the scene of a homicide. “This will force an agency like ours to make the extremely unfortunate decision over what constitutes a necessity to send,� says Santa Cruz Police spokesman Zach Friend. “If you’re the victim of a crime, you know that that crime is a priority to you. But if we were required to spend that much money, we’d have to make the determination.� Since the final decision won’t be made until the state budget is passed, a list of fees has not been released. But Lt. Darren Thompson of the Watsonville Police Department says it’s clear that the services don’t come cheap. “It’s about $1,500 to do one test to see if one person was holding a gun that was fired. For one little package of swabs,� he says. “Evidence is critical. Juries want to see it. TV shows like CSI have increased the awareness to the public. It’s exaggerated, but our jurors—they want to see evidence and see it analyzed.� Friend, Thompson and Wowak all estimate that the fees will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars over the course of one year. The city of Watsonville estimated that its general fund will take a $440,000 hit; Wowak heard a past estimate of about $120,000 for the county. “A fewhundred-thousand-dollar hit would simply mean the loss of additional police staff,� says Friend. Drew Soderborg, a fiscal and policy analyst with the LAO, says the fees are simply a logical way to do things, regardless of the current financial crisis pushing the change. “The rationale is that lab services is a local responsibility,� he says. “And it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to be providing 100 percent of the services for some counties and very little to no services for the rest of the counties.� He says it costs the state justice

department about $40 million to run the labs each year, and that the fees would help the labs pay for themselves. He adds that the LAO also recommended some type of break for counties experiencing financial hardship, or in the case that a large crime occurs, but he didn’t specify what makes a county or crime eligible for help. And he also reasoned that a drop in the amount of evidence sent to state labs is not necessarily a bad thing. “One concern is that if there’s no fee, there’s no incentive to ration use of the service,� he says.

‘TV shows like CSI have increased the awareness to the public. It’s exaggerated, but our jurors—they want to see evidence and see it analyzed.’ —Lt. Darren Thompson If the proposal passes with the budget, local law enforcement will have to decide whether to shop around for a private lab, contract out to another county’s labs or pay the state fees. Sheriff Wowak says it is conceivable that the county could build its own lab, but in this economy that’s hardly likely. And in the meantime, the amount of evidence sent to the lab will necessarily have to decline. “We always hate to get to a point where a person’s case and prosecution comes down to dollars and cents,� says Wowak. “But I need to be realistic about what I can and cannot do.� 0


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10 QUESTIONS

PUBLIC EYE

EVOb P`]cUVb g]c b] AO\bO 1`ch-

I’ve been coming here since I was 9 years old. EVOb¸a g]c` TOd]`WbS ab`SSb-

The uncharted paths in the Bonny Doon woods behind my house. <O[S a][SbVW\U g]c¸`S SfQWbSR OP]cb

I love helping bodies discover new ways of moving. <O[S O ^Sb ^SSdS

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I’m a pediatric occupational therapist and Feldenkrais practitioner. EVOb e]cZR g]c PS R]W\U WT g]c eS`S\¸b R]W\U bVOb-

I might take the adventure of directing theatrical stories based on the power of being human in our complex world. EVOb R] g]c R] W\ g]c` T`SS bW[S-

Play with my family, do yoga, make jewelry, sew, ask questions, listen to stories, watch my inner story.

Sometimes I forget my bags when I go to the grocery store, my travel cup when I am at the coffeehouse, and I have to drive 35 miles or more to work. EVOb O`S g]c `SORW\U-

A Mercy by Toni Morrison, The Body Has a Mind of Its Own by Sandra Blakeslee. EVOb¸a bVS []ab W[^]`bO\b bVW\U g]c¸dS ZSO`\SR W\ bVS ZOab bV`SS gSO`a-

To stand quietly while being ready to act in any direction. 4Od]`WbS a\OQY--

Beets, rice, tea, goat cheese and hot chocolate with whip cream, spiced with additives from my acupuncturist. Read Miranda Janeschild’s complete answers at www.santacruz.com/news.

STREET SIGNS

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) submit your public eye photo to publiceye@santacruz.com (

Owl Movement

I

T’S LATE dusk, about an hour after sundown. That’s when the first hissing screeches begin to sound in the treetops. “There they are!� exclaims a binocular-wielding Rebecca Dmytryk, founder of the emergency wildlife care organization WildRescue. “You can hear the juveniles. The whole family will be hunting overhead soon.� On cue, the noisy phantoms in the trees begin to show themselves in splashes of cream white against the dark blue twilight. Barn owls: six juveniles and two adults. It’s been six weeks since the baby birds were found nesting inside the sign of Scott’s Body Shop on Center Street, across from Santa Cruz Police headquarters. At the time, Dmytryk and her husband, Duane Titus, built a temporary owl box where the

sign had been. It was inside this wooden box that the young owls were raised to be nearly the same size as their doting parents. And now, at 10 weeks old, the owlets have left the box for the branches of a tall redwood tree a couple hundred yards away and are getting their first lessons in flight. “This is a critical time for these birds,� says Dmytryk. “They are learning how to fly, how to hunt, where to roost, what to be fearful of. This is when they learn how to be adults.� The screeching continues as the birds swoop from their roost and circle overhead, specialized feathers flapping silently in the wind. The youngsters trail the parents most of the time, each insatiably calling for the 10 to 15 mice per night it’s accustomed to having delivered. But the parents keep the young birds on

the move, and though their landings are often an awkward stumble of clutching talons and bobbing heads, their soaring flight looks every bit as graceful as the more experienced raptors. Barn owls, as the name suggests, thrive in lightly populated areas. In spite of threats from eating poisoned rodents, getting hit by cars and becoming tangled in wires, the birds are common throughout North America. These young owls, each about a foot tall and weighing roughly 14 ounces, will likely live out their lives in the vicinity of their birthplace in downtown Santa Cruz. But within a few weeks, the parents will start giving them the boot. “At that point, they’ll be hunting and surviving on their own,� says Dmytryk. “I’m just so proud that they’re all here and all doing so good.� — Curtis Cartier


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A/G 03341/93 The crowd went wild for the men’s novice bodybuilding category.

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UYS,� calls out Kelvin Fountano, president of the World Body & Fitness Association. “Make sure when you go onstage your wear your number on your left side.� Left side, on the left. The words ripple through the dimly lit Rio Theatre auditorium as family members and trainers fuss over bodybuilders of all sizes at Saturday’s Santa Cruz Bodybuilding and Figure Championships in Seabright. “This isn’t one of our biggest events,� says Fountano. “But it’s one of our funnest.�

Since the Rio has no true backstage area, black curtains have been erected to the left of the stage, and inside it’s dark and easy to trip on free weights scattered among gym bags. In the gloom it’s still possible to make out the bodybuilders, in particular the snowyhaired 60-and-over qualifiers, who are pumping little weights and jogging in place, their muscles more sinewy than the twentysomethings wandering around. Everyone is practically naked, stripped down to thongs and glistening in tanning oil.

“It’s best not to stay back there too long,� warns Fountano. “People are spraying themselves down. You get a little dizzy after a while.� Christina Davis, a heavyweight bodybuilder from San Jose, is bent over, getting oiled up to a dark sheen by an assistant. “I’m really excited,� she says. “Confident.� She is one of only four female competitors and the only one in the heavyweight category. Her two rivals in the figure event, a more feminine category in which the ladies wear clear plastic heels and do not f lex, wait outside in the auditorium, the rhinestones studding their bikinis poking through their track suits. Both have been on a diet for the last five months. “Chicken and vegetables,� says Sally McCollum, a 38year-old Aromas resident. “Tilapia. Egg whites. Protein powder,� adds Shani O’Neill, a 27-yearold from the Westside. Even before I finish asking them what they’re going to do after the competition, O’Neill interrupts, “Party. Afterparty at the Palomar.� “You can’t have a body like this with alcohol,� says last year’s women’s champion, Sondra Harrison, who drove in from Yuma. She trains all year round and participates in as many WBFA regional competitions as possible, along with her husband.

“We travel a lot; we follow the circuit,� she says. “[The goal] is to hopefully go to Germany with Team USA. Or to become a spokesmodel for a supplement company.� Today’s competition is one of scores of regional contests leading to Team USA, members of whom compete for the Mr./Ms. Universe title against about 1,000 bodybuilders from around the world. Though Fountano is on the lookout for members to join Team USA, held this year in Hamburg, Germany, Judge Jeffrey Johnson says he much prefers the athletes who come out just for love of the sport. “You got to love it and want to be a part of it,� he says. “I don’t like people who are here for exposure, to be in the spotlight.� But one by one, they’re all in the spotlight. Sixty-three-year-old Steve Franklin of Soquel, a powerful, tanklike man with skin the color and sheen of a rotisserie chicken, takes the 60-and-over title; Harrison loses her 2008 overall women’s bodybuilding title to Davis and her overall figure title to O’Neill, who receives her first-place trophy to calls of “Party time!� from the audience. Things get particularly heated in the men’s novice bodybuilding category, when 25-year-old Watsonville resident Nino “Nico� Vega, a first-time competitor, faces off against three rivals in a round that brief ly confounds the judges. “Audience, you can help the judges,� says Fountano from the podium, and the crowd roars back. “Nico!� someone screams from the front row. It’s his trainer from Gold’s Gym, L. Soekardi. Straining in his pose, beads of sweat stippling his chest, Vega’s eyes f lick down at her from the stage, like a child to his parent. “Squeeze!� she yells. “Hit it, Nico!� In the end, he clinches the first place. Johnson explains why. “The tall kid, he had great symmetry, everything f lowed nicely, but he was smooth, not cut. This guy at the end didn’t have nice symmetry,� he muses afterward. “Sometimes you get stuck, and I don’t like to f lip a coin. It’s not easy.� Afterward in the black tent, Vega cradles his trophy and talks to his girlfriend Eva. “It feels good,� he says of his win. “The hardest part is the diet, no carbs. I’m Filipino so it’s rice, rice, rice. And I’m young. I used to go out a lot, but I haven’t been drinking in four months—no partying or nothing.� Soekardi is overjoyed. “I’m so happy, I’m very proud,� she says hoarsely. “I lost my voice.� 0


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In Defense of Slow Reading Has the relentless cacophony of Google culture made us dumb? An Internet junkie picks up a book and finds out. 0G >/C: 2/D7A

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O PARAPHRASE Rick James via Dave Chappelle, “Internet’s a hell of a drug.â€? Like James’ storied cocaine habit, it’s addictive and alluring, its benefits debatable. I speak as someone intimately experienced with addictive drugs: two years ago, I quit smoking. To this day, I find myself smoking in dreams and occasionally sneak them from friends at the bar. The rest of the time, the Internet serves as a proxy. Addictive personalities often replace one addiction with another. My new worst friend is the social web, the endless stream of information constantly streaming down Sen. Ted Stevens’ infamous “series of tubes.â€? Here’s a short list of Internet services that I use and check with halfhourly frequency: email, Facebook, Tumblr, del.icio.us, Evernote, Twitter, Remember the Milk, Google Reader (tracking some 180 RSS feeds), and Yahoo News. I back up longer articles using Instapaper to read on the bus; at the office, I work with two web browsers open at all times, 10 individual tabs loaded in each, spread over two monitors. On the commute home, I’m checking text messages via my Internet-enabled phone and reading archived blog posts on my iPod. At times, it seems like a type of digital schizophrenia, or if nothing else, a hell of a drug. I’m what pencil-necked social media experts and Web 2.0 carpetbaggers would call a “power user.â€? I dine on a ¨ ' constant, movable feast of information.


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1=D3@ j A:=E @ 3 / 2 7 <5 Scolds might suggest that this is a symptom of a larger Internet addiction, but when your day job involves managing web content and your night jobs are web design and freelance writing, it’s impossible to avoid spending 12 to 14 hours a day online. My habits are far from unusual; as we sit in offices for eight hours at a desktop computer, only to leave the office with iPhones, Blackberries and Kindles in tow, it’s clear that the moment futurists have predicted is upon us: the Internet has become pervasive, and it’s only going to become more so in the years to come.

I find myself twitchy, distracted, desperately in need of a reading discipline that I unlearned at some point in the past decade. It’s as if I have not only forgotten an important mode of critical thinking, but basic reading comprehension. With so much information streaming at once, most of it with all the panache of a poorly organized corporate database vying for attention with hard news and gossip masquerading as political analysis, there’s little room for critical engagement; there’s barely enough time for basic reading comprehension. I could read 50 news articles in a day about the Middle East and return with no deeper understanding of what happened in Iraq on that given day. My mind has become a decontextualized database of

ephemeral facts, equipped with only the most rudimentary of search functions. It’s not exactly cheering to realize that I’m not alone. It’s a phenomenon that author John Lorinc bemoaned in his 2007 essay “Driven to Distraction� for the Canadian magazine Walrus. “We have created a technological miasma that inundates us with an inexhaustible supply of electronic distractions,� Lorinc wrote. “The deluge of multi-channel signals has produced an array of concentrationrelated problems, including lost productivity, cognitive overload and a wearying diminishment in our ability to retain the very information we consume with such voraciousness. It may be that our hyper-connected world has quite simply made it difficult for us to think.� Lorinc’s far from alone in his alarm. In the past year, a cottage industry has sprouted up around the warning that Google—and the Internet at large—is making us stupid. The most infamous of the bunch has been Nicholas Carr’s cover story for the August 2008 issue of the Atlantic. Citing the work of Maryanne Wolf, a developmental psychologist at Tufts University, who warns that online readers become “mere decoders of information,� Carr editorializes that “our ability to interpret text, to make the rich mental connections that form when we read deeply and without distraction, remains disengaged.� I’m dubious of the argument that Google is making us stupid, but Carr makes a key observation in the piece, writing that “deep reading . . . is indistinguishable from deep thinking.�

Binding Resolution Feeling disenfranchised from that sort of deeper engagement, my resolution for this year was to step away from the stream—at least for an hour a day—and return to trusty old print. I decided to read more books—not on a Kindle or the e-Book reader on an iPhone, where the temptation for distraction via a rudimentary browser is a mere hand gesture away—but in bound, linear, paper form. It’s been a revelation. I’ve rediscovered an ethic of attentiveness, an intellectual silence and focus, that I lost in recent years as I jumped from one link to another, juggling countless browser tabs at all times. My process of reading had ceased being linear and had morphed into a cacophony of facts, data, opinions and animated Flash video. Since I’ve rediscovered slow reading, I find myself thinking more ¨


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1=D 3@ j A:=E @3 /27<5 clearly, perusing linear paths of critical engagement with topics. It’s a relieving contrast to the multitasked intellectual inattentiveness that the online world encourages and demands. One of the things I’ve been rereading is the short stories of Jorge Luis Borges, an author many consider a prophet of the discursive, hypertext era of the Internet. Borges’ work—elliptical, playful and rife with allusions—is stunningly contemporary in its metanarrative and referential play. Yet even a writer as prescient as Borges demands the engagement of slow reading: those elliptical routes are far more rewarding when confined to the particular context of the linear narrative. His work demands a depth of engagement that cannot be replicated by reading his work on a web browser, just one in 10 tabs of content in a web browser, with billions of other off-topic distractions a mere Google search away. Yet even for a print-native reader like myself, rediscovering the pleasures of slow reading and returning to the printed page is a struggle. Given an hour of free reading time, habit will compel me to the LCD screen rather than a book. I must make a concerted effort to sit down on the couch, book in hand. Once I open the book, keeping focused on that single linear feed of information is a constant challenge: I find myself twitchy, distracted, desperately in need of a reading discipline that I unlearned at some point in the past decade as my attention turned to online media. It’s as if I have not only forgotten an important mode of critical thinking, but basic reading comprehension. The state of concentration required to truly engage with the printed word can be attained, and is indeed rewarding, but it requires one hell of a concerted effort in this day and age. Pundits like Jeff Jarvis, who collect healthy speaking fees by telling aspirational bloggers and new media entrepreneurs what they want to hear, might scoff at an appreciation of slow reading as being the rear-guard defense mechanism of a cultural dinosaur. They’d be half right. For all of slow reading’s continued rewards, it doesn’t take an oracle to acknowledge that print is doomed to a future as a niche product that will command a premium from a small group of enthusiasts, not unlike vinyl or free-range meat. Which is a damned shame, in a certain sense. Clearly the human mind benefits from a type of close, engaged reading that print encourages. And while there are a handful of services that attempt to

replicate that experience on a screen, to varying degrees of success—Amazon’s Kindle, the web content archiving service Instapaper that accompanies me on the bus—the temptation of distraction is always near. Faced with that inevitability, something needs to change: either the way we consume content on screens or the way our brains process information. Futurist Ray Kurzweil argues that it may be our brains.

The Adaptive Brain Speaking recently on New York Public Radio’s On the Media, Kurtzweil suggested that the human mind will evolve to synthesize this new form of information gathering. “Over time, the nonbiological portion of our intelligence will predominate, and that’s basically what we mean by the singularity,� he said. “When you get out to 2045, we’ll have multiplied the overall intelligence of the human/machine civilization a billionfold, and that’s such a profound transformation that we call it a singularity.� Kurtzweil considers the wired brain as an inevitable—and advantageous—next evolutionary step for the human race, one that is consistent with the development of our minds over time. “There is something unique about humans in that we’re the only species that we know about that actually extends our reach with our tools, ever since we picked up a stick to reach a higher branch,� he explained. “We’re already a human/machine civilization. Our tools are part of who we are. They always have been. And that’s what unique about human beings.� Kurtzweil’s predictions have a good rate of accuracy, and I imagine he’s right. But even the overclocked evolution of the mind that he speaks of is a slow process, and neither the Internet nor the brains we currently have are doing the trick. No matter how many lauded new web tools I use to pull disparate information together, there is nothing that can effectively organize and synthesize the sheer wealth of information, leaving me with discrete pieces of data in an endless stream of facts, statistics, news and trivia. This information may reside on our hard drives or in the cloud, but only nominal amounts of it reside in our brain. And until the mind takes that evolutionary leap Kurtzweil speaks of—or we begin injecting Google nanobots in our minds to better tie together the brain’s rudimentary search engine—this new system of thought does little to help the process of analysis, of synthesis, of


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1=D3@ j A:=E @3/27<5 pulling pieces of information together to reach an informed conclusion. Kurtzweil’s singularity may be decades away, but I suspect that this change has slowly begun, if not through evolution or nanobots, then through a change in practice. Even after rediscovering the value of slow reading, falling in love with print all over again, I find myself drawn by the allure of the screen. At times, slow reading seems almost too slow, and that intellectual quiet unbearable. My mind craves that discursive frenzy— maybe, like any other hard drug, the Internet has rewired my brain.

Perhaps we’re missing the point harping upon some arbitrary distinction between how we read in print and how we read online. No matter the media, we need to rediscover the discipline of slow reading that has been lost in the frenzy of never-ending RSS feeds and social network life streams. No matter how we’re engaging with information—in print or onscreen, in a web browser or on a phone—it is, as it’s always been, essential for us to read slowly, be engaged with what we read, to constantly challenge ourselves to relearn how to think, to be critically engaged. That never-ending data stream isn’t going anywhere, and the fact is, we may need its addictive distraction more than it needs our attention.0

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ICHARD Thompson’s long career as a musician in folk rock is doubly significant: first as an example that a man of fragrant wit and deep empathy can make a permanent place in a business that discourages staying power; and second because, as a man without heavy radio hits, Thompson proves the race isn’t won by the swift. I liked Hayden Childs’ diatribe in his novel inspired by Richard and Linda Thompson’s album Shoot Out the Lights, published in the 33 1/3 series. There’s something to be said for the raving Thompson fan’s wrath at the lack of general public props Richard Thompson has received over the decades: “I think Clapton is the worst kind of mediocrity . . . When I overhear Thompson’s fans asking each other if it’s possible that Thompson is a better guitarist than Clapton, I don’t have much faith in humanity’s ability to tell diamonds from shit.â€? The rock fan hyperbole explains at least a little Thompson’s importance; a close hearing will do the rest. What a marvel it is that we still get the pleasure of seeing him at small venues. Thompson’s own tale is too complex for 900 words, but it would make a hell of an opera. These days, when not touring, he’s the host of an unusually useful website with lyrics, questions and quips such as this one: “Busking gets you used to life as a professional musician, i.e. public humiliation, being ignored, and begging for pennies.â€? A/<B/ 1@CH E339:G( 2SZWUVbSR b] bOZY b] g]c 7 eOa ^O`b ]T bVOb T`WUVbS\W\U ¡BSO` AbOW\SR :SbbS`¸

4=:93<@=193< Richard Thompson plays the Rio this Saturday. []P Ob Ab`OePS``g ;caWQ 4SabWdOZ W\ TOZZ '' ) eS e]cZR\¸b ZSb g]c ZSOdS eWbV]cb O\ S\Q]`S EWbV]cb UWdW\U b]] [cQV OeOg eVOb eWZZ g]c PS ^ZOgW\U ]\ bVWa b]c`- ;OgPS g]c Q]cZR Xcab acUUSab a][S ]T bVS RObSa ]T bVS Q][^]aWbW]\ PSW\U Oa g]c VOdS gSO`a b] `SOQV T`][

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We’re not people who drink much anymore, either. Maybe you have to have the sober perspective before you can really write about getting drunk.

The nice thing in touring this summer is the contrast; you pick up some variety, a contrast between large places and small places, indoors and outdoors.

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THOMPSON: Well, um . . . it will be a selection of various decades, some new stuff, some freshly written, recent recordings and music, back all the way to the 1960s.

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The title is a GI expression [for what happens when the Humvee is blown up]. For some time, I had been trying to write a song about the Iraq war, so I started visiting websites to read some GI poetry and rap lyrics. I was interested in military slang and the sort of language being used.

Be glad to. I’ve known Loudon since the ’70s. Normally, I can’t stand to listen to confessional songwriters, Joni Mitchell being the exception; they have too much ego to achieve the level of honesty that Loudon does. People know him as a funny writer; he’s side-splittingly humorous, but the serious songs are magnificent. BVS be] ]T g]c VOdS e`WbbS\ a][S ]T bVS PSab a]\Ua OP]cb P]]hS SdS`

Some songs start with words, some with music. The lucky songs get both first. Starting up songwriting is difficult. Whichever door you can find and jam open is the one you use. 2] g]c TW\R bVOb O\g ]T g]c` ]ZR a]\Ua O`S b]] aOR b] ZWabS\ b] ZSb OZ]\S ^S`T]`[-

I don’t mind sad—there’s a couple songs I don’t sing anymore because they’re much too melodramatic. A sad song should be fairly sad but dry-eyed. EVOb ab`WYSa g]c Oa bVS aORRSab a]\U g]c¸dS SdS` VSO`R-

“Ebony Eyes� by the Everly Brothers is terribly sad, maybe mawkish. “I Think It’s 3 "


" j / 3 june 24-july 1, 2009 A/<B/1@CH 1=; / 3

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:7AB G=C@ :=1/: 3D3<B 7< B63 1/:3<2/@ Going to Rain Todayâ€? by Randy Newman is a brilliantly sad song. And then, of course, you get into the realm of opera. 7 eO\bSR b] bVO\Y g]c T]` g]c` [caWQ ]\ bVS ¡5`WhhZg ;O\¸ a]c\Rb`OQY´[g TOd]`WbS TWZ[ ]T bVOb gSO`

I worked on a spin-off of the Grizzly Man film on Animal Planet with the footage Timothy Treadwell shot. We see much more of Treadwell the talented nature photographer, not the insane Treadwell who couldn’t see the boundaries. . . .

I don’t mind sad, but there’s a couple songs I don’t sing any more because they’re much too melodramatic. A sad song should be fairly sad but dry-eyed. 6OdS g]c `SOR bVS \]dSZ POaSR ]\ ¡AV]]b =cb bVS :WUVba¸ Pg 6OgRS\ 1VWZRa- 7b¸a dS`g U]]R caW\U g]c` `SQ]`R Xcab ZWYS 1VO`ZSa 9W\P]bS caSa 8]V\ AVORS¸a ^]S[ T]` bVS a]c`QS ]T ¡>OZS 4W`S ¸

I haven’t read it. It sounds dangerous. Maybe I should read it. . . . EVOb¸a g]c` ]^W\W]\ ]T bVS [caWQ W\Rcab`g bVSaS ROga- 7a Wb e]`aS \]e bVOb Wb eOa ! gSO`a OU]-

I’m at the point where I don’t really know what’s going on—I really haven’t been in touch for 10 years. The industry revolves around live music; go see the show, buy CDs and get the T-shirt. Any profit for musicians now is in T-shirts. I hope this changes a little—it’s great to be an independent musician. And if you can play live, you can get a strong foundation. Live audiences are more loyal than the audiences got from CDs.

RICHARD THOMPSON plays Saturday, June 27, at 8pm at the Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. Tickets are $25 advance/

Email it to calendar@santacruz.com, fax it to 831.457.5828, or drop it by our office. Events need to be received a week prior to publication and placement cannot be guaranteed.

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H/;0@/ Shira, song! Ten close friends perform eclectic global music in over 15 languages. For A Concert of Judaic and Global Song, the vivacious all-female a cappella group Zambra will sing selected Hebrew, Latino and Yiddish songs from their global repertoire, with featured original arrangements of Sephardic and Ashkenazi music. Accompanying them for this performance are a violin and accordion. Saturday, June 27, 7:30pm at Temple Beth El, 3055 Porter Gulch Rd., Aptos. Suggested donation: $12 adults/$6 children. (831.429.1691) V^g hinaZ eV^ci^c\h# I]gj ?jc (%! &&Vb# ;gZZ# &(+- EVX^[^X 6kZ! HVciV 8gjo# 1]TTSSb]^WO EaZ^c"V^g 6gi^hih EV^ci J8H8 ;Vgb# # I]gj ?jc (%# ;gZZ# &))( 8Ve^idaV GY! HVciV 8gjo# 4SZWf 9cZ^O 5OZZS`g AVbZciVi^dch EVhhV\Zh >># Ldg` Wn GdWncc Hb^i] VcY :kV 7ZgchiZ^c# ;gZZ# I]j"Hjc cddc" +eb &%, :ab Hi! HVciV 8gjo! )%-#(,(#'-*)# 6SOZbV AS`dWQSa /US\Qg I^cV BVhX^dXX]^/ 9Zh^\c ^c B^cY# I]Z Vgi^hi h]dlh b^mZY bZY^V! ^cXajY^c\ eg^cibV`^c\! eV^ci^c\! eV^ci^c\ l^i] aVnZgZY eVeZg VcY ]VcYbVYZ eVeZg0 gjch lZZ`YVnh i]gdj\] ?ja (&0 ^c 7aY\# 9 dc i]Z hZXdcY [addg# ;gZZ# &%-% :bZa^cZ Hi! HVciV 8gjo! -(&#)*)#)%%%# BVS ;WZZ 5OZZS`g 6aa 6XXZhh/ (% NZVgh d[ GdX` Éc Gdaa E]did\gVe]h# AdXVa e]did\gVe]Zg B^X]ZaaZ 7Zchdc h]dlh ldg` [gdb i]Z gdX`! ejc`! G 7! \gjc\Z! bZiVa VcY ]^e"]de ZgVh# I]gj ?jcZ (%# ;gZZ# &(& ;gdci Hi! HVciV 8gjo# >OXO`] DOZZSg /`ba 1]c\QWZ HXjaeijgZ >h/ É%.# I]Z [djgi] VccjVa Zm]^W^i d[ XdciZbedgVgn

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3 !!


Monterey Bay Master Gardeners Presents the JUNE 27, 2009 9 AM TO 5 PM

A Day of Free Gardening Information with a

FOCUS ON FOOD Speakers

Sponsors

Natural and Fresh Foods by Agape Feast Wine Tasting

Host and Principal Sponsor Monterey Bay Master Gardeners City of Scotts Valley Scotts Valley Water District San Lorenzo Valley Water District City of Santa Cruz Soquel Water District Central Home Supply WILPF Vision Recycling Smith & Hawken

Keeping Backyard Chickens Fruits, Food, and Fire Safety Non-toxic Control of Vertebrate Pests Beth Benjamin Growing Vegetables from Seed in the Home Garden Manfred Warmuth Smart Food Production in the City Lynn Battazzo Bee Symphony

Demonstrations Morning Alrie Middlebrook John Farais

n in -w bi ard hi Aw x le a na de i atio Educ i ng hi n de ,c gar te s ble ivi Sustaina ctt ’s a ren

Afternoon Ilona & Chelton Wood Darren Huckle Larry Jacobs of Jacobs Farms

Child

ts &

in g

Cynthia Sandberg Dave Egbert Thomas Wittman

California Native Edible Plants California, Mediterranean and Native American Cuisines Nutritional Foods and Natural Sweetners California Native Culinary and Medicinal Herbs (walking tour) Organic Food and Food Safety

Ideas for water conservation, composting and edible gardening

June 27th 9 am - 5 pm Skypark, Scotts Valley

FREE

More information:

sp e

www.smartgardening.org

ake s de rs fo mo rb ck n st en eg rati inn s& ons e r be s& es exp erien Sho ced gardeners p fo r pla nts, b ooks, & more

www.smartgardening.org

Directions: Take Highway 17 to Scotts Valley. Leave Highway 17 at the Mt Hermon exit. Continue .7 mile on Mt Hermon Road. Turn right on Kings Village Road. Follow Kings Village Road to the end and turn left into Skypark.



SANTACRUZ.COM

june 24-july 1, 2009

| 27

The Best In Supplies For Custom Landscaping

SCOTTS VALLEY ROCK LANDSCAPE & POND SUPPLIES April-October Open 7 Days A Week

IN 1968

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d en % ! &"" $ P % ! &"" $ % ! &"" $ % ! &"" e$ ) #!$ ! ! %#! ) T!"$! ) !"$! %$ ) % %& #( ) % %& #( ) % ) R % $ W $ ) ' #$ ! ) P ' #$ ! ) ! ) P )) ) P! P &"" $ ) ! ) R! n # ' ) R!

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) Serving All Of Santa Cruz County

438-3644 4425 S 4425 442 SC C

DR D R

www.scottsvalleyrock.com tt ll k ilable

Ava Delivery

MP TITIV PRI


Surf City Distributing Frozen fruit and juice bars.

3#/443 6!,,%9 3+90!2+ s *5.% TH s AM TO PM

Terra Nova Ecological Landscaping Ecological landscape design, installation and maintenance

CHILDREN'S PLAY AREA

RESTROOM

Terra Sole Nursery New, unusual plants for our California climate featuring herbs, succulents, perennials. FOOD DEMOS & FOOD SERVICE WINE TASTINGS

Vision Recycling Produces wood chips, mulch, etc. for sale at the Buena Vista Landfill.

REC BLDG

Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) Water Committee

WATER STATION

EXHIBITORS Arboretum at UC Santa Cruz Low-maintenance, non-invasive and drought-tolerant plants from California, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand; also selected items from the gift shop and gardens available.

Barnwood Bird Houses Bird houses.

Caeli Landscape Architecture A landscape architecture/design service that specializes in master plans, site plans and garden design featuring site-appropriate materials, plants and site improvements.

California Native Garden Foundation An organization dedicated to the beauty, garden worthiness, and ecological appropriateness of California native gardens.

California Native Plant Society, Santa Cruz Chapter A non-profit organization of amateurs and professionals that promotes understanding and appreciation of California's native plants, and helps preserve them in their natural habitats through scientific activities, education and conservation

Camp Joy Gardens Children’s activities--building soil and sowing seeds; books, plants and other independently explored items will be provided.

Carman’s Nursery Rare and unusual plants – bonsai starters, unusual fruiting plants, herbs and mini-ivies, rock garden plants, variegated plants, shade lovers, and dwarf conifers.

Central Home Supply Santa Cruz county’s largest and best landscaping and building supply.

Cool-Off Evaporative sportswear that helps the wearer keep cool in hot weather.

Copper Moon Apothecary Hand-crafted organic soaps, lotions and herbal remedies.

Crescent Hill Nursery, Inc. Rare and exotic perennials for the Mediterranean climate.

David’s Bulbs Giant white squill plants (Urgenia maritima).

Dharma Love by Anastasia Keriotis Eco-friendly clothing and accessories from certified organic cotton, hemp, fair trade and socially accountable cotton products. Embellished with original artwork by Anastasia Keriotis.

Res SVFD Res Res

Speaker Tent

Fruit Bars

MG Welcome

·

To Parking

MG Sales Plant Hold

Ecological Landscaping Association A nonprofit organization of dedicated landscape professionals, individual gardeners, educators and more who are committed to educating themselves and others about ecological landscaping.

Farm Fresh to You Organic living without a trip to the store! Produce delivered to your doorstep – no commitment, customizable, fresh and easy.

Gardening by the Book Gardening books & baubles.

Garden Whimsy Pique assiette & other garden whimsy

Gophers Limited Cinch gopher and mole traps. “Easy Gopher Control without Poisons” DVD. Hori-hori planting knives, lots of other traps and information about our service.

Gutter Helmet Rain gutter protection keeps out leaves, twigs, pine needles and other debris to give you peace of mind and clean gutters.

Happy Coops Chicken coops and runs for the backyard gardener.

Hidden Gardens A full-service garden center specializing in organic locally grown fruit trees, perennials, food crops and vegetables. Also selling baby chickens.

Homeless Garden Project Provides job training and transitional employment to homeless. Products from the Women’s Organic Flower Enterprise and freshly picked organic strawberries for sale at the Faire.

Houses for Bats (AML Enterprises) Single and multi-chambered bat houses certified by Bat Conservation International.

Jenny Wren Designs Whimsical mosaic artwork for the garden.

Kate’s Kitchen Gardens Design and installation of edible gardens for the home.

Your Backyard Bounty Consulting services to help you grow your own fruit, veggies, and flowers. A variety of options in garden design and installation to fit your space and budget.

Your Home Grown Food Personalized gardening service, specializing in small spaces. Grow vegetables, herbs and fruits in garden beds in your yard, containers on your porch, and window boxes for your house.

Ecology Action/County of Santa Cruz Home Composting Decrease garbage and increase waste diversion while increasing yields in your garden. Master Composters answer recycling and composting questions. Composting workshop at 1:00 p.m.

Free bottled water from the Blue Lotus Water Filter. Fill your own metal bottle at our faucet, or use our recyclable cup.

FOCUS ON FOOD 9:30a

Alrie Middlebrook, California Native Garden Foundation California Native Edibles 10:30a John Farais, The Zen Cowboy Chef Cooking Demo & Tasting: California, Mediterranean and Native American Cuisines 11:35a Phil LaRocca La Rocca Vineyards 12:00p John Farais, The Zen Cowboy Cooking Demo & Tasting: California, Mediterranean and Native American Cuisines 1:00p Organic Wineworks 2:00p Ilona & Cheytan Wood, Agape Feast Organic Foods and Wines 1:30p Larry Jacob, Jacob’s Farm Food Safety Wine Tasting BEAUREGARD VINEYARDS LA ROCCA VINEYARDS ORGANIC WINE WORKS

SPEAKER SCHEDULE

A map of exhibitor locations will be available at the Master Gardeners' Welcome Booth. Knox Garden Box Elevated garden boxes and birdhouses.

Landscape Design: Why Hire a Designer? Whether you need a complete plan or a specific consultation, site analysis or garden coaching, a landscape designer can help you attain the garden you've always wanted.

Liquid BioTech Rejuvenate your soil and revolutionize your garden by using compost tea.

Monterey Bay Master Gardeners Master Gardeners provide information about the Faire and respond to your gardening questions.

Monterey Bay Master Gardeners Sales of items from homes and gardens of Master Gardeners.

Monterey Bay Master Gardeners' Children's Craft Booth Learn how to make wonderful garden crafts! Projects include pounded flower bookmarks, leaf prints, river rock plant markers, paper pots, and miniature flower arrangements.

Monterey Bay Beekeepers Guild Beekeeping information and honey sales.

Monterey Bay Iris Society Iris rhizomes offered for sale from the private gardens of club members. Iris literature and instructions for growing iris also available.

Monterey Bay Dahlia Society Have fun while learning, growing, and sharing all there is to know about dahlias! Come by and see some beautiful early blooms!

Native Revival Nursery Drought-tolerant California native plants from the Bay Area and beyond, six blends of water-wise native sod, plus garden design and consultation.

New Garden Nursery and Landscaping Deer, drought, frost, and fire resistant plant material and groundcovers, from landscape consultation to complete installation.

Palo Designs Garden-related jewelry, sun catchers, pots and other garden-related items.

Pet Plants Bonsai Plants and pots for Bonsai and pre-Bonsai.

Pfister’s Perennials Perennials, maples, bamboo and potted arrangements.

Robin’s Keep Mosaic art, mosaic trays, furniture, statuary, birdbaths, and shell pots.

Santa Cruz Homesteaders/Live Oak Grange Santa Cruz Orchid Society Orchid plants.

Santa Cruz Water Conservation Coalition Promotes cost-effective and environmentally sound ways to reduce our demand for water. Effective tools help make saving water easy and fun.

Scotts Valley Landscape Group A collection of local businesses featuring the following unique products and services: landscape installation and design; artificial grass; concrete staining and restoration; custom garden boxes, and chicken coops.

Scotts Valley Fire Department Medical/First Aid

Smith and Hawken Premier retailer of contemporary garden furniture, equipment and supplies distinguished by authenticity, style and craftsmanship.

Recreation Building 9:30a Dave Egbert Fruits, Food, and Fire: sustainable landscapes that keep you and your home Fire Safe 10:30a Beth Benjamin Growing Vegetables from Seed in the Home Garden 11:30a Thomas Wittman Non-toxic Control of Vertebrate Pests 1:00p Manfred Warmuth Smart Food Production in the City 2:00p Cynthia Sandberg Keeping Backyard Chickens 3:00p Lynn Bottazzo Bees Symphony EVENTS 11:15a

Darren Huckle, L.Ac., Roots of Wellness Herb Walk: California Herbs at Skypark 1:00p Home Composting Workshop: the Santa Cruz County Home Composting Program

Food Court Fresh and Natural Foods by Agape Feast Organic baked cookies, raw vegan pie ("chzcake"), raw golden raisin brownies with walnuts, salads, grilled fish (wild salmon or wild mahi mahi), calamari sandwiches or salad, and shrimp sandwich or salad.

Free Water Free bottled water, courtesy of WILPF

SPONSORS

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Go Green! Featuring High Quality, Affordable, Natural & Organic Products Vitamins, Vitamin i Herbal Supplements, Bulk Supplem Herbs & Teas, Bulk Products, Body P Care, Gifts, Face Ca Clothing, Jewelry, Clothing Toys, In Incense & Candles Can

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E7<3 /<2 4@7D=:7BG THROUGH the mystery and history of wine, Red Wine and Frivolous Things seeks to deepen audiences’ appreciation of wine with an aerial musical comedy. This high-flying troupe will perform original air and land dances by local choreographer Lisa Christensen. The story follows ancient deities Dionysus of Greece, Shezmu from Egypt, Soma from India and Geshtinana of Sumeria as they offer advances in champagne and winemaking through the centuries. The troupe also explores the story of aging as the disguised deities live as medieval monks and contemporary immigrant farmworkers who watch their friends and family age and die without them. Red Wine puts new zing into the everyday wine drinking we take for granted while revealing the deities’ influences on the history and economics of wine and champagne. Wine tasting 45 minutes before the show is included in the ticket price for audience members over 21. (Kat Lynch)

RED WINE AND FRIVOLOUS THINGS runs Friday through Sunday, June 26–28. Show starts at 8pm (wine tasting at 7:15pm) Friday–Saturday, and 3pm (2:15 wine tasting) Sunday. Vets Hall, 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. Tickets $18–$25, includes wine tasting for those 21 and over, available at www.brownpapertickets.com.

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7< / ;==2 A LONG gravel driveway shaded by overhanging trees recalls the long, humid summers of Savannah, where the photograph was taken. In an aged-looking, high-contrast photo, dried roses wilt in their vase looking exhausted. Nearby, a heavily made-up San Francisco woman leaps out at the viewer from a hazy, glossy close-up. The atmosphere that Santa Cruz Weekly contributor Pete Saporito’s 11 photos create in Vinocruz is mellow, yet they somehow liven up the wine store’s white walls. According to Saporito, who currently studies graphic design at Cabrillo College and completed a photography major there six years ago, the cut glass and the frames are also part of the art. Such is the case with a dark custom frame that creates a simple, somber mood for a bright red screenprint of Our Lady of Guadalupe. As a gallery, and because of the glare the track lighting creates, Vinocruz forces viewers to stand directly in front of the images to take them in. Several of the images are framed on either side by the dark, wooden wine cabinets. Was this on purpose? The sides of the cabinets block out any distraction that the small wine store could create and, like the photos themselves, force the observers to absorb them one by one. (Kat Lynch)

PETE SAPORITO’s photographs are on display though July 23 at Vinocruz, 725 Front St., Santa Cruz. Admission is free. Vinocruz hours are 11am–pm Monday–Thursday, 11am–8pm Friday and Saturday, and noon–6pm Sunday. (831.426.8466)


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Jazz Presenters since 1975

THURS. JUNE 25 • 7 PM

JAZZ CAMP CONCERT Hear the future of Jazz! Students from this summer’s camp perform! Free concert • Dinner served at the cafÊ MON. JUNE 29 • 7 & 9 PM

PONCHO SANCHEZ LATIN JAZZ BAND “the hardest working man in Afro-Cuban Jazz...â€? –JazzTimes $30/Adv $33/Door, No Jazztix or Comps Sponsored by Radiology Medical Group MON. JULY 6 • 7 & 9 PM

“DEDICATED TO YOUâ€? KURT ELLING SINGS COLTRANE/HARTMAN FEATURING ERNIE WATTS AND THE LAURENCE HOBGOOD TRIO $25/Adv $28/Door THURS. JULY 9 • 7 PM

GILLIAN HARWIN & THE GOTHAM GROOVERS Concert only: $12/Adv $15/Door Jazz & Dinner: $24.60/Adv

Ladysmith Black Mambazo “South Africa’s Musical Treasure� –New York Times

JULY 13 AT THE RIO THEATRE $45 Gold Circle, $30 General No Jazztix or Comps Sponsored by Wells Fargo Bank THURS. JULY 16 • 7 PM Saxophone icon from the 60s & 70s

JOHNNY ALMOND’S BIG BASH

AB=@;G AC<2/G Weather Pending

Featuring Johnny’s musical friends from the Bay Area & beyond! $15/Adv $18/Door

at the Abbey on Sunday

MON. JULY 20 • 7 & 9 PM

AN EVENING WITH OTTMAR LIEBERT & LUNA NEGRA $28/Adv $31/Door, No Jazztix/Comps Sponsored by Drew Miller Insurance Services, Inc. MON. JULY 27 • 7 PM RISING STAR VOCALIST/PIANIST!

SPENCER DAY

$20/Adv $23/Door Sponsored by Nickelodeon & Del Mar Theatres JULY 30 AUG 5 AUG 10

AUG 17

MADS TOLLING QUARTET (1/2 Price Night for Students) YELLOWJACKETS FEATURING MIKE STERN BUSTER WILLIAMS QUARTET “Something More� featuring Patrice Rushen - piano, Benny Maupin reeds, Cindy Blackman - drums LARRY CARLTON

Dinner served Mondays & Thursdays beginning at 6pm, serving premium wines & microbrewed beers. Snacks & desserts available all other nights. All age venue.

Advance tickets at Logos Books & Records and online at kuumbwajazz.org Tickets subject to service charge and 5% S.C. City Admission Tax.

KUUMBWA JAZZ

320-2 CEDAR ST • SANTA CRUZ KUUMBWAJAZZ.ORG

4 27 - 2 2 27

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Bands often spend a lifetime chasing the kind of respect that this San Francisco indie folk set has garnered in two short years. After being christened indie darling M. Ward’s “favorite new band� in 2007, the Port O’Brien gang quickly found themselves touring with Bright Eyes, Modest Mouse, Fleet Foxes and MGMT. Charmingly harmonic, the group gets inspiration from songwriter Van Pierszalowski’s summer trips to Alaska, where he works on his father’s salmon fishing boat, then turns the open space and rugged purity of the Last Frontier into delightful little folk ditties. Crepe Place; $8 advance/$10 door; 9pm. (Curtis Cartier)

An award-winning marathon runner, a surfer and an engineer plus flute, sax and guitar players make up this animated group of unconventional musicians. Extra Large blends bluesy funk with soulful reggae in highspirited anthems that preach lessons of life, liberty and the pursuit of dance. Their whimsical lyrics genially warn against the dangers of greed and getting funked out of school while charismatically commanding the audience to jump and jive a la the Rolling Stones, a legend the sextet does justice to in song. The Robin Campbell Band of Half Moon Bay also brings it to Felton for this night of nonstop dance. Don Quixote’s; $8 advance/ $10 door; 8pm. (Jaime Nabrynski)

Few local bands are as quintessentially Santa Cruz as Ribsy’s Nickel. Melding three of the town’s musical passions— muscular rock, laid-back reggae and punk—the band could serve as a veritable soundtrack to Santa Cruz. The band has seen a fair amount of national interest, including songs on MTV and surf videos, but the members keep their affiliations local. All about representing their beloved Westside, it’s party-hearty music for hard-partying bros and the girls that love them. Blue Lagoon; $5; 9pm. (Paul M. Davis)


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1=<13@BA 233@B719 JULY 2 AT CREPE PLACE 339 / ;=CA3 JULY 3 AT CATALYST

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2/D72 <3:A=< 0/<2 Specializing in improvised soundscapes so expansive they seemingly reach the great beyond, the David Nelson Band stands proudly among Nelson’s past collaborations. Nelson, a founding member of the New Riders of the Purple Sage and a longtime Jerry Garcia collaborator, is a master guitar player and vocalist with a voracious musical appetite. This is apparent in his current ensemble, which also features Jefferson Starship alum Pete Sears and Phil Lesh collaborator John Molo, as the band goes from rock & roll to country and bluegrass with ease and aplomb. Moe’s Alley; $25; 9pm. (PMD)

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H75/0== ;=23:7AB3 In New Orleans, a handful of musicians walk through the French Quarter like gods among men. And nearly all of these local legends have, at one time or another, worked with a member of Neville family. In Joseph “Zigaboo� Modeliste’s case, it was his drum work with Art and Cyril Neville as a founding member of the iconic funk set the Meters that established him as

Big Easy elite. But today, 20 years after splitting from the group, Zigaboo is known as one of the most innovative percussion virtuosos in the world. And with an all-star cast of supporting funksters, his plans to spice up Santa Cruz, Cajun style, are very likely to work out. Moe’s Alley; $12 advance/ $15 door; 9pm. (CC)

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>67: 03@9=E7BH A bluesman with soul beyond his years, Phil Berkowitz is a vocalist and harmonica player with few peers in the region, save for Andy Santana, with whom he appears during this special one-off collaboration in Aptos. It’s not quite a clash of the titans, more a friendly rivalry as Berkowitz and Santana trade harmonica licks tit-fortat. Berkowitz, coming off a successful CD paying tribute to Louis Jordan, will bring a decidedly old-school charm to the proceedings. Verve Lounge; $5; 9pm. (PMD)

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E3/B63@ >3<27<5 Janie Oliver has a voice so sweet and warm it’s just got to be fattening. And as the lead singer for San Francisco’s

>719 =<3 Greensky Bluegrass plays jam-band-laced bluegrass in Felton Tuesday.

1/:74=@<7/ 03/16 0=GA 1=; JULY 4 AT DON QUIXOTE’S B63 7B/:A JULY 7 AT MOE’S ALLEY 6=E:7<¸ @/7< JULY 9 AT CREPE PLACE >=1= JULY 11 AT GOLDEN STATE :/2GA;7B6 0:/19 ;/;0/H= JULY 13 AT RIO THEATRE >/B= 0/<B=< JULY 18 AT MOE’S ALLEY 57::7/< E3:16 JULY 24 AT CATALYST :G:3 :=D3BB AUG. 6 AT GOLDEN STATE

up-and-coming indie jazz set Weather Pending, she’s been bumping up the calories all over the Central Coast lately. Blending smooth and sultry bass lines with toned-down clicks and high-hats, the trio captures the hip, downtown vibe of coffeehouse jazz while leaving plenty of room for Oliver’s honey-dipped vocals to drip through. Fresh from the studio with their debut album And How! the crew is keeping it low-key in Santa Cruz with a show at the Abbey. The Abbey Coffee Lounge; price TBD; 8:30pm. (CC)

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5@33<A9G 0:C35@/AA Brandishing a banjo, mandolin and guitar, three Michigan mountain townies set out in the fall of 2000 on a journey that would transform the traditional American roots genre. After a slight shifting of members and the addition of a stand-up bass and dobro, Greensky Bluegrass emerged seven years later as a flatpicking quintet that won a ticket to the main stage of the 2007 Telluride Bluegrass Festival. Now fully furnished with all the right tools, their progressive style embraces the fluid improvisation of a jam band’s modus operandi—a refreshing, personal twist to conventional country tunes. One need listen no further than these bluegrass bumpkins’ version of Prince’s hit “When the Doves Cry� to gauge the scope of their creativity. Don Quixote’s; $10; 7:30. (JN)


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Kuumbwa Jazz Presents

Ladysmith Black Mambazo “South Africa’s Musical Treasure.� –New York Times

KUSP DOES

JAZZ SUNDAY 9:30–MIDNIGHT Giant Steps/Howard Feldstein MONDAY 9:30–MIDNIGHT B‌ In the Night/Bobby Bishop TUESDAY 9:30–MIDNIGHT Out Front Out Back/Larry Blood WEDNESDAY 9:30–MIDNIGHT In the Groove/Mike Lambert THURSDAY 9:30–MIDNIGHT Ain’t What they Used to Be/ Alan Mertens & Eddie Hudson FRIDAY 10–MIDNIGHT Night Train/Christian Deeny SATURDAY/SUNDAY 2–6AM Jazz with Bob Parlocha

JULY 13, 8 PM RIO THEATRE

$45 Gold Circle, $30 General, No Jazztix or Comps Tickets: Logos Books & Records and online at kuumbwajazz.org Info: 831.427.2227 or kuumbwajazz.org ONLINE @ KUSP.ORG

Sponsored by Wells Fargo Bank


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RESTAURANT & NIGHTCLUB

1011 PACIFIC AVENUE SANTA CRUZ 831-423-1336

Friday, July 3 • AGES 16+

Saturday, July 25 AGES 16+ • In the Atrium

EEK A MOUSE plus

HOTTUB

$10 Adv./ $12 Dr. • Drs. 8:30 p.m., Show 9 p.m. Thursday, July 30 • AGES 16+ • In the Atrium

CH R IS P U REK A

Aivar

$14 Ad./$19 Door Drs. 8 p.m., Show 9 p.m. Friday, July 10 • AGES 16+ • In the Atrium

BLVD

plus

plus

Lucy Walsh

$3 Adv./ $5 Dr. • Drs. 8:30 p.m., Show 9 p.m.

Mimosa

Friday, July 31 • AGES 16+ • In the Atrium HOMETOWN CD RELEASE PARTY

STELLAR CORPSES

$10 Adv./ $12 Dr. • Drs. 8:30 p.m., Show 9 p.m. plus Los Dryheavers also Rockit Zombies $10 Adv./ $12 Dr. • Drs. 8:30 p.m., Show 9 p.m. Saturday, July 11 • AGES 21+ Friday, August 7 • AGES 21+

ROBIN TROWER plus

JOHNNY WINTER

Corby Yates

$33 Advance/$39 at the Door Drs. 6:30 p.m., Show 7:30 p.m.

plus Saturday Night in the Atrium FREE SHOW SERIES No Cover • 9 p.m. • 21+

ALIEN COWBOYS BOOM BOOM STEREO • ALIEN MONSTER Wednesday, July 15 • AGES 16+ • In the Atrium

Mystic Roots plus Top Shelf

$21 Adv./ $24 Dr. Drs. 7:30 p.m. Show 8:30 p.m.

Friday, Aug. 7 • AGES 16+ • Country Music in the Atrium

JAMES INTVELD

$10 Adv./ $12 Dr. • Drs. 8:30 p.m., Show 9 p.m.

Aug 8 The Pack/ The Cataracs

Dizzy Balloon/ Pep Love The Holdup/ The Skaflaws (AGES 16+) Aug 8 Lukas Nelson & the Promise of the Real (AGES 16+) Thursday, July 16 • AGES 16+ • In the Atrium Eric Hutchinson plus Anya Marina Aug 16 Hatebreed (AGES 16+) $10 Adv./ $12 Dr. • Drs. 7:30 p.m., Show 8:30 p.m. Aug 17 Xavier Rudd (AGES 16+) Aug 19 Trevor Hall (AGES 16+) Thursday, July 23 • AGES 16+ • In the Atrium Music for Animals/ Wendy Darling Aug 20 The Pyrx Band (AGES 16+) $10 Adv./ $12 Dr. • Drs. 8:30 p.m., Show 9 p.m. Aug 21 Slacktone (AGES 16+) Sep 16 Sugar Ray (AGES 21+) Friday, July 24 • AGES 21+ Sep 17 Steel Pulse (AGES 16+) AN EVENING WITH Sep 17 Elliot Randall/ Gina Villalobos (AGES 16+) Oct 3 Still Time (AGES 16+) Oct 21 UFO (AGES 21+) Nov 28 Igor & Red Elvises (AGES 21+)

also Natural Incense $8 Adv./ $10 Dr. • Drs. 7:30 p.m., Show 8 p.m.

Gillian Welch

$25 Adv./$28 Dr. Drs. 7 p.m., Show 8 p.m.

Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.

Sunday thru Tuesday FREE POOL for Bar Patrons Noon to Closing

ROCKER’S PIZZA KITCHEN 831-426-PIZZA $1 Pizza Slice ALL DAY TUESDAYS

Wed. - Mon. $2 CHEESE OR PEPPERONI until 6 p.m.

Advance tickets are available at the Catalyst daily with a minimal service charge. Tickets to all Catalyst shows, subject to city tax and service charge, are also available by phone at 1-866-384-3060, and online at our web site

www.catalystclub.com

HAPPY HOUR DAILY 5-7pm $2 COORS

$1.99 Asian Lettuce Wraps $2.99 Pulled Pork Sliders $3.99 Cheeseburger …and more!

931 Pacific Ave. Info & Group Events: 423-POOL


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Film.

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The Breeders

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ERE IS YET another movie that seeks to be the next Juno. Director Sam Mendes’ Away We Go, an on-again, off-again road picture, concerns Burt (John Krasinski), an insurance broker whose work consists of taking occasional business calls. His mate, though not his wife, is the dour, nervous Verona (UC–Santa Cruz alum Maya Rudolph). Verona apparently has Phoebe Gloeckner’s job as a medical text illustrator. The two are living in a semiheated singlewide trailer in order to be close to Burt’s parents. Then comes the news that Burt’s father and mother (Catherine O’Hara, Jeff Daniels) are moving; they’ll miss their grandchild’s birth and first two years of life. Verona’s parents are both dead and can’t help. What follows is a series of sketches as these two alterna-plumed worry-birds seek nesting grounds. They take their act to Phoenix, Tucson, Madison and Montreal. The destinations sour on them fast. The Tucson episode, in which moody, pregnant Verona bonds with her sister (Carmen Ejogo), exists to make the finale pay off. That’s good to remember, because it doesn’t add up otherwise. Allison Janney plays a mad Phoenix housewife with a taste for greyhound races and an afternoon snort. Her husband (Jim Gaffigan) is her scratching post, and he’s given up entirely. Janney makes something happen in Away We Go. That happening has been called “overacting� already, but her lancing, obscene patter gives this movie some snap.

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In Madison, things get angry. Burt and Verona visit LN (pronounced Ellen). She is played by Maggie Gyllenhaal as a superficially nice New Age Nazi. One the one hand, she is overprotecting her child; on the other hand, she’s letting the toddler sleep in her bed, where he can witness his mom having sex. Though it’s set in Wisconsin, I’ll wager that this segment is about Berkeley—co-screenwriter Dave Eggers’ home once—where it is possible to see children who are breast-fed until they have their own library card. The natural comic payoff to this episode should be the kid’s revenge, but the kid doesn’t push back. As in Mendes’ Revolutionary Road, the kids tend to stay out of the picture. In Montreal, Burt and Verona meet up with friends raising a perfect multicolored Trapp family of adoptees. The jazz clubs and merriness of the summer-wrapped city conceal secret sadness. This sorrow is expressed by Melanie Lynskey, who does an interpretive pole dance to music by the Velvet Underground. Her character, Munch (odd name; Lynskey is nobody’s munchkin), delivers the film’s key line. To be a parent, she says, “You have to be so much better than you ever thought you could be.�

Away We Go gives us the Goldilocks take on raising children. Some parents are too controlling, and others are too negligent; with luck, Verona and Burt will be just right. If the film has something that resonates, it’s about the feeling of uninhabitability of America during the end of the Bush years. No surprise that Canada looks like more fun. The film is co-written by Vendela Vida, editor of the West Coast literary magazine The Believer, in collaboration with her husband, Dave Eggers. Their script stresses platitudes like “A family is made out of love� or “Kids need to be protected from too much information.� During a cafe scene, we get a demonstration model of syrup on sugar cubes—that’s how sweet they think a family should be. It was thought that Eggers spoke for a generation called X—young people with great wells of feeling and yet with terrible fears of being slapped down for expressing their emotions. Thus they wore an ill-fitting mask of cynicism, through which wide, dewy eyes were always visible. As these aging children foal their own offspring, they fear becoming the kind of parents they’ve been lambasting in print, movies and music for more than a decade. Eggers is a diligent author, well known

for his public service work. But underneath his transcendence is a reverse snobbery against anyone carried away with hostility or critical thinking. I’m still angry about Eggers’ line denouncing “the screaming bumper stickers� he saw in Berkeley. Is it wrong to make some noise about the way the world is run? Especially if you’re planning to bring new kids into it? Then there is Mendes—a director who supervises outsized, theatrical performances. The text and the actors can sometimes support that bigger-than-life approach, as in Revolutionary Road. Unfortunately, Away We Go may be dismissed as another dud like Revolutionary Road, which is far from a dud, and which is willing to offend with its passion and argumentative force. It was acid, not sugary. Kate Winslet’s one-way escape from the traditional life in Revolutionary Road is here replaced by a pride-of-ownership last shot in Away We Go; what’s the address, Reactionary Road? 0 AWAY WE GO (R; 98 min.), directed by Sam Mendes, written by Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida, and starring John Krasinski and Maya Rudolph, opens Friday at the Del Mar Theatre.


"$ j 47:; june 24-july 1, 2009 A/<B/1@CH 1=;

Film Capsules

SHOWTIMES FOR FRIDAY JUNE 26 – THURSDAY JULY 2 STARTS FRIDAY 6/26! “A funny and tender roadtrip through America ‌ absolutely extraordinary!â€? –Rolling Stone

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John Krasinski Maya Rudolph Catherine O’Hara Jeff Daniels Maggie Gyllenhaal Allison Janey A

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SAM MENDES FILM

(R) Daily: (2:30),

(4:45), 7:15, 9:30 plus Fri, Sat, Sun (12:15) STARTS FRIDAY 6/26! “Visually seductive, hilariously comic & movingly tragic!� –Daily Mail UK

Michelle Pfeiffer

Kathy Bates

FROM THE DIRECTOR OF

Rupert Friend

‘THE QUEEN’ & ‘DANGEROUS LIAISONS’

A FILM BY STEPHEN FREARS ACADEMY AWARDŽ NOMINATED DIRECTOR OF ‘THE QUEEN’

MICHELLE PFEIFFER (R) Daily on 2 Screens: (2:00),

(3:00), (4:00), (5:00), 6:00, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 plus Fri, Sat, Sun (12:00), (1:00) Midnights @ The Del Mar Fun! Prizes! The Channel 4 News Team!

Anchorman (PG-13)

First five Anchorman quotes that come to mind, starting ... now! 1. “I love lamp.� 2. “Tits McGee is on vacation.� 3. “ You ate a whole wheel of cheese! How’d you do that? Heck, I’m not even mad! That’s amazing!� 4. “The human torch was denied a bank loan.� 5. “They named it San Diego, which of course in German means ‘a whale’s vagina.’� The great thing about this movie is that if I do the same thing in 10 minutes, I’ll come up

with five totally different lines. It is rapidly worming its way into my life as one of the most quotable comedies ever. (Plays Fri and Sat midnight at the Del Mar.) /E/G E3 5= (R; 98

min.) See review, page 45. (Opens Fri at Del Mar.) (SP) 163@7 (R; 100 min.)

Steven Soderbergh’s controversial follow-up to his epic film about Che Guevara focuses on the revolutionary leader’s little-known sex-change operation. No, there’s no way that’s correct. I’m sorry, I was trying

to impress you. I don’t know what it’s about. I’ll be honest, I don’t think anyone knows what it’s about. Oh wait, here it is. Stephen Frears’ new romantic drama about a shallow courtesan in Belle Epoque Paris (Rupert Friend, in the title role) who falls in love with a much older woman (Michelle Pfeiffer). (Opens Fri at Del Mar.) (SP) / 1:=19E=@9 =@/<53 (1971) Stanley

Kubrick’s mondoviolence classic about a near-future thug who discovers milk was a bad

Movie reviews by Steve Palopoli and Richard von Busack

choice. (Plays Thu at Santa Cruz 9.) (SP)

Fri at the Aptos, Nick and Riverfront.) (SP)

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(PG-13; 109 min.) Despite the disastrous John Q, writer-director Nick Cassavetes dives back into the health-care crisis with this story about a young girl (Abigail Breslin from Little Miss Sunshine) who was conceived as a test-tube baby to provide organs for her dying sister (Sofia Vassilieva). Her attempt to free herself from her organ-donor destiny leaves her mother (Cameron Diaz) in a glass case of emotion. (Opens

(Unrated; 103 min.) In this French film from writer-director Oliver Assayas, Juliette Binoche plays a woman coping with the death of her mother. I know it sounds harsh, but God does not want her to live. Along with her brothers, she begins dealing with the contents of their mother’s summer home, raising questions about family heritage and the emotional weight of material things. (Opens Fri at the Nick.) (SP)

B@/<A4=@;3@A( @3D3<53 =4 B63 4/::3< (PG-13; 150

min.) Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen Michael Bay delivers a second dose of what is basically metal-gear porn for overly testosteroned teenagers. They love cars! They love robots! They damn sure love cars that turn into robots! Interestingly, a small portion of the script was leaked to me. Let’s take a look. Shia LeBeouf: “Leave these people alone. They mean you no harm.� Megatron: “We Transformers are a

Fri 6/26 & Sat 6/27 @ Midnight

www.thenick.com

SHOWTIMES

STARTS FRI 6/26! “A well-researched investigative documentary ‌ informative, suspenseful and full of hope.â€? –Variety

(NR)

A/<B/ 1@CH 17<3;/ '

;g AWabS`¸a 9SS^S` – (Opens Fri) 2; 4:15; 6:30; 8:40; plus Sat-Sun 11:50am. C^ – Daily 2:30; 4:40; 6:45; 8:50; plus Sat-Sun 12:20. 7[OUW\S BVOb – Wed-Thu 2:10; 4:20; 6:30; 8:40.

B`O\aT]`[S`a( @SdS\US ]T bVS 4OZZS\ – Daily 11:45; 12:15; 12:50; 3:05; 3:35; 4:10; 6:30; 7; 7:30; 9:50; 10:20; plus Wed-Sun 9:30am; 10:50. GSO` =\S – Wed-Thu 12:15; 2:45; 5:15; 7:45; 10:15; Fri-Wed 12:05; 2:45; 5:15; 7:50; 10:10. BVS BOYW\U ]T >SZVO[ ! –Wed-Thu 11:25; 2; 4:45; 7:20; 9:55; Thu 11:25; 2; 4:45; 9:55; Fri-Wed 11:20; 2:10; 4:45; 7:20; 9:55. BVS >`]^]aOl – Wed-Thu 11:15; 1:50; 4:25; 7:10; 9:45; Fri-Wed 11:15; 1:45; 4:30; 7:10; 9:40. :O\R ]T bVS :]ab – Wed-Thu 11:10; 1:40; 4:15; 6:50; 9:20. BVS 6O\U]dS` – Wed-Thu 12:05; 2:35; 5:05; 7:35; 10:05; Fri-Wed noon; 2:30; 5:05; 7:40; 10:05. C^ – Wed-Thu 11; 11:35; 1:25; 2:10; 4; 4:35; 6:30; 7; 9:25; Fri-Wed 11:30; 1:55; 4:20; 6:50; 9:15. <WUVb Ob bVS ;caSc[ – Wed-Thu 11:50; 2:20; 4:55; 7:25; 9:50. AbO` B`SY – Wed 1; 3:50; 6:45; 9:35; Thu 1; 3:50; 6:45; Fri-Tue 1; 3:50; 6:45; 9:35; plus Fri-Sun 10:15am. /\USZa 2S[]\a – Wed-Thu 9. / 1Z]QYe]`Y =`O\US—Thu 8pm.

" AB /D3<C3 17<3;/A

1475 41st Ave., Capitola 831.479.3504 www.culvertheaters.com

(5:10), 7:20, 9:30 plus Sat, Sun (12:30) STARTS FRI 6/26! “A tender, sun-kissed, Chekhovian drama ‌ brims with life and loveliness!â€? –Entertainment Weekly

Summer Hours JĂŠrĂŠmie Renier

/>B=A 17<3;/

122 Rancho Del Mar Center, Aptos 831.688.6541 www.culvertheaters.com

Daily: (2:50),

Juliette Binoche

Showtimes are for Wednesday, June 24, through Wednesday, July 1, unless otherwise indicated. Programs and showtimes are subject to change without notice.

Charles Berling

B`O\aT]`[S`a( @SdS\US ]T bVS 4OZZS\ – Daily 12:15; 3:30; 6:45; 10. BVS >`]^]aOZ – Daily noon; 2:30; 5; 7:30; 9:50. BVS BOYW\U ]T >SZVO[ ! – Wed-Thu 11:30; 2; 4:30; 7; 9:40. BVS 6O\U]dS` – Daily 11:50; 2:15; 4:45; 7:15; 9:30.

(NR)

23: ;/@

1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com

Daily: (3:10),

(5:20), 7:30, 9:35 plus Sat, Sun (12:50) “A mind-boggling expose!� –San Francisco Chronicle

/eOg ES 5] – (Opens Fri) 2:30; 4:45; 7:15; 9:30; plus Fri-Sun 12:15pm. 1V{`W– (Opens Fri) 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 9; 10; plus Fri-Sun noon; 1. BVS 0]ga( BVS AVS`[O\ 0`]bVS`a¸ Ab]`g – Wed-Thu 4:30; 6:45; 8:45; Sat-Sun

12:30.

(PG) Daily: (3:00),

(5:00), 7:10, 9:10 plus Sat, Sun (1:00)

Jessica Biel Kristin Scott Thomas Colin Firth

3Oag DW`bcS ³ Wed-Thu 2:45; 4:50; 7; 9. BVS 0`]bVS`a 0Z]][ – Wed-Thu 2:20; 4:40; 7:10; 9:20. 3O`bV– Wed-Thu 2:30. /\QV]`[O\—(Fri and Sat only) midnight.

<7193:=23=<

(4:50), 7:00, 9:00 plus Sat, Sun (12:40)

210 Lincoln St., Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com

( ) = Bargain Shows Before 5:30pm

STARTS FRIDAY 6/26! “Enormously touching and genuinely poignant.� –Jeffrey Lyons

Abigail Breslin Cameron Diaz Alec Baldwin Jason Patric Emily Deschanel Joan Cusack BASED ON JODI

PICOULT’S BESTSELLER FROM THE DIRECTOR OF ‘THE NOTEBOOK’

@7D3@4@=<B AB/27C; BE7<

155 S. River St., Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1701 www.regalcinemas.com

(PG-13)

Daily (2:00),

(4:15), 6:30, 8:40 plus Sat, Sun (11:50am)

Daily (2:30),

(4:40), 6:45, 8:50 plus Sat, Sun (12:20) COMING SOON!

(PG)

Woody Allen’s ‘Whatever Works’ 7/3

Children under 5 admitted only on Mondays & Weekend Matinees

4]]R 7\Q – Wed-Thu 2:10; 3; 4:10; 5; 6:10; 7:10; 8:10; 9:10; Fri-Wed 3; 5; 7:10; 9:10; plus Sat-Sun 1. Ac[[S` 6]c`a – (Opens Fri) 3:10; 5:20; 7:30; 9:35; plus Sat-Sun 12:50. C\RS` =c` AYW\ – (Opens Fri) 2:50; 5:10; 7:20; 9:30; plus Sat-Sun 12:30. 3Oag DW`bcS – Fri-Wed 2:40; 4:50; 7;9; plus Sat-Sun 12:40. AZSS^ 2SOZS` – Wed-Thu 4:50; 7; 9. 2S^O`bc`Sa – Wed-Thu 1:30; 6. 3dS`g :WbbZS AbS^ – Wed-Thu 4; 8:30. Ac\aVW\S 1ZSO\W\U ³ESR BVc (#

my sister’s keeper

A1=BBA D/::3G $ 17<3;/A

226 Mt. Hermon Rd., 831.438.3261 www.culvertheaters.com B`O\aT]`[S`a( @SdS\US ]T bVS 4OZZS\ – Daily noon; 1:30; 3:15; 4:45; 6:30; 8;

9:45.

(PG-13) Daily: (2:40),

1405 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1700 www.regalcinemas.com

;g AWabS`¸a 9SS^S` – (Opens Fri) 11:45; 2:15; 4:45; 7:15; 9:45. <WUVb Ob bVS ;caSc[ – Fri-Tues 12:45; 3:30; 6:30; 9. >cPZWQ 3\S[WSa – Wed Jul 1, 12:30; 3:45; 7; 10. BS`[W\Ob]`( AOZdObW]\ – Wed-Thu 1; 4; 7; 9:35. 7[OUW\S BVOb – Wed-Thu 12:45; 3:30; 6:30; 9.

BVS >`]^]aOZ – Daily12:30; 2:50; 5:10; 7:30; 9:50. GSO` =\S – Daily 12:40; 3; 5:20; 7:40; 10. BVS BOYW\U ]T >SZVO[ ! – Wed-Thu 11:45; 2:15; 4:40; 7:10; 9:35. 7[OUW\S BVOb – Wed-Thu 11:10; 1:30; 4; 6:40; 9:25. BVS 6O\U]dS` – Daily 11:50; 2; 4:20; 7; 9:20. C^ –Daily 11:40; 2:10; 4:30; 6:50; 9:15.

4=F B63/B@3

15 Maple Ave., Watsonville 831.724.1220 Call theater for showtimes.

5@33< D/::3G 17<3;/ &

1125 S. Green Valley Rd., Watsonville 831.761.8200 www.greenvalleycinema.com Call theater for showtimes.


j "%

A/<B/1@CH 1=; june 24-july 1, 2009 47:;

wearing Maximilian Schell. (RvB) 23>/@BC@3A (PG-13;

135 min.) The surprise best foreign film winner at this year’s Oscars, proves that there’s just as much potential for humor in a death comedy as there is in a sex comedy. Daigo (Masahiro Motoki) used to play C<23@ =C@ cello in a Tokyo orchestra. A97< (Unrated; 104 Laid off, he decides to min.) Breakthrough leave Tokyo to reclaim documentary tackles his family home in the the myths and country in picturesque misunderstandings Yamagata Prefecture, surrounding Lyme supposedly known as disease. Director Andy a region of bumpkins. Abrahams Wilson His adoring wife, Mika explores what Lyme (Ryoko Hirosue) agrees patients have had to to the plan, seemingly go through to be taken without doubts. When seriously by the medical Daigo shows up for an establishment, which interview in answer to would rather “agree to an help wanted ad, he disagreeâ€? about the very learns it was a misprint; existence of the disease, he’ll be working in even as it spreads to a mortuary. As the epidemic proportions. boss, Sasaki, Tsutomu (Opens Fri at the Nick.) Yamazaki gives a top (SP) movie-star’s performance in this role, his suaveness just getting richer as the film goes along. B63 0=GA( B63 Director Yojiro Takita A63@;/< 0@=B63@A¸ expertly mixes what AB=@G (PG; 105 min.) seems like unmixable A documentary about material: Departures is a the tunesmithing movie about death that’s brothers, composers suffused with the joy of of myriad Disney living. (RvB) anthems, seemingly 3/@B6 (G; 90 min.) genetically augmented James Earl Jones rumbles earworms like “It’s on the soundtrack as the a Small Worldâ€? and sunrise is viewed from various cortex infections outer space. Holding the from the Mary Poppins series of critter encounters soundtracks. Apparently, together is the plight of a their interpersonal relations weren’t as full of polar bear family—“Dad,â€? “Momâ€? and two cubs, an dismaying cheer as their heir and a spare—during music. Unpreviewed. (RvB) the course of a year. The stunning small B63 0@=B63@A effects make more of an 0:==; (PG-13; 113 impression. Remarkable min.) Rian Johnson’s time-lapse photography follow-up to Brick has pans gently across a loads of charm and valley while observing no plot. The postmod the yearly change of a intentions are clear forest of deciduous trees right off in naming this from bare branches to pair of grifting brothers scarlet leaves. Otherwise, Stephen (Mark Ruffalo) it’s the usual: shark vs. and Bloom (Adrien seal, polar bear vs. walrus, Brody) in a story that’s lions vs. elephant, and part screwball comedy, cheetah vs. gazelle. To part 1960s Swinging the organization’s credit, London caper. Rachel Disney bites the bullet: Weisz has never been “The planet is warming,â€? more endearing as the Jones says, leaving no former New Jersey room for backpedaling. invalid heiress who Very, very cute, and the wants to join the ending is somehow happy racket. Their regular partner is the chic Asian and comforting, just like the critter shows one demolition expert Bang drowses through at the Bang (Rinko Kikuchi). end of a beery Sunday. Pursuing the brothers, probably, is an eye-patch- (RvB)

@3D73EA

3/AG D7@BC3 (PG-

13; 100 min.) Circa 1928: Larita, an outrÊ American female racecar driver (Jessica Biel), arrives at the English country mansion of her new husband, John Whittaker (Ben Barnes). Still in possession of the place is his dragon of a mother, Mrs. Whittaker (Kristin Scott Thomas), and John’s formerly wayward stepfather, Mr. Whittaker (Colin Firth). It’s hard to understand why Stephan Elliott decided to redo Noel Coward like a man trying to refurbish an antique with Day-Glo paint. Elliott’s timing isn’t bad, but he does go inadvisedly modern, adding a butt shot, a crunched Chihuahua and a bit about an English fox hunt I’d swear was pinched from Auntie Mame. (RvB) 3D3@G :7BB:3 AB3>

(PG-13; 103 min.) Documentary about the making of a Broadway revival of A Chorus Line, with dancers trying to make it big as they battle through auditions. Sort of like So You Think You Can Dance, with people who can actually dance. (SP) 4==2 7<1 (PG; 101

min.) The most necessary film of the summer. The outrages of corporate food production are exposed in this fast and infuriating documentary by Robert Kenner. Defying the lawyers, one corporate chicken farmer shows us her wretched, antibiotic-packed birds. Today’s industry lobbyist is tomorrow’s regulator, as sure as today’s pig is tomorrow’s bacon. Drooling packed-in steers are fattened with cheap Iowa corn; it breeds E. coli in their guts. The nighannual outbreaks of E. coli are seemingly the cost of business, a price paid even by spinach-eating vegetarians. Director Kenner can’t be accused of starry-eyed idealism. Food, Inc. reminds that if the United States could make Big Tobacco come to heel, then agribusiness’s wasteful and deadly practices can be stopped. (RvB) B63 6/<5=D3@ (R; 100 min.) A well-built, good-looking and

satisfyingly low comedy with a sturdy silentmovie two-reeler plot and the wit to realize that the Three Stooges format is solid gold. A quartet of Southern California types heads to Vegas for a bachelor party. Cut, eventually, to The Morning After: The groom has vanished, and the three chumps, rendered amnesiac by booze, must search for him. They are: kittywhipped, Larry-like Stu (Ed Helms), confident but wrongheaded Moe-style leader Phil (Bradley Cooper) and the “one-man wolf pack� Alan, played by the film’s standout, Zach Galifianakis, Curlying beautifully. Stick with it, since the first third is hit and miss; later, director Todd Phillips solidly builds the situations, thinking up strategies to bolster the risky comedy. (RvB) 7;/57<3 B6/B (PG; 107 min.) I thought that perhaps some lazy but ingenious filmmakers had finally come up with the ultimate solution to financing problems by having the audience simply go in and imagine their own movie while they stare at a blank screen. But instead it’s the new Eddie Murphy film, in which a troubled businessman finds that the answers to all his problems lie in his daughter’s vivid imagination. Aw. By the way, Eddie Murphy told me he’s also available to star in your blank-screen movie if you’d rather see that. (SP) :/<2 =4 B63 :=AB

(PG-13; 93 min.) You probably remember this Sid and Marty Krofft TV series about a family transported to prehistoric times as completely stupid, because you are a pleasant, well-adjusted person with excellent hygiene. But just to show that absolutely anything on television can inspire terrifying loyalty, I will point out that someone wrote a dictionary for the language spoken by Cha-Ka, the caveman who made friends with the Marshalls and taught them his native tongue. Perhaps the supernerds who are on the Internet complaining about how

83/<<719 5@/D3:7<3A

proud race. They must pay for their intrusion.� Shia LeBeouf: “On my journey I met one of your kind. His name was Katow-jo. We became friends.� Megatron: “Katow-jo is my cousin. Go in peace.� Wow, heavy stuff ! (Opens Wed at 41st Avenue, Santa Cruz 9 and Scotts Valley.) (SP)

4/;7:G /44/7@ Kfsfnjf!Sfojfs-!Kvmjfuuf!Cjopdif!boe!Dibsmft!Cfsmjoh!bsf!tjct!xip!nvtu!gbdf!uif! foe!pg!uifjs!dijmeippe!ebzt!bgufs!uif!tveefo!efbui!pg!uifjs!npuifs!jo!Ă•Tvnnfs!Ipvst-Ă–!pqfojoh!! Gsjebz!bu!uif!Ojdl/ the producers of this film turned the series into a Will Ferrell comedy should be happy Mel Gibson didn’t sign up to direct and make it a somber meditation on the nature of primate society, with unsubtitled dialogue in Cha-Kaese. Hey, it’s pretty much what happened to Lost in Space. (SP) B63 >@=>=A/: (PG13; 107 min.) Boss lady Sandra Bullock and underling Ryan Reynolds fake an engagement for the benefit of the family of the “bride.â€? Directed by Anne Fletcher. A:33> 23/:3@ (PG13; 97 min.) In the near future, Memo (Luis Fernando Pena), the son of a Oaxacan peasant, leaves for Tijuana to work for Cyberbracero, a company that sells the virtual labor of sleepless men and women who are plugged into neural ports; they do every kind of virtual work from high-steel construction to nannying to fruit picking. Memo’s one friend in the city is Luz (Leonor Varela), a blogger who sells her memories online; she receives an inquiry about Memo from a mysterious interested party. Director Alex Rivera’s science fiction film is politically intelligent, but it has a

bigger debt than Mexico itself, first to William Gibson and later to the visuals of the film Minority Report. The background is plausible and satirical-—Memo leaves his home because of the privatization of water, where a machinegun-bearing droid sells water by the liter to starving peasants. Still, there are economies of scale we can’t really understand: Why pay $100 American to irrigate a dying milpa? Why build a terrifically expensive robot to pick fruit, when working -class labor is more disposable than metal, servos and rotors? The witty neologisms—a group of “coyoteks� offer to drill Memo some new holes— help this overnarrated film, and the CGI is effective. And in a science fiction cinema currently dominated by transformer robots, this looks like the work of Felipe K. Ricardo, Philip K. Dick’s Latino cousin. (RvB) AB/@ B@39 (PG-13; 136 min.) Happily, J.J. Abrams’ version of the 40-year-old story is a loving refurbishing of an old structure rather than a demolishing. Traditions honored include the green babe (Rachel Nichols) and the

red-shirted ensign. As Kirk, Chris Pine himself is the ham this sandwich needs. Zachary Quinto is very poised as Spock, the tragic mulatto of space. The film’s real tension arises in the partnership between Kirk and Spock—two halves of one great leader, calm calculation meeting insane daring. (RvB) AC<A67<3 1:3/<7<5

(R; 102 min.) In Albuquerque, two sisters get into the lucrative field of cleaning up after dead bodies. Christine Jeff’s mostly pleasant comedy of death and bloodshed is lit up like a pink lamp shade by the ever-lovable Amy Adams and given some dark highlights by Emily Blunt as her grimier sibling. The film seems trampled over by a producer’s cold feet, but what’s left has charm and hard-nosed humor. With Alan Arkin as the feckless father of the sisters—looking fit as usual, Arkin; he’ll probably get a shovel and bury us all some day. (RvB) C> (PG; 96 min.) During the last Depression, a reject kid named Carl becomes fascinated with that darling of the newsreels, the intrepid dirigible pilot Charles Muntz, who discovered the bones of an immense

bird in South America and was declared a fraud. Fast-forward and Carl (voiced by Ed Asner) is a square-headed, Spencer Tracy lookalike of 78. When trouble comes, he escapes in the only direction open to him—straight up, with his battered house as the gondola to thousands of balloons, Unfortunately, a pesky 7-year-old scout, Russell (Jordan Nagai), is clinging to the front porch. The pair land in South America, where they discover a 13-foot-tall iridescent goonie bird and eventually Muntz himself (Christopher Plummer). Pixar spoils us. The news that Up is one of the year’s best films isn’t really news; Pixar has faith in an audience’s ability to feel without being manipulated—that’s what makes them more than just a studio with an unusually dazzling command of the vocabulary of animation. (RvB) G3/@ =<3 (PG-13; 97 min.) Jack Black and Michael Cera basically play themselves, only in prehistoric times. I’m willing to take back Jack, but Michael Cera can just stay there until he gets over that annoying shtick he does in every film. (SP)


48 |

june 24-july 1, 2009

SANTACRUZ.COM

Wine shop Tasting

Pacific Ave.

Museum of Art and History

Abbot Square

Cooper Street

Annie Glass

Gifts Accessories

Front Street

Downtown Santa Cruz on Abbott Square off Cooper Street (Near Annie Glass).

831-426-VINO (8466) www.vinocruz.com


Epicure.

j "'

A/<B/1@CH 1=; june 24-july 1, 2009 3>71C@3

Ice, Ice, Baby

/<<3:7A3 93::G

We all scream for crazy good fresh fruit sorbet 0G /<<3:7A3 93::G

I

LOVE a generous sampling policy. A teensy dip of Meyer lemon sorbet bursts with a fragrant, floral tang. A compostable spoonful of cashewcaramel infuses my mouth with buttery, unctuous delight. Chocolate, midnight dark, is a dizzyingly pure essence. I settle on a scoop of apricot, aglow with spring sunshine straight from the orchard. Since May 27, shoppers at the Downtown Santa Cruz Farmers Market have been tempted by yet another takeaway treat. This one is as wholesome as it is enticing: delectable pure fruit sorbets in a palate of seasonal flavors and vivid colors. Scream Sorbet is forging a new frontier in frozen dessert territory at 21 farmers markets throughout the Bay Area. By relying on local (usually organic) produce harvested at its peak, subtly enhanced with the simplest of ingredients and processed by methods embraced by the molecular gastronomy crowd, Scream creates sorbet that sings with fresh fruit, inventive flavor combinations and the most alluring texture imaginable. The tall and personable Noah Goldner, one of three principals of the enterprise, travels to Santa Cruz every Wednesday to offer six sorbet flavors, a teasingly small fraction of the 36 listed on their website, ranging from single fruits or nuts to visionary combinations. While visiting the Emeryville kitchen to witness the magic happening, I savored the coconut-lime-Thai basil variety and found the interplay of vibrant lime and bright herbaceous basil embraced by silky coconut milk dazzling. A connoisseur’s palate informs their use of specific varietals, such as pure Oro Blanco grapefruit, Murcott tangerine or Meyer lemon; true fruit flavors like cherry

>3B7B3 B@3/B Rin Salao (left) samples Scream Sorbet’s apricot sorbet. Tiffany Thomas opts for lime mint.

or peach; and bold innovations like black sesame-almond, lime-jasmine, beet-lemon and saffron-almond. The nut flavors are in a category by themselves, employing a seductive, satiny mouthfeel and rich consistency reminiscent of the thickest cream but entirely dairy-free. Nathan Kurz, founder of Scream Sorbet, started “wondering what happens when you don’t cut corners and whether there’s an audience for a very high quality product. Our hope was that there are people who will pay for that top quality, and we’re finding that there are.� He merged his experience in homemade sorbet and ice cream with his scientific inclinations as a physicist and began bringing sorbet to farmers markets in March 2008. Stephanie Lau, a trained pastry chef and the third Scream Sorbet

co-owner, collaborates with Kurz on developing recipes, subjecting each fruit to “about 10 recipe variations. For example, we’ve discovered that the method of juicing makes a big difference in the taste of citrus, and we experiment whether or not to strain pulp or seeds out of the mixture.� Further, they eschew gums and stabilizers: “our intention is to produce a fresh fruit product, not a shelf stable product.� Taking a cue from the molecular gastronomy movement—the origin of all foods foamed, vaporized or otherwise fancifully altered—they invested in some high-tech Swiss gadgetry. Instead of being churned like ice cream, a fruity concoction is frozen solid and subjected to a titaniumcoated blade spinning at 2,000 rpm, which purees the rock-solid blend without incorporating additional air, achieving

Scream’s trademark lush, dense texture. Buying at farmers markets is a core element of the Scream philosophy, enabling the company “to close the loop between ‘there’s the source’ and ‘here’s the product,’� says Kurz. “If you like our peach sorbet, we can point to a stand and say, ‘We got these peaches from them,’ and they can say, ‘If you like these peaches, try that sorbet over there.’� He admits that “this approach to sourcing could limit our growth, but it’s the key to the highest quality.� SCREAM SORBET is available every Wednesday at the Downtown Santa Cruz Farmers Market, Lincoln and Cedar streets, Santa Cruz, and on Tuesdays at the Old Monterey Farmers Market, Alvarado Street, Monterey.


# j 27<3@¸A 5C723 june 24-july 1, 2009 A/<B/1@CH 1=;

Drink & Surf? Diner’s Guide There Is No Better Place To Surf The Web, Enjoy A Cold Beer or A Bottomless Soda & Of Course, Award-Winning Pizza!

Our selective list of area restaurants includes those that have been favorably reviewed in print by Santa Cruz Weekly food critics and others that have been sampled but not reviewed in print. All visits by our writers are made anonymously, and all expenses are paid by Metro Santa Cruz. AG;0=:A ;/23 A7;>:3( + C\RS` + # + $ + O\R c^

Price Ranges based on average cost of dinner entree and salad, excluding alcoholic beverages

/>B=A $$ Aptos

/;0@=A7/ 7<27/ 07AB@=

$$ Aptos

0@7B/<<7/ /@;A

$$$ Aptos $$$ Aptos

$$ Aptos

Staying In? We Deliver!

www.woodstockscruz.com

responsibly.

Deals, Menu & More:

$ Capitola Capitola

Please drink

(Next to Trader Joe’s) (831) 427-4444

8017 Soquel Dr, 831.688.1233 :/ 03::/ D7B/ 07AB@=

257 Center Ave, 831.685.8111 A3D3@7<=¸A 5@7::

7500 Old Dominion Ct, 831.688.8987

Indian. Authentic Indian dishes and specialties served in a comfortable dining room. Lunch buffet daily 11:30am-2:30pm; dinner daily 5pm to close. www.ambrosiaib.com American and specialty dishes from the British and Emerald Isles. Full bar. Children welcome. Happy hour Mon-Fri 2-6pm. Open daily 11am to 2am. Italian. Ambience reminiscent of a small trattoria in the streets of Italy, serving handmade lasagna, pasta dishes, gnocchi and fresh fish. Wed-Sun, lunch 11am-2pm, dinner 5-9pm. Continental California cuisine. Breakfast all week 6:30-11am, lunch all week 11am-2pm; dinner Fri-Sat 5-10pm, Sun-Thu 5-9pm. www.seacliffinn.com.

H/;33< ;327B3@@/<3/< Middle Eastern/Mediterranean. Fresh, fast, flavorful. Gourmet

7528 Soquel Dr, 831.688.4465

meat and vegetarian kebabs, gyros, falafel, healthy salads and Mediterranean flatbread pizzas. Beer and wine. Dine in or take out. Tue-Sun 11am-8pm.

1/>7B=:/

710 Front St

207 Searidge Rd, 831.685.0610

1/43 D7=:3BB3

104 Stockton Ave, 831.479.8888

All day breakfast. Burgers, gyros, sandwiches and 45 flavors of Marianne’s and Polar Bear ice cream. Open 8am daily.

>/@/27A3 ACA67 Japanese. This pretty and welcoming sushi bar serves 200 Monterey Ave, 831.464.3328 superfresh fish in unusual but well-executed sushi combinations. Wed-Mon 11:30am-9pm.

California Continental. Swordfish and other seafood specials. Dinner Mon-Thu 5:30-9:30pm; Fri 5-10pm; Sat 4-10:30pm; Sun 4-9pm.

A6/2=E0@==9

Capitola

1750 Wharf Rd, 831.475.1511

AB=19B=< 0@7253 5@7::3 Mediterranean tapas. Innovative menu, full-service bar,

Capitola

231 Esplanade, 831.464.1933

international wine list and outdoor dining with terrific views in the heart of Capitola Village. Open daily.

$$$ Capitola

H3:2/¸A

203 Esplanade, 831.475.4900

California cuisine. Nightly specials include baby back ribs, prime rib, lobster and crab legs. Daily 7am-2am.

A/<B/ 1@CH $$ Santa Cruz

$$ Santa Cruz

/1/>C:1=

1116 Pacific Ave, 831. 426.7588

1:=C2A

110 Church St, 831.429.2000

$$ Santa Cruz

B63 1@3>3 >:/13

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Santa Cruz

2218 East Cliff Dr, 831.476.4560

$ Santa Cruz

460 Seventh Ave, 831.477.2908

1134 Soquel Ave, 831.429.6994

4/<2/<5= ;3F71/<

$$ Santa Cruz

67<2?C/@B3@

$$ Santa Cruz

6=44;/<¸A

303 Soquel Ave, 831.426.7770

1102 Pacific Ave, 837.420.0135

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Santa Cruz

221 Cathcart St, 831.426.4852

Mexican/Seafood/American. Traditional Mexican favorites. Best fajitas, chicken mole, coconut prawns, blackened prime rib! Fresh seafood. Over 50 premium tequilas, daily happy hour w/ half-price appetizers. Sun-Thu 11am-10pm, Fri-Sat 11am-11pm. American, California-style. With a great bar scene, casually glamorous setting and attentive waitstaff. Full bar. Mon-Sat 11:30am-10pm, Sun 1-10pm. Crepes and more. Featuring the spinach crepe and Tunisian donut. Full bar. Mon-Thu 11am-midnight, Fri 11am-1am, Sat 10am-1am, Sun 10am-midnight. Seafood. Fresh seafood, shellfish, Midwestern aged beef, pasta specialties, abundant salad bar. Kids menu and nightly entertainment. Harbor and Bay views. Lunch and dinner daily. Mexican. Serving breakfast all day. Popular for our street tacos and handmade Salvadorian pupusas. Vegetarian options made w/ local fresh vegetables and organic tofu. Daily 9:30am-9:30pm. Americana. Ribs, steaks and burgers are definitely the stars. Full bar. Lunch Mon-Sat 11:30am-2:30pm; dinner Sun-Thu 5:30-9:30pm, Fri-Sat 5:30-10pm. California/full-service bakery. Breakfast, lunch, dinner. “Best Eggs Benedict in Town.� Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-6pm. Halfprice appetizers; wines by the glass. Daily 8am-9pm. ’60s Vegas meets ’50s Waikiki. Amazing dining experience in kitchy yet swanky tropical setting. Fresh fish, great steaks, vegetarian. Full-service tiki bar. Happy-hour tiki drinks. Aloha Fri, Sat lunch 11:30am-5pm. Dinner nightly 5pm-close.


j #

A/<B/1@CH 1=; june 24-july 1, 2009 27<3@¸A 5C723 $$ Santa Cruz $$ Santa Cruz

7 :=D3 ACA67

516 Front St, 831.421.0706 8=6<<G¸A 6/@0=@A723

493 Lake Ave, 831.479.3430

$$$ :/ >=AB/ Santa Cruz 538 Seabright Ave, 831.457.2782

Japanese Fusion. Sushi bar, sake bar, vegetarian, seafood, steak in fun atmosphere; kids play area; karaoke every night. Open seven days 5-10pm; Mon-Fri 11:30am-2:30pm. Seafood/California. Fresh catch made your way! Plus many other wonderful menu items. Great view. Full bar. Happy hour Mon-Fri. Brunch Sat-Sun 10am-2pm. Open daily. Italian. La Posta serves Italian food made in the old style— simple and delicious. Wed-Thu 5-9pm, Fri-Sat 5-9:30pm and Sun 5-8pm.

$$ Santa Cruz

=:7B/A Fine Mexican cuisine. Opening daily at noon. 49-B Municipal Wharf, 831.458.9393

$$ Santa Cruz

>/17471 B6/7

1319 Pacific Ave, 831.420.1700

@7AB=@/<B3 7B/:7/<=

Santa Cruz

555 Soquel Ave, 831.458.2321

$$ Santa Cruz

@=A73 ;11/<<¸A

$$ Santa Cruz

1220 Pacific Ave, 831.426.9930 A=74

105 Walnut Ave, 831.423.2020

$$ Santa Cruz

C>>3@ 1@CAB >7HH/

$$ Santa Cruz

E==2AB=19¸A >7HH/

2415 Mission St, 831.423.9010

710 Front St, 831.427.4444

Thai. Individually prepared with the freshest ingredients, plus ambrosia bubble teas, shakes. Mon-Thu 11:30am-9:30pm, Fri 11:30am-10pm, Sat noon-10pm, Sun noon-9:30pm. Italian-American. Mouthwatering, generous portions, friendly service and the best patio in town. Full bar. Lunch Mon-Fri 11:30am, dinner nightly at 5pm. Irish pub and restaurant. Informal pub fare with reliable execution. Lunch and dinner all day, open Mon-Fri 11:30ammidnight, Sat-Sun 11:30am-1:30am. Wine bar with menu. Flawless plates of great character and flavor; sexy menu listings and wines to match. Lunch Wed-Sat noon2pm; dinner Mon-Thu 5-10pm, Fri-Sat 5-11pm, Sun 4-10pm; retail shop Mon 5pm-close, Tue-Sat noon-close, Sun 4pm-close. Pizza. Specializing in authentic Sicilian and square pizza. Homemade pasta, fresh sandwiches, soups, salads and more. Hot slices always ready. Sun-Thu 10am-9:30pm, Fri-Sat 10am-11pm. Pizza. Pizza, fresh salads, sandwiches, wings, desserts, beers on tap. Patio dining, sports on HDTV and free WiFi. Large groups and catering. Open and delivering Fri-Sat 11am-2am, Mon-Thu 11am-1am, Sun 11am-midnight.

A/< :=@3<H= D/::3G $$ Felton

@32E==2 >7HH3@7/

6205 Hwy 9, 831.335.1500

Organic Pizza. Everything organic: pizza, lasagna, soup, salad, beer and local wine. Always organic, local produce. Party room seats 32. Weeknights 4-9pm (closed Tue), Fri 4-10pm, Sat 1-10pm, Sun 1-9pm. See menu at www.redwoodpizza.com.

A1=BBA D/::3G $ 63/D3<:G 1/43 American. Serving breakfast and lunch daily. Large parties Scotts Valley 1210 Mt. Hermon Rd, 831.335.7311 welcome. Mon-Fri 6:30am-2:15pm, Sat-Sun 7am-2:45pm. 87/ B3::/¸A $ Scotts Valley 5600 #D Scotts Valley Dr, 831.438.5005

Cambodian. Fresh kebabs, seafood dishes, soups and noodle bowls with a unique Southeast Asian flair. Beer and wine available. Patio dining. Sun-Thu 11am-9pm, Fri-Sat 11am-10pm.

A=?C3: $$ Soquel

3: 167>=B:3 B/?C3@7/

4724 Soquel Dr, 831.477.1048

Mexican. Open for breakfast. We use no lard in our menu and make your food fresh daily. We are famous for our authentic ingredients such as traditional mole from Oaxaca. Lots of vegetarian options. Mon-Fri 9am-9pm, weekends 8am-9pm.


# j /AB@=:=5G june 24-july 1, 2009 A/<B/1@CH 1=;

Astrology Free Will

By Rob

Brezsny

For the week of June 24 /@73A (March 21–April 19): Reality TV personality Spencer Pratt used to be skeptical about the power of prayer. But his wife Heidi, herself a devout believer, urged him to keep his mind open. Then, as an experiment, Spencer asked God to help him and Heidi get a double date with teen pop star Miley Cyrus and her boyfriend, despite the fact that neither of them even knew Cyrus. Apparently God heard and responded, because not too long after that, the hopedfor double date did indeed come to pass. I’m telling you this, Aries, because I think you’re entering a phase when you, like Pratt, will have extra luck in making idiosyncratic wishes come true. If I were you, though, I’d focus on more profound idiosyncratic wishes than the kind Pratt pined for. B/C@CA (April 20–May 20): Do you have a subconscious urge to escape the constraints of your customary behavior? Have you ever wished you could be someone else for a while? If so, this is your lucky week, Taurus. The cosmos is granting you a temporary exemption from acting and feeling like your same old self. From now until July 2, you have permission to walk like, talk like, think like and even make love like a Pisces or Virgo or Gemini—or any sign, for that matter, except Scorpio or Aquarius. You might enjoy checking out my horoscopes for the other signs, and following the advice that sounds most fun.

53;7<7 (May 21–June 20): It’s Fete Your Feet Week, Gemini. Your soles definitely need more attention, pampering, and contact with nature. (So does your soul, and hopefully that will happen as you carry out the more literal assignment.) So abstain from wearing your shoes and socks at every opportunity. Get as much contact as possible between your naked feet and the naked earth. Even walking unshod on floors and pavements could prove helpful. Foot massages are advisable, as well as pedicures, henna tattoos and foot baths. Try praying with your feet instead of your hands, and see if you can get someone to kiss and adore you down there.

1/<13@ (June 21–July 22): “His heart was growing full of broken wings and artificial flowers,� wrote poet Federico Garcia Lorca. “In his mouth, just one small word was left.� There were times during the first half of June when I was tempted to borrow those words to describe you, Cancerian. Now, thankfully, you’re moving into a much brighter phase. The buds that are about to bloom in your heart are very much alive, not artificial, and your wings, while not fully restored to strength, are healing. Meanwhile, your mouth is even now being replenished with a fresh supply of many vivid words.

:3= (July 23–Aug. 22): What scares you or perturbs you in the coming week could, by August, become what fuels you. What makes you feel unsettled and out of sorts could turn out to be good medicine. But of course you’re under no obligation to submit yourself to this experimental sequence, Leo. The fact is, you could probably run away from the discomfort and get immediate relief. Unfortunately, taking that approach would deprive you of the benefits that will almost certainly come from enduring the discomfort for a while. My preference is that you be brave and far-seeing.

D7@5= (Aug. 23–Sept. 22): There’s a better than even chance that you’re about to embark on a Summer of Love. To improve your odds even more, meditate on the following questions. 1. What qualities do you look for in a lover that you would benefit from developing more fully in yourself ? 2. What do you think are your two biggest delusions about the way love works? 3. Is there anything you can do to make yourself more lovable? 4. Is there anything you can do to be more loving? 5. Are you willing to deal with the fact that any intimate relationship worth pursuing will inevitably evoke the most negative aspects of both partners—and require both partners to heal their oldest wounds? :70@/ (Sept. 23–Oct. 22): You are entering a phase when you’ll have more power than usual to influence people. Your charisma will be waxing and the light in your eyes will be growing more intense, making it more likely that your point of view will be heard and appreciated. Your powers of persuasion will be increasing, as well, and you’ll have extra understanding about how to motivate people and get them to work together effectively. So let me ask you

the most important question: What exactly do you want to accomplish with your enhanced clout?

A1=@>7= (Oct. 23–Nov. 21): Congratulations, Scorpio. You’ve reached the end of the Big Squeeze. You’ve served your time in the bottleneck. And so I invite you to relax your pinched expression, loosen up your puckered expectations, and let the Season of Experiments begin. According to my projections, you will soon be receiving a host of invitations to wander into the frontier with your raw sense of wonder turned up all the way. Please research each invitation thoroughly before choosing. When you’ve decided which adventures are most likely to enhance your understanding of the art of liberation, dive in. A/57BB/@7CA (Nov. 22–Dec. 21): A guy I barely know critiqued me at a party recently. “You haven’t suffered enough to feel intense passion,� he said. “Your life has been too happy, too easy.� I didn’t want to get into a debate about whether my life has been too happy and easy, so in my reply I didn’t mention my divorce or the time I was shot or the grueling poverty I endured for 18 years. “So you’re saying,� I told him, “that suffering is the only way you can acquire passion? I don’t agree. Have you ever raised a child? Have you ever been in love with someone who incited you to make radical changes in your life? Have you ever worked on a creation for many years and then submitted it to be judged by thousands of people? I have.� I’m letting you know about this, Sagittarius, because I predict you’ll soon be offered an experience like those I named—adventures that have the potential to build intense passion without requiring you to suffer. 1/>@71=@< (Dec. 22–Jan. 19): “The whole purpose of education is to turn mirrors into windows,� said journalist Sydney J. Harris. That would be an excellent motto for you to live by in the coming weeks, Capricorn. Whether or not you’re enrolled in school, you’re in a phase when your capacity for attracting learning experiences is at a peak. To take maximum advantage of the cosmic tendencies, all you have to do is cultivate a hungry curiosity for fresh teachings and life lessons—especially those that shift you away from gazing at your own reflection and toward peering out at the mysteries of the world. /?C/@7CA (Jan. 20–Feb. 18): Here’s a preview of the accomplishments I expect you to complete in the next four weeks. Number of karmic debts paid off and canceled: 1. Number of bad habits replaced with good habits: 2. Number of holes blasted in your theory about why you can’t do more of what you love to do: 300. Number of “necessities� lost that turn out not to be necessities: 1. Number of psychic wounds successfully medicated: 1. Number of confusing messes that evolve into interesting opportunities: 2. Number of romantic obstructions eliminated: 1 and a half. >7A13A (Feb. 19–March 20): A delicious forbidden fruit will be more available than usual in the coming weeks. You can choose to ignore it, of course. You can pretend it’s not even there and instead concentrate on the less forbidden fruits that are tasty enough. Or, on the other hand, you can sidle up closer to the forbidden fruit and engage in some discreet explorations, testing subtly to see whether it’s any healthier for your sanity than it used to be. I’m not sure what the best decision is, Pisces, but I do suggest this: Don’t just rip off all your defenses, forget all your commitments, and start heedlessly taking big bites out of the forbidden fruit.

6][Se]`Y( AS\R [S O RSaQ`W^bW]\ ]T g]c` UO[S ^ZO\ T]` Vc\bW\U R]e\ VO^^W\Saa Rc`W\U bVS aSQ]\R VOZT ]T ' 4`SSEWZZ/ab`]Z]Ug Q][

Go to @3/:/AB@=:=5G 1=; to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone &%% &%! "&&& or 1.900.950.7700


S a n t a c r u z .co m june 24-july 1, 2009 C L ASS I F I E DS

CLASSIFIED INDEX ¡ ™ £ ¢ ∞ §

Employment Real Estate Family Services For Sale Home Services General Notices

53 54 53 53 54 53

‡ • ª º ⁄

PLACING AN AD

Classes & Instruction Mind, Body & Spirit Music Vacation & Travel Single Services

53 53 53 53 53

BY PHONE Call the Classified Department at 831.440.3860, Monday through Friday, 8.30am to 5.30pm.

BY FAX Fax your ad to the Classified Department at 831.457.5828.

CONTACTING US

Mail to Santa Cruz Classifieds, 115 Cooper St, Santa Cruz, CA 95060.

Please include your Visa, MC, Discover or American Express number and expiration date for payment.

IN PERSON

DEADLINES

Visit our offices Monday through Friday, 8.30am 115 Cooper St, Santa Cruz,.

For copy, payment, space reservation or cancellation: Display ads: Friday 12pm Line ads: Friday 3pm

BY MAIL

EMAIL classifieds@metronews.com

Sales Associate

Employment Shipping/Receiving Workers Wanted!

Watsonville, Day and Swing Shifts Available. Fluent English Required. Must have Reliable Transporation Temp & Temp-To-Hire. KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 Never A Fee e-mail: vermije@kellyservices.com.

Clothing and Housewares Shifts Vary $8.50/hr. Must have recent experience Excllnt Customer Svc. Exp. Comfortable w/Cash Register Flexible Schedule KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 Never A Fee e-mail: vermije@kellyservices.com

Looking for Summer Work?

Conference Center in Scotts Valley. Kitchen Help & Housekeeping. Shifts Vary $10/hr. Weekdays and Your Ad Here! Weekends Advertise in Metro Santa Cruz KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 and your ad will automatically run Never A Fee e-mail: online! Print plus online. vermije@kellyservices.com. A powerful combination. Call 408/200-1329!

HEALTH CONSCIOUS COMPANY

POST OFFICE NOW HIRING

Looking for Like-Minded People! Great growing company looking for staff with the ability to grow w/ it. The Following Skills Desired: High ability to multi-task. High energy, fresh ideas and a passion for the health industry. Extremely detail oriented. Proficient in MS Office (Excel). AA or BA a Plus! Experience desired in: Customer Service. Project Management. Fast Paced Restaurant. Sales Experience and/or passion for sales. Looking for people seeking longevity in a Stable Growing Company! Send your resume today! KELLY SERVICES, 831-425-0653 Never A Fee e-mail: vermije@kellyservices.com

Avg. Pay $21/hour or $54K annually including Federal Benefits and OT. Paid Training, Vacations. PT/FT. 1-866-945-0315 (AAN CAN)

Attention Readers Some ads in this section may require an initial investment or fee. Metro Newspapers encourages you to thoroughly investigate any advertiser’s claims before sending payment.

1 Billion People Use This Product Everyday Our Incomes are Exploding. A Billion People Ate Chocolate Yesterday! Find Out What’s In It For You... www.chocolatecash.com 1-877-230-3694 24/7

Administrative Assistant II Non-Profit in Watsonville Intermediate Word & Excel Excellent Organization Skills 8am-5pm Monday-Friday Some Weekends $14/hr. Looking for someone dedicated & passionate about philanthropy KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 Never A Fee e-mail: vermije@kellyservices.com

High School Diploma!

$600 Weekly Potential

Heal Anxiety & Depression With Ayurveda

Helping the government Part time. No experience, no selling. Call 1-888-213-5225 Ad Code L-5. (AAN CAN)

MOVIE EXTRAS NEEDED Earn $150 to $300 Per Day. All Looks, Types and Ages. Feature Films, Television, Commercials, and Print. No Experience Necessary. 1-800-340-8404 x2001 (AAN CAN)

g Business Opportunities

Post Office Now Hiring!

Average pay $21/hour or $54K annually. Including Federal benefits and OT. Paid training, vacations. PT/FT. 1-866-945-0295. (AAN CAN)

August 28-30 with DR. John Douillard, DC, PhD at Mount Madonna Institute (Watsonville, CA). Tuition: $245, plus meals & lodging. Registration: 408.846.4060 info@mountmadonnainstitute.org More Info: MountMadonnaInstitute.org

¬ 831.457.9000 PHONE

√ 831.457.5828 FAX @ classifieds@metronews.com

Get a New Computer

Practice a martial art based on harmony with nature, with others, and within oneself in a non-competitive, mutuallysupportive environment. ADULT/TEEN BEGINNING CLASS STARTS July 13th (enrolling through July 25th). Mon/Wed 8-9pm & Sat. 9:15-10:15am, 6wks $95, 8wks $120 OR Intro Pkg: includes 8wk class, training uniform, and extra month of general training $185. Youth ages 6 & up open to enrollment. Non-profit org. Family Discounts. AIKIDO OF SANTA CRUZ, 306 Mission St, Santa Cruz (831) 423-TEAM. www.aikidosantacruz.org

Brand name laptops and desktops. Bad or no credit, no problem. Smallest weekly payments available. It’s yours now. Call 800/803-8819. (AAN CAN)

Firearm permit. Classes are forming now in SJ. Guarantee 100%. Please call Dan, 408-580-4681.

Classes & Instruction Fast, affordable and accredited. Free brochure. Call Now! 1-888-532-6546 ext. 97 www.continentalacademy.com (AAN CAN)

Santa Cruz Weekly Classifieds 115 Cooper Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 Monday to Friday, 8.30am – 5pm Charge by phone, fax or email 24 hours a day

AIKIDO

Security Guard Training

For Sale April Ash Designer Outlet

Mattresses Still in plastic. Full sets $229. Queen set $259. Call 831/338-0321.

Dressers, Chests, Beds, Bookshelves, Sofas, etc. Call 831.325.9388, or walk-in 3641 Soquel Dr., (behind Senate Furniture) Santa Cruz.

Music

Genuine Analog 24 Track Analog. 24 Bit Digital. Stout Recording Studio. Randy Burk, Producer/ Session Drummer. 510-567-8572 Oakland. StoutRecordingStudio.com

Spread the Word Say you saw it in the Santa Cruz Classifieds. 408/200-1329

Bundini’s Used Furniture

You saw it in the Metro Classifieds!

Blues/Jazz weekly private instruction on Harmonica, Guitar, Bass and Organ/Piano. Conveniently located near 101/Blossom Hill Rd. 408/224-2936. www.schooloftheblues.com

GET A NEW

Furniture accessories and COMPUTER! mattresses, consignments. 2800 South Rodeo Gulch Rd., Brand Name laptops & Soquel. Friday, Saturday, and desktops Bad or NO Credit No Problem. Smallest weekly Sunday 10am-5pm. payments avail. CALL NOW 1-800-816-2232. (AAN CAN) Brand New

Tell A Friend

School Of The Blues

| 53

Computer Services Brand New Laptops & Desktops Bad Credit, No Credit – No Problem Small Weekly Payments - Order Today and get FREE Nintendo WII game system! Call Now – 800-840-5439 (AAN CAN)

Professional Services $$ Need CASH Fast $$ $500, $1000, or $1500 direct to your account. No Credit History Required Get CASH now. For complete details go to www.BestTopCash.com www.BestTopCash.com (AAN CAN)

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy $975 + Costs Robert M. Haight, Attorney 831/438-6610

Your Ad Here! Browse through the Metro Santa Cruz classifieds. Get seen today. To advertise call 408/200-1329.

General Services The Hot White Linen Affair! Friday July 24, 2009 at the Fabulous French Quarter Cabaret 193 S. Murphy Avenue Sunnyvale, CA! FOR TICKETS OR INFO: (408) 729-6048, OR EMAIL: jerreece@wpcsjsunnyvale.org

Advertise Your Business in 111 alternative newspapers like this one. Over 6 million circulation every week for $1200. No adult ads. Call Rick at 202/289-8484. (AAN CAN)

Single Services

g Chatline

♥Hot Singles 408/514-0101♥

Or 650/223-0299. Browse and respond free! Use free code 6668, 18+ or try Megamates.com

g Single Services

♥Hot Guys 408/514-1111 ♥

Or 650/223-0505. Browse and respond free! Use free code 5494. 18+ or try Megamates.com

Convert Your Car To Electric Contact: cathy@electroauto.com or 831-429-1994 For more info see www.electroauto.com/works hop-EA1day.shtml

follow us on twitter

Guitar Lessons/Song Writing Get those songs written and recorded. Help with structure, arrangement, lyrics, groove, and production. 30 year pro. All styles. Stephen 831/278-1500

twitter.com/santacruzweekly


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C L ASS I F I E DS june 24-july 1, 2009 S a n t a c r u z .co m

Homes Home Services

g Carpentry

Cabinets and Furniture

Elegance and beauty for the discriminating homeowner/contractor. Paul Sable, Master Craftsman, 44 years experience, Creating amazed and contented clients. Free design consultation and estimate. References galore. 831/345-3540

g Contractors

Home Renovation Specialist

Affordable, reliable carpenters for home improvement. Frame, finish, doors, windows, decks, fences, tile, sheet rock and remodels. Lic#925849. Call Dave 831/332-6463

Notice To Readers California law requires that contractors taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor or materials) be licensed by the Contractors State License Board. State law also requires that contractors include their license number on all advertising. You can check the status of your licensed contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 1-800321-CSLB (2752). Unlicensed contractors taking jobs that total less than $500 must state in their advertisements that they are not licensed by the Contractors State License Board. Gardening/Landscaping

Tired Of Your Co-Workers? Check out Santa Cruz Weekly’s employment section and find your new career today!

Real Estate Rentals

g Shared Housing

ALL AREAS RENTMATES.COM

Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: www.Rentmates.com. (AAN CAN)

Say you saw it in the Santa Cruz Classifieds. 408/200-1329

g Homes

ALL AREAS - HOUSES FOR RENT

Browse thousands of rental listings with photos and maps. Advertise your rental home for FREE! Visit: http://www.RealRentals.com (AAN CAN) Class: Rent or Lease

Real Estate Sales

g Condos/Townhouses

10 acres. Rough and rugged and a beautiful spot right on top! Long private bumpy road. Private road association. Good owner In the good old days you opened up shop right on your financing. $215,000. Shown by appointment only. Contact property, work in the back, Deborah J. Donner, Donner live in the front. This comLand and Mortgage Co., Inc. mercial/residential property has a good sized home, shop, 408/395-5754 or www.donnerland.com garage and 2 fenced yards. Priced at $415,000. Team Thomas with David Lyng R.E. Boulder Creek 831/ 402-2442 or 408/307-4178 This one is a beauty! Come see. Bloom Grade. 5 acres. TPZ. Private road. Serene and It’s All About Youquiet. By the golf course. It’s Not About Me Ridge-top view. Beautiful. Team Thomas puts you first Power and water. Pad the way it should be! Call us cleared. $289,000. Shown by for all of your real estate appointment only. Contact needs-WE CARE! TEAM Deborah J. Donner, Donner THOMAS with David Lyng R.E. Land and Mortgage Co., Inc. (831) 402-2442 408/395-5754 or www.work4-u.com www.donnerland.com

gg Land

TEXAS LAND -0Down!

20-acre Ranches, Near El Paso. Beautiful Mountain Views. Road Access. Surveyed. $15,900. $159/mo. Money Back Guarantee. Owner Financing. 1-800-843-7537 www.sunsetranches.com www.sunsetranches.com (AAN CAN)

Boulder Creek

40 acres. Timber Preserve Zoning. Creek frontage. Wild and serene. Off grid. Private Comfortable 2BD, 2BA townhome. Walking distance Road. Small ridge top site. Good owner financing to New Brighton Beach, or offered. $295,000. Shown by Cabrillo. GREAT deal $259K, appointment only. Contact assumable financing - not a distress property, co-housing, Deborah J. Donner, Donner Land and Mortgage Co., Inc., Call Terry at Pacific Sun Broker at 408/395-5754 or Properties 831/345-2053. www.donnerland.com

Aptos/Soquel

g Homes Under $600K

Soquel - Three Level Townhome

Home owners association fees are just $190 per month for this 3 bedroom 2 and a half bath home with nearly 1500 sq. ft. of living space. Private patio, fireplace, attached garage, WOW! This one is worth taking a look at Priced at $415,000? Call Team Thomas with David Lyng R,E. work4-u.com 831/402-2442

Boulder Creek

Boulder Creek - The Way The West Was Won

Boulder Creek A Beautiful spot! 16 acres. Pre-site development review completed. It used to be a helicopter landing pad. Full sun, tremendous views. Easy access. Good well. E-Z location. Timber Preserve Zoning. $485,000. Shown by appointment only. Contact Deborah J. Donner, Donner Land and Mortgage Co., Inc. 408/395-5754 or www.donnerland.com

Services

All AreasRentmates.com

Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: www.Rentmates.com. (AAN CAN)

become a fan

***FREE Foreclosure Listings*** Over 200,000 properties nationwide. LOW Down Payment. Call NOW! 1-800-446-1328 (AAN CAN)

metrofb.com

g Miscellaneous

The Metro Facebook Page

Attention First Time Buyers

New government programs with HUGE buyer credits available. Call TEAM THOMAS with David Lyng R.E.Click on the HOME BUYER TAX CREDIT link for more info. www.work4-u.com (831) 402-2442

! ED

Affordable prices and satisfaction guaranteed. E-mail: rivieralandscape@att.net www.rivieralandscape.com Tel: (650)207-1993 Insured and bonded

Spread the Word

2502 Bean Creek Rd. Single Story Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms: 2 Suite: No Living Area: 1,794 square feet Year Built: 1960. 831-638-1855 Cell: 831-801-1222

C DU

Professional License Landscape and Maintenance Service

Scotts Valley

All real estate advertised in Metro Newspapers is subject to the State and Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status (the presence of children), or national origin, or the intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. State and locate laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis to the best of our knowledge.

RE

g

Notice

Your Ad Here! Advertise in Metro Santa Cruz and your ad will automatically run online! Print plus online. A powerful combination. Call 408/200-1329!

AN EXPERIENCED

TEAM

for buying, selling and managing property in Santa Cruz County

g Homes

List With Team Thomas For Maximum Exposure We will post your home on up to 10 websites and we also have a unique marketing plan so that YOU WILL BE SEEN and YOUR HOME WILL BE SOLD FOR THE HIGHEST PRICE POSSIBLE. Team Thomas with David Lyng R.E. (831) 402-2442 www.work4-u.com

SPOTLIGHT ON VALUE REDUCED to $395,000 • 2 bdrms + large sleeping loft, 1 1/2 baths • Newer solid home with full foundation • Spacious kitchen, island, dishwasher • Parks, trails, river, fun, minutes away

Pacific Sun Properties 734 Chestnut Street Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831.471.2424 831.471.0888 Fax www.pacificsunproperties.com

• Large sunny deck, big yard for gardening • Cathedral ceilings, lots of storage • Don't be shy, make an offer TODAY! Judy Ziegler ph: 831-429-8080 cell: 831-334-0257

www.cornucopia.com


S a n t a c r u z .co m june 24-july 1, 2009 C L ASS I F I E DS

Wheels

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Used Washers, Dryers, & Refrigerators. Whirlpool Ed @ 831.475.9205 ALL Dependable & Clean. Honest, Guarantee, & Service. Also wanted repairable appliances.

Seriously Ill? Need MMJ?

TO ADVERTISE: 831.457.9000 April Ash Designer Outlet Furniture accessories and mattresses, consignments. 2800 South Rodeo Gulch Rd., Soquel. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday 10am-5pm.

Lhasa-Poo Puppies! No shedding, Hypoallergenic. Males $950. Females $950. Small. 408/761-0757

WAMM is NOW accepting applications for membership into our collective. Looking for members who can donate generously. Serving Santa Cruz for 16 years! Your application does not ensure membership. wamm.org, 831-425-0580. peace

The Divorced Fathers Network Advocates of shared parenting, are proud to announce a new chapter in San Jose. DFN is a nonprofit group offering peer support for divorced fathers with the goal of improving the lives of children, fathers and mothers after divorce. DFN holds free meetings the first and third Tuesday nights of each month in San Jose. Please call 831/335-5855.

$$ Need CASH Fast $$ $500, $1000, or $1500 direct to your account. No Credit History Required Get CASH now. For complete details go to www.BestTopCash.com www.BestTopCash.com

Guitar Lessons/Song Writing

Chapter 7 - Bankruptcy

Get those songs written and recorded. Help with structure, arrangement, lyrics, groove, and production. 30 year pro. All styles. Stephen 831/278-1500

$975 + Costs Robert M. Haight, Attorney 831/438-6610

Bundini’s Used Furniture

New government programs with HUGE buyer credits available. Call TEAM THOMAS with David Lyng R.E. Click on the HOME BUYER TAX CREDIT link for more info. www.work4-u.com (831) 402-2442

Attention First Time Buyers

Dressers, Chests, Beds, Bookshelves, Sofas, etc. Call 831.325.9388, or walk-in 3641 Soquel Dr., (behind Senate Furniture) Santa Cruz.

Cabinets and Furniture

Wanna Be In Movies?

Elegance and beauty for the discriminating homeowner/ contractor. Paul Sable, Master Craftsman, 44 years experience, Creating amazed and contented clients. Free design consultation and estimate. References galore. 831/345-3540

Film & TV acting classes starting now! Free DVD & consultation with working actor Ralph Peduto. Call (831) 475-UACT (8228). www.actingoncamera.com Be a pro, work with one. Training pros since ‘86.

Medicann - Med. Marijuana Evaluations

Your Personality Determines Your Happiness

Lic. MD 866-632-6627 Free I.D. card 24/7 verification. Doctor/patient confidentiality. Discount for MediCal, MediCare and veterans.

Know why? Call for your free personality test. Call 1-800-293-6463

Up to $1200/month To Give A Child A Good Home

Professional License Landscape and Maintenance Service

Loving parents needed. www.billwilsoncenter.org 1-888-922-KIDS

Affordable prices and satisfaction guaranteed. E-mail: rivieralandscape@att.net www.rivieralandscape.com Tel: (650)207-1993 Insured and bonded

The Hot White Linen Affair!

List With Team Thomas For Maximum Exposure

Friday July 24, 2009 at the Fabulous French Quarter Cabaret 193 S. Murphy Avenue Sunnyvale, CA! FOR TICKETS OR INFO: (408) 729-6048, OR EMAIL: jerreece@wpcsjsunnyvale.org

We will post your home on up to 10 websites and we also have a unique marketing plan so that YOU WILL BE SEEN and YOUR HOME WILL BE SOLD FOR THE HIGHEST PRICE POSSIBLE. Team Thomas with David Lyng R.E. (831) 402-2442 www.work4-u.com

Heal Anxiety & Depression With Ayurveda August 28-30 with DR. John Douillard, DC, PhD at Mount Madonna Institute (Watsonville, CA). Tuition: $245, plus meals & lodging.Registration: 408.846.4060 / info@mountmadonnainstitute.org More Info: www.MountMadonnaInstitute.org

1 Billion People Use This Product Everyday Our Incomes are Exploding. A Billion People Ate Chocolate Yesterday! Find Out What’s In It For You... www.chocolatecash.com 1-877-230-3694 24/7

Convert Your Car To Electric Heller Immigration Law 25+ Years In S. Bay FREE Consultation with an Attorney! 800/863-4448 or www.greencard1.com/consult@greencard1.com

Get Rid of Stress and Depression Find out how NOW! Call 1-800-293-MIND

Are You Hiring? Let Metro help you find the right candidate! Call today to hear about our specials. 408-200-1309.

Homes for $30,000 Buy foreclosures! Must sell now! 1-4 bedrooms. For listings call 1-800-903-7136

Contact: cathy@electroauto.com or 831-429-1994. For more info see www.electroauto.com/workshop-EA1day.shtml

Looking for Summer Work? Conference Center in Scotts Valley. Kitchen Help & Housekeeping. Shifts Vary $10/hr. Weekdays and Weekends KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 e-mail: vermije@kellyservices.com.


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