North Coast Journal 09-06-12 Edition

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6 Incorporate! 8 Souping it up 23 Rubber duckies at sea 24 Shunning Chekhov 26 Pretty Lights in Blue Lake 35 Lousy movie, dimwit message


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• EXPIRE S 10/31/12 · Not va lid with oth er : offe rs. Please no substi tu tio ns NCJ. 09.06

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2 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

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table of 5 5

Mailbox Poem

25 Fortuna First Friday and Trinidad Arts Night

6

Media Maven

26 The Hum

8

News

28 Music & More! 31 Calendar 35 Filmland

Friday, Sept. 7, 6-9 p.m.

The Un-Fair

ILLUMINATING THE DARK

Peeps Ain’t Corps

The Cool Car Guys

10 Blog Jammin’ 12 On The Cover

The Mormon Moment

18 Seven-o-Heaven

cartoon by andrew goff

22 Home & Garden Service Directory

23 In Review a book

24 Stage Matters

Where Have You Gone, Uncle Vanya?

BLOOD, BOOZE AND OBAMA

37 Workshops 41 Field Notes

Occam’s Razor and the Face on Mars

44 44 46 49 51

Sudoku Crossword Marketplace Body, Mind & Spirit Real Estate This Week

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012

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22nd Annual

Natural Fiber Fair September 8 - 9

Arcata Community Center • 10am to 5pm • Admission $5

Knitting, Spinning, Felting, Weaving, Sewing, Dyeing, Basketry and More... Teaching Our Community Sustainable Traditions

Free Hourly Demos • Vendor Hall and Fleece Market Quilt and Basketry Exhibits • Great Food Paper Sculpture by Featured Artist Lori Goodman Kids Craft Zone sponsored by NorthCoast Knittery

Bring your project and join the Fiber Circle! Sign up for Half and Full Day Workshops. naturalfiberfair.com 599-2729

4 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com


The Un-Fair Too Confused to Vote?

Editor: The cartoon (by Joel Mielke, Aug. 30) depicting the three people who failed to secure valid signatures for the Arcata City Council ballot pokes fun at the filers, but begs the question: who signed their petitions and what does this say about the random citizen’s awareness of their voter registration status? I am guessing the majority of the folks who signed on in support of the candidates thought they were qualified to sign, yet for a variety of reasons, this was not the case. Does this mean that come Election Day there will unpleasant surprises for people who will discover their registration is invalid and thus they will be unable to vote? Maybe a follow up story explaining requirements for citizens to actually cast a ballot on Election Day would be a public service. The fact that three petitions failed to pass muster indicates citizens might need to evaluate their voter eligibility before Nov. 6. Sheila Evans, Eureka

Free entrance to the rich, Double fees for the poor, Blue ribbons to the longest faces, And nobody, but nobody, is welcome! Artists and poets: your entry requirements Include a stint walking the Collapsing Plank over the Mud-Dunking Tanks: 25 cents a throw, and big targets! The Mangy Dog Contest is in Building D. That’s next door to our sun-baked Day Care Corral Where amid cigarette smoke and horseflies the blistered babies whine and howl.

Cartoon by joel mielke

Write a letter! Please try to make it no more than 300 words and include your full name, place of residence and phone number (we won’t print your number). Send it to letters@ northcoastjournal.com l

Do you tweet obsessively? So do we. Follow us. @ncj_of_humboldt

Grown-ups may enter the Insult Exchange, e.g. “If you were my husband, I’d poison your coffee” “If you were my wife, I’d drink it.” And don’t miss the Manure-Drag Races, Each racer a certified mother-in-law, Shouldering the ropes to a 100-pound-load sled, twice around the track, in calico dresses, Trifecta purse to be announced! — Rick Park

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012

5


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Peeps Ain’t Corps

I

plan to incorporate myself. I can do that for $100 in California. You should do the same. As Burstiner, Inc., I’d have corporate free speech rights. And that seems to be pretty strong protection these days. Last month, an appellate court in D.C. told the federal government it couldn’t force tobacco companies to put on cigarette packs nasty photos of cancerous gums or people with holes in their throats in an attempt to warn kids away from an addictive cancer-causing habit. Tobacco companies have corporate free speech rights. And the U.S. Supreme Court has told the federal government that it can’t limit the amount of money political groups raise to spend on political ads. Cigarette makers and sellers spent about $45 million in the last election on ads to convince California voters to reject Proposition 29. If passed, it would have raised millions of dollars for research to fight cancer through a tax on cigarettes. Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled a Vermont law unconstitutional that tried to restrict drug companies’ ability to buy from pharmacies data that showed which doctors prescribe particular drugs. Called data-mining, this helped the drug companies identify doctors more likely to prescribe certain types of drugs, so the companies could better tailor their marketing. They want doctors to prescribe the more expensive drugs, not cheaper generics. Vermont argued that its law restricted corporate conduct, not speech. The court said that the buying of the prescription drug info was “creation and dissemination of information” and that’s corporate speech that our First Amendment protects. So here’s what our courts have done in the name of corporate free speech. They limited the government’s ability to try to keep our teenagers off a highly addictive habit that could kill them. (Commenting on the cigarette pack decision, Tina Rosenberg of the New York Times cited statistics that only 1 in 10 people will take up smoking after age 18.) They denied the government’s ability to limit the raising of money corporations spend to try to influence elections. So now tobacco companies can spend ridiculous sums to prevent a tax that would help us treat people who get cancer from smoking cigarettes. And the government can’t stop drug compa-

6 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

nies from buying information about what drugs our doctors prescribe to us, which means the drug companies can use that info to get us to buy more expensive drugs once we get cancer from smoking or inhaling second-hand smoke. All of this is a result of Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission in 2010, in which the Supreme Court determined that corporations are persons and entitled to the full protection of the U.S. Constitution. Come November, Arcata residents get to vote on an initiative that will declare that within the city of Arcata, corporations will not have the rights of persons. The “Corps Ain’t Peeps” initiative is symbolic, of course, since city laws don’t trump U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Former Arcata city councilman Dave Meserve spent days standing in the rain last winter gathering signatures to put the measure on the ballot. He hopes to get other towns to adopt similar measures. It is part of a movement, led by Eureka resident David Cobb, to amend the U.S. Constitution to establish that corporations are not persons and money is not speech. Talk about David versus Goliath. As just a peep, not a corp., I’ve never felt more puny. Every month, it seems, I read about how the government can’t restrict corporate speech, even as I see evidence that corporate media restricts private speech. On Aug. 25, New York Times reporter David Streitfeld on Sunday profiled Todd Rutherford, a man who made $28,000 a month for a while posting great online reviews to self-published books for pay. (Brilliant idea! I should have thought of that first!) That is, until Google decided it didn’t like the idea of advertising for favorable reviews. It suspended his advertising account and Streitfeld tells us that Rutherford now sells recreational vehicles. In May, Fahmida Rashid of PC Magazine reported how some Facebook users get an error message when they try to post comments. The message explains that the comment was blocked because it “seems irrelevant or inappropriate.” I’m not sure about the appropriateness of comments I make on Facebook, but I’m pretty sure they are all irrelevant. For all you out there who revel in how many people receive your Tweets, or how many Linkedin or Facebook friends you can message at one time, note that these platforms you post to run on algo-

rithms. That’s a fancy word for a complicated mathematical formula. Tweak the formula and suddenly any post with the word “rutabaga” gets blocked. Tweak the Google search algorithm and suddenly certain websites end up on the 15th page of the search, rather than at the top of the first page. Could the government force Google to make its search fair to the little guy or tell Facebook or Twitter what it can or can’t block? I don’t think so. The decision for the pharmacies against the state of Vermont made the creation and dissemination of information by businesses protected free speech. Google and Facebook and Twitter are all about the dissemination of information. I can’t imagine the courts will let the government dictate how they do that. In past columns this year, I argued that speech you buy is more powerful than speech that’s free and that bought speech is more protected. But Rutherford paid for his speech and Google took it down. If he were Rutherford Advertising Agency Inc., however, I bet I’d still see his ads when I Googled info on how to promote my self-published books. And as a corporation, with corporate free speech rights, the government couldn’t force him to put warning labels on his reviews informing readers how bogus those reviews were (in some cases Rutherford never read the books he reviewed). So it isn’t enough to pay for your speech to ensure its protection against censorship. You need to incorporate yourself. Let’s be corps, not peeps.

– Marcy Burstiner

mib3@humboldt.edu

Marcy Burstiner is an associate professor of journalism and mass communication at Humboldt State University. She will favorably review your self-published book for $50 a pop. If you want her to actually read it, that will cost $100. If you want the review to read as if it were from someone who actually read the book, please include an extra $25. For search engine optimization she will include in her review a reference to Adele for $15 more. So that you can send her reviews to all your Facebook friends and Twitter them to the world, she guarantees that the reviews will have no inappropriate language and will be utterly irrelevant.


Sept. 6, 2012 Volume XXIII No. 36

North Coast Journal Inc. www.northcoastjournal.com ISSN 1099-7571 © Copyright 2012

The North Coast Journal is a weekly newspaper serving Humboldt County. Circulation: 21,000 copies distributed FREE at more than 350 locations. Mail subscriptions: $39 / 52 issues. Single back issues mailed / $2.50. Entire contents of the North Coast Journal are copyrighted. No article may be reprinted without publisher’s written permission. Printed on recycled paper with soy-based ink.

publisher Judy Hodgson judy@northcoastjournal.com editor Carrie Peyton Dahlberg carrie@northcoastjournal.com art director Holly Harvey production manager Carolyn Fernandez staff writer/a&e editor Bob Doran bob@northcoastjournal.com staff writer/copy editor Heidi Walters heidi@northcoastjournal.com staff writer Ryan Burns ryan@northcoastjournal.com calendar editor Andrew Goff calendar@northcoastjournal.com editorial intern Scottie Lee Meyers contributing writers John J. Bennett, Simona Carini, Barry Evans, William S. Kowinski, Mark Shikuma, Amy Stewart graphic design/production Lynn Jones, Alana Chenevert, Drew Hyland production intern Kimberly Hodges sales manager Mike Herring mike@northcoastjournal.com advertising Colleen Hole colleen@northcoastjournal.com advertising Shane Mizer shane@northcoastjournal.com advertising Karen Sack karen@northcoastjournal.com office manager Carmen England classified assistant Sophia Dennler mail/office:

310 F St., Eureka, CA 95501 PHONE: 707 442-1400 FAX:  707 442-1401

press releases newsroom@northcoastjournal.com letters to the editor letters@northcoastjournal.com events/a&e calendar@northcoastjournal.com music thehum@northcoastjournal.com production ncjournal@northcoastjournal.com sales ncjournal@northcoastjournal.com classified/workshops classified@northcoastjournal.com

on the cover:

Mormon missionaries reach out to a potential convert. Photo by Scottie Lee Meyers.

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012

7


Members of Nor-Cal Imports car club, from left to right: Jamal Wyllie, Nick Terrini, Brad Adams, Hakim Wyllie AND Rick Arnold. Photo by Heidi Walters

The Cool Car Guys By Heidi Walters

heidiwalters@northcoastjournal.com

S

o there you are, schlumping your way home late after work on the 101 corridor in your homely old Honda — groceries in the back, evening sun in your eyes, list of to-do-nexts on your mind. Passing by Target as you enter Eureka, you once again notice the handful of young guys in the parking lot huddled around some slick little cars, a few peacock bright. What the heck? They were there last Wednesday, too. And the Wednesday before that. In fact, they’ve been a Wednesday special for years. Those who finally detour into the lot to meet these guys might find a new religion: car modification. OK, maybe religion is the wrong word. Hobby. True love. It’s Nor-Cal Imports, a Humboldt Countybased auto club started six years ago by Jamal Wyllie of Eureka. The club meets Wednesdays from 7:30 to about 9 p.m. to talk about cars, modifications and upcoming cruises, races, parades and other events — like the Rhody Parade in the spring, and Cruz’N Eureka, which is coming up this weekend. (See page 35.) Last Wednesday, about half of the 15some club members had gathered in the

8 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

low evening light. In the distance, shoppers were still making after-work forays into the plastic-scented, colorful kaleidoscope of Target. Wyllie, who’s 30 and vice-president of the club, was there with his 2006 350Z Nissan; Brad Adams had his shiny black 1995 Acura Integra and Rick Arnold his boxy, matte-purple 1990 Honda Civic. Soon Hakim Wyllie, Jamal’s younger brother and president of the club, arrived in a gleaming Lincoln that he parked away from the other guys’ cars; it was just his transportation tonight, because his sporty car was in the shop. These were not your ordinary small imports. Jamal Wyllie’s Nissan, for instance — you likely wouldn’t find it sitting outside Harper Motors. Jay-bright Laguna Seca Blue paint job. Black carbon fiber hood. Carbon fiber fenders. Carbon fiber trunk. Top Secret body kit, front end and side skirts. The Veilside spoiler. Hakim Wyllie, who’s almost 29, walked over and showed me a smart phone picture of his lime green Mitsubishi Eclipse GSX, the one in the shop. “I bought this car from a friend, bone-stock-off-the-lot,” he said.


Jamal, listening, laughed. “What people call JDM these days,” he said. “Japanese domestic market.” “It was silver,” Hakim continued. “I painted it in my garage in McKinleyville.” And he did more, lots more. “My car is one of the few total-package vehicles — everything is customized, from the sound system to the lighting to the body kit to the interior. … The frame’s original.” The Wyllie brothers grew up in Eureka, where their parents moved from Redding when Jamal was nearly 2. Their dad, originally from Trinidad and Tobago, met their mom, who is from Haiti, in New York; he had moved to the city to train in shot put for the Olympics. They moved west, and then west again, in search of a yet smaller town and bigger trees. Jamal got modification fever when he was 16 and driving his first car, a Chevy Cavalier. One day he saw his best friend’s car, and noticed it had a weird front end. “My friend said, ‘Yeah, it has a body kit on it,’” recalled Jamal. “I said, ‘What’s that?’ It was different. That’s what I like about it. I can change my clothes, I can change my car — my 350Z can be a Lambo. I can make a Lambo! It’s amazing what you can do.” Lambo is short for Lamborghini. Hakim got into it, too, and like Jamal races his car. When he was 18, he wrecked his Plymouth Laser — going the speed limit, he says, but riding on bald tires —on a slick road by the golf course. The impact into a telephone pole snapped his neck. He lifted his collar aside to reveal the dark horizontal scar across his throat. “Check out this guy,” said his brother. “Wrecks his car, breaks his neck. Most people would give up, have nothing to do with cars. Or get an SUV — something big, you know. But no, this guy, he’s all Rocky and comes right back at it.” The other guys kicked around, listening to the conversation, or wandered off to talk quietly by their cars. They have their stories, too. But why this club, this hobby — what’s the draw in taking a sometimes already spiffy little car and souping it up? “A car is what represents the person — the attitude of this person,” said Jamal, who was wearing jeans and a gray and black sweathshirt with the hood pulled up. He’s friendly and gets animated when he tells a story, his voice rising, his laugh becoming more frequent. His car seems a little flashier than him, but he explained its connection to him well. “It’s Laguna Seca blue — a cool color. It’s blue, it’s nice and slick. And I’m nice and slick.” He laughed. “Some cars look more aggressive. What’s me in this car is these smooth curves, showing my freedom, my

positive attitude.” “I just like to be unique,” said Hakim, who, unlike the T-shirted or hoodied rest of the guys, wore a shimmery longsleeved dress shirt with copper and black vertical stripes, and large sparkly studs in his ears. “Why drive the same stock everyone else does?” Although the club’s name has “Imports” in it, the club doesn’t discriminate — any car, American or foreign, sports or muscle, is welcome. The club’s even forming a Nor-Cal VIP sub-club, for folks with more luxury rides, like Hakim’s Lincoln — which he plans to modify, of course, by putting on some 22s (tires), for starters. Part of the joy these club guys find is in the work itself — taking a regular car and fixing it up — and in what they do with their cars afterward. Some team members race on tracks run by the National Auto Sport Association, an organization that holds races for different classes of cars and drivers, trains drivers, promotes rallies and supports clubs. Jamal has raced at Thunderhill (near Chico), Laguna Seca and Sonoma, so far. He said the club works to keep street racing off the streets and, instead, on legal tracks, like the Samoa Drag Strip out on the peninsula. “We want to show kids around here it’s OK to race a car, but they should go do it in a safe environment,” he said. Perhaps the greater joy of being in the club, however, comes from the closeness that forms among members and their families. “Everyone helps each other out, teaches each other things about cars, works on each other’s cars,” Jamal said. “I’m sort of the team mechanic,” said Arnold. “I paint cars,” said Hakim. “I make ‘em run,” said Arnold. “I make ‘em run, too,” said Adams. “I’m going to CR to get my automotive associate’s degree. I love cars, but I hate paying shop labor and I like helping other people.” “Nobody has touched my cars except my team members,” said Arnold. “My green car, these guys changed my suspension,” said Hakim. “It took like 20 minutes to half an hour,” said Adams, “versus all day in the shop and paying a fat labor bill — which probably would have cost twelve- to thirteen hundred.” A black, tough-looking car circled around them and stopped. The driver leaned out the window. “This a car club?” “Yeah, Nor-Cal Imports,” Jamal said, adding quickly, “We have muscle cars too.” The guy nodded. Asked a couple more questions. And drove coolly on. l

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Blog Jammin’ HUMBOLDT STATE, SPORTS / BY CARRIE PEYTON DAHLBERG / AUG. 29, 4:11 P.M.

More Hazing Penalties The other shoe has dropped for women’s soccer players at Humboldt State University. Their team is being suspended for three games because of hazing, the university said in a press release. The full release is on our website. ● KARUK, FORESTRY / BY HEIDI WALTERS / SEPT. 4, 12:21 P.M.

Tradition restored For a century, at least, the Karuk Tribe has been unable to manage the lands surrounding the center of its world — Katimiin, at Ishi Pishi Falls near Somes Bar — the way it did for thousands of years prior. So the recent agreement between the tribe and the United States Forest Service allowing a return to traditional management there, using fire as a main tool, is no small achievement. For that matter, any agreement between the tribe and the forest service is significant, says Craig Tucker, spokesperson and Klamath Coordinator for the tribe.

“Usually when we put out a press release about the Forest Service, we’re mad at them or mentioning them as the defendant in our latest lawsuit,” Tucker said on Tuesday. “This shows a big turn around, and that a positive relationship has developed. Hopefully it’s a sign of things to come.” Katimiin is where the tribe’s World Renewal ceremony — “Pikyawish” — concludes each year. The tribe, with 4,000 enrolled members, is the second largest tribe in the state next to the Yurok. Yet it still does not have its own reservation. Most of the Karuk ancestral territory is managed by Six Rivers National Forest; every time the tribe wants to conduct ceremonies at Katimiin it has to get a special use permit from the forest service. The land has changed dramatically in the meantime. “That whole landscape has gone from big, majestic stands of old-growth tan oak to basically a Doug fir tree farm,” Tucker said. “We want to go in and treat these areas with fire in traditional ways to cultivate traditional foods and basket-making materials. We want to actively manage for stands of tan oak.” The Karuk traditionally harvest acorns from the tan oak. ● READ FULL POSTS AND SEE PHOTOS AT

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10 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com


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11


The E Mormon Moment Once-outcast religion in the spotlight as Romney accepts presidential nomination Story and photos by Scottie Lee Meyers

lder Mitchell Camper sits in his musty study room clutching his Mormon Missionary Handbook and reads aloud a few pages to his inseparable missionary companion. The wallet-sized booklet with 82 pages of small font disappears in his big hands. It’s filled with so many rules that they seem to be spilling over the binding. The missionaries can’t roll up their sleeves and can’t wear anything but sanctioned underwear. They can’t have a “faddish” hairstyle. They can’t read any book or watch any video that hasn’t been approved by the church. They can’t join clubs, musical groups or sports teams. If they play a team sport among themselves, they can’t keep score. They can’t call home, except for Christmas and Mother’s Day. They can’t flirt, and they sure as hell heck can’t be alone with women. They’re not the kind of guys you’d want to get a beer with; they can’t drink alcohol. There’s another rule too: They can’t be without the rulebook. As I prepare to spend a day with these ambassadors of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — the full name Mormons prefer — I try to be on my best behavior too. I tuck in my shirt and try not to curse. But I’m having a hard time at it. Mormons have now famously conquered Broadway, talk radio and reality TV. America is having a Mormon moment. And that moment is brought to you largely by Mitt Romney, who took the stage at the Republican National Convention last week in Tampa and

ELDER MITCHELL CAMPER AND ELDER CORY GOYNES DURING THEIR MORNING STUDY. ON THE COVER NICK WALBURN LISTENS TO ELDER GOYNES’ PRAYER ABOUT THE ATONEMENT OF CHRIST. WALBURN HAS SHOWN AN INTEREST IN JOINING THE FAITH, AND HE WAS INVITED TO ATTEND CHURCH IN MCKINLEYVILLE WITH THE ELDERS THE FOLLOWING DAY.

12 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

became the first Mormon to accept the party’s presidential nomination. Romney has been loosening his tie lately when it comes to his faith. In an effort to present a warmer version of himself, Romney recently invited reporters to church. The attention is making some Mormons nervous. As the November election nears, church followers celebrate their Jackie Robinson moment while white-knuckling Romney’s potential gaffes, afraid the words and actions of one man could come to represent the entire church. Mormonism was literally pulled out of Joseph Smith’s hat. In 1827 Smith was a 25-year-old New Yorker who made a living using psychic powers to find treasure. According to church teachings, an angel asked him to retrieve golden plates buried in the hills of upstate New York. An unknown language was engraved on the plates, and Smith deciphered it by reading reflections in a seer stone at the bottom of his hat. Smith’s transcriptions became the Book of Mormon, and the text remains the cornerstone of the religion to this day. Driven from state to state as the religion grew, Mormons have had an uneasy history — not just


church, come out with polygamy, wearing athletic which the church gear and running officially abanshoes. It’s time for doned more than their mandatory a century ago, but exercises — 30 minwith a worldview utes every morning, that sometimes save Sunday. Elder seems locked in Goynes checks his the 1800s. The watch and sees church didn’t allow that the minute blacks into the hand points straight priesthood until down. “Time to go,” 1978. Women still he says, and we jog aren’t allowed. And out into the Arcata gays? In 2008, MorDEL PARSON'S PAINTING OF JESUS CHRIST dawn, a producemons contributed IS ONE OF THE MOST WIDELY USED aisle mist falling more than $20 IMAGES OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST around us. million to passing OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS. AN IMAGE OF THE PAINTING HANGS IN EVERY ROOM OF THE We circle the California’s PropoMISSIONARIES' APARTMENT. Arcata Marsh, and sition 8, a gay return to the elders’ marriage ban still small apartment just before 7 a.m. The being contested in the courts. The church place has a college-student feel, occupied was by far the biggest donor, contributing by young men too frugal for matching furmore than half of the $40 million aimed at niture, decorated with posters tacked onto preventing gay people from marrying. And the walls. There are differences, though. the church’s clout is spreading worldwide. The posters depict Jesus, Joseph Smith and Today Mormonism is the fastest growing biblical scenes, not Bob Marley. The beds religion in the Western Hemisphere with have been taken out of the bedrooms and more than 14 million members worldwide, put into the living room, where the men and more than 6 million here in the U.S., sleep; the bedrooms have been converted according to the church. Globally, there into study rooms. There’s no beer in the are now more Mormons than Jews. And fridge, no TV on the stand and no magamissionaries like those who roam through zines on the counter — all are forbidden. Arcata and Eureka help spread the word. The elders clean up, chomp Pop-Tarts You probably know the Mormons as and make a church-sanctioned call on a the guys walking in pairs around town in smartphone with Jesus-themed wallpaper. their white dress shirts and skinny ties, They dress in their dark slacks and white waving and smiling as you walk or drive by. shirts, complete with a black nametag Like the Poem Store woman, the backon the left shirt pocket. They call this wards-running man, and the mustachioed clothing the armor of God. The tops of accordion player, the Mormon missionaries their notorious underwear — intended have become small-town fixtures in their to provide “protection against temptaconstant visibility. I’ve always wondered tion and evil” —are visible around their about that poem woman — what does necklines and biceps. The undergarments motivate someone to barter with poetry are nothing more than white boxer shorts she types on a street corner? — and I’ve and a separate undershirt. The elders love had that same faintly voyeuristic fascinaties, especially Elder Camper, who has tion with the Mormons. So I embedded more than 50 of them dangling neatly in with Elder Mitchell Camper and Elder Cory his closet. “It’s our only opportunity for Goynes for a day to see what it’s like to be individuality.” a man on a mission. At 8 a.m., they start their mandatory two hours of study. In the center of the when I arrive at the room are two desks, pushed together missionaries’ H Street apartment in Arcata. and facing each other. The whiteboard I don’t have to check my notes to see on the wall lists their long-term schedule which unit they live in because only one and their personal goals. Elder Goynes is light shines in the complex, and there’s a striving to more effectively use Facebook picture of Jesus in the window. continued on next page The missionaries, called elders by the

It’s 6:20 a.m.

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012

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continued from previous page

to reach out to people. (Our region is one of seven missions in the world that allows missionaries to use social media.) He also wants to deliver more meaningful prayers and keep better records. Elder Camper’s goals look like a red-Sharpie haiku: Be less condemning, use less words, silence. As always with the missionaries, they start with a prayer. The men go to their knees, fold their hands and close their eyes. Elder Goynes leads the prayer; it’s slow, rhythmic, methodical and yet improvised. It carries a lullaby tone, but its sincerity jolts me awake; he thanks his heavenly father at length for allowing him time to exercise this morning. Elder Goynes becomes silent, and in unison they say, “We pray in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen,” as they always do when they end a prayer. After the prayer, the two sit in silence reading the Book of Mormon, the King James Bible and lessons from their teaching manual, Preach My Gospel. I sit in silence, studying their faces. Elder Camper is a baby faced 19-yearold from St. Michaels, Md., a small and

wealthy town near Chesapeake Bay. He puts product in his well-trimmed, brown hair and styles it ever so slightly in a fauxhawk. Elder Camper played baseball in high school and his muscular physique shows his athleticism. He sprays on Calvin Klein cologne, which somehow smells imprudent on a man with so many personal restrictions. After graduating high school, Elder Camper went on a weeklong party with friends who binged on alcohol and drugs. He wanted something more meaningful for himself, so he signed-up for a mission, becoming the first missionary from his area in decades. His Mom didn’t pressure him into going, she told me later on the phone. She had thought he’d stay home and attend the police academy he’d enrolled in. She exchanges emails with him every

Monday, the only day missionaries are allowed to send emails home. “It’s been a lot easier than I thought. I miss him incredibly, but I have such a peace about what he’s doing. He seems so happy and that makes

me happy. It takes away the worry of having a teenager across the country.” Still, she’s afraid of California’s earthquakes. Elder Goynes is a rosy-cheeked 23-yearold from Baton Rouge, La. He puts a little

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country, dropping them off to new buyers. Impressed by his hard work ethic, the company president asked him to be part owner. But God called him on this mission instead. The silence lasts for an hour — or almost an hour — when Elder Camper asks his companion if he’s ready. “We still have four minutes,” replies Elder Goynes. At exactly 9 a.m. Elders Camper and Goynes join two other missionary roommates in the hallway. They stand side by

IT’S JUST AFTER SUNRISE ON A LATE AUGUST SATURDAY, AND THE ELDERS JOG AROUND THE ARCATA MARSH. MORMON MISSIONARIES ARE REQUIRED TO DO AT LEAST A HALF HOUR OF EXERCISES EVERY MORNING, EXCEPT SUNDAY.

side, staring at the sheet music tacked to the wall. They briefly hum the rhythm of the song, then sing in surprising harmony: “Two thousand stripling warriors, young men of pow’r and might. Responded to the battle cry. O who will stand and fight? Behold, our God is with us!” The men sing slowly, in low voices that blend with a haunting persistence.

For young Mormon men,

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percent of young men served, according to The Salt Lake Tribune. The missionary men always serve with a companion; they are never to be farther than shouting distance apart. The church has 55,000 missionaries worldwide today, including about 7,000 women, referred to as “sisters.” Hopeful missionaries must pass a test of worthiness. If you’ve had a child out of wedlock, a homosexual experience or committed a serious crime, you’re not worthy, according to the LDS Church. The missionaries are typically 19 to 26 years old, but there are senior and married couple missionaries too. After completing a six week training program, they are assigned to a region typically far away from home, and spend two years dedicating their lives to bringing people to God. The missionaries have to be frugal. They don’t get paid — in fact, they pay the church to go on a mission. Each missionary, often with the help of relatives, must pay $400 a month or almost $10,000 over two years. That money goes into a general church fund, which pays for each missionary’s total living expenses and helps offset the costs for missionaries serving abroad. The church provides housing and a shared car, and gives each missionary $130 a month for food and most other living expenses. Elders Camper and Goynes have been in Arcata for a month now. They love the natural beauty of the place, they say, but they love the people here even more. They’re serving in the Santa Rosa Mission, which stretches along the coast from Vallejo to Crescent City, and is importuned by 180 missionaries, including 16 in Humboldt County. For two years these elders will move around the region, typically assigned to new companions and new service areas every three to six months. Mission Presi-

left Elder Camper and Elder Goynes silently read verses of the King James Bible during their mandatory personal study session, which they conduct every day between 8 and 9 a.m. below As missionaries in the Arcata area, Elder Camper and Elder Goynes interact with a lot of Humboldt State students, who they say are more openminded to their message. “We try not to be like robots when we’re out proselytizing,” said Elder Camper, “We just try to relate any way we can. You can relate anything to the gospel.”

dent Rene Alba, an unpaid clergyman who will serve his position for three years, said shuffling the missionaries around prevents them from becoming too “chummy” with the community and losing focus.

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study session, that always begins by reading aloud five pages from their Missionary Handbook. Elder Goynes has five marks in his handbook, one for each time he’s read through it. They read passages from the King James Bible and the Book of Mormon out loud to each other. Then they discuss their itinerary for the day, planning whom to visit and how to teach them. Each visit

is custom tailored. “He’s got a short attention span, so don’t go on too long with the Joseph Smith lesson. Let’s stick to authority,” Elder Camper tells his companion. We’re running late when we leave the apartment at 10:46 a.m. Elder Goynes climbs into the driver seat of the church’s silver Dodge Caravan. (The church also provides gas money.) A few boxes of the Book of Mormon and religious pamphlets sit in the trunk. Elder Camper stands behind the van and watches Elder Goynes back out. It’s another rule; one companion always stands outside when the car is in reverse. If Elder Camper were backing out in a desert and the nearest obstacle was 20 miles away, Elder Camper would still get out and watch him. We say a prayer and drive off, listening to a CD of a church leader speaking on the importance of missionary work. “Such a good line,” Elder Goynes exclaims every other minute, after a particular passage resonates with him. We arrive at an apartment complex near Health Sport in Arcata. Before we get out, we say a prayer and grab a few extra copies of the Book of Mormon. A little

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optimistic, I think. Elder Goynes smiles and waves at every passing car. We stop and chat with a few passersby. Sometimes the conversations flow easily, but others carry awkward silences with a clear subtext: Please stop bothering me now. They ask every person they encounter the same question, “Is there anything we can do right now to help you, anything at all?” Yesterday a college student took them up on their offer, and the elders spent the afternoon helping her move furniture into her new house. We walk around the back of the apart-

ment complex when a car cruises by and the driver lifts a hand to wave back at Elder Goynes. “They’re always so nice in their cars,” he says. The elders spot a young woman smoking a cigarette on her second-story balcony. It’s a sort of Romeo and Juliet scene gone wrong. The Elders profess their love of God, but the young woman fails to return it. “I’m spiritual, not religious,” she tells them. “We hear that a lot,” say the missionaries. “Why do you go to people? Why not let them come to you?” she asks in a stern voice. “Christ tells us to go everywhere,”

AFTER CIRCLING AN APARTMENT COMPLEX IN ARCATA, ELDER CAMPER AND ELDER GOYNES TALK WITH BRYN ROBERTSON AND HER ROOMMATE FOR ALMOST 15 MINUTES. ROBERTSON WAS SKEPTICAL OF THEIR MESSAGE, BUT EVENTUALLY AGREED TO TAKE A COPY OF THE BOOK OF MORMON.

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replies Elder Goynes. The missionaries tell her they want to bring happiness into her life with the Book of Mormon. She says being miserable helps her art. Her roommate comes out and tells them very politely that he’s an atheist, that the universe is an accident, just a bunch of chemicals in our brain, and we’re all taking it way too seriously. The young woman chimes in, “Hey, I got a book for you to read!” “Oh yeah, what’s it called?” “Cruddy, it’s a graphic novel by Lynda Berry and it’s about murder and drugs.” she says tauntingly. The elders write down the name of the author in their notebook and agree that the next time they’re in the library they will try to check it out. The elders make a deal. They’ll read her book if they can come up and give her the Book of Mormon. She agrees. There’s a feeling of truce when they meet at the door. (Because the church regulates their reading, they said later, they actually will not be allowed to read Cruddy until their mission ends.) Back in the van, the elders pray for that woman on the balcony. Not that she finds the Book of Mormon to be true, although that would be nice, but that she finds happiness and that she may never be lonely. “How did we do?” they ask me. “You did about as good as you could,” I answer honestly. Days later I called the young woman, Bryn Robertson, and asked about her encounter with the Mormons. “I don’t really


like it when I’ve made it clear that I’m not interested and people persist. Then it feels intrusive,” she said, adding that she does try to keep an open mind to all beliefs. “I felt like in the beginning it was sincere. It switched halfway through and felt superficial. Then they spoke their agenda.” The Book of Mormon is still on her desk, unopened. She means to look at it eventually, just to stay open minded. We forge on, door after door, among the hostile and the curious, before the elders lunch at their apartment. They insist on fixing me a chicken pot pie. “They’re really good and they’re like a dollar at the store,” says Elder Camper, glad for such finds on a tight missionary budget. It’s 1:45 p.m. and we have to be in Eureka in 15 minutes. Elder Camper stands behind the car and chaperones Elder Goynes as he backs out. We say a prayer and take the 101 south. “Are there any parts of your faith that you don’t agree with?” I ask the elders. The car is silent in contemplation until Elder Goynes lets out a sigh and says, “I’d have to think about it for a while. Let me get back to you on that one.” I was surprised. I figured everyone saw cracks in their religion. So I pressed it further. “What about gay marriage?” “Elder Camper and I have both have friends back home that are gay. People think we hate gay people, but that’s not true at all,” says Elder Goynes. “The church is against it, but we accept all people and

Elder Camper speaks about how he knows the Book of Mormon is true to Alexander Kurnizki, an engineering student at HSU. The missionaries don’t have prepared scripts and improvise off one another.

invite them to church.” Elder Camper tells me that in his last transfer in San Rafael he helped baptize a woman who used to be a lesbian, until she found Mormonism. Days later, after thinking it over, the elders tell me they don’t disagree with any part of Mormonism. They’re not cafeteria Christians, picking and choosing what they do and don’t like. They consume their faith whole. At 2 p.m. we meet with eight other missionaries to inundate a small area with elders and sisters — they call it a blitz. The

sisters hand each companion an index card with a list of names and addresses to visit. These are people who haven’t been active in the church for a while or maybe showed an interest recently. We get in the car, pray and drive to the first address on the list. Elder Goynes knocks on the door. “Friends knock, strangers ring,” he says. No answer. We hear the TV blasting next door and Elder Goynes takes the opportunity to try the neighbor too. A fat man with a scruffy beard opens the door. He takes one look at us and says, “I can’t help you.” SLAM! The elders experience this every day. They got 10 antagonistic people in a row yesterday, but the day before that, they had a string of people receptive to their message. A couple weeks ago, two men answered the door naked. “Doesn’t that shit stuff piss make you mad?” I ask the elders. “How do you guys deal with that?” Elder Goynes would later show me a Bible verse, Luke 6:23: “Blessed are you, when men shall hate you, and when they shall separate you from their company, and shall reproach you, and cast out your name as evil, for the Son of man’s sake.” We approach a man gardening in front of his beautifully refurbished Victorian home. “How ya doing today sir? Is there anything we can help you with right now?” Elder Camper asks. The man tells us to leave without even a glance in our direccontinued on page 21

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tion. “Not here fellas; you gotta move on. Move along now.”

From the beginning,

Mormons faced distaste and ridicule from mainstream America. After the church was formed in the early 19th century, Smith moved his reformed Christianity and its followers from state to state, essentially being evicted by governments that detested the religion’s belief in polygamy. The church eventually settled in what was then Utah Territory, where it’s still headquartered today. The LDS Church abolished plural marriage in 1890 after the federal government seized its assets. There is still a tiny Mormon Fundamentalist church that practices polygamy, but the LDS Church treats it like a crazy uncle, excommunicating its followers. Over time, stressing hard work and an all-embracing safety net for fellow church members, the church became what it is today — wealthy, established and largely Republican. Mormons have climbed political ranks, with 15 church members currently serving in Congress, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Although Reid is a Democrat, almost 80 percent of LDS Church members are Republican, according to Bob Rees, a Berkeley theology professor and practicing Mormon. When Rees teaches comparative religions, he reminds students that all faiths have practices or beliefs that seem odd to outsiders, but prejudice against Mormons is disproportionate, one of the remaining acceptable prejudices in American culture. The church is also resolutely businesslike. In a 2011 cover story, Newsweek magazine compared the LDS church to “a sanctified multinational corporation — the General Electric of American religion … with an estimated net worth of $30 billion.” Mormons are taught to give the church 10 percent of their income. Romney has implied that this tithing is part of why he should not release more tax returns. “Our church doesn’t publish how much people have given,” Romney told Parade magazine. “This is done entirely privately. … It’s a very personal thing between ourselves and our commitment to our God and to our church.”

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made of wood that blends in with the surrounding woodland beside St. Joseph Hospital. A couple dozen people meet in a classroom-sized room with fluorescent lighting and metal folding chairs. The woman getting baptized is in her mid-30s and wears a body-hugging dress, a dress so white it almost glows. Add a train to this floor-length gown and it would evoke a wedding. We pray and sing hymn number 157, “We Are Not Ashamed to Own Our Lord.” The Eureka sister missionaries then sing a duet in perfect pitch, so perfect that tears glisten in the eyes of the people sitting next to me. After a half hour or so of singing and praying, we all cram into a small room next door, with a blue-tiled basin called the baptismal font. A large mirror hangs above so friends and family can see from every angle. The woman plugs her nose and Elder Nathan Tubbs, a missionary dressed in a white robe, guides her head back and submerges her fully, then brings her back up. The room is silent. Only the water dripping off her body into the pool makes a noise. Two men quickly step in and close doors in front of the font, as if to say, “‘Nothing to see here, folks, move along.” The whole thing lasts maybe a minute. I nearly bring my hands together to clap — it feels like an applause moment, but everyone stands quiet. The group migrates back to the original room to sing hymn number 227, “There is Sunshine in my Soul Today.” The newly minted Mormon comes in midway through the song, her hair still wet and up in a bun. Again I want to clap or whisper congratulations or offer a hug. But the service goes on.

We leave the church at 7:19 p.m. and hit the streets again to spread the word of Jesus Christ. I’m constantly yawning, while the elders seem to have eternal energy. More knocks yield nothing. More doors slam. We do this for another hour and a half before calling it a night. The elders typically return home at 9 p.m. They’ll journal for an hour, prepare plans for the following day, pray, and then it’s lights out at 10:30 p.m. Before leaving the van, Elder Goynes recites the mileage we covered today and Elder Camper records it in a notebook — mileage limitations are another rule. It’s time for me to depart. We gather in a circle in their apartment, bow our heads and Elder Camper leads us in prayer. “O dear heavenly father, help Scottie to find the Book of Mormon to be true,” he says. Hearing my name shocks me. But then he asks his savior to help me write an awesome story with a clear head. I appreciate the gesture and I sure as hell heck need all the help I can get. I step outside into the cool, Arcata air and immediately untuck my shirt — it feels vaguely sinful. I hop onto my bike and head straight to Redwood Curtain to meet a friend and a former professor for a much needed beer or three. The bar brings sunshine to my soul. I tell a joke or two with vulgar punch lines. I’m happy to stop censoring the occasional curse word. I swig my goblet of duppel and tell my drinking partners, “I met two really nice guys today.” I am awed by their niceness, their rules, their implacable lives. Then I order another round. l

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Some books tell a complicated story so engagingly that every few pages bring another grin of discovery, a mental “Wow, how cool is that.” Moby-Duck is one of those books. Before you’ve finished it, you’ll know about container ships and sea ice, childhood and toys, the six degrees of freedom and the ache of a father for his toddler son. You’ll visit a plastic sand beach, an aging Chinese toy factory and a largely empty looking stretch of ocean that’s become known as a Garbage Patch of the sea. The gentle whimsy of this very intelligent book begins with its cover image — a bright-eyed yellow plastic duck bobbing across the waves. Its subtitle promises: “The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea, and of the Beachcombers, Oceanographers, Environmentalists and other Fools, Including the Author, Who Went in Search of Them.” Author Donovan Hohn is no fool, but part of his charm is that he’s more than willing to suspect himself of it. When the book opens, Hohn is a schoolteacher and sometime magazine writer who gradually becomes seduced by the saga of those floating bath toys — duck, frog, turtle and beaver — that have fallen off a container ship. Over time, as his first child is born and begins to talk, Hohn chases the tale of the toys: where they came from, where they went, how they disintegrated and what they can tell us about plastics in the sea. In this, he is as rigorous with his subject as he is with himself, pointing out weak assumptions and sketchy data. He pieces the story together on separate trips, often on a shoestring, and writes about each foray as he goes. Parts of Moby-Duck were printed first in Harper’s, Outside and the New York Times Magazine, and sometimes the seams between magazine article and book-length work are poorly stitched, leaving awkward bits of repetition. Largely, though, the mash-up works. Like a beachcombing kid running up with fresh wonders, Hohn constantly digresses from his central plastic theme. The hoax memorialized in Strait of Juan de Fuca, the leather-heavy diet of doomed arctic explorers, the trick for telling a fulmar from a gull, the idea of wilderness in a Wallace Stevens poem — they’re all part of the journey. This is a language-lovers book, rich in passages that beg to be read aloud. Bright red and blue wetsuits hanging to dry “looked like melting superheroes.” Of sailor and plastics pursuer Charles Moore, Hohn writes, “his heavy-lidded eyes and wrinkly neck give him the aspect of a sun-drugged tortoise.” And of the iconic duck: “What misanthrope, what damp, drizzly November of a sourpuss, upon beholding a rubber duck afloat, does not feel a Crayola ray of sunshine?” — Carrie Peyton Dahlberg

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012

23


VANYA ON 42ND STREET: Brooke Smith as Sonya, Wallace Shawn as Uncle Vanya, Julianne Moore as Yelena and George Gaynes as Serebryakov. Courtesy of the Criterion Collection

Where Have You Gone, Uncle Vanya ? There’s more than one way to see a play By William S. Kowinski williamkowinski@northcoastjournal.com

A

s the 2011-12 theatrical season ended in August, I took it as an opportunity to set aside the year’s musicals, contemporary comedies and clown shows for

some different theatrical experiences. Unfortunately my travel budget doesn’t even extend to Oregon, so I must bring contrasting productions home, where I can travel in time as well as space.

Something New. New Menu Available Online

6th Street & K Street 707-633-6124 theotherplacearcata.com

24 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

It started when I ran across a filmed version of The Seagull by Anton Chekhov on Turner Classic Movies. Featuring a young Vanessa Redgrave, it a luminous film directed in 1968 by Sidney Lumet. Though Lumet made Dog Day Afternoon, The Verdict and many others, he regarded this as his best film (the TCM introducer said). Still, TCM seems to be the only place it’s available. This prompted a kind of longing, especially when I realized that I hadn’t seen a Chekhov play ever on the North Coast, nor given the present configurations and situations of theatres here, is it ever likely I will. I checked around, and nobody could remember one here for maybe 25 years. Director, actor and professor James Floss recalled Pacific Art Center Theatre productions of The Cherry Orchard and Three Sisters (with Terry Desch, Toodie Dodgen and Bonnie Bareilles), both decades ago. It doesn’t take long for conversations with veteran North Coast actors to turn to the late lamented Pacific Art Center Theatre. It’s clear now that it left a niche in the local stage ecology that’s never been filled, not just for Chekhov but an array of classic modern playwrights. I’ve seen Three Sisters at the Pittsburgh Public Theatre, and two productions of The Cherry Orchard: one by Bulgarian-born director Mladen Kiselov at Carnegie Mellon University, and one at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in 2007, directed by Libby Appel, who did The Seagull at OSF this season. But the Chekhov play that grabbed me this summer was Uncle Vanya. Coincidentally (I later discovered on the Internet) there were two productions of Uncle Vanya in New York City this year, including a much-praised one at Lincoln Center featuring the film star Cate Blanchett, produced by her theatre company. [Insert Chekhovian sigh here.] My explorations were instead via DVD and VHS. I started with August, the 1996 film directed by and starring Anthony Hopkins. It transposes Uncle Vanya to Hopkins’ native Wales, pretty much intact. (It features Kate Burton, daughter of another famous Welsh actor, Richard Burton.) Outside the Russian milieu but in a corresponding context, it illuminates aspects of the play more sharply for English and American audiences. Next was Vanya on 42nd Street, the 1994 Louis Malle film of a production directed by Andre Gregory, starring Wallace Shawn. The conceit here is that we’re witnessing a group of actors who’ve been exploring the play in an abandoned old theatre. It starts with them arriving for a run-through, chatting with a few invited audience members, then with each other. And eventually you realize that this chat has actually become Chekhov — the play has started.

Actor Peter Ustinov remarked that Chekhov’s characters are so self-absorbed that they don’t really relate to each other, and so the actors are all soloists. But in this intimate and low-keyed version, the actors and their characters do relate dramatically, even beyond a New York manner of exchanging accounts of their obsessions. This Vanya uses the adaptation by playwright David Mamet, as does a 1991 BBC version with Ian Holm, David Warner and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, which I’ve watched several times. Mamet gave the late 19th century dialogue a contemporary cadence, sharpening the humor and at times seemingly highlighting the relevance. One character, Dr. Astrov, is passionately committed to saving the disappearing forest, partly because it moderates the climate. “We have destroyed the forest, our rivers run dry, our wildlife is all but extinct, our climate ruined.” This jumps out, emphasizing Chekhov’s theme of dashed potential and waste. This Uncle Vanya is available in a DVD set of Chekhov by the BBC that also includes a 1970 production with Anthony Hopkins. So why multiple Vanyas, one after the other? Besides seeing and hearing how each of these great actors play these roles, there’s the experience of structure — not in the way directors may analyze it, but more like the way actors feel it. Acting in the same play multiple times in a run provides a unique sense of the play’s structure. Actors may see the play from their character’s point of view, but they experience the rhythm of it through their actions, their entrances and exits, and even when they take breaths. The structure of a Chekhov play in particular is difficult to absorb in a single performance, but it’s there. This BBC collection also contains The Wood Demon, an early version of Uncle Vanya with a lot of the same dialogue but very different structure, as well as several other obscure plays (including a Chekhov farce) and multiple versions of the famous ones, featuring Judi Dench, John Gielgud, Rex Harrison, Michael Gambon, Patrick Stewart, etc. So at least the year ahead will not lack Chekhov, if only on my screens.

Coming Up

Due to popular demand, Ferndale Rep has added two performances of Woody Guthrie’s American Song, on Friday and Saturday, Sept. 7 and 8, at 8 p.m. Redwood Curtain previews the contemporary comedy Circle Mirror Transformation on Thursday and Friday, Oct. 6 and 7, with official opening night on Saturday. Written by Annie Baker and directed by Nathan Emmons, it features Adina Lawson, Gary Sommers, Wandy Stapp, Dmitry Tokarsky and Mira Weidman. l


northcoastjournal.com

Fortuna First Friday Friday, Sept. 7, 6-9 p.m.

Corner of 14th & G Streets. Near Wildberries and only two blocks from HSU. Tuesday - Sunday 11:30am to 8:45pm Closed Monday

822-2227

Featuring local artists and musicians, during an evening of shopping and strolling in Fortuna. www.fortunabusiness.com 725-9261 fbid@fortunabusiness.com

WORKS ON DISPLAY AT THE DOWNTOWN STOREFRONT ART GALLERY IN FORTUNA WILL INCLUDE GINNY DEXTER’S “FIELD’S LANDING PIER” (TOP) AND ELAINE GREDASSOFF’S “STRAWBERRIES” (RIGHT).

Trinidad Arts Night MOSAICS BY BARBARA WRIGHT WILL BE ON DISPLAY AT THE TRINIDAD ART GALLERY. EAST 1. SAUNDER’S PARK at the start of Patricks Point Drive. Belly dancing at 7 p.m. and fire dancing by Circus of the Elements at 8:45 p.m. Free show! 2. OCEAN GROVE 480 Patricks Point Drive. Afterparty starts at 9 p.m. Live music by Likwefi and mixed media paintings by Doug Desjardins. Admission $5. 3. OSHUN YOGA 343 Main St. Paintings by Jesi Naomi. Free yoga class from 5:30-6:30 p.m. 4. TRINIDAD MUSEUM 400 Janis Court at Patricks Point Drive. Dave ‘n’ Ravin’ acoustic folk music at 6:30 p.m. 5. TRINIDAD TRADING COMPANY 460 Main St. Local nature-inspired and found-object sculpture by Matt Aldinger. Food samples from Humboldt Homemade Meals and music with JD Jeffries. 6. WINDANSEA 410 Main St. TBA WEST 7. BEACHCOMBER 363 Trinity St. TBA. 8. TRINIDAD B&B 560 Edwards St. Landscape paintings by Sam Lundeen. 9. TRINIDAD EATERY Corner of Parker and

Friday, Sept. 7, 6-9 p.m. Businesses and groups host local artists and musicians in downtown Trinidad. Trinidadartnights.com. 502-5737. Trinity streets. Larry Ulrich photography, Douglas Beck woodcarving, For Folks Sake folk band, Bergeron Winery of Trinidad pouring its wine and appetizers by Eatery Chefs. 10. MOONSTONE CROSSING 529 Trinity St. Pastels by Lisa Landis. 11. SEASCAPE RESTAURANT Cabana 1 Bay St. Local acrylic marine paintings by Jim Welsh. Shrimp cocktail hors d’oeuvres and Salmon Creek wine. 12. TRINIDAD ART GALLERY 490 Trinity St. A “Coming Soon” show by current members of the Trinidad Art Gallery LLC art cooperative. Original music by coop member Tim Breed. 13. TRINIDAD MASSAGE AND SPA COTTAGE 529 Trinity St. Ceramics by Mark Campbell. Music by the Forever Young experience. 14. TRINIDAD TOWN HALL 409 Trinity St. Thirteenth Annual Storytelling Festival by the Sea. More information at www.northcoaststorytellers.inkpeople.org. 6:15 - 10:30 p.m. THROUGHOUT TRINIDAD The Redwood Express horse-drawn wagon rides, $8 adults and $5 children. ●

1. BARTOW’S JEWELERS 651 12th St. Open late. 2. BEVERAGE PLUS FOODS 1221 Main St. Open late. 3. CHRISTY’S HERITAGE VILLA 1125 Main St. Open late. 4. CINDY’S STYLING CENTER 1021 N St. Music by DJ Dalton Williams of Amplified Productions. 5. COLOR IMPRESSIONS 1010 Main St. Art by Paula Redtfeldt. 6. COWLICKS 1041 Main St. Photography. 7. DOWNTOWN STOREFRONT ART GALLERY Main Street between 11th and 12th streets. Art by Anita Tavernier, Emma McDowell, Ginny Dexter, Natalia Drew, Elaine Gredassoff, Abbie Perrott, Louanna Johnson and Susan Schuessler. 8. FERNDALE JEWELERS 1020 Main St. Art by Dakota’s Designs. 9. FORTUNA ART & OLD THINGS 1026 Main St. Tani Johnson, watercolors, oils and pen and ink. 10. FORTUNA MUSIC MART 1040 Main St. Art by R.E. Goldburg; live music by Winema Winds woodwind quintet. 11. FORTUNA PET SHOPPE 650 11th St. Open late. 12. FURNITURE DEN & DESIGN 1156 Main St. Gina Mobley, “Alphabet Soup Art” photographs and Penny Fregeau (acrylic and oils painting). 13. HUMBOLDT HEALTHY FOODS 899 Main St. Live music by Jordan Dyar. 14. J&H CO. 557 Ninth St. Open late. 15. KRAFTER’S KOZY KORNER GIFTS 1103 Main St. Tina Helton, “Earthen Vessels Pottery.” 16. MAIN STREET ART GALLERY 1006 Main St. Chuck Bowden, “9/11 Truth Show,” “Revolutionary Realism,” “1920 Photos of the Barnum and Bailey Circus;” live music by Attila. 17. MIND MINE 734 10th St. Open late. 18. MOORE’S SLEEP WORLD 906 Main St. (Old Low’s building) Art by Sanford Pyron; live jazz by Blue Lotus. 19. PRECISION INTERMEDIA 1012 Main St. Valerie Carmen, watercolors; Mark Wells, oils and photography; live ‘80s rock and originals by Band Mélange. 20. RAIN ALL DAY BOOKS 1136 Main St. Art by Abbie Perrott. 21. STREHL’S FAMILY SHOES AND REPAIR 1155 Main St. Art by Richard Leamon. 22. TACO LOCO 955 Main St. Modern art sculptures by Brian Bishop and paintings by Richard Leamon. 23. THE ANTIQUE DEPOT 1122 Main St. Open late. 24. THE PLAYROOM 1109 Main St. Happy hour price for Fortuna First Friday visitors. 25. THE SURRELL BUILDING 1100 Main St. Art by members of Fortuna Arts Council. 26. TRENDZ 1021 Main St. Bo Derringer, live airbrushing demonstration. 27. CUDDLY BEAR 571 10th St. Live music; acoustic jam night — anyone welcome! ●

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012

25


Illuminating the Dark

Pretty Lights lights up Blue Lake, the difficult life of an HSU dorm dweller and this week in Jah!

Derek Smith, aka Pretty Lights

By Travis Turner and Andrew Goff calendar@northcoastjournal.com

F

or most of us there is that one artist that easily slides out of the iTunes quiver, loads itself into the Bose and fires you straight into the night. Reaching for it is as thoughtless as picking out socks. You know the music; you hear it in your sleep and hum it while walking down the street. For me that music comes from Derek Smith, better known as Pretty Lights. Smith brings elegance to his arrangements of electronic sounds and samples. From Filling Up the City Skies (2008) to Spilling Over the Side (2010) Smith makes music listening as easy as hitting shuffle. Each track tells a specific story and instills a sense of wonder. Some are like wind blowing through an open window making curtains dance and sway. Others are like a walk down an alley in early morning fog with hushed sounds that cause you to stare into dark places. At times the music is so familiar that it feels like Smith reaches in and plucks the strings of your memory. That sense of the familiar is not an accident. Smith mixes in everyone from Nirvana to Run DMC in what he calls his Electro Hip-Hop Soul style. He even remixed John Denver’s “Take Me Home Country Roads” in 2011. In high school he wrote and produced hip-hop in Fort Collins, Colo., and was soon opening for STS9, The Disco Biscuits and Widespread Panic. In 2009 Smith and his musical partner at the time, Cory Eberhard, started playing on the festival circuit. Over the next year they played at Bonnaroo, Rothbury, Electric Daisy Carnival and Camp Bisco. In 2010 Pretty Lights replaced Eberhard

with drummer Adam Deitch and made their debut appearance at Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Colorado. In January 2011 Pretty Lights released two albums on the newly formed Pretty Lights music label. That label gives away all of its music for free, which makes it easy to get some new blood pumping through your mp3 player. World Famous Productions will be presenting Pretty Lights at the Blue Lake Casino on Sunday, along with special guests Stephan Jacobs and Paul Basic. The show starts at 7 p.m. and will be outdoors, so bring a jacket or be prepared to dance like a crazy person. Tickets are available at Lotus Café or Peoples Records in Arcata, The Works in Eureka or online. —Travis Turner

Those Spoiled Students

Isn’t college supposed to prepare you for the soul-starving real world? If that’s the case, HSU is mega-failing. Dorm dwellers can hardly roll out of their bunks without landing on some hip-reeking soundsmith spoon-fed to them by AS Presents. Just take this week’s four nights of awesome as proof — three of them school nights, btw. Tuesday sees the Depot return of antique American music revivalists Pokey Lafarge and the South City Three, playing with local string manipulators the Striped Pig Band. Wrapping up a solid summer of exposure opening for Jack White and Old Crow Medicine Show, the group doles out early ragtime and country blues passionately performed live. How authentic is their stuff? Lafarge’s duet with Vince Giordano on “Lovesick Blues” will be featured on the Sept. 23 episode of HBO’s Prohibition-

26 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

era Buscemi-feast Boardwalk Empire. The Home Box Office doesn’t mess around. So, ya. On Sunday, the Depot will be bouncin’ when the cross-dressing “Queen Diva of Bounce Music” Big Freedia drops a visual and aural assault on student senses. Joined by local beat vendor DJ Anya, the androgynous New Orleans performer is making good on a promise to return after having to cancel a show back in February — commendable! Not everyone does! To be clear, this is high-energy party music. Lyric snobs can stay home and play the Dance Dance Revolution-style “Booty Battle” game on Big Freedia’s website. (Actually, everyone should check that out). More conscious rhymes may be absorbed Wednesday when underground hip-hop heavy Aesop Rock takes the stage at the Van Duzer Theatre. (Man, is this the first time a strict hip-hop artist has rocked the JVD? Bob would know. He’ll be back next week.) The San Francisco MC is touring in support of his very personal and latest album Skelethon. Finally, passionate alt punk band Joyce Manor will bring a garage-y, screamed Weezerish sound to the Depot on Friday. The band will be joined by local noisemakers Aleister Christ and The Small Axe. As with all these shows, the rest of Humboldt is encouraged to join in on the good times, but without those student ID cards you’re paying a tad bit more. Lucky students.

Dig Out Your Combat Boots Things were looking just a little too normal around the Arcata Plaza for, well, at least the people who are bringing you the first ever Club Deliverance this Saturday at Jambalaya.

Goths in search of a place to belong will be whelmed by an evening of Industrial delights — name drops like KMFDM, Joy Division, Nine Inch Nails — courtesy of DJ Zephyr. Black eyeliner, velvet and lace are not required, but if the door person deems that you’re “dressed for the occasion” you get in cheaper. Which is good.

And, Of Course, Reggae

Is this not Humboldt? Do we not require reggae at least once a week? We do. This week’s off-beat rhythmic diversions can be found first on Friday at Mazzotti’s in Arcata, where roots reggae road warriors Midnite will make with the island sounds — well, not Jamaica. They’re from the U.S. Virgin Islands. Across the pond at Nocturnum on the same night Dutch reggae singer Ziggi Recado and the 7th Street Band will be joined by tireless local performer Ishi Dube. And finally, Wednesday, HumBrews has Jamaican reggae elder statesmen Black Uhuru — they won the first ever Grammy Award for “Best Reggae Album” back in 1985, kids. Now, while not reggae, we will mention one more time that Yogoman Burning Band is waaay fun and they have a few reggae-ish songs and — and! — Humboldt has three chances to see them this week. First chance: Saturday at the Humboldt Pride Festival at Eureka’s Halverson Park. Second chance: Saturnight at HumBrews along with Missing Link’s Matt and Adam. Third chance: Sunday at Mad River Brewery in Blue Lake. I recommend you Yogoman up, and get to at least one of those. — Andrew Goff

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27


entertainment in bold

TRADITIONAL AND FUSION JAPANESE FOOD DINE IN OR TAKE OUT

includes paid listings

see The Hum pg. 26

(707) 444-3318 2120 4TH STREET EUREKA

MONDAY-SATURDAY

11:30AM-9:00PM

clubs • concerts • cafés bands • djs • karaoke • drink & food specials • pool tournaments • and more thur 9/6

fri 9/7

sat 9/8

THE ALIBI: ARCATA 822-3731 744 9th St. Arc. thealibi.com

venue

Dirty Dancing Thursdays w/ Gabe Pressure and Anya 10:30pm $3

Find us on Facebook

People (prog rock), Crag Dweller (heavy psych from Portland) 11pm $5

ARCATA THEATRE LOUNGE 1036 G St. Info line: 822-1220

Sci Fi Night ft. Robots 6pm-10pm All ages Free

Ocean Night featuring Otter 501 Doors at 6:30pm $3 All Ages

Serenity (2005) Doors at 8:30pm $5 Rated R

BAR-FLY PUB 443-3770 91 Commercial, Eureka barflypub.com

Happy Hour everyday 4-6pm $1 off wells & pints

Find us on Facebook

Happy Hour everyday 4-6pm $1 off wells & pints

Karaoke w/ Chris Clay 8pm

Dr. Squid (dance rock) no cover 9pm

Open Mic 7pm

Stranger Than Fact (indie rock) 8pm

Karaoke 8pm-1am

No Mercy Band (R&B) no cover 9pm

Pretty Lights (electronic) 7pm $36 Dr. Squid (dance rock) 9pm

The Tumbleweeds (cowboy) 6-8pm

The Tumbleweeds (cowboy) 6-8pm

Eyes Anonymous (new wave) no cover 9pm

Uptown Kings (blues) no cover 9pm

The Rezonators 7pm

Tempest (Celtic rock) 7pm

Rick Park (guitar) 12:30pm

BEACHCOMBER II CAFE Trinidad

French & Thai Fusion Restaurant

with a Wood-Fired Oven and Full Bar

BEAR RIVER CASINO 733-9644 11 Bear Paws Way, Loleta BLONDIES Arcata 822-3453 BLUE LAKE CASINO 668-9770 777 Casino Way, Blue Lake CHAPALA CAFÉ Eureka 443-9514 CHER-AE HEIGHTS 677-3611 27 Scenic Dr. Trinidad CLAM BEACH INN McKinleyville

Throwback Thursday DJ Night w/ Accurate Productions 9pm Kindred Spirits (bluegrass) 9pm

Salsa Dancing 9pm $5

EUREKA INN 497-6093 FIELDBROOK MARKET 839-0521

Mon-Fri 11:30am - 9:30pm Sat-Sun 4pm - 9:30pm 3rd and F Streets • Old Town Eureka

497-6294

Jimi Jeff & the Gypsy Band 8:30pm

THE FORKS Willow Creek HALVERSON PARK Eureka HEY JUAN! BURRITOS 1642 1/2 G St. Arcata HUMBOLDT BREWS 826-2739 856 10th St. Arcata HUMBOLDT STATE UNIVERSITY

NightHawk (classic rock) no cover 9pm

Pride Festival: Yogoman Burning Band Death Metal Thursday (DMT): 4:30-10 pm AND Happy Hour until Close! www.humboldtbrews.com

Distracting the cook will only prolong the hunger Missing Link Records Soul Night (vinyl dance party) 9pm

Happy Hour All Day! Yogoman Burning Band w/ Missing Link’s Matt n’ Adam 9pm $10

Joyce Manor (punk) 9pm $5 Club Deliverence 9pm $5

JAMBALAYA 822-4766 Arcata LARRUPIN CAFE Trinidad LIBATION 825-7596 761 8th St. Arcata LIL’ RED LION 444-1344 1506 5th St Eureka

Summer Hours: until 9pm Monday Thursday, 10pm Friday & Saturday

Jim Silva ad John Myers (acoustic) 7-10pm no cover

myspace.com/ littleredlioneurekacalif

Atomic Bride, Splinter Cell (alt rock) 9pm

MAZZOTTI’S Arcata Plaza

Wolf Hollow Revival (blues/rock) 6pm

No Good Redwood Ramblers (bluegrass) 6pm

It’s sunny here

Mateel Comedy Cabaret 8pm Rehab 8pm

Midnite (reggae) 9:30pm $25

MONDAY CLUB Fortuna

W. Broadway Co. (showtunes) 7:30pm Ziggi, 7th Street Band, Ishi Dube 8pm

NOCTURNUM Eureka NORTH COAST GROWERS FARMERS’ MARKETS 441-9999

We got beer. DJ Gabe Pressure 2pm

THE LOCAL Eureka MAD RIVER BREWERY 668-5680 101 Taylor Way Blue Lake MATEEL COMMUNITY CENTER

Jon Demello 7-10pm no cover

MC Bruce @ Henderson Center Rick Park @ McKinleyville

See the NCJ’s 8 Days a Week Calendar for times and Farmers’ Market info

9am-2pm on the Arcata Plaza Asha Nan 10am

Buddy Reed and The Rip It Ups (blues) 7pm

Soulful Sidekicks (folk) 7pm

Jerry Cottrell (acoustic) 7pm

www.pearlloungeeureka.com

Restless Rebel, Second Nature Sound (dance music) 10pm

DJ ItchiFingaz (dance music) 10pm

PERSIMMONS GARDEN GALLERY 1055 Redway Drive 923-2748

SoHum Girls (pop) 7pm

John Stowell Quartet (jazz) 7pm

Bill Jones and Friends (country) 7pm

RED FOX TAVERN 415 5th St Eureka REDWOOD CURTAIN BREWING 550 South G St., Arcata 826-7222

Ventucky String Band 9pm $5

Marlon Asher 9pm $15

Check Facebook for updates about live music and other special events

www.redwoodcurtainbrewing.com

Get your Growlers filled

Live Music World Dance Party 7pm Class, 8pm Party, all ages, $5

Learn more at www.RedwoodRaks.com Joe, Blake and Chris (Irish) 6pm

OCEAN GROVE Trinidad OLD TOWN COFFEE & CHOC. 211 F St. Eureka 445-8600 PEARL LOUNGE 507 2nd St. Eureka 444-2017

REDWOOD RAKS 616-6876 824 L Street, Arcata redwoodraks.com ROBERT GOODMAN WINES 937 10th St. Arcata 826-WINE SHAMUS T BONES 407-3550 191 Truesdale St., Eureka

West African Drum & Dance 5:30-7pm $10 Irish Music Night 7:30pm Compost Mountain Boys (Humboldt Blue Grass) 8-10pm

Find us on Facebook Dr. Squid (dance rock) 8-10pm

PressureAnya DJs 10pm free

THE SHANTY Eureka SICILITO’S PIZZERIA Garberville SIDELINES Arcata Plaza

Karaoke 7-10pm MXMSTR KRSHN2N 10pm

Rude Lion (reggae DJ) 10pm Goodshield 7pm

SILVER LINING 3561 Boeing Ave., McK Jessi Naomi 9pm

Bump Foundation (funk) 9pm

Sangria and Snacks 4-6:30

ShugaFoot Band (jazz/blues) 7:30pm Ladies night ($1 off drinks) 8pm

Buddy Reed (blues) 9pm

TOBY & JACKS Arcata Plaza

Boss Levelz 10pm

MXMSTR KRSHN2N 10pm

TIP TOP CLUB 443-5696 6269 Loma Ave., Eureka

Throwback Thursday’s

Friday and Saturday lap dance specials

www.fabuloustiptop.com

SIX RIVERS BREWERY Central Ave. McK. 839-7580 THE SPEAKEASY 444-2244 411 Opera Alley, Eureka

Crossbones 9pm All ages DJ night 9pm

SOPAI’S CAFE 535 5th St Eureka

28 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

Check out Shamus T Bones at the Wing Fest


LIBATION Twerk it with Big Freedia Sunday at The Depot

WINE SHOP *ENJOY OUR BOTTLED BEERS, TOO!*

JIM SILVA & JOHN MYERS Fri., Sept. 7, 7-10 pm • no cover

JON DEMELLO

Sat., Sept. 8, 7-10 pm • no cover

sun 9/9

mon 9/10

tues 9/11

wed 9/12

Hella Gay Dance Party w/ DJ Anya 10pm

Your friend on the Arcata Plaza

2-Fer Tues: buy any breakfast or lunch item 8am-3pm: 2nd for 1/2 off

Irish Pub Wednesdays: with $2 wells

Giant Monday Night Football 1:15pm

Giant Monday Night Football Doors at 3:45pm Free All ages

Find our website at www.arcatatheatre.com

Sci Fi Night ft. Euro Space Operas 6pm-10pm All ages Free

Closed Sunday www.barflypub.com

Happy Hours 4-6pm $1 off pints/wells Pint Night 6pm-close $2 beer pints

Happy Hours 4-6pm $1 off pints/wells Wing Special 1 lb. for $5 Free pool

Karaoke w/ DJ Marv 9pm-1am

No Limit Texas Holdem Tournament 6:30pm Quiz Night 7pm

No Limit Texas Holdem Tournament 6:30pm

A Chance to win $1,000,000

A Chance to win $1,000,000 Karaoke w/ KJ Leonard 8pm

www.bluelakecasino.com

Fat Tire Tuesdays $2.00 Fat Tire Pints

EXPANDED EVENING HOURS! NEW SMALL PLATES MENU!

Wine Bar & Store: Open Monday through Saturday 8th Street on the Arcata Plaza • 825-7596

$0.25 Wing Wednesday Huayllipacha (Andes) 6pm

Karaoke w/Chris Clay 8pm 9-ball tournament 8pm

8-Ball Tournaments at 8pm

Karaoke with Chris Clay 8pm

FREE Pool & $3 Wells

Jimi Jeff Jam Session 8:30pm Rule #1: Suck it up! Rule #2: Learn rule #1

Mimosa Mondays $3.00 pints of Mimosas all day long!

HumBrews yard sale noon Big Freedia (bounce) 9pm $10

UPCOMING: Delhi 2 Dublin Oct. 3

Fish Taco Tuesdays $3.50 for one $7.00 for two The Growlers, Cosmonauts, Guantanamo Baywatch 9pm $12

Call In Your Order: 822-8433 Black Uhuru (reggae) 10pm $25

Pokey LaFarge & So. City Three 9pm

Aesop Rock (hip hop) 9pm $25

Sundaze: Deep Groove Society 9pm We are a certified wine shipper

Don’t think of it as work Think of it as fun!

Book your band 444-1344

Repeat: We got beer.

myspace.com/ littleredlioneurekacalif

Yogoman Burning Band (noon-2pm) 6pm

Purl and Pour come craft 6:30pm

Wallace and Phines (folk) 6pm

Blue Lotus Jazz (jazz) 6pm

All markets have fresh fruits and vegetables and much, much more

Online at humfarm.org

Squeeze Bug @ Old Town Eureka

See the NCJ’s 8 Days a Week Calendar for times and Farmers’ Market info

Whomp Whomp Wednesday 9pm

Rude Lion Sound (reggae) 8pm Now serving beer and wine

GLDT and ALLY Open Mic 6pm

www.OldTownCoffeeEureka.com

Open mic w/ Mike Anderson (music/spoken) 6:30pm

Closed www.pearlloungeeureka.com

Closed www.pearlloungeeureka.com

Tequila Tuesdays muchas variedades

www.pearlloungeeureka.com

www.persimmons.net or find us on Facebook

Handcrafted items for children and adults.

Ask us about hosting your event

www.persimmons.net

Tasting Room open Mon-Wed 4-11pm Thu-Fri 4-12, Sat. 12-12, Sun 2-10 Sacred Wave Dance Meditation 10-11:30pm, $10/$15

Buddy Reed (blues) 9-11pm

Find us on Facebook.

Pints for Nonprofits: Surfrider Humboldt 4-11pm

Tap & Jazz Dance w/ Stephanie 6-7pm Tap, 7-8pm Jazz $10

Argentine Tango Int. 7:15, Beg 8:15pm

The Birdhouse Band 6pm

The Good Taste Tasting Room

www.robertgoodmanwines.com

End the weekend right Dine early

After work/appetizers and drinks

Make Early Reservations for the weekend 407-3550

Int. Bellydance w/ Shoshanna 7:30-9pm $10 Swing Dance Night 7pm Full cocktail bar

Good & Evil Twins Karaoke 8pm Trivia Night 8pm

Karaoke 9pm w/ sushi

Sunny Brae Jazz 9pm w/ fried chicken

Ukesperience: Unplugged (acoustic) 8pm

Sunday Mimosa and Bloody Mary specials

Secret Password Hint: South of St. Charles Avenue

ShugaFoot Band (jazz/blues) 6pm

Wednesday Happy Hour 4-6:30pm

Like us on Facebook

2-for-1 DD lap dances

2 Dollar Tuesdays $2 beer / $2 lap dances

Ladies/Amateur Night Ladies get in free!

WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! WE MOVED INTO A LARGER ARCATA STORE AT 10TH AND H.

HUMBOLDT’S LARGEST AND BEST SELECTION OF HUMBOLDT CLOTHING AND GLASS SMOKING ACCESSORIES

10% DISCOUNT ON ALL GLASS WITH STUDENT ID

EUREKA BAYSHORE MALL 707-476-0400

ARCATA 987 H ST. 707-822-3090

Stickers • Locally Blown

www.libation.com

Humboldt Hoodies • Tees • Hats • Beanies •

Happy Hour 6-8pm Monday - Thursday, $1 off wine by the glass

Glass • Illadelph Glass • Roor Glass • HBG Glass

Aber Miller (piano) 6-9pm Wine Bar overlooking the Arcata Plaza

Dine with us at Lunchtime Present this Form Be Eligible for our Weekly FREE Lunch Drawing

Official Entry Form Offer expires 10/31/12

Name: _____________ Phone: _____________ Open Daily for Lunch and Dinner, 11:30am - 10pm • Extended Bar Hours

Reservations Recommended (707) 407-3550 1911 Truesdale Street Eureka Off Broadway behind the Best Western Bayshore Inn

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012

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30 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 •

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‘TIS THE WEEK TO CELEBRATE DIVERSITY, HUMCO! (WELL, YOU SHOULD BE EVERY WEEK. BUT ESPECIALLY THIS ONE.) SCOUR OUR CALENDAR FOR DETAILS ABOUT MULTIPLE HUMBOLDT PRIDE WEEK EVENTS INCLUDING THE ANNUAL PRIDE FESTIVAL AND BAT ‘N’ ROUGE AS WELL AS VARIOUS LGBT-THEMED DANCES AND EVEN A FAMILY SKATE NIGHT! DO IT.

COME KNITTERS, COME WEAVERS, COME NATURAL DYERS! IT’S TIME FOR THE ANNUAL NATURAL FIBER FAIR AT THE ARCATA COMMUNITY CENTER ON SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, SEPT. 8 AND 9. OODLES OF WORKSHOPS, DEMONSTRATIONS AND VENDOR BOOTHS. PICTURED IS THE WORK OF THIS YEAR’S FEATURED ARTIST LORI GOODMAN, WHOSE PIECES WILL BE ON DISPLAY AT THE EVENT.

HOW WELL DO YOU KNOW YOUR MARLEYS? BOB’S THIRD-OLDEST CHILD — AND OLDEST SON — ZIGGY MARLEY WILL BE DROPPING SOME REGGAE LOVE AND PEACE ON HSU’S VAN DUZER THEATRE ON THURSDAY, SEPT. 6.

6 thursday MUSIC

Ziggy Marley. 8 p.m. Van Duzer Theatre, HSU. Iconic, fivetime Grammy-winning reggae royalty performs. $55/$25 HSU students. humboldt.edu/centerarts. 826-3928. Humboldt Folklife Society Group Sing Along. 7-9 p.m. Arcata Community Center, 321 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Parkway. Joel Sonenshein leads. 839-7063. ART Figure Drawing Group. 7-9 p.m. Cheri Blackerby Gallery, 272 C St., Eureka. In the courtyard. Weekly group. Live model. An Ink People DreamMaker project. 442-0309.

MOVIES

The Last Days. 7-9 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theatre, 447 Main Street. Steven Spielberg’s Academy Award-winning documentary chronicles the stories of five Hungarian survivors of the Holocaust as they return to their hometowns and the places where they were imprisoned by the Nazis. www.ferndalemuseum.com. 786-9196.

FOOD

Henderson Center Farmers’ Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Vegetables, fruits, seedlings, plants and local food. Music by MC Bruce. humfarm.org. 441-9999. McKinleyville Farmers’ Market. 3:30-6:30 p.m. McKinleyville Safeway Shopping Plaza, Central Avenue. Farm-fresh produce every Thursday. Music by Rick Park. humfarm.org. 441-9999.

LECTURE

Curiosity and Beyond: Exciting Developments In NASA’s Unmanned Space Program. 5:30-7 p.m. Humboldt State University, BSS Room 166, Arcata. HSU’s Sustainable Futures Speaker Series presents Dr. Greg Davis of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. www.schatzlab.org. 826-4345. Epigenetics Talk. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Humboldt Area Foundation, 373 Indianola Road, Bayside. Noted Naturopathic health counselor and nutritionist Paulette Suzanne explains how what is in your DNA does not necessarily

dictate your destiny. E-mail glowingskinjuiceplus@gmail. com. 599-2846.

ETC.

Humboldt Pride Family Skate Night. 7 p.m. Blue Lake Roller Rink, 312 S. Railroad St. humboldtpride.org.

7

friday

EVENTS

Bat ‘N’ Rouge. 5 p.m. Arcata Ballpark, Ninth and F streets. Comedy drag softball fundraiser featuring local community leaders making fools of themselves for your enjoyment and a good cause. Proceeds benefit the Arcata Forest Fund Committee. $20/$10 grass seats. www. eurekasisters.org. 845-3873. Trinidad Art Nights. 6-9 p.m. Downtown Trinidad. Multiple businesses and organizations participate and host local artists and live music. trinidadartnights.com. 677-3188. Fortuna First Friday. 6-10 p.m. Downtown Fortuna. Local businesses stay open late for Fortuna’s art walk featuring local musicians and artists. 725-9261.

THEATER

Woody Guthrie’s American Song . 8 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theater, 447 Main St. Seven singers backed by a live band in a celebration of America telling the life of the rambling folksinger through his words and music as he travels from the Dust Bowl to California to the New York island. $18/$16 students and seniors. ferndale-rep.

org. 800-838-3006. HSU First Friday’s at Four. 4-5:30 p.m. Studio Theater, HSU. Hour-long seminar on auditioning techniques. humboldt.edu. 826-3579.

MUSIC

Joyce Manor. 9 p.m. The Depot, HSU. Raw punk group performs with special guest Aleister Christ and The Small Axe. Free for HSU students. $5. 826-3928. Barn Dance. 8-11 p.m. Arcata Veterans Memorial Building, 1425 J St. Dance called by Sue Moon with tunes from Blake Ritter and Sam McNeill. $7. humboldtfolklife.org. 269-2061. Bat ‘N’ Rouge After Party. 9 p.m. Jambalaya, 915 H St., Arcata. DJ Anya and Gabe Pressure spin ’80s tunes. jambalayaarcata.com. Humboldt Talent Showcase. 6-10 p.m. Westhaven Center for the Arts, 501 S. Westhaven Drive. Local artists, community ears. Hosted by Jim Hubbard and featuring True Gospel Singers and the David and Jen Blues Band. $5/$10 sliding scale. 822-5693. DANCE World Dance. 8 p.m. St. Alban’s Episcopal Church, 1675 Chester Ave., Sunny Brae. Humboldt Folk Dancers event features teaching and request dancing. $3. 839-3665.

ART

Artbreak Day. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Corner of Second and F streets, Eureka. Savita Skye of Art is Moving provides art supplies for a day of free community art making. The event will occur simultaneously in six cities throughout California. artbreakday.com. 602-370-9213.

MOVIES

Ocean Night Film Screening. 7 p.m. Arcata Theater

Lounge, 1036 G St. Screening of Otter 501. Sponsored by Ocean Conservancy, Humboldt Surfrider and Humboldt Baykeeper. $3. 822-1220. Local Filmmakers Night. 6:30-9 p.m. Access Humboldt Community Media Center, Eureka High School, Eureka. 1915 J St. Local filmmaker and producer Benjamin Bettenhausen shares selected works with a sneak peek at behind the scenes of the movie FLEA. www.accesshumboldt.net. 476-1798.

COMEDY

Mateel Comedy Cabaret. 8 p.m. Mateel Community Center, 59 Rusk Lane, Redway. Monthly showcase of professional comedians. This month features Conor Kellicut and Matt Gubser. $10. www.mateel.org. 923-3368.

8 saturday EVENTS

Humboldt Pride Festival. Noon-6 p.m. Halvorsen Park, Waterfront Drive, Eureka. Humboldt’s annual celebration of all things queer. Parade starts at 11:45 a.m. at First and C streets and heads to the park. Music by Yogoman Burning Band. Performances by Shoshana and the Yahabibi Dance Company. www.humboldtpride.org. 223-2591. Mattole Valley Dahlia Festival. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Mattole Grange, 36512 Mattole Road, Petrolia. Regional arts and

continued on next page

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012

31


Stories by the Sea continued from previous page crafts, food, music and amateur dahlia competition. $3. E-mail spottedsparrow26@gmail.com. 986-4031. Humboldt Botanical Garden 2012 Gala. 1-5 p.m. Humboldt Botanical Gardens, College of the Redwoods, Eureka. Third annual event is a Humboldt Botanical Gardens Foundation fundraiser and chance to see current and completed projects. Silent auction. $50. www.hbgf.org. 442-5139. Chicken Wing Fest. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Eureka Boardwalk. Wing lovers far and wide sample wings from different chefs. Live bands, Best Wing contest, beer garden, vendors and more. Proceeds help raise money and awareness to fight meth use in Humboldt County. 442-7662. Cruz’N’Eureka. 4 p.m. Saturday’s events include a car show in Old Town from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. featuring vendors, a raffle and a silent auction. 839-1192. Storytelling Festival by the Sea. 8:30 a.m. Trinidad Town Hall, 409 Trinity St. North Coast Storytellers event featuring music and storytelling and an open mic for beginning and experienced tellers. Raconteurs include Cynthia Restivo, Dan O’Gara, Ali Freedlund, Seabury Gould, Anita Punla, Ross Mackinney and Nancy McQuillan. 677-3840. Natural Fiber Fair. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Arcata Community Center, 321 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Parkway. Demonstrations and exhibits on spinning, knitting, weaving, and dyeing plus vendors selling fleeces, fibers, yarns and tools. Presentation by artist Lori Goodman, maker of handmade mulberry paper hangings. $5. naturalfiberfair.com. 599-2729.

THEATER

Woody Guthrie’s American Song. 8 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theater. See Sept. 7 listing.

Mattole Valley Charter School

Humboldt County’s most experienced Public Charter School is accepting fall enrollment for K–12th grades. • Learning Centers offer dynamic daily instruction. • Independent study offers choice and flexibility. • We will create a personally tailored program to fit your student. • MVCS serves students county-wide. Online Live Classes • Virtual Academy College Co-Enrollment • Tutoring • Highly Qualified Credentialed Teachers • WASC Accredited H

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ART

Second Saturday Family Arts Day. 2-4 p.m. Morris Graves Museum of Art, 636 F St., Eureka. This month’s theme: Palettes and Pets, an exhibit of art with animals as a theme to celebrate the difference a pet makes in our lives. facebook.com/HACMGMA. 442-0278.

MUSIC

Head to Head Music Festival. 9 a.m. Dean’s Creek Resort, Redway. Two days of Grateful Dead inspired music featuring Something Different, Lonesome Locomotive, Arden Park Roots, Liquid Cactus, High Beams, Skunk Train and Twin Engines. $60/$35 one day pass. headtoheadmusicfestival.com. 923-2555. HSU Welcome Concert. 5 p.m. Fulkerson Recital Hall, HSU. HSU Music faculty players celebrate a new school year. This year’s concert includes the “Trumpet Consort von Humboldt” conducted by Gil Cline. $8/$3 students and seniors. HSUMusic.blogspot.com. 826-3928. Orleans Volunteer Fire Department Music Fest. 4 p.m. Along the Klamath River, one mile north of Orleans on Highway 96. Music by Jimi Jeff and the Gypsy Band and the Antoino Alzerez Band. All proceeds go to support the department. 530-627-3358. Come to Carson. 3 p.m. Carson Park, Eureka. Faith Center hosts Christian artist Nicole Croteau on her Anchors and Silhouettes Tour. Picnic and activities. eurekafaithcenter. org. 442-1784. W. Broadway Co. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Fortuna Monday Club, 610 Main St. Local singers Carolyn Ayres, Brad Curtis, Betty Diehl, Bill Ryder, Carol Ryder, Sharon Welton, James Gadd and Fiona Ryder present an evening of music from the Broadway stage. $10. fortunaconcertseries.com/schedule. htm. 682-6092.

DANCE

Glowing with Pride Dance. 9 p.m. Nocturnum, Eureka. Pride Festival glow afterparty hosted by Where’s Queer Bill Presents. 832-4785. USA Dance with Jim Lahman Band. 6:30-9:30 p.m. Eureka Theater, 612 F St. Dance starts with a west coast swing lesson at 6:30 p.m. by Mark and Deb Allen with Mark and Valerie Jansen, followed by dancing to the Jim Lahman Band until 10:30 p.m. $10/$5 USA members. E-mail usadances@gmail.com.

OUTDOORS

Manila Dunes Restoration. 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Manila Community Center, 1611 Peninsula Drive, Arcata. Volunteers needed to help restore coastal dunes. Gloves, tools and cookies provided. Please wear closed-toed shoes and bring drinking water. E-mail info@friendsofthedunes. org. 444-1397. Friends of the Marsh Tour. 2 p.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center, 600 S. G St. Meet leader Jenny Hanson for a 90-minute walk focusing on the plants of the marsh. 826-2359. Sanctuary Forest 25th Anniversary Celebration. 5:30 p.m. Beginnings, 4700 Briceland Thorn Road, Redway. Music by Ishi Dube and Vidagua. Asian fusion dinner by Nancy Miyamoto. Mattole River themed silent auction. Audubon Society Marsh Field Trip. 8:30 a.m. Meet at the parking lot at the end of South I Street. Led by Pat Bitton. Bring binoculars and have a great morning birding. Trip held rain or shine. 442-9353.

FOOD

Arcata Farmers’ Market. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Fresh vegetables, fruits, seedlings, plants and local food. World music by Asha Nan. humfarm. org. 822-5951.

mattolevalley.com • (707) 629-3634

SPORTS

Humboldt Roller Derby. 5 p.m. Redwood Acres Fair-

32 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012 •

northcoastjournal.com

That night, the fox had trotted into each of their dreams. But in the morning, none of the storytellers would remember him. Maybe a vague tickle on their noses where the fox had breathed, whisker-close as he watched their eyes skitter under closed lids. Maybe they tasted his musty blackberry scent on the backs of their tongues. Perhaps they awoke with a daring unease that made them want to dash up Trinidad Head and lean far, far, far out over cliff’s edge to gaze longingly at the rockbashing waves, then pull back just before losing balance to laugh joyously, released from fear. It didn’t matter to the fox that they didn’t remember his actual pointy rust nose or white whiskers or sharp, berrystained teeth. That they didn’t hear him creep next to their beds on mooncooled paws to stare at them. Alter their minds. The fox was just making sure they felt at home in his home. That they got it. They would be telling all sorts of tall tales the next couple of days to all sorts of gullible people. Let them have fox essence and fox canny in their minds and hearts. Fox respect. Satisfied he’d done his best, the fox turned from the last bedside — another snoring storyteller forever changed by his visit — and padded quietly out the door of the inn in the trees, up the road into the small town of Trinidad, and then down to the beach and up again, up, up along the hill-twining path to the top of Trinidad Head. He took his time. Stopped frequently to clip the low berries from the bushes with his teeth, chew and swallow, and then dance up onto his hind legs to lean, forepaws pressing into leafy branch flesh, for the high ones. Along the way he pooped a lot, bright, seedy, berry-red piles of welcome and warning. You’re in my home now. It’ll be my home when you leave. Come, have ground, 3750 Harris St., Eureka. Featuring Humboldt’s Widow Makers facing off against the Sacred City’s Disciples and the Redwood Rollers against Sacred City’s Sacrificers! humboldtrollerderby.com. $12/$10 adv. 441-1993. Street Legal Drag Racing. 5:30 p.m. Samoa Drag Strip, Eureka. Cars go vroom. samoadragstrip.com. Tour of Trinidad. 9 a.m. Trinidad School, 300 Trinity. Trraditional end of the Humboldt summer cycling season. Various tours for various abilities. Register online. Portion of the proceeds of this event will be donated to Project Share Life. teambigfoot.net. 845-3095.

LECTURE

Local Authors Summer Lecture Series. 1-2:30 p.m. Humboldt County Library, 1313 Third St., Eureka. Local author and historian Jerry Rohde shares photos and stories from the days of chopping and sawing the biggest of the “big sticks.” humboldtlibraryfoundation.org. 269-1991.

ETC.

Creamery District Design Charrette. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Arcata Playhouse, 1251 Ninth St. Exploring how to create a community that centers on the arts and creative commerce. Please RSVP. arcataplayhouse.org. 822-1575.

some berries. Then scat. If the fox could chuckle, he would have. Honestly, though, these storytelling folk were probably all right. He was glad they were here. The 13th annual Storytelling Festival by the Sea begins Friday evening, Sept. 7, and continues through Saturday, Sept. 8, at the Trinidad Town Hall, 409 Trinity in the center of Trinidad. Local and visiting storytellers spin tales from around the world — from the North Coast to Ireland and beyond. The Neena McNair Family Singers and other musicians might break the spell — and pull you into a new one. Master storyteller Cynthia Restivo, who honed her acting chops touring Europe with a theater troupe, will perform both days, and on Saturday she’ll conduct a storytelling workshop, from 8:30 to 10 a.m., called Stories Well-Lived. Other fun includes ghost tales (Friday night), an open-mic story swap — your chance to shine! — and yet more stories, summoning dragons, heroes, foolish folk, fate (maybe foxes?) and love. Registration is at 6:15 p.m. Friday, and at 7 p.m. Liz Lara O’Rourke performs the opening song. You can pay an all-show $30 fee ($15 for kids 4-15); or $8 per event ($4 kids); $12 for two events ($6 kids); $65 for a family pack; $25 for just Saturday. The Cynthia Restive Workshop costs $10 (unless you’re a librarian, in which case you get into it free!). Also, you can buy lunch ($10) and dinner ($20) on Saturday from Teri’s Custom Catering, but you must order ahead: Call Dan: 677-3840. The Storytelling Festival is put on by the North Coast Storytellers Guild, part of The Ink People Center for the Arts. For a full festival schedule go to www.northcoaststorytellers.inkpeople.org. — Heidi Walters

9 sunday EVENTS

Natural Fiber Fair. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Arcata Community Center. See Sept. 8 listing.

MUSIC

Head to Head Music Festival. 9 a.m. Dean’s Creek Resort, Redway. See Sept. 8 listing. Pretty Lights. 8 p.m. Blue Lake Casino. Electronic music artist Derek Vincent Smith brings his glitchy hip-hop beats, buzzing synth lines, and vintage funk and soul samples to Humboldt. $36. 822-7091. Big Freedia. 9 p.m. The Depot, HSU. New Orleans’ queen diva of bounce music brings the urban beats. DJ Anya opens. $10/free for HSU students. 826-3928.

DANCE

Sunday Afternoon of Dance. 2-4 p.m. Morris Graves Museum of Art, 636 F St., Eureka. This month featuring Shoshanna and the Ya Habibi Dance Company. /www. facebook.com/HACMGMA. 442-0278.


ART

Trinidad Artists’ Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Trinidad Art, 490 Trinity St. Next to Murphy’s Market, Trinidad. Featuring works of art and crafts from local artisans, live music and delicious barbecue. E-mail karriewallace@ymail. com. 834-8720.

OUTDOORS

Farm Open House. 1-4 p.m. Redwood Roots Farm, 25 Jacoby Creek Road, Bayside. Farmer Janet Czarnecki will be on hand to answer questions about her cut flower garden and strategies for overwintering vegetable crops. Snacks and refreshments. redwoodrootsfarm.com. 496-0481. Audubon Society Field Trip. 9 a.m. Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge, 1020 Ranch Road, Loleta. Meet at Refuge Visitor Center off Hookton Road. Leisurely, two- to three-hour trip intended for people wanting to learn birds of Humboldt Bay area. 822-3613.

ETC.

Songwriting Workshop. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Westhaven Center for the Arts, 501 S. Westhaven Drive. With Les Craig. Bring an instrument. $10. Redwood Coast Scrabble Club. 1-5 p.m. Couple Cups, 1603 G St, Arcata. Fun with words. 677-9242.

10 monday THEATER

HSU’s Fall Theatre Productions Auditions. 6-9 p.m. Studio Theater, HSU. For productions of 8 and Shakuntula. humboldt.edu. 826-3579.

ETC.

Human Rights Commission Meeting. 1 p.m. Humboldt County Courthouse, conference room A. Emergency meeting to draft a letter of advisement regarding Ordinance 2477 to be sent to the Board of Supervisors.

11 tuesday MUSIC

Pokey Lafarge And the South City Three. 9 p.m. The Depot, HSU. Charismatic roots musician performs. $5/$3 HSU student. www.humboldt.edu/aspresents. 826-3928.

FOOD

Old Town Farmers’ Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Old Town, Eureka, F Street between First and Third streets. Fresh farm-grown produce. Music by Squeeze Bug. humfarm. org. 441-9999. Fortuna Farmers’ Market. 3-6 p.m. 10th and Main streets. Fresh and tasty local produce, plants, breads and jams. 726-9371. Wildberries Farmers’ Market. 3:30-6:30 p.m. Wildberries Marketplace, 747 13th St., Arcata. Fresh fruit, vegetables and plants from local growers. 441-9999.

LECTURE

Shining a Light Lecture Series. 3:30-5:30 p.m. Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center, 921 Waterfront Drive, Eureka. Series of lectures on the effects of addiction on families, individuals and communities. $50. www.humboldt.edu/ olli. 826-3731.

ETC.

North Coast Networkers. Noon-1:30 p.m. Rita’s Mexican Grill, 1111 Fifth St., Eureka. Group of local business people who get together once a week in order to give and receive referrals. www.bnicalneva.com. 825-4709. Humboldt Cribbage Club. 6:15-9:30 p.m. Moose Lodge, 4328 Campton Road, Eureka. Weekly cribbage tourna-

ment. $7. cribbage.org. 444-3161. Healing Rooms of Redwood Coast. 6:30-9 p.m. Wood Street Chapel, 1649 Wood St., Fortuna. Nondenominational prayer group. E-mail dlbitte@hotmail. com. 834-5800.

12 wednesday MUSIC

Aesop Rock. 9 p.m. Van Duzer Theatre, HSU. Underground hip hop star performs. With special guests Rob Sonic & DJ Big Wiz. $25/$20 HSU students. 826-3928.

OUTDOORS

Yoga for Paddlers. 6 p.m. Big Lagoon County Park, Big Lagoon County Park Rd, Trinidad. Greenland or Bust leads an evening of yoga followed by a relaxing paddle and hot tea. $20. www.greenlandorbust.org. 834-5501.

LECTURE

Investment Strategies in Turbulent Times. 5:45-7 p.m. Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center, 921 Waterfront Drive, Eureka. Educational seminar for those seeking financial peace of mind. www.premieradvisor.com. 443-2741.

MEETINGS

North Coast Water Garden Club. 7 p.m. Wharfinger Building, 1 Marina Way, Eureka. Monthly meeting. Presentation by Paul Holzberger on the “neutron bomb treatment.” 839-0588.

ETC.

New Perspectives on Dementia Care. 1-5 p.m. Eureka Women’s Club, 1531 J St. Training focusing on educating and supporting those who work and interact with people living with dementia. $40. 444-8254. Meditation. 5:55-7 p.m. First Christian Church Eureka, 730 K St. “Just sitting” meditation for all, in soto zen tradition. E-mail barryevans9@yahoo.com. 476-8317.

13 thursday MUSIC

Blame Sally. 8 p.m. Arcata Playhouse, 1251 Ninth St. San Francisco all-female folk-rockers perform with guests Jan Bramlett and Rick Copeland. $15/$13 students. arcataplayhouse.org. 822-1575.

ART

Figure Drawing Group. 7-9 p.m. Cheri Blackerby Gallery. See Sept. 6 listing.

FOOD

Henderson Center Farmers’ Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. See Sept. 6 listing. McKinleyville Farmers’ Market. 3:30-6:30 p.m. McKinleyville Safeway Shopping Plaza. See Sept. 6 listing.

southeast asian cuisine

Thai • Lao • Vietnamese corner of 4th & L Eureka • 443-2690 ••• OPEN Mon.-Sat Lunch & Dinner • We cater, too! •

“SO GOOD.” North Coast Journal

835 J Street, Arcata • 822-WISH Open For Dinner @ 5:30 pm Tues-Sun

presents the 2012 save Sept. 21 e th 8pm ! e EUREKA dat HUMBOLDT PARTY! THEATER

MEETINGS

Humboldt Handweavers’ and Spinners’ Guild. 6:45 p.m. Wharfinger Building, 1 Marina Way, Eureka. Presentation by award winning fiber artist and workshop instructor Carin Engen. hhsguild.org. 541-272-2297.

Heads Up…

Make Masks! The masks are gathering again for The Ink People Center for the Arts’ annual Maskibition. The entry date for this annual exhibition of masks is Saturday, Sept. 29. Contact exhibition curator Kathryne DeLorme at 4427850 or mythicfaces@juno.com for more info.

continued on next page northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012

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34 North Coast Journal • Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 •

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continued from previous page Make Junque! Humboldt Arts Council will be accepting entries for the 18th Annual Junque Arte Competition and Exhibition taking place Wednesday, Sept. 26. To be eligible, artwork must be made of 100 percent recycled materials. Review detailed entry guidelines available at the Museum or at humboldtarts.org. Make Words. The Great Intenders, a Northern Humboldt prose-writing group, has openings for two new members. For more information, visit sharonlevy.net/tgi ●

Shiny Cars! Hot Wings! Homosexuality! What could these three things possibly have in common? They will all be rightfully celebrated at individual, geographically overlapping festivals in Old Town Eureka this coming Saturday, Sept. 8! Oh my! Is this town big enough for three clashing events? We report, you decide! First and probably most important, this weekend sees the culmination of a week’s worth of LGBT-themed events at the annual Humboldt Pride Parade and Festival taking place at Halvorsen Park. Rainbow flags will be waving as the Marching Lumberjack-enhanced kickoff parade leaves the C Street Plaza at 11:45 a.m. and makes its way down Waterfront Drive to the park where the mighty Yogoman Burning Band — arguably the most fun band in history — provides the soundtrack for the gay-ety. The aforementioned parade will pass right by Businesses Against Meth Use’s fourth annual serving of Chicken Wing Fest, taking place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Eureka’s Boardwalk at the foot of F Street. Multiple booths featuring local wingsmiths will attempt to explode your tongue inside your head. Bring some wet naps. The smell of saucy fowl flesh will likely waft a block away where the Boys and Girls’ Clubbenefitting 19th annual Cruz’n Eureka classic car show will take up a good chunk of Second Street around the Gazebo. Expect a day full of chrome, exhaust and blinding paint jobs. (Saturday’s car herding will be preceeded on Friday night with a cruise through Old Town from 5:30-7:30 p.m., you know, if moving cars grab you more than parked cars). Old Town be hoppin’ this weekend! But can the gay community, the motor heads and the meat enthusiasts coexist? Show up to find out! For more on the Humboldt Pride Festival go to humboldtpride.org. For more on Chicken Wing Fest go to chickenwingfest.org. For more on Cruz’n Eureka go to cruzneureka.com. — Andrew Goff

BAT ‘N’ ROUGE

PHOTO BY BOB DORAN

Ladies, Play With Your Balls Take me out to the ball game Take me out to the crowd Why is that man in that dress, you ask? I guess he thought it matched his catcher’s mask! So make sure to pack extra nylons That slide to home is a pain! Cuz’ it’s one, two, three runs you pout At the drag ball game! Yes, sports fans! ’Tis that time of year once again when local celebrities people-you-might-haveheard-of-maybe check their egos and their trousers at the gate for a good ol’ sloppy game of softball. Yes, as part of Humboldt Pride Week, the Eureka Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence are once again hosting all the eye candy that is Bat ‘N’ Rouge, a comedic softball fundraiser for the Arcata Forest Fund Committee. In short, you get to watch people in your community make fools of themselves and, eventually, you get some cool trails in the woods to play around on. Win/win. This year’s event is a little different than in years past in that instead of two teams of not-so-macho local notables, one celeb dream/queen team will be challenged by the established LGBT softball powerhouse The OUTfielders. It could, wait no, will get ugly (seriously, some people should never wear lipstick). Who will be setting this year’s fashion “don’ts” trends? Here’s a deep roster: Andy Salatny, Mark Andre, Kirk Cohune, Sean Robertson, Gene Joyce, Mike Wilson, Gregg Foster, Bob Ornelas, Hank Sims, Andrew Goff, Will Startare, Travis Turner, John Shelter, Toby Mays, Briar Bush, Pete Nichols, Tom Chapman, Shane Brinton, Michael Winkler, Steve Salzman, Gabe Pressure and Johnny Berrypicker. In addition to those fools, the Kinetic Rutabaga Queens will act as impartial umpires and there’ll be a “half time” tease courtesy of the Va Va Voom Burlesque Vixens. Much better. Bat ‘N’ Rouge takes place at the Arcata Ballpark on Friday, Sept. 7 at 5 p.m. Tickets are $20 for stadium seats or $10 for grass seats. For more info go to humboldtpride.org. — Andrew Goff

gary oldman in lawless.

Blood, Booze and Obama

Some scoundrels make moonshine, others political hack jobs By John J. Bennett filmland@northcoastjournal.com

Reviews

LAWLESS. From a distance, Lawless looks like about nine-tenths of a great movie. Director John Hillcoat (The Proposition, The Road) specializes in methodical, nuanced meditations on men of violence. Here again he constructs a reality that demands severe action of its inhabitants. That reality, backwoods Tennessee circa 1930, is drawn from a novel by Matt Bondurant, which in turn was inspired by real events. Gloom-rocker Nick Cave, who also wrote The Proposition, adapted the screenplay. These guys are specialists in combat and desolation, making a movie about bootleggers versus the establishment. Seems like a win-win, especially considering the amazing cast they assembled. With Tom Hardy in the lead, supported by Jessica Chastain, Guy Pearce and Gary Oldman, Lawless should boast one of the best ensemble performances of the year. But sadly, the performances are as mismatched and clumsy as the rest of the movie. Hardy, Jason Clarke and Shia LaBeouf play the brothers Bondurant. They oper-

ate a café and filling station way back in the hills of Franklin County, Tenn. They also dominate the illicit liquor trade, with a little cooperation from the good ol’ boys of local law enforcement. When big-city crime (in the form of Oldman’s Tommy-gun-toting Floyd Banner) crops up in sleepy Franklin County, drawn by the steady stream of moonshine, Special continued on next page

Sept. 6 Sept. 12 Thurs Sept 6 - Sci Fi Night ft. Robots 6 p.m. - 10 p.m. All ages Free Fri Sept 7 - Ocean Night featuring Otter 501 Doors at 6:30 p.m. $3 All Ages Sat Sept 8 - Serenity (2005 ) w/pre-show Shindig Doors at 5 p.m. $5 Rated PG-13 Sun Sept 9 - Giant NFL Football Doors at 1:15 p.m. Free All ages Mon Sept 10 - Giant Monday Night Football Doors at 3:45 p.m. Free All ages Wed Sept 12 -Sci Fi Night ft. European Space Operas 6 p.m. - 10 p.m. All ages Free

arcatatheatre.com • 822-1220 • 1036 G St.

3535

northcoastjournal.com• NORTH Thursday,SEPT. Sept.6,6,2012 • NorthCOAST CoastJOURNAL Journal• •THURSDAY, 2012 northcoastjournal.com


Movie Times

* = SAT./SUN. EARLY SHOWS

Film times reflect the most current listings as of Tuesday afternoon. As schedules at individual theaters sometimes change, we recommend calling ahead to avoid any inconvenience.

Broadway Cinema

707-443-3456 1223 Broadway Street, Eureka Times are for 9/7- 9/13 unless otherwise noted. THE WORDS 1:40, 4:10, 6:40, 9:10 COLD LIGHT OF DAY 1:50, 4:20, 6:50, 9:20 2016: OBAMA’S AMERICA 1:30, 3:55, 6:20, 8:45 THE POSSESSION 12:00, 2:30, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40 LAWLESS 12:25, 3:15, 6:00, 8:50 PREMIUM RUSH 12:05, 4:45, 9:30 HIT AND RUN 8:10 THE EXPENDABLES 2 12:55, 3:40, 6:25, 9:00 PARANORMAN 3D 3:05 PARANORMAN 2D 12:35, 5:40 ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN 12:40, 3:10, 5:50, 8:30 THE BOURNE LEGACY 3:00, 8:35 THE CAMPAIGN 2:20, 7:05 HOPE SPRINGS 12:30, 6:05 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES 7:50 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT 2D 12:20, 2:45, 5:25 THE AVENGERS 2:40, 8:20 BRAVE 12:15, 5:55

Mill Creek Cinema

707-839-3456 1575 Betty Court, McKinleyville Times are for 9/7 - 9/13 unless otherwise noted. THE WORDS *1:10, 3:40, 6:10, 8:40 THE POSSESSION *12:05, *2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20 2016: OBAMA’S AMERICA *1:55, 4:20, 6:45, 9:10 LAWLESS *12:25, 3:15, 6:00, 8:55 HIT AND RUN 7:05, 9:30 HOPE SPRINGS 8:50 THE EXPENDABLES 2 1:15, 3:50, 6:25, 9:00 PARANORMAN 3D 2:25 PARANORMAN 2D 12:00, 4:45 ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN 1:00, 3:35, 6:15 THE BOURNE LEGACY 1:50, 8:30 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES 4:55

Minor Theatre 707-822-3456

1001 H Street, Arcata Times are for 9/7 - 9/13 unless otherwise noted.

INTOUCHABLES *1:40, 4:10, 6:40, 9:10 THE CAMPAIGN *2:35, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30 AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY *subtitles* *2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20

Fortuna Theater

707-725-2121 1241 Main Street, Fortuna Times are for 9/7 - 9/13 unless otherwise noted. THE WORDS HOPE SPRINGS LAWLESS HIT & RUN THE EXPENDABLES 2 PARANORMAN

*12:20, *2:40, 5:00, 7:20, 9:40 *1:15, 4:15, 6:40, 9:00 *1:00, 4:05, 7:05, 9:45 *12:00, *2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30 *12:40, 4:00, 6:55, 9:35 *12:10, *2:20, 4:35, 6:50, 9:10

Garberville Theater 707-923-3580

766 Redwood Drive, Garberville ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT

9/7- 9/13: 7:30 EXCEPT 9/12: 6:30

continued from previous page Deputy Charlie Rakes (Pearce) is close on its heels. And when the Bondurants refuse to roll over and profit-share with him, Rakes starts an ever-escalating war. Caught up in the conflict are a former Chicago showgirl (Chastain) and a coy preacher’s daughter (Mia Wasikowska) who fall for Hardy and LeBeouf, respectively. The violence is stark, realistic and disturbingly memorable. But bloody beatings do not a movie make. Between the fistfights and shootouts, Lawless is unevenly paced, often unconvincingly acted, and disappointingly impotent. For one thing, Hillcoat uses the crutch of a voiceover to bookend the movie. This device is often a lazy substitute for visual storytelling, and here it allows LeBeouf to indulge his painfully phony Tennessee accent while delivering an unnecessary history lesson on Prohibition. The movie’s pacing and structure are also problematic. The first act builds gradually, effectively establishing atmosphere. But midway through, Hillcoat drops back and punts, using voice-over to fast-forward the story, effectively undoing his own smart filmmaking. By the ostensible climax, all dramatic tension has evaporated. Frustrating. Acting, or the directing of the actors, may be the movie’s weakest point. I’ll acknowledge a bias here: I’m not generally a LeBeouf fan. However, he isn’t as unlikeable or unconvincing in this as I expected. That being said, his dialect coaches should receive an angry letter. And I don’t think he has the presence to carry off such a demanding role. Hardy, as always, is a pleasure to watch: With his cardigan sweater and grunting, he folds some much-needed humor in with the terrible blood-letting. The most troubling, out-of-place performance is Pearce’s. He invests himself fully in the character, but that character seems ill-conceived. His Charlie Rakes is a nightmarish caricature of Chicago corruption, a rapacious dandy who nonsensically mutters Bible verse and may be a closeted homosexual. Pearce plays it to the hilt, but he belongs in a different movie. A superb cast, a talented director, an interesting historical period, illegal booze — it’s all there. It just isn’t put together quite right. Lawless disappoints because its unrealized potential is evident in every frame. R. 115m. 2016: OBAMA’S AMERICA. If this was a better movie, I might be worried. Dinesh D’Souza is the kind of pandering neocon intellectual who impressionable voters seem to love. And his lame-brained crackpot theory about Obama’s agenda might be insane enough to seem plausible to those voters. Fortunately, the movie he’s foisted on us is so poorly crafted, so stri-

northcoastjournal.com northcoastjournal.com Journal • Thursday, Sept. Coast 6, 2012 •JourNal • North • thursday, JaN. 12, 2012 31 36 North Coast

dently divisive, that it will only appeal to people who made up their minds about Obama long ago. In the words of one very enthused audience member at Friday night’s screening: “You want to show it to people, but they won’t listen. They’re all brainwashed.” Wow. D’Souza posits that Obama inherited a virulently anti-colonial bent from his father, whom he only met once. The tenure of their relationship isn’t important, apparently. What is important is D’Souza’s thick-witted, barely supported thesis, which posits that in service of his father’s will, Obama intends to destroy the United States, both economically and militarily. This will allow him to raise up the colonized nations of the world and plunge us back into the Cold War. There’s a lot of Reaganite Kool-Aid drinking going on in this thing. As I said, it’s a blessing that 2016 is so shoddily constructed. It stretches about 15 minutes of content to feature-length with a lot of B-grade second-unit work and footage of D’Souza talking on the phone with an assortment of third-tier conservative pundits. Why on the phone? Was it too expensive to get them in the same room? Too dangerous? Not that it matters. This movie doesn’t even pretend at centrism or attempt to reach across the aisle. It just preaches to the converted. PG. 87m. —John J. Bennett

Previews

THE COLD LIGHT OF DAY. A young Wall Street trader (Henry Cavill) takes a sailboat trip with his family in Spain, because why the hell not? His family gets kidnapped, and it turns out his dad is a CIA agent, because he’s Bruce Willis. Throw in a mysterious briefcase and Sigourney Weaver and you have yourself this movie. PG13. 93m. THE WORDS. A young writer (Bradley Cooper) achieves mega-success by publishing the Great American Novel. Trouble is, he didn’t write (dramatic pause) the words. Some old man played by Jeremy Irons did. (He’s literally credited as “The Old Man.”) Also, Dennis Quaid shows up, looking concerned. PG13. 96m. AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY. Critically acclaimed documentary chronicles this world-renowned Chinese artist and activist working to make statements about — and in defiance of — an oppressive government. R. 91m. Your Arcata Theatre Lounge overview starts and ends with Sci-Fi Pint and Pizza Nights. Thursday’s iteration, from 6 to 10 p.m. features robots! In Assassin (1986), Robert Conrad must stop a megalomaniac scientist’s robot from assassinating the president, and in Robot Monster (1953), an alien called Ro-Man attacks Earth

with his “calcinatory death ray.” Friday is Ocean Night, featuring Otter 501 at 6:30 p.m. This quasi-documentary follows an orphaned baby otter from Mendocino whose absurd cuteness will liquefy your brain. From cute to clever: Saturday at 6 p.m. brings Joss Whedon’s witty space western Serenity. PG13. 6 p.m. And next Wednesday completes the cycle with another Sci-Fi night, 6-10 p.m. this one with European seasonings: Voyage to the End of the Universe (1963) comes from Czechoslovakia while Assignment: Outer Space hails from Italy.

Continuing

THE AVENGERS. Marvel’s super-team returns. PG13. 143m. BRAVE. Pixar’s Scottish princess also returns. PG. 100m. THE BOURNE LEGACY. Jeremy Renner replaces Matt Damon in the action franchise based on Robert Ludlum’s international thriller novels. PG13. 125m. THE CAMPAIGN. Doofus duo Will Ferrell and Zach Galafianakis star in this broad, lazy skewering of American politics. R. 85m. THE DARK KNIGHT RISES. Is it a fascistic diatribe against the Occupy movement, or just a Batman movie? Discuss. PG13. 164m. THE EXPENDABLES 2. Stallone, Schwarzenegger, Norris et alii employ steroids and explosives as they rage against the dying of the light. R. 102m. HIT AND RUN. A young couple on the lam tries to outrun a federal marshal and a band of misfits in this labor of love from Dax Shepard. R. 100m. HOPE SPRINGS. Meryl Streep and Tommy Lee Jones play an aging couple trying to rekindle the fire in their 30-yearold marriage. PG13. 100m. THE INTOUCHABLES. After a paragliding accident leaves him a quadriplegic, a French aristocrat hires a black man (!) from the projects (!!!) to be his caretaker. French with subtitles. R. 112m. THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN. A barren couple writes down their hopes for a young’un, buries them in the backyard, and hark, a dirty kid emerges. PG. 100m. PARANORMAN. A misunderstood boy tries to save his town from zombies in this pretty if bland stop-motion film from the makers of Coraline. PG. 93m. THE POSSESSION. Available for rent: Body of young girl. Tenant must be malevolent spirit who can freak parents out by making girl convulse and puke locusts. PG13. 91m. PREMIUM RUSH. Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars as a bike messenger pedaling from crime lords through the mean streets of NYC. PG13. 91m. —Ryan Burns l


List your class – just 50 cents/ word per issue! Deadline: Monday, noon. Place online at www.northcoastjournal.com or e-mail: classified@northcoastjournal.com Listings must be paid in advance by check, cash or Visa/ MasterCard. Many classes require pre-registration.

Arts & Crafts

EUROPEAN BASKETWEAVING IN ARCHAEOLOGY. An introduction to the historical, archaeological and cultural significance of of basketweaving, with focus on European and Mid-East basketweaving technologies. Students will also create two baskets using continuous weave techniques. Mon./Wed., Oct. 1-24, 6-8 p.m. $75 ($50 additional for optional 1 unit of credit in ANTH 328). With Barbara Klessig. Pre-registration required. Call HSU Distance & Extended Education at 826-3731 to register, or visit www.humboldt. edu/extended (AC-0920) GLASS FUSING WITH TRACE GALBRAITH. $120 + $60 materials fee. Mon. & Wed., 10:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Class #1, Sept. 24, 26, Oct. 1, 3. Class #2, Oct. 15, 17, 22, 24. Tues. & Thurs., 5-8 p.m. Class #3, Sept. 25, 27, Oct. 2, 4. Class #4, Oct. 16, 18, 23, 25. Explore elements of design and principles of composition as you create exciting works of art with glass. Fire Arts Center, 520 South G St., Arcata. (707) 826-1445. More info at www.fireartsarcata.com. (AC-0906) PLAYING WITH CLAY FOR GROWN UPS. Sept. 25–Oct. 30., Tues., 10 a.m.-Noon. Here’s your chance to have some fun and get your hands dirty! Fun and stress-relieving introduction to ceramic art in an informal, non-threatening setting. $110. Fire Arts Center, 520 South G St., Arcata. (707) 826-1445. More info at www.fireartsarcata.com (AC-0906) POTTERY GLAZING CLINIC. With Elaine Shore. Sat., 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Oct. 13 and Oct. 20, plus one hour Oct. 27. Introduces glazing techniques, which can bring your pieces to the next level. For beginning and ongoing students who are ready to take advantage of Fire Arts large selection of glazes. $65. Fire Arts Center, 520 South G St., Arcata. (707) 826-1445. More info at www.fireartsarcata.com (AC-0906) EXPRESSIVE ARTS. For the joy of creating. Mon’s, 6-8 p.m. beginning Sept. 17, ongoing. Painting, mixed-media, mask making and more. $75/mo. Fortuna United Methodist Church.More information call Susan Cooper, 726-9048 (AC-0906)

RAKU FIRING. Come to Fire Arts and experience the enjoyment of pottery firings. Bring your own bisqueware or select from a variety of unglazed pieces & glazes from Fire Arts. Call Thurs. to reserve space. Glazing at noon & Firing at 1 p.m. on Fri., $6/piece or $25/kiln load. Fire Arts Center, 707-826-1445. www.fireartsarcata. com (AC-0906)PHOTO TO PAINTING. Making your memories into Art: Learn how to turn your favorite photos into either a watercolor or acrylic painting. Sat.’s, Sept. 15 – Nov. 3. 9:30 a.m – noon. Fee $99. CR Eureka Downtown Site. Information or to register, call College of the Redwoods Community Education, 269-4000 or www.redwoods.edu, visit Community Education link. (AC-0906)

COMMUNITY MEDIATOR TRAINING. Annual course at Humboldt Mediation Services. Two-week, 34-hours, weekdays, Oct. 1, 2, 4, 9 and 11, 5:15- 9 p.m., and Sat., Oct. 6 and 13, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Facilitate meaningful discussion, deal with strong emotion, validate and reframe concerns, and reconcile differences to reach and draft workable agreements. Certifies participants to mediate disputes in Community Boards style of mediation. Discounts available for volunteers, students, seniors, and those who sign up with a friend (or foe). Contact HMS office, (707) 445-2505, email janet.s@humboldtmediationservices.org or visit www.humboldtmediationservices. org (CMM-0927)

TILE MAKING. With Marilyn Allen. Fri., 5:30–7:30 p.m., Sept. 14–Nov. 16. Enjoy this decorative, yet functional, art form while exploring a variety of tile-forming and surface-decorating techniques. Finished tiles can be hung, grouted, or incorporated into other projects. For beginners and experienced students. $180. Fire Arts Center, 520 South G St., Arcata. (707) 826-1445. More info at www.fireartsarcata.com (AC-0913)

Computers

WHEEL THROWING BEGINNING & INTERMEDIATE. With Peggy Loudon. Wed., Sept. 12–Nov. 14. 3 classes offered: 9-11 a.m., 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., 2-4 p.m. Complete introduction to basic wheel-throwing and glazing techniques. For beginning and returning students, class will put you on the road to developing your own personal style. $180. Fire Arts Center, 520 South G St., Arcata. (707) 826-1445. More info at www.fireartsarcata. com (AC-0906)

Dance, Music, Theater, Film

WHEEL THROWING BEGINNING & UTILITARIAN FORMS. With Bob Raymond. Wed., 7-9 p.m., Sept. 12– Nov. 14. Learn the basics or perfect your wheel-throwing technique. With 40 years experience, Bob Raymond is an inspiration to students of all levels. For intermediate students, he will assist in mastering Utilitarian forms. $180. Fire Arts Center, 520 South G St., Arcata. (707) 8261445. More info at www.fireartsarcata.com (AC-0906) SKIN KAYAK BUILDING WORKSHOP. with Marc Daniels, expert skin boat builder. Build your own tailorfitted skin-on-frame sea kayak. Learn carving, lashing, pegging, steam-bending ribs, and stitching fabric skin. Three weekends, Sept. 15-30, 393 Main St., Ferndale. $1975, 50% deposit to reserve spot. No experience needed. Call (707) 834-2186 or info@mindseyemanufactory.com for details. (AC-0906) SUCCESSFUL YARN SUBSTITUTION AT YARN Sat. Sept. 21 11 a.m - 1 p.m., Cost $35 Learn how to substitute yarn for a pattern you want to make. Open to both knitters and crocheters. Call 443-YARN to register and for class info. (AC-0920) ALTERING PATTERNS FOR SIZE/GAUGE/STYLE AT YARN. Sat., Sept. 21, 2-5 p.m., Cost $45 Learn to adjust a pattern you’d like to make for a different size, gauge, or style. Open to both knitters and crocheters. Call 443YARN to register and for class info. (AC-0920) LEARN TO KNIT SOCKS CLASS AT YARN. Thurs. Oct. 4 - 25, 5:30-7 p.m., Cost $60 Knit socks are fun to knit and a joy to wear. Learn how to knit socks using a short-row method to turn the heel. Call 443-YARN to register and for info. (AC-0927)

Communication

THE PRESIDENT’S FAITH, DOES IT MATTER? How the President’s faith affects their decisions while in office is a matter of debate. Discuss it at LifetreeCafe this week, Sun. Sept. 9, 7 p.m. 76 13th St., Arcata. 672-2919, www. campbellcreek.org for more info. (CMM-0906)

INTRO TO PHOTOSHOP WITH ANNIE REID. A fastpaced hands-on exploration of the imaging application for digital camera enthusiasts, designers and other digital media artists. Tues.Thurs., Sept. 18-Oct. 2, 6:30-9 p.m. $135. Pre-registration required. Call HSU Extended Education at 826-3731 to register, or visit www.humboldt.edu/extended (C-0906) ALL SEASONS COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA. Sponsored by Arcata Recreation Division, strings, woodwinds, brass and percussion. Open to all ages. Sat’s, 10 a.m-noon., D St. Neighborhood Center. Seasonal performance opportunities are offered throughout the year. Fees are just $25/year for ages 22-64. All other ages are free. For more information call 822-7091 or visit our website www.cityofarcata.org. (DMT-0906) GAMELAN MUSIC. Interlocking bronze percussion from Indonesia, Javanese style. Beginning class in Arcata, 3 blocks from HSU. 4 wk sessions: $20. Sun., 10-11 a.m. (Sept. 16-Oct. 7) and Tues., 2-3 p.m. (Sept. 18-Oct. 9). Sharon (707) 502-7904, GamelanSekarSequoia@gmail.com. (DMT-0913) REDWOOD RAKS WORLD DANCE STUDIO, ARCATA. West African, Belly Dance, Tango, Salsa, Swing, Breakdance, Jazz, Tap, Modern, Zumba, Hula, Congolese, more! Kids and Adults, 616-6876. (DMT1227) PIANO LESSONS BEGINNING TO ADVANCED ALL AGES. 30 years joyful experience teaching all piano styles. Juilliard trained, remote lessons available. Nationally Certified Piano Teacher. Humboldtpianostudio.com. (707) 502-9469 (DMT-1115) DANCE WITH DEBBIE. Ballroom, Latin and Swing for adults & teens. Group and private lessons at North Coast Dance Annex in Eureka. Contact (707) 464-3638 or debbie@dancewithdebbie.biz. (DMT-1108) PIANO LESSONS. Beginners, all ages. Experienced. Judith Louise 476-8919. (DMT-1227) LEARN 2 HOOP DANCE. Foundational Hoop Dance series starts every few weeks in Arcata. Ongoing int/ adv. workshops. Private lessons. Hoops/collapsible hoops for sale. www.chakranation.com (DMT-1227) WEST AFRICAN DANCE. Tues.s, Thurs.s, 5:30-7 p.m., at Redwood Raks, Arcata. All levels welcome. Live drumming. Dulce, 832-9547, Christina, 498-0146. (DMT-1227) SAXOPHONE/FLUTE LESSONS. All ages, beginneradvanced, jazz improvisation, technique. Susie Laraine: 441-1343. (DMT-1227) GUITAR/PIANO LESSONS. All ages, beginning and intermediate. Seabury Gould 444-8507. (DMT-1227) SONGWRITING. Sun. Sept 9 & 16, with Les Craig at Westhaven Center for Arts. 10-1, $10. For more info call 677-0459. (DMT-0913)

Fitness

AIKIDO. Is an incredibly fascinating and enriching non-violent martial art with its roots in traditional Japanese budo. Focus is on personal growth and pursuit of deeper truth instead of competition and fighting. Yet the physical power you can develop is very real. Come observe any time and give it a try! The dojo is on Arcata Plaza above the mattress store, entrance is around back. Class every weeknight starting at 6 p.m., beginning enrollment is ongoing. www.northcoastaikido.org, info@northcoastaikido. org, 826-9395. (F-1227) AIKIDO. An innovative, dynamic, and non-competitive self-defense martial art. Mon.s and Wed.s, Sept. 17- Oct. 10. 5:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. $49. College of the Redwoods Main Campus. Information or to register, call College of the Redwoods Community Education, 269-4000 or www.redwoods.edu, visit Community Education link. (F-0906) ZUMBA FITNESS & ZUMBA TONING! Zumba Fitness, Mon., Arcata Vets Hall. Zumba Toning (uses 1-2.5lbs. weights w/specific toning choreography), Thurs., Pan Arts Studio. Both classes 5:30-6:30 p.m., $6 drop-in. No membership required. Get moving, get grooving, get fit, get happy, you will not be disappointed! Ann has over 20 years teaching dance/fitness classes. Questions? Contact Ann, (707) 845-1055 or annyoumans.zumba.com (F-0906) NORTH COAST SELF DEFENSE ACADEMY. Come learn your choice of Gracie Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Muay Thai Techniques, Filipino Kali, Jun Fan Stand Up Kickboxing, & Muay Thai/MMA Sparring. Group and private sessions available 7 days a week for men, women and children; all experience and fitness levels welcome. Call or visit (707) 822-6278 or 820 N St., Building #1 Suite C, Arcata www.northcoastselfdefense.com (F-1227) HUMBOLDT CAPOEIRA ACADEMY. Fall Session Aug. 1-Dec. 15. Classes for Kids, Adults and Beginners. Martial Arts, Music and Acrobatics. Helps to improve strength, flexibility, coordination and self-control. Rental Space Available. For full class schedule visit www.humboldtcapoeira.com. (707) 498-6155, 865 8th St., Arcata. (F-1129) KUNG FU & TAI CHI. Taught by Sifu Joshua Cuppett. Adult Kungfu: Tues./Wed./Thurs., 5-6 p.m., Sat., 1-2:30 p.m., Sun., 2-3 p.m. Kids Kungfu: Tues./Wed./ Thurs., 4-5 p.m. (uniform included), Adult Tai Chi, Wed.s, 6-7 p.m., Sun. 1-2 p.m. Kungfu Movie night is first Fri. of every month, 4-8 p.m. Lau Kune Do: Temple of Martial Arts, 445 I St., Arcata. arcatakungfu. com (F-0913) PANATUKAN, FILIPINO MARIAL ARTS. Taught by Hal Faulkner. Mon., 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Wed., 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Learn Filipino boxing. Lau Kune Do: Temple of Martial Arts, 445 I St., Arcata. arcatakungfu. com (F-0927) NORTH COAST FENCING ACADEMY. Fencing (with swords!). Improve your mind and body in a fun, intense workout, and a very chill environment. Ages 8 and up. 1459 M St., Arcata, contact Justin (707) 601-1657 text or phone, or email northcoastfencingacademy@gmail.com (F-0927) ZUMBA WITH MIMI. Put the FUN back into your workout! Latin & Pop music, sure to leave you sweaty and smiling! Wed. & Fri. 9:30 a.m. at Redwood Raks in the Old Creamery Building, Arcata. Tues. & Thurs. 9:30 a.m., Fri. 5:30 p.m., Humboldt Capoeira Academy, Arcata. (F-1227) continued on next page

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continued from previous page AIKIBOJITSU. Get your black belt in stick! New beginning classes in Aikibojitsu, The Art of the Staff, taught by Tom Read Sensei, Chief Instructor of Northcoast Aikido, with over 40 years of experience in martial arts. Classes meet Sat.s 9 a.m- 10 a.m., at Northcoast Aikido, 890 G Street, Arcata (entrance in back, by fire station). $20 per class, Visit www. aikibojitsu.com (F-1206) DANCE-FIT. Dance, aerobics & strength training all in one class ! Mon., Wed. & Fri. 9-10 a.m First class is free. Drop in for $5 per class or 14 classes for $55. No Limits tap & jazz studio, corner of 10th & K st. Arcata. 825-0922 (F-1227) ZUMBA WITH MARLA JOY. Elevate, Motivate, Celebrate another day of living. Exercise in Disguise. Now is the time to start, don’t wait. All ability levels are welcome. Every Mon. and Thurs. at the Bayside Grange 6-7 p.m., 2297 Jacoby Creek Rd. $6/$4 Grange members. Every Wed. 6-7 p.m. in Fortuna at the Monday Club, 610 Main St. Every Tues. at the Trinidad Town Hall, Noon and every Thurs. at the Eureka Vets Hall, Noon. Marla Joy (707) 845-4307, marlajoy.zumba. com (F-1227) SUN YI’S ACADEMY OF TAE KWON DO. Classes for kids and adults, child care, fitness gym, and more. Tae Kwon Do Mon-Fri 5-6 p.m., 6-7 p.m., Sat 10-11 a.m. Come watch or join a class, 1215 Giuntoli Lane, or visit www.sunyisarcata.com, 825-0182. (F-1227)

Home & Garden

GARDENING SCHOOL. First of a series of 4. Course 1 offered by the Humboldt District of California Garden Clubs, Inc. Oct. 12 -13, 9 a.m.- 4 p.m, Eureka. Speakers Deborah Giarud on Basic botany for gardeners and the parts of a plant. Sam Polly on Improving your Soil. Also Dr. Colette Beaupre and Donna Brink on House Plant Care and Plant propagation with hands on project. Maria Krenek with plants for sale and explain how to care for them. Those completing the series will be entitled to be Gardening Consultants. Fee $40 for one day or $75.00 for two days. Lunch is included each day. Study guide provided with course. Call 442-1387 or email mgoodwin@ northcoast.com for more information and a registration form. (G-0927) FALL PLANT ID. Learn to identify a wide variety of plants suited to our local area on guided walks around the College of the Redwoods main campus and adjacent Botanical Garden. Mon’s, Sept. 10 – Oct. 29, 1:30 p.m –4 p.m. Fee $80. CR Main Campus Greenhouse. Information or to register, call College of the Redwoods Community Education, 269-4000 or www.redwoods.edu, visit Community Education link. (G-0906) GARDENING FOR WILDLIFE. Learn how to plant flowers and trees to attract beautiful and beneficial wildlife with an emphasis on birds. Sat., Sept. 8,. 9 a.m –11:30 a.m. Fee $25. Information or to register, call College of the Redwoods Community Education, 269-4000 or www.redwoods.edu, visit Community Education link. (G-0906)

Kids & Teens

CERAMICS FOR YOUNGER KIDS, AGES 4-7. Sat., 9:30-11 a.m., Sept. 15–Oct. 6. Children will have a great time creating with clay. Make 1-2 pieces per week. Each project designed to bring out their creativity. With Amanda Steinebach. $60. Fire Arts Center, 520 South G St., Arcata. (707) 826-1445. More info at www. fireartsarcata.com (AC-0906)

CHILDREN’S MUSIC WITH MUSIKGARTEN. Music’s melodic and rhythmic patterns awaken and stimulate neural pathways in the brain that help develop memory, math skills, and powers of abstract and creative thinking. But above all, your child will love making music, singing, playing, listening, and movement fun with Redwood Musikgarten! Morning and afternoon classes starting Sept. 12, 10 week sessions, in Arcata. Sign up through Arcata Recreation. redwoodmusikgarten.org, 601-0694. (K-0906) CHILDREN’S YOGA. 5-week series begins Sept. 14. Fri.s, 4:15-5 p.m. Great fun! Location: Redwood Raks, the old Creamery Building. info@littlebuddhasyoga. com (K-0913) ROWING. Humboldt Bay Rowing Association is forming its competitive Junior Crew Team for ages 12 and up. No experience necessary, must know how to swim. Contact Scott at 845-4752 or hbrajrscoach@ me.com or visit www.hbra.org. (K-0927) FRIDAY NIGHT FLIPS. Want a space for your kids to play while you getaway? Bring them to the Arcata Community Center gymnastics room for 2 hours of fun. Ages 6-12, Fri’s, 5:30 p.m-7:30 p.m. Bring a snack! Drop-in $10/$11 non-residents or purchase a 6 class pass at the Arcata Recreation Division office $50/$55 non-residents. Call 822-7091 or visit our website www. cityofarcata.org/rec. (K-0906) IMAGINE THAT! Beginning Sept. 12. Ongoing weekly youth art. Drawing, painting, printmaking, maskmaking and more. Ages 5-18 grouped by age. $60 each month. Fortuna Methodist Church, 9th & N St. Call to register 726-9048. An Ink People Center for the Arts DreamMaker program. (K-0906) KID’S YOGA AT OM SHALA W/ CRYSTAL SOLEIL. Movement, breathing techniques, songs, games & guided relaxation. On-going Wed’s (ages 5-7) 4-4:50 p.m & Thurs. (ages 8-10) 4-4:50 p.m, Om Shala Yoga, 858 10th St., Arcata. $7/drop-in, $55/10-class pass. 825-YOGA (9642), www.omshalayoga.com (K-0906) ACTIVE KIDS = HAPPY KIDS. Come learn selfconfidence, discipline and respect while gaining true life skills through martial arts. North Coast Self Defense Academy is offering two introductory lessons for only $14 with this ad. Call or visit- (707) 822-6278 or 820 N St, Building #1 Suite C, Arcata www. northcoastselfdefense.com (K-1227)

Language

BEGINNING ITALIAN. Introduction to Italian grammar, basic vocabulary and culture. With Giulia Marini. Tues./Thurs., Sept. 18-Oct. 25, 5:30-7:30 p.m. $125. ($50 additional for optional one unit of credit.) Preregistration required. Call HSU Extended Education to register, 826-3731 or visit www.humboldt.edu/ extended (L-0906) INTRO TO JAPANESE. Basic Japanese grammar structure, vocabulary and writing systems. Focus on useful conversational skills. With Mie Matsumoto. Tues./Thurs., Sept. 18-Oct. 11, 5:30-7:30 p.m., $125 ($50 additional for one unit of optional credit). Preregistration required. Call HSU Extended Education to register, 826-3731 or visit www.humboldt.edu/ extended (L-0906)

Lectures

FREE SEMINAR ! INVESTMENT STRATEGIES IN TURBULENT TIMES. Premier Financial Group is dedicated to helping our community achieve financial peace of mind. Come to our free educational seminar on Wed., Sept.12, 5:45 p.m - 7p.m., Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center, 921 Waterfront Dr., Eureka. This is a non-sales seminar. RSVP (707) 443-2741 or online at www.premieradvisor.com. (LE-0906)

38 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

LIVING ON SHAKY GROUND. How to Survive Earthquakes & Tsunamis in Northern California. A free class. Mon., Sept. 24, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Presbyterian Church, Garberville. Pre-registration required: Call (707) 499-0754. With Judy Warren of HSU Regional Training Institute, Community Disaster Preparedness (www.humboldt.edu/rti). Funding provided by the Calif. Emergency Management Agency Earthquake and Tsunami Program. (L-0913) DISASTER PREPAREDNESS IS EVERYONE’S BUSINESS. Our region relies on its local businesses to remain open after a disaster to help the community quickly recover. This course provides a simple but effective plan to identify and mitigate hazards, create a sensible business disaster plan, prepare disaster supplies kits, identify and strengthen building weaknesses, plan to reduce injuries and save lives. Instructor: Judy Warren. Wed., Sept. 26, Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center, Eureka (next to Adorni Center), 6-9 p.m. $50. For more details, fees and to register: www. humboldt.edu/rti or call HSU Distance & Extended Education at (707) 826-3731. (L-0913) DISASTERS DON’T WAIT: HAVE YOUR SUPPLY KITS READY. Get your supplies ready for response to an earthquake, tsunami or severe weather. With Judy Warren of HSU Regional Training Institute — Community Disaster Preparedness. Fee: $25. Wed., Sept. 19, 6-8 p.m., Trinidad City Hall. Pre-registration required: www.humboldt.edu/rti/supplykits or call HSU Distance & Extended Education (707) 826-3731 (LE-0906) FOOD SAFETY. Preparing for any emergency includes food safety. Learn the basics of selecting appropriate nutritious foods, storage and preparation of edible supplies, especially when there is no power. Presented by HSU Regional Training Institute, Community Disaster Preparedness. $25. Tues., Sept. 11, 6-8 p.m., D Street Neighborhood Center, Arcata. Pre-registration required: www.humboldt.edu/rti/ foodsafety or call HSU Extended Education at (707) 826-3731. (L-0906) LIVING ON SHAKY GROUND. How to Survive Earthquakes & Tsunamis in Northern California. A free class. Wed., Sept. 12, 6-8 p.m. at Humboldt County Library, Eureka. Pre-registration required: Call (707) 499-0754. With Judy Warren of HSU Regional Training Institute, Community Disaster Preparedness (www. humboldt.edu/rti). Funding provided by the Calif. Emergency Management Agency Earthquake and Tsunami Program. (L-0906)

Over 50

OSHER LIFELONG LEARNING INSTITUTE (OLLI). Offers dynamic classes for people age 50 and over. Call 826-5880 or visit www.humboldt.edu/olli to register for classes. (O-1227) FROM VINEYARD TO GLASS. Join David Winnett for a day-long trip to the Winnett Vineyeards in Willow Creek. Learn about viticulture, tour the vineyards and sample wines. Lunch included. Fri., Sept. 28, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Fee: $70/OLLI members, $95/nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880 (O-0920) OLD TOWN EUREKA: ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY WALK. Ray Willman will lead this walk in Old Town Eureka, exploring the National Registry Historic District from C to M streets, including entering the 1892 Ingomar Theater, the Buhne Building and the Pink Lady. Sun., Sept. 30, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Fee: $30/ OLLI members, $55/nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880 (O-0920)

THE ARMCHAIR TRAVELER, EULOGIZING EUREKA. Join Jerry and Gisela Rohde for a presentation that virtually travels the streets, alleys and wharves of Eureka. Commemorate bygone Victorian buildings and explore the city’s history through Lloyd Stine’s photos. Sat., Sept. 29, 1-3 p.m. $30/OLLI members, $55/nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880. (O-0920) SETH KINMAN, LIVE & KICKING. A one-man show of the life and times of Seth Kinman (1815-1888), a famous pioneer, bear hunter, and storyteller from the early history of Humboldt County. With Charlie Beck. Sun., Sept. 23, 1 p.m. Natural Resources Bldg., room 101, Humboldt State University (free parking). Cost for OLLI members only: $10. (O-0913) THE LIFE & FILMS OF WILLIAM WYLER. See and discuss seven films directed by William Wyler. Films could include Dodsworth, Wuthering Heights, The Letter, Mrs. Miniver, Roman Holiday, and others, depending on availability. Tues., Oct. 2-Nov. 13, 6-8 p.m. $65/OLLI members, $90/nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880. (O-0920) CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY & THE MODERN WORLD. Join Professor Tom Gage to explore quirky, shocking but entertaining stories from classical mythology that linger beneath the surface of modernity. Thurs., Sept. 20-Oct. 18 (no class Sept. 27), 3:30-5:30 p.m. $50/OLLI members, $75/nonmembers. OLLI: 8265880. (O-0913) ART FOR THE YOUNG AT HEART. Intro to Watercolor and Printmaking. Mon’s 5:30 -7:30 p.m, Sept.10 - Nov. 12. Instructor Patricia Sennott. $175. Arcata Elementary School, 2400 Baldwin. More info, email Patricia, psennott@gmail.com. (O-0906) DESIGNING YOUR NEXT 50 YEARS. How do we improve the quality of life for seniors in Humboldt County? Examine several creative ways to enhance senior living on both personal and community levels, and take action to implement selected ideas after this class concludes. With JoAnne Schuch. Thurs., Sept. 13-Oct. 4, 6-8 p.m. $50/OLLI members, $75/ nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880 (O-0906) GENEALOGY & FAMILY HISTORY. Discover the tools that will help you learn more about your forebears with Michael Cooley. Sat., Sept. 15, 29 and Oct. 13, 10 a.m.-Noon. $45/OLLI members, $70/nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880. (O-0906) HEARING THE OTHER, FATEMA MERNISSI & M. FATHULLAH GULEN. Discuss the published ideas of two influential Muslin thinkers dedicated to fostering peace, mutual understanding and good will. With Professor Tom Gage. Tues., Sept. 18-Oct. 16 (no class Sept. 25), 6-8 p.m. $50/OLLI members, $75/ nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880 (O-0906) MEMOIR, WRITING YOUR LIFE STORY. Explore and write about pivotal experiences that shaped you. With Sharon Ferrett. Thurs., Sept. 13-Oct. 25, 10 a.m.-Noon, in McKinleyville. $65/OLLI members, $90/ nonmembers. OLLI: 826-5880. (O-0906)

Pets/Animals

DOG OBEDIENCE. Start your puppy off on the right “paw” by providing socialization and behavior modification or reinforce the basics with your dog. 6-week classes Wed’s, Sept.19-Oct. 24. Puppy Class 6:30 p.m -7:30 p.m. Dogs 6 months and older 7:30 p.m-8:30 p.m. Sign-up or for more information call Arcata Recreation Division 822-7091 or visit our website www.cityofarcata.org. (P-0906)


Spiritual

ARCATA ZEN GROUP MEDITATION. Beginners welcome. Sun., 8 a.m. North Coast Aikido Center, on F St. between 8th and 9th in Arcata. Wed., 6-7 p.m. at First Christian Church, 730 K, Eureka, ramp entrance and upstairs; newcomers please come 5 minutes early. Sun. contact, 826-1701. Wed. contact, barryevans9@ yahoo.com, or for more info. call (707) 826-1701. www. arcatazengroup.org. (S-1227) TIBETAN BUDDHIST SCHOLAR KHENTRUL LODRÖ T’HAYE RINPOCHE. Is offering a Medicine Buddha empowerment Sat. Sept. 8, 10 a.m.-Noon, and teaching on “Advice from Longchenpa” Sat., Sept. 8, 2-5 p.m. and Sun., Sept. 9, 9 a.m.-Noon and 2-4 p.m. at Humboldt Area Foundation, 373 Indianola Rd., Eureka. Suggested donation $80 for week-end. All are welcome. No one turned away for lack of funds. For more information call Caroline (707) 826-2340. (S-0906) SHAMANIC JOURNEYING. Sat, Sept. 22, Noon-6 p.m. $99. Learn the shaman’s soul journeying technique for personal healing and spiritual growth with Michal Mugrage. Free Presentation at Moonrise Herbs Sept. 18, 7-9 p.m. Contact 407-7192 or soul-nurturer@gmail. com to register. (S-0920) TAROT AS AN EVOLUTIONARY PATH. Classes in Eureka and Arcata. Private mentorships, readings. Carolyn Ayres, 442-4240, www.tarotofbecoming. com. (S-1227)

Sports/Recreation

FAMILY FUN GAME NIGHT AT EUREKA MUNI! Come to roller skating on Sept. 15 for Fabulous Family Fun Game Night! Enjoy a variety of exciting games & great music to skate the night away. Eureka Municipal Auditorium. 6-8:30 p.m., $4 Youth/$4.75 adults. Skate rental included. Call 441-4223. (SR-0906) MEN’S 30+ FALL BASKETBALL. Show off your jump shot, 3 point skills or impenetrable defense in Eureka Recreation’s Men’s 30+ Fall Basketball League! Form a dream team with your friends, family & co-workers. $425/team. Deadline to register is 9/21 by 5 p.m. Sign up at Adorni Center, 1011 Waterfront Dr. 4414245 or www.eurekarecreation.com. (SR-0906)

ROLLER SKATING. Blue Lake Parks & Recreation Fri./ Sat., 6:30-9:30 p.m., Sun. 2-5 p.m. Adult Skate: 2nd Sun. of every month, 6:30-9:30 p.m. To schedule birthday parties, call 668-5932 or find us on facebook at parks-rec@bluelake.ca.gov. (SR-1227)

SEX/ PORN DAMAGING YOUR LIFE & RELATIONSHIPS ? Confidential help is available. saahumboldt@ yahoo.com or 845-8973 (T-1227)

Vocational

Therapy/Support

GRADUATE RECORD EXAM (GRE) Prep Class at HSU: If you are applying to grad school and need a good score on the GRE, this course will prepare you. Sat.s, Sept. 22-Oct. 13, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. $395 fee includes materials. Early registration is encouraged. Pre-registration required. Call HSU Distance & Extended Education: 707-826-3731 or visit www.humboldt.edu/extended/ gre (V-0906)

POSITIVE CONNECTIONS. In this world of negativity and lack of connection create and participate in a positive social network based on strengths and optimism. In a group format, learn to improve your relationships with yourself and others. Meets once a week for 6 wks. Offered by Tamara Severn, MFT, #49815. For info and to register call 834-3747 (T-0913)

ONLINE CERTIFICATE IN FACULTY PREPARATION. Teaching in Higher Education. Do you want to teach in higher education? This series of online courses introduces prospective and current faculty to the roles and responsibilities of teaching in higher education and specifically addresses teaching, learning and technology issues in the college classroom. This is a three-semester, 12-unit online certificate program that starts Oct. 1. Register by Sept. 24. For full course descriptions, deadlines, fees and more information, visit www.humboldt.edu/facultyprep or contact Humboldt State University Office of Distance & Extended Education at 707-826-3731 or extended@ humboldt.edu. (V-0920)

DIVORCE SUPPORT GROUP. Connect with others and feel less alone. Learn effective coping skills, ways to manage strong emotions how to heal and live the life you want. Group meets Mon. evenings, 6-7:30 pm. For more info. and to register call (707) 834-3747. Facilitated by Tamara Severn, MFT, #49815 (T-1115)

OVERCOMING DISCOURAGEMENT. Meeting Life’s challenges and Embracing Change. Support Group for Women of All ages. Meeting weekly for 10 weeks, Past Hurts, Relationship Changes, Workplace/Career Issues. Learn and Receive Support from Others. Focus on Some Guiding Principles. Confidentiality Required. Starting Wed., Sept. 12, 6:30-8 p.m. 905 6th St., Arcata, $25 per session/Insurance considered to register or more information call Sonja Harting, M.S., MFT LIC #MFC 40367, 826-0921 #4, slharting@gmail.com (T-0906)

SERVSAFE ESSENTIALS CERTIFICATE. Comprehensive one-day workshop assists restaurants and other food handling businesses in complying with AB 1978/ Campbell. Wed., Sept. 19, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. $175. Information or to register, call College of the Redwoods Community Education, 269-4000 or www.redwoods. edu, visit Community Education link. (V-0906) ANUSARA YOGA IMMERSION & TEACHER TRAINING W/ PEGGY PROFANT. Immersion Oct 18- Dec 10, Teacher Training Jan 17-Mar 2013. Om Shala Yoga, 858 10th St., Arcata. 825-YOGA (9642) www.omshalayoga. com (V-0906)

Wellness/Bodywork CALL 441-4245 TO REGISTER YOUR MEN’S 30+ BASKETBALL TEAM.

3-DAY FOREST YOGA W/ ELISSA DAWN & JANINE MELZER. Sept 21-23.,Om Shala Yoga, 858 10th St., Arcata. $65 for series if paid by 9/14, $90 after or enroll per day for less. 825-YOGA (9642), www. omshalayoga.com (W-0906)

EVERY PART OF YOU HAS A SECRET LANGUAGE, YOUR HANDS AND YOUR FEET SAY WHAT YOU’VE DONE. Rumi. Learn their language. Reflexology classes start Oct. http://www.reflexologyinstruction. com/ (707) 822-5395 (W-0927) T’AI CHI WITH MARGY EMERSON. Three programs: T’ai Chi for Back Pain and Arthritis, Traditional Long Form (Wu Style), and The 42 Combined Forms (all 4 major styles). 13-week session starts the week of Sept. 17. Begin as late as the third week. At the martial arts academy in Arcata’s Sunny Brae Shopping Center. Visit a class with no obligation to pay or enroll. Morning and evening classes. Fees for the 13-week term: $110 for 1 class per week, $165 for 2 or more classes per week. See www.margaretemerson.com or call 822-6508 for schedules. (W-0920) AYURVEDIC WELLNESS COUNSELOR PROGRAM. with Traci Webb. Meets five weekends (Fri.-Sun.) Oct. 12-Jan. 20, Part I of three part Practitioner Certificate. Includes: Aromatherapy, Colortherapy, Mental Constitutions, Yoga/Ayurveda Psychology, Ayurvedic Diagnostics, Panchakarma Theory, $1500 by Sept. 30 ($1,600 after), OR $350/month. Northwest Institute of Ayurveda: info@ayurvedicliving.com (707) 601-9025. (W-0927) MEDICAL & THERAPEUTIC QIGONG. Ancient knowledge for todays well being. Suitable for all ages. Designed to empower and master your inner world. Reclaim health and joy in your life. 8-week class, Mons.s, 5:30-7 p.m., Sept. 10-Oct. 29, $80. Open Class, Thurs.s, 9-10:30 a.m., $12/session. At Garden Bliss, corner of 3rd and E St., Arcata. Information, Saki, (707) 822-8760 or sakitou2@gmail.com. (W-0906) INTRO TO HOLISTIC MEDICINE WITH JOHN YAMAS. Learn about the four major blockages to healing (emotional, biochemical, toxins, structure/ energetic flow), and self care for health. Explore different systems of holistic medicine, history of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), and emotional components and treatments including flower essence therapy, neuro-emotional technique, TCM and Qigong. Wed., Sept. 19-Oct. 31, 7-8:30 p.m. $70. Pre-registration required. Call HSU Extended Education to register, 826-3731 or visit www.humboldt.edu/ extended (W-0906) continued on next page

Skin Kayak Building Workshop

North Coast Academy

Improve your mind and body in a fun, intense workout, and a very chill environment. Adults & kids ages 8 and up. Contact Justin (707) 601-1657 Text or Phone. 1459 M. St. Arcata. northcoastfencingacademy@gmail.com northcoastfencing.tripod.com

Back to School Student Special

5 class pass only $40 Must show proof of current registration Special offer good

Aug. 20 - Sept. 30, 2012 858 10th street • Arcata, CA 95521

707-825-YOGA (9642)

Franklin Habit will be teaching at NorthCoast Knittery on 9/22 and 9/23. Come learn how to do color work, how to read vintage knitting patterns or fundamental concepts of tessellation: the creation of interlocking patterns. Sign-up online at Northcoastknittery.com or Call 442-9276 or come by

with Marc Daniels, expert skin boat builder. Build your own tailor-fitted skin-on-frame sea kayak. Learn carving, lashing, pegging, steambending ribs, and stitching fabric skin. Three weekends, Sept. 15-30, 393 Main St., Ferndale. $1975, 50% deposit to reserve spot. No experience needed. Call (707) 834-2186 or info@ mindseyemanufactory.com for details.

Mind’s Eye Manufactory

NorthCoast KNittery 320 2nd St. between D&E, Eureka Space is Limited! There is a bonus when you sign-up.

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012

39


DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL 1105 6TH STREET, SUITE C EUREKA, CA 95501 707-445-7229 NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES

HERBAL ALLIES WITH WENDY READ. Sat., Sept. 22, 2-4 p.m. $45 + $15 lab fee. Part 3 of making herbal medicine series teaches students how to combine other herbs with your cannabis salves infusions and teas to improve effectiveness. 707 Campus, 1881 Barnett Ct., #4, Redway Meadows Business Park. 707 Cannabis College, www.cannabiscollege.com, (707) 672-9860. (W-0920) AROMATHERAPY CERTIFICATE PROGRAM & ESSENTIAL OIL DISTILLATION. With Traci Webb. Two Weekend Immersions, Oct 12-14 & Oct. 26-28, $900 (or $475/weekend), Northwest Institute of Ayurveda: info@ayurvedicliving.com, (707) 601-9025. (W-1011) DANDELION HERBAL CENTER. Classes with Jane Bothwell. BEGINNING WITH HERBS. Sept. 19- Nov. 7, 2012. eight Wed. evenings plus two herb walks. Learn the basics with many hands-on activities, prereq to 10 month course.10 MONTH HERBAL STUDIES PROGRAM Feb.-Nov. 2013. In-depth materia medica, therapeutics, flower essences, formulations and harvesting. Register online www.dandelionherb.com or call (707) 442-8157. (W-0913) NEW CLIENTS $10 OFF. Myrtletowne Healing Center 1480, #A Myrtle Ave. A Hidden Gem on Myrtle Ave., specializing in therapeutic massage. We will assist you on your road to recovery or work with you on that chronic pain issue. Swedish, deep tissue, trigger point, reflexology, acupressure, uterine centering, lymph drainage, lomi lomi, and more. Founders Hilary Wakefield and Sarah Maier are both Doulas, we do pregnancy massage as well! You are worth it, call today (707) 441-9175 (MB-0927) START YOUR CAREER IN MASSAGE THERAPY! Evening classes begin Sept. 4, 2012 at Arcata School of Massage. 650-Hour Therapeutic Massage Certification will prepare you for Professional Certification in California, and the National Exam. Our comprehensive program prepares your body, mind and heart to become a caring, confident professional massage therapist. Call 822-5223 for information or visit arcatamassage.com (W-1227) ●

SUBMIT YOUR WORKSHOPS AND CLASSES

ONLINE

classified@northcoastjournal.com

continued from previous page

United Indian Health Services, Incorporated (UIHS) is pleased to announce the 2012 General Election Day as November 14, 2012 and UIHS is seeking interested Candidates for the 2012 Board Election of Indian Community Representatives. The General Election is Vote by Mail only. You may register to vote, at any UIHS clinic site, if you meet the following criteria: • You are an American Indian eligible for services at UIHS and are registered as an Eligible Indian Beneficiary • You are eighteen years of age or older at the time of election • You reside in the voting area from which you will vote • You have completed a Voter Registration Application/Affidavit VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE The voter registration period remains open throughout the calendar year and closes on the voter registration deadline date of October 15, 2012. However, please be advised that voters who register after the deadline date will not receive a Vote-by-Mail ballot. USES OF VOTER INFORMATION The information on the voter registration application/affidavit will be used by elections officials solely to administer the UIHS Vote by Mail Election. Personal items of information or voter signatures as shown on the registration application cannot be used for any purpose unrelated to the UIHS Election nor can it be released for commercial purposes. If a voter has any questions about the use of voter information or wish to report suspected misuse of such information, please call UIHS Compliance Officer at 707.825.5000. SEEKING INTERESTED CANDIDATES All candidates must meet the criteria for membership as an Indian Community Member. For more information about the qualifications and eligibility of a Candidate and/or to receive a Declaration of Candidacy form, please go to www.uihs.org or contact the Election Committee at PO Box 731, Arcata, CA 95521 or request the form at any UIHS clinic site. A non-refundable Candidacy filing fee of $50.00 is required when submitting the Declaration of Candidacy form. 8/23, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-239)

United Indian Health Services, Incorporated (UIHS) is registering American Indians to vote, who are eligible for services provided by UIHS. QUALIFICATIONS TO REGISTER TO VOTE IN UIHS ELECTION You may register to vote if you meet the following criteria: You are an American Indian eligible for services at UIHS and are registered as an Eligible Indian Beneficiary, you are eighteen years of age or older at the time of election, you reside in the voting area from which you will vote and you have completed a Voter Registration Application/Affidavit. You will need to re-register to vote when: • You move • You change your name VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE The voter registration period remains open throughout the year except after the voter registration deadline date, which is a closed period of not less than two weeks prior to election day and shall remain closed until election counting day. The deadline date for registration is October 14, 2012. However, please be advised that voters who register after the deadline date will not receive a Vote-by-Mail ballot. The 2012 Election counting day is set for November 14, 2012. USES OF VOTER INFORMATION (ELECTION POLICY) Information on your voter registration application/affidavit will be used by elections officials to send you official information on the voting process and the Vote-by-Mail ballot. Items such as Driver’s license and social security numbers, or your signature as shown on your voter registration application, cannot be released for commercial purposes. If you have any questions about the use of voter information or wish to report suspected misuse of such information, please call UIHS Compliance Officer at 707.825.5000. 9/6/2012 (12-251)

northcoastjournal.com

Curious about legal advertising? 442-1400

NORTH Coast COAST Journal JOURNAL •• Thursday, THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 2012 ••northcoastjournal.com northcoastjournal.com 40 North

Date of Filing Application: August 29, 2012 To Whom It May Concern: The Name of the Applicants are: JOSEPH MARK FILGAS, LORRENA LUCILLE FILGAS The applicant listed above is applying to the Department of Alcoholic Beverages Control to sell alcoholic beverages at: 2910 E ST EUREKA, CA 95501-4334 Type of License Applied for: 41 - On-Sale Beer And Wine Eating Place 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/2012 (12-253)

PUBLIC SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property pursuant to Sections 21700-21716 of the Business & Professions Code, Section 2328 of the UCC, Section 535 of the Penal Code and provisions of the civil Code. The undersigned will sell at public sale by competitive bidding on the 19th of September, 2012, at 9:00 AM, on the premises where said property has been stored and which are located at Rainbow Self Storage, at 4055 Broadway Eureka, Ca, County of Humboldt the following: Jeperson Mykham, Unit # 5025 Cherryle McConnell, Unit # 5209 Lynn Taylor, Unit # 5233 Keta Rojas, Unit # 5239 Matthew Quittenton, Unit # 5255 Danielle Guinn, Unit # 5429 Ari Kushman, Unit # 5461 Daniel Moriarty Jr., Unit # 5534 The following units are located at 639 W. Clark Street Eureka, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immediately following the sale of the above units. James Rach, Unit # 2303 William Carter, Unit # 2816 Caitlin Wild, Unit # 2905 Linda Stewart, Unit # 3115 Tobin Steiskal, Unit # 3418 Elaine Zeigler, Unit # 3630 The following units are located at 3618 Jacobs Avenue Eureka, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immediately following the sale of the above units. Linda Stewart, Unit # 1112 Clinton Myers, Unit # 1302 Cranisha Craver, Unit # 1364 Jeffrey Christensen, Unit # 1519 Deny Lightfoot, Unit # 1558 Melissa Shea, Unit # 1569 William E. Woods III, Unit # 1623 Tobin Steiskal, Unit # 1661 Barbara Nichols, Unit # 1681 Raymond Solis, Unit # 1714 Sandra V. Martinez, Unit # 1767 The following units are located at 105 Indianola Eureka, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immediately following the sale of the above units. William Bowden, Unit # 423 Sabrina Kinsey, Unit # 441 Mattheww Schnell, Unit # 486 Items to be sold include, but are


not limited to: Household furniture, office equipment, household appliances, exercise equipment, TVs, VCR, microwave, bikes, books, misc. tools, misc. camping equipment, misc. stereo equip. misc. yard tools, misc. sports equipment, misc. kids toys, misc. fishing gear, misc. computer components, and misc. boxes and bags contents unknown. Purchases must be paid for at the time of the sale in cash only. Anyone interested in attending the auction must sign in at 4055 Broadway Eureka CA. prior to 9:00 A.M. on the day of the auction, no exceptions. All purchase items sold as is, where is and must be removed at time of sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between owner and obligated party. Auctioneer: Rainbow Self-Storage, 707-443-1451, Bond # 40083246. Dated this 6th day of September 2012 and 13th day of September 2012 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-250)

AMENDED NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE

This Notice Amends the NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE recorded on August 3, 2012 as Document No: 2012-020191-2, Official Records of Humboldt County. This Amendment is done to correct the sale date. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED AUGUST 8, 2005. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Notice is hereby given that on September 21, 2012 at 11:00 a.m. on the front steps of the Humboldt County Superior Court, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, County of Humboldt, State of California, James E. Reed, Trustee, whose street address is 43130 Highway 299 E, Fall River Mills, California 96028, and whose telephone number is (530) 336-5050, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the real property described below. The real property is located in the town of McKinleyville, California, County of Humboldt, State of California. It is commonly described as 1525 School Road, McKinleyville, CA 95519. The county assessor’s parcel number for the property is 511-443-013. The following is the legal description of the property: Lot 5 as shown on Tract No. 571, Larsen Subdivision, as shown on the Map thereof filed in Book 23 of Maps, Pages 119, 120, 121, and 122, Humboldt County Records. The sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession, or encumbrances to satisfy the obligations secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in that certain deed of trust dated August 8, 2005, executed by GERHARD LARSEN and CHRISTINE LARSEN, as Trustors, in which James Kenneth McKinney, an unmarried man as to an undivided 40% interest; Grant A. Brown and Carol A. Brown, husband and wife, as Joint Tenants as to an undivided 35%

interest and Mark A. Rasmussen, a single man, as to an undivided 25% interest, are named as Beneficiaries and Alliance Title Company, a California corporation is named as Trustee, and recorded on August 17, 2005, as Instrument Number 2005-27682-3, Official Records of Humboldt County, California. A Notice of Default, containing an election to sell the described real property under the above Deed of Trust was recorded on January 30, 2012 as Instrument No. 2012-2287-7, Official Records of Humboldt County, California. The following amounts represent the total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the above-described property to be sold and the estimate of costs, expenses and advances as of the time and of the initial publication of this notice of sale: Unpaid balance of obligation: $275,000.00 Unpaid Interest 38,500.00 Current Taxes Due 1,103.94 Defaulted Taxes 8,310.91 Costs: 736.00 Attorney’s Fees: 1535.00 ============= TOTAL AMOUNT: $ 325,185.85 The undersigned was appointed and substituted as Trustee under the above Deed of Trust by a substitution dated December 15, 2011 and recorded on January 30, 2012 as Instrument No. 2012-2286-4, Official Records of Humboldt, California. This notice is given in compliance with a written request made to the Trustee by the Beneficiary. Dated: August 7, 2012 /s JAMES E. REED, Trustee Filed: August 27, 2012, #2012-021690-3 County Clerk of Humboldt County CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-246)

AMENDED NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE

This Notice Amends the NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE recorded on August 3, 2012 as Document No: 2012-020193-3, Official Records of Humboldt County. This Amendment is done to correct the sale date. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED APRIL 4, 2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Notice is hereby given that on September 21, 2012 at 11:00 a.m. on the front steps of the Humboldt County Superior Court, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, County of Humboldt, State of California, James E. Reed, Trustee, whose street address is 43130 Highway 299 E, Fall River Mills, California 96028, and whose telephone number is (530) 336-5050, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the real property described below. The real property is located in the town of McKinleyville, California, County of Humboldt, State of California. It is commonly described as 1640 Rosebud Lane, McKinleyville,

California 95519. The county assessor’s parcel number for the property is: 509-240-043-000. The following is the legal description of the property: DESCRIPTION: That real property situated in the County of Humboldt, State of California, described as follows: PARCEL ONE: Parcel 2 of Parcel Map No. 3366 as per Map recorded in Book 32, Pages 70 and 71 of Parcel Maps, Humboldt County Records. PARCEL TWO: A non-exclusive easement for ingress, egress and public utility purposes over, under and across those portions of Parcels 1 and 3 of said Parcel Map No. 3366 which lie within Parcel “F”, (Rosebud Lane). PARCEL THREE: A non-exclusive easement for storm drainage purposes over, under and across those portions of Parcels 1 and 3 of said Parcel Map No. 3366 lying within Parcel “E” as shown on said Parcel Map No. 3366. PARCEL FOUR: A non-exclusive easement for pedestrian access purposes over and across that portion of Parcel 1 of said Parcel Map No. 3366 lying within Parcel “G” as shown on said Parcel Map No. 3366. The sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession, or encumbrances to satisfy the obligations secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in that certain deed of trust dated April 4, 2006, executed by PACIFIC SUNSET DEVELOPMENT, LLC, A California Limited Liability Company, as Trustor, in which JESSIE J. SMITH, an unmarried man as to an undivided 30% interest; JAMES L. REAMS and JUDITH REAMS, husband and wife, as Joint Tenants, as to an undivided 30% interest; FRANK BROWN and ANN BROWN, as Trustees of The Brown Family Trust, Dated 5/28/2004 as to an undivided 15% interest and MYRLE LEMA and PEGGY LEMA, Trustees of the Lema Family Trust, Dated July 28, 1992 as to an undivided 25% interest, are named as Beneficiaries and Alliance Title Company, a California corporation is named as Trustee, and recorded on April 27, 2006, as instrument Number 2006-12354-4, Official Records of Humboldt County, California. A Notice of Default, containing an election to sell the described real property under the above Deed of Trust was recorded on January 30, 2012 as Instrument No. 2012-2289-7, Official Records of Humboldt County, California. The following amounts represent the total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the above-described property to be sold and the estimate of costs, expenses and advances as of the time and of the initial publication of this notice of sale: Unpaid balance of obligation: $385,000.00 Unpaid Interest 53,900.00 Unpaid and Defaulted Taxes 29,567.89 Costs: 1028.66 Attorney’s Fees: 1340.00 ============= TOTAL AMOUNT: $ 470,836-55

continued on page 43

Field notes

Mars reconnaissance orbiter photograph of the eroded Mesa known as the “face on Mars” after the Viking 1 orbiter 1976 iMage (below). at three-foot spatial resolution, the 2007 Mro iMage is 100 tiMes More detailed than the Viking photo. photo courtesy of nasa

Occam’s Razor and the Face on Mars By Barry Evans

fieldnotes@northcoastjournal.com

T

he story goes that the greatest philosopher of his day, William of Occam (1285-1349) invented the Law of Parsimony, which has come down to us as the principle of “Occam’s Razor.” Roughly put, it says that when you’re trying to explain anything, you should “shave away” unnecessary premises, making no more assumptions than are strictly needed. Although credited to this Franciscan friar, the principle had already been around for centuries before Occam. For instance, the second century Egyptian mathematician Ptolemy wrote, “We consider it a good principle to explain phenomena by the simplest hypotheses possible.” Still, today, Occam’s Razor it is. So in practice, if I told you that sometimes when I let go of a ball it went up, not down, the principle might suggest to you that natural laws were involved — perhaps the ball was attached to an elastic string, or I was underwater, or I was lying — rather than bringing in some additional assumption (involving, perhaps, an antigravity device). Keeping with our recent Martian theme, to celebrate the start of Curiosity’s mission in Gale Crater, let’s look at how Occam’s Razor might approach the notorious “Face on Mars.” How did it get there? Who carved it? Is it evidence of a now defunct civilization on the Red Planet? When the two Viking landers touched down on the surface of Mars in the summer of 1976, they left their parent spacecraft orbiting the planet. In addition to functioning as relay stations for the landers’ signals, the orbiters mapped the surface of Mars in some detail. One photograph, taken over a region known

as Cydonia, shows a mile-wide sphinxlike face. It’s pretty crude, which is not surprising, considering the resolution of the Viking photos was only about 300 feet. The left side of the face is in shadow, but the right eye socket, mouth and chin are quite discernible. A slightly flattened nose with a nostril right where it should be completes the picture. If that isn’t an ancient relic of a giant human face on the surface of Mars, then what is it? Occam’s Razor might prompt us to surmise that it might be a natural geological formation. And indeed, later photographs have confirmed that it’s a wind-eroded hill, similar to many other wind-eroded hills in Cydonia, only sculpted a little differently in a way that suggests a face. We humans are pattern seekers. We’re good at finding meaning in random shapes. We’ve all seen animals in the clouds, castles in glowing coals, and a man (or rabbit, if you happen to be from Japan) in the moon. Given the vast and varied terrain photographed by the Viking orbiters, it would have been surprising if evocative patterns hadn’t been found. Oh yes, and that dot, exactly where you’d expect to find a right nostril? It’s a transmission error caused by telemetry noise. You can find many more of them in the same photo. Natural feature or alienmade sculpture? Wind-eroded hill or huge face carved by ancient Martians? I don’t think William of Occam would have had a problem with this one. How about you? l Barry Evans (barryevans9@yahoo. com) still can’t see the rabbit in the moon. Camel, yes. Rabbit, never. His Field Notes compendia are at Eureka Books and Northtown Books.

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, SEPT. 6, 2012

41


PROPERTY TAX DEFAULT (DELINQUENT) LIST

Made pursuant to Section 3371, Revenue and Taxation Code

I, John Bartholomew, Humboldt County Tax Collector, State of California, certify that: The real properties listed below were declared to be in tax default at 12:01 a.m. on July 1, 2009, by operation of law pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code Section 3436. The declaration of default was due to non-payment of the total amount due for the taxes, assessments and other charges levied in the fiscal year 2008-2009 that were a lien on the listed real property. Tax-defaulted real property may be redeemed by payment of all unpaid taxes and assessments, together with the additional penalties and fees, as prescribed by law, or it may be redeemed under an installment plan of redemption. The amount to redeem, including all penalties and fees, as of September, 2012, is shown opposite the assessment number and next to the name of the assessee. All information concerning redemption of tax-defaulted property will be furnished, upon request, by John Bartholomew, Humboldt County Tax Collector, 825 Fifth Street, Room 125, Eureka, California 95501 (707) 476-2450.

PARCEL NUMBERING SYSTEM EXPLANATION The Assessor’s Parcel/Assessment Number (APN/ASMT), when used to describe property in this list, refers to the assessor’s map book, the map page, the block on the map (if applicable), and the individual parcel on the map page or in the block. The assessor’s maps and further explanation of the parcel numbering system are available in the assessor’s office. Property tax defaulted on June 30, 2009 for the taxes, assessments and other charges for the fiscal year 2008-2009: Assessor’s Assessment No 525-281-012-000 405-271-014-000 110-071-008-000 305-271-051-000 216-382-060-000 109-101-025-000 111-031-014-000 110-071-019-000 400-153-004-000 507-091-021-000 109-121-018-000 111-071-055-000 520-084-013-000 077-232-010-000 201-252-001-000 108-133-019-000 109-281-020-000 053-153-008-000 053-162-006-000 053-103-021-000 220-082-007-501 109-362-036-000 109-362-037-000 032-171-015-000 109-183-017-000 109-183-018-000 111-012-002-000 004-015-004-000 201-031-013-000 109-281-037-000 109-321-004-000 109-331-038-000 203-383-019-000 031-181-006-000 005-074-005-000 216-081-004-000

Amount to redeem Achamire Eva M C/Achamire Homer D/Cotton An$ 3,341.43 thony W/Cotton Russell E Ackles Richard $3,413.95 Acojedo Rogelio P $1,821.40 Andersen David R & Cheryl $326.18 Anderson Mark A $2,564.70 Antonelli Mattie F C $1,810.43 Applegate Paul A $2,991.80 Arthur Christopher H $1,301.05 Arzner Judy M $2,541.07 Backman Mark W & Susan L $3,044.01 Bailey Thomas A $1,927.45 Baker Dena H $1,655.15 Baker Rodney A $1,170.60 Banning Matthew/Downie Sarah $23,301.28 Barcelos Tracie M $2,304.28 Barker Hans $6,796.45 Barnes Claire $2,581.10 Barnett Michael L $6,620.04 Barnett Michael L $1,088.01 Barnett Michael L $10,193.03 Beecham Larry $3,117.53 50% undivided interest share of 220-082-007-000 Berger Annemarie Estate Of $7,986.22 Berger Annemarie Estate Of $8,597.89 Best Buy Containers LLC Cr $1,643.32 Birchfield Bill & Billie Jo/Birchfield Julie A $1,834.09 Birchfield Bill & Billie Jo/Birchfield Julie A $1,834.09 Bleuler Barbara G Tr $2,157.57 Bonnet Joyce M $20,894.93 Borges Michael & Kelly $4,036.25 Bourikian Robert & Varakian Nona $1,766.54 Bourikian Robert & Varakian Nona $1,674.80 Bourikian Robert & Varakian Nona $1,773.10 Boyd Perry & Jewel $1,712.47 Branstetter Dennis & Steve & Terri $5,596.89 Briggs Janice L & Michelle M $1,719.15 Buck Mountain Ranch Limited Partnership Lp $139.80 Assessee’s Name

Assessor’s Assessment No 216-134-001-000 216-135-005-000 223-072-006-000 223-073-004-000 223-073-005-000 223-074-001-000 109-341-035-000 109-341-034-000 109-311-002-000 109-362-007-000 510-231-035-000 040-263-017-000 109-301-028-000 404-031-005-000 111-061-020-000 522-301-005-000 220-312-032-000 300-052-002-000 110-021-058-000 111-061-019-000 526-062-050-000 531-074-011-000 303-063-010-000 110-261-039-000 519-301-015-000 009-071-004-000 525-291-008-000 110-051-009-000 110-201-022-000 109-041-023-000 109-211-036-000 110-281-017-000 002-082-001-000 002-231-004-000 506-051-003-000 506-061-026-000 506-061-027-000 506-112-006-000 506-121-001-000 100-284-011-000 210-141-013-000 004-023-005-000 110-021-002-000 203-092-053-000 210-192-017-000 031-171-046-000 515-331-033-000 025-083-016-000 510-231-029-000 510-081-024-000 021-072-010-000 503-143-016-000 052-091-002-000 200-411-059-000 211-622-005-000 214-021-005-000 220-291-002-000 104-112-002-000 109-211-033-000 529-361-010-000 002-061-003-000 507-092-021-000 111-112-007-000 110-231-038-000 109-362-004-000 053-141-037-000 013-044-008-000 306-012-001-000 001-047-008-000 110-071-002-000 111-051-019-000 529-361-029-000 529-361-030-000

42 North Coast Journal • Thursday, SEPT. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

Assessee’s Name Buck Mountain Ranch Limited Partnership Lp Buck Mountain Ranch Limited Partnership Lp Buck Mountain Ranch Limited Partnership Lp Buck Mountain Ranch Limited Partnership Lp Buck Mountain Ranch Limited Partnership Lp Buck Mountain Ranch Limited Partnership Lp Bukovsky Martin EJ & Mellie A Bukovsky Martin E J & Mellie/Morgan Melinda Bukovsky Martin E J Pt/Bukovsky Mellie A Pt Morgan Melinda Pt Busters Ventures III LLC Co Byrd Michael L C G Metzger Development Co Inc Cr Cerstelotte Eddy Mertens Celestine M C Chapman Dallas G Chissie Michael & Elizabeth A Christie Kevin L Cleaves Cameron L/ McMonigal Mark/Streichsbier Cathy Jo/Millard Esteban S & Nellie Cloninger Heidi L Coastal Covers II Inc Coastal Covers II Inc Colegrove Everett Const Colegrove Everett H & Marjorie H Conlee May B Cook Cassandra M Cook David L Suc Tr Cordero Richard K/Cordero Steven R Cordova Gilbert & Genevieve Cortazar James/Bejarano Basty/ Cortazar Vincent/ Cruz Brenda Crews Calvin F/Crews Robert L/ Crews John T/ Crews William C CS Paradiso Holdings LLC Co CS Paradiso Holdings LLC Co CS Paradiso Holdings LLC Co Cue E V LLC Cue E V LLC Cue IV LLC Cue IV LLC Cue IV LLC Cue IV LLC Cue IV LLC Curran Elizabeth D’Adami Caitlin Day Lindsay & Rebecca Dean Paul Dick Eugene F & Bonnie S Dillard Jeffrey Dixon Shannon & Ashley Dodd Jesse Dorvall Rocky L & Judy A Eanni Jo E Eanni Joemma Eckart Robert K Eckart Robert K Egan Athena L Ehrhardt Brent & Kelly Eib Gerald R Enzenbacher Dennis J Fair Anthony Fielder Dale V & Carol J Fink Maureen Floria-Gale Beth E Flower Robert A Floyd Randall C & Pamela A Forsberg Ruby C Foster Nicholas S Tr Foxy Avenue Clips Inc Foyster Barry F Um Rem/ Foyster Brian F LE Fredlund Cissie G Freitas Michael & Lynnette/ Gill Denise Fulton Ronald & Lilly Carolyn F Funesto Lamberto & Georgia Gabinay Elmer H & Angelynne S Gale Beth Gale Beth

Amount to redeem $20,179.04 $1,815.47 $437.29 $271.67 $341.70 $248.97 $1,832.03 $1,907.50 $1,913.36

Assessor’s Assessment No 006-311-009-000 110-211-036-000 110-211-037-000 215-172-005-000 006-073-028-000

$10,058.07 $3,225.85 $3,010.83 $287.39

214-041-006-000 109-241-018-000 109-311-047-000 110-151-014-000 110-181-017-000 110-211-032-000 204-291-011-000 109-171-017-000 534-193-007-000 021-117-009-000 111-112-006-000 002-231-003-000 109-261-031-000 514-021-008-000 109-362-028-000 025-074-002-000 401-011-020-000 401-021-028-000 033-011-018-000 033-011-019-000 033-311-005-000 214-253-002-000 214-254-002-000 300-041-014-000 095-081-022-000 302-071-090-000 111-241-051-000 011-183-012-000 081-021-001-000 110-121-007-000 216-133-010-000 014-252-004-000 109-292-050-000 109-292-051-000 215-202-015-000 315-262-003-000 315-271-008-000 016-222-011-000 203-382-012-000 316-191-017-000 109-331-029-000 016-172-003-000 515-121-045-000 215-241-044-000 212-162-015-000 040-174-027-000 013-152-041-000 021-281-005-000 534-182-017-000

$576.03 $4,287.98 $3,616.73 $12,700.20 $6,384.97 $3,589.62 $20,558.42 $246.33 $1,518.35 $2,074.23 $1,897.24 $724.27 $1,471.70 $4,334.58 $4,272.86 $1,861.42 $2,253.24 $1,786.05 $2,188.31 $8,286.32 $4,034.39 $1,146.20 $711.81 $391.73 $4,273.64 $5,687.58 $2,404.40 $1,900.98 $4,588.00 $1,399.59 $3,067.29 $7,186.11 $17,122.86 $3,639.10 $2,851.57 $4,461.93 $2,966.50 $6,890.25 $4,860.77 $3,378.15 $13,121.01 $3,734.55 $4,712.00 $24,671.78 $406.45 $1,816.13 $8,209.02 $143.25 $6,047.23 $1,768.46 $1,570.93 $6,277.75 $380.35 $2,882.03 $880.42 $1,910.13 $963.00 $3,711.69 $359.95 $9,261.26

108-133-014-000 003-131-017-000 205-011-001-000

004-105-015-000 053-212-003-000 503-381-005-000 100-141-003-000 110-291-007-000 111-241-033-000 525-261-007-000 221-221-014-000 221-221-019-000 221-211-027-000 307-121-054-000 208-321-003-000 208-321-004-000 208-321-006-000 204-381-029-000 109-192-041-000 077-163-015-000 529-032-030-000

Assessee’s Name Gauvaln Gwendolyn D Gibbs Benjamin E S & Carpenter Seth O Gibbs Benjamin E S & Carpenter Seth O Glover David Gomez Ana M & Lyda Kathee/ FDR Family Living TR FBO/ L&M Family Living TR FBO Gray Terry L Gregg Kenneth W & Trudy L Haberstock Craig R & Haberstock Raymond G & Annette A Hagler Arlo/Hagler Angela M/ Hagler George S Haifa Iyad A Hakimzadeh Debora Hakimzadeh Debora Hakimzadeh Debora Hakimzadeh Debora Hall Roger D & Peggy L Hargrove Wade Hart Lani A & Kelley Richard N Heath Cheryl Hirst William L Jr Hollenbeck Shelley M Holmes Leslie J Hopkins Kathryn & Lyall Pamela J Hudson Carolyn K Tr Hudson Diana L Humboldt Sunshine Inc Cr Humboldt Sunshine Inc Cr Hurd Pearl Hurd Pearl Hurd Pearl Ingram Debrielle J Ingram Debrielle J Jacobsen Michael R & Darlene H Jenkins Danielle Johnson Betty L Tr Joseph Laurie A Joyce Sandra Keener Jill Kelly Monica Kercher Sterling & Sandra / Caballero Kevin R Kessler Richard Tr/Parent Andrew FBO King Donald J & Sandra J King Donald J & Sandra J Kinser Jess Sr & Marjorie B/Kinser Jess B Jr Living Trust Klein Richard M Klein Richard M Kneaper Mark A & Linnea M Tr Knight Barry W Suc Tr Koehler Drew T Koehler Richard D III Kroemer Andreas Lacourt Anne G Lander Mark Layman John E Leonardo Tony & Janice Leslie Paul & Heidi Levine Zachary Lincoln Charlene A/Abbott Clyde W/Abbott Aaron L/ Abbott Charles W Jr Lopez Roberto Lu Tian Y Lund-Valdez Lisa Tr Machado Ron A Malinowski William W Manares Antonio C & Medelita O Marshall Jacquelyne J McCrady Susan O McCrady Susan O McCrady Susan O McGuiness Robert & Chomicki-McGuiness Jewel McGuiness Robert G McGuiness Robert G McGuiness Robert G McKay Peter H & Sandra L McLean John Meacham Steven L & Nancy J Tr Meade Dennis

Amount to redeem $2,000.43 $1,838.64 $1,838.64 $6,896.92 $14,454.12 $10,481.85 $13,254.27 $10,433.86 $2,887.75 $2,201.68 $2,057.18 $1,928.75 $2,108.56 $1,706.59 $2,504.35 $2,225.82 $9,273.10 $2,970.67 $1,774.73 $6,602.91 $2,103.65 $253.95 $1,499.82 $23,621.20 $2,952.08 $5,289.28 $1,113.72 $1,804.95 $1,794.41 $3,166.04 $1,640.79 $2,766.87 $1,563.06 $516.70 $3,013.20 $612.21 $1,652.52 $2,671.46 $2,968.62 $6,162.74 $1,981.46 $2,525.62 $1,809.92 $887.94 $375.56 $30,954.19 $7,330.59 $14,348.43 $1,401.01 $4,053.74 $7,301.59 $3,780.35 $2,079.64 $6,380.37 $6,728.37 $10,277.96 $1,557.18 $7,122.05 $77.15 $6,279.82 $14,483.42 $14,468.88 $3,820.22 $1,258.74 $1,083.56 $2,375.10 $5,716.69 $29,035.74 $3,414.92 $4,830.90 $4,622.16 $12,395.25 $1,369.41 $4,553.99 $3,051.10


Assessor’s Assessment No 109-101-021-000 217-381-014-000 511-342-004-000 505-322-001-000 109-071-002-000 209-152-002-000 109-211-013-000 306-111-007-000 105-162-003-000 306-292-004-000 009-133-008-000 109-341-022-000 005-022-007-000 310-082-001-000 310-083-003-000 310-083-006-000 310-084-001-000 310-084-002-000 309-161-002-000 310-051-009-000 109-241-041-000 208-231-003-000 217-251-003-000 522-511-013-000 509-132-004-000 306-102-011-000 109-281-006-000 301-082-055-000 508-331-010-000 108-132-020-000 223-231-004-000 031-151-006-000 108-022-002-000 108-064-006-000 509-162-023-000 109-341-027-000 109-141-022-000 201-112-005-000 203-051-039-000 203-051-044-000 110-291-024-000 110-151-005-000 309-221-003-000 309-221-005-000 211-363-007-000 211-371-009-000 309-151-002-000 309-161-001-000 310-011-003-000 508-242-011-000 109-182-041-000 522-121-015-000 111-052-050-000 109-061-012-000 109-061-014-000 110-281-023-000 221-061-032-000 104-191-005-000 516-131-018-000 109-051-002-000 033-140-005-000 530-081-012-000 223-072-002-000 010-281-024-000 017-012-017-000 001-102-005-000 031-192-013-000 008-144-017-000 215-181-015-000 215-181-019-000 106-111-012-000 108-221-004-000 306-026-011-000 204-312-003-000

Assessee’s Name Miers Robert E Milligan William J Montgomery Roger Moreno Pixie W R Morrison Peter Mosolf Terence & Dalton Elizabeth J Munro Raymond Nasca Phillip R Neikirk Jonathan O Nelson Donald O Nelson Raymond S & Holly L Nguyen Anh & Dinh Niekrasz-Laurent Virginia L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Oblena Leolin D Oliver David III Oliver Jessi ONeill William J Tr Pallin Manuel A & Irene Parker Mildred A Parrish Bishop P 3rd Parsons Thomas & Machado Ashley Pergens Andre L F & Karen B Pergens Karen B Pergens Karen B Perkins Kim Peterson Maurice Jr Peterson Maurice Jr Phillips Melissa E Pirzadeh Dara Porreca Paul V Premo Francine Etal/Premo Diana/Premo Cheryl J/ Premo Cyndi L/Premo Marchelle/ Premo Marlena A R & T Black Development Pt R & T Black Development Pt/ Gess Cathy L & Jerry J/ Poletski Richard A & Dama Rezapour Gassem Rezapour Gassem & Arellano-Raith Jennie V Rice Joe & Jill Rice Joe & Jill Rice Joe C & Jill R Rice Joe C & Jill R Rice Joe C & Jill R Rice Joe C & Jill R Rice Joe C & Jill R Riley Patricia/Ohanen Patricia J Rillamas Carl D & Brenda A Rinesmith Myrna S/Snyder Gladys M Roberts Lynn E Roberts Lynn E & Sylvia A Roberts Lynn E & Sylvia A Roberts Mike Roediger Tim R Rose Coreen K Roth Padre & Carrie Sakata Michael D Tr/ Sakata Mildred M Tr Sanders Joshua W Sanderson Roger/Frye-Free Vina Adkins Patricia/ Knight Rachel/ Henderson Lauretta/Frye Muriel Carlson Margaret/Martin Donna Frye(Hunsucker) Patricia Santaella Sherri L Schrack Heidi A Scott John Security National Offices LLC Shaha Gregory Shelley Tim E & Connie J Shiningstar Tara Shiningstar Tara Shultz Calvin C & Smith Lori A Co Tr Smalley Gene H/Smalley Steven P/Doyle Sandra C Smith Shawlyn E/Flannery Richard A Spears Therese L

Amount to redeem $1,719.13 $2,421.27 $1,907.42 $1,552.40 $1,196.21 $4,039.54 $2,005.36 $2,095.95 $1,572.99 $2,411.41 $6,447.10 $2,011.00 $1,667.82 $278.92 $185.34 $332.60 $303.13 $303.13 $5,235.58 $2,115.60 $3,503.01 $5,282.99 $4,946.35 $19,346.60 $2,451.06 $765.45 $1,708.38 $1,758.44 $4,721.96 $15,658.19 $11,092.80 $5,254.54 $5,853.14 $377.37 $4,410.07 $2,244.32 $2,635.11 $2,414.87 $4,814.81 $4,486.66 $2,429.05 $2,246.46 $781.07 $108.66 $381.94 $11,455.96 $354.48 $237.18 $2,551.88 $3,993.10 $2,389.69 $3,955.64 $6,039.51 $2,013.20 $2,013.20 $2,562.97 $2,984.97 $12,256.83 $12,661.29 $1,810.43 $9,872.72 $584.89 $12,017.14 $21,323.88 $6,256.87 $9,987.74 $84.70 $239.42 $3,071.07 $11,562.90 $10,536.97 $21,698.65 $11,273.22 $2,918.57

Assessor’s Assessment No 002-063-005-000 001-066-002-000 001-066-003-000 005-053-006-000 305-271-007-000 111-112-013-000 111-161-014-000 111-161-049-000 004-233-010-000 004-233-011-000 006-312-008-000 221-091-021-000 025-091-020-000 008-143-015-000 200-083-010-000 006-073-007-000 010-281-027-000 010-281-029-000 033-170-026-000 002-132-008-000 221-181-028-000 205-031-061-000 205-071-039-000 109-193-011-000 210-191-011-000 021-263-002-000 004-144-011-000 511-182-006-000 109-131-048-000 510-101-065-000 216-252-003-000 216-261-058-000 216-252-001-000 216-252-004-000 216-271-020-000 109-211-017-000 305-101-020-000

Amount to redeem $6,908.23 $9,241.04 $2,235.58 $11,625.00 $11,034.40 $3,810.43 $1,297.45 $1,681.92 $13,524.02 $9,448.44 $2,554.03 $7,107.39 $5,491.48 $3,111.62 $4,964.10 $968.08 $3,047.95 $2,867.44 $15,067.76 $184,406.22 $7,050.84 $16,859.07 $26,708.23 $3,122.62 $3,352.43 $1,276.49 $2,110.47 $4,862.28 $2,052.61 $21,604.23 $1,038.81 $3,253.93 $1,878.66 $1,473.41 $11,439.43 $1,870.38 $868.25

Assessee’s Name Squires Floyd E III & Betty J Squires Floyd E III & Betty J Squires Floyd E III & Betty J Squires Floyd E III & Betty J St John Lisa D Stack Paul W & Elenita Stanley Carwin T Stanley Carwin T Stevens James & Margaret Stevens James & Margaret Stevens Lois A Stone Alishia & Leach Joseph W B Supko Eugene N Thomas Corinne E Tr Tillinghast Michael A & Jill A/ Tillinghast Eric T Tomlinson Glennda F Tornroth Genevieve M & Cedeno Betty A Tornroth Genevieve M & Cedeno Betty A Trabue Trevor United Property Holdings LLC United States Of America United States Of America Pl United States Of America Pl Valerio Kevin Vance Robert Webster Terry L & Brenda S White Jennefer L A & Horridge Jarod W Williams Greg & Rust Garry Williamson Peter Woodard Karon Wyatt Dale & Venus Wyatt Dale L & Venus Wyatt Dale Wyatt Dale Wyatt Echo K Zandi Abrahim Zeck Kristen M

I certify or (declare), under penalty of perjury, that the foregoing is true and correct.

John Bartholomew Humboldt County Tax Collector Executed at Eureka, Humboldt County, California, on August 24, 2012. Published in the North Coast Journal on August 30th, September 6th, and September 13th, 2012. 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-244)

?

Did you know

Your fictitious business name statement

will expire five years from the date it was last filed with the County Clerk. You have 40 days from the expiration date to renew your FBNS with the County. A new statement does not need to be published unless there has been a change in the information required in the expired statement. If any changes occur then you must file a new FBNS and have published again. Within 30 days from the stamped refiling date, you must begin publishing the statement in the newspaper. If you publish it in the North Coast Journal for the required four weeks, on the last day of publication a “proof of publication” will be sent to the County Clerk to complete the filing process. The cost for running your ficticious business name in the North Coast Journal is a flat $50 fee.

(707)

442-1400

continued from page 41. The undersigned was appointed and substituted as Trustee under the above Deed of Trust by a substitution recorded on January 30, 2012 as Instrument No. 2012-2288-6, Official Records of Humboldt County, California. This notice is given in compliance with a written request made to the Trustee by the Beneficiary. Dated: August 7, 2012 /s JAMES E. REED, Trustee Filed: August 27, 2012, #2012-021692-4 County Clerk of Humboldt County CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-247)

AMENDED NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE

This Notice Amends the NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE recorded on August 3, 2012 as Document No: 2012-020192-3, Official Records of Humboldt County. This Amendment is done to correct the sale date. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED AUGUST 17, 2007. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Notice is hereby given that on September 21, 2012 at 11:00 a.m. on the front steps of the Humboldt County Superior Court, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, County of Humboldt, State of California, James E. Reed, Trustee, whose street address is 43130 Highway 299 E, Fall River Mills, California 96028, and whose telephone number is (530) 336-5050, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the real property described below. The real property is located in the town of McKinleyville, California, County of Humboldt, State of California. It is commonly described as Allie Court Subdivision. The county assessor’s parcel numbers for the property are 511-431-064-000; 511-431-065-000; 511-431-066-000; 511-431-067-000; 511-431-068-000; 511-431-069-000; 511-431-071-000; 511-431-072-000; 511431-073-000. The following is the legal description of the property: DESCRIPTION: That real property situated in the County of Humboldt, State of California, described as follows: Those portions of the Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 30, Township 7 North, Range 1 East, Humboldt Meridian, described as follows: PARCEL ONE: BEGINNING at the Southeast corner of said Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter;

thence North along the quarter section line 419.77 feet to the true point of the beginning; thence North along the quarter section line 272.25 feet; thence West parallel with the South line of said Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter 320 feet; thence South parallel with the quarter section line 272.25 feet; thence East parallel with the South line of said Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter 320 feet to the true point of beginning. PARCEL TWO: A non-exclusive easement for ingress and egress and public utility purposes over a strip of land 20 feet in width, the East line of which is described as follows: BEGINNING at the Southeast corner of Parcel One; thence South along the quarter section line 419.77 feet. PARCEL THREE: The easements reserved in the Partial Reconveyances recorded March 22, 2010 as Instrument No. 2010-5928-3, Humboldt County Records, and recorded March 22, 2010 as Instrument No. 2010-5931-3, Humboldt County Records, and the easement granted to Pacific Sunset Development, LLC, a California Limited Liability Company, by Deed recorded September 30, 2009 as instrument No. 2009-21917-7, Humboldt County Records. EXCEPTING therefrom Lot 1 of Tract No. 617, Silver Creek Estates Subdivision as per Map recorded in Book 24 of Maps, Pages 102, 103, and 104 Humboldt County Records, as released by partial Reconveyance recorded March 22, 2010 as Instrument No. 2010-5928-3, Humboldt County Records. ALSO EXCEPTING therefrom Lot 8 of Tract No. 617, Silver Creek Estates Subdivision as per Map recorded in Book 24 of Maps, Pages 102, 103, and 104, Humboldt County Records, as released by Partial Reconveyance recorded March 22, 2010 as Instrument No. 2010-5931-3, Humboldt County Records. The sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession, or encumbrances to satisfy the obligations secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in that certain deed of trust dated August 17, 2007, executed by PACIFIC SUNSET DEVELOPMENT, LLC, A California Limited Liability Company, as Trustor, in which Russell C. Hawkins and Helen K. Hawkins, husband and wife, as Joint Tenants as to an undivided 50% interest; Terry Ronald Lindblad and Deborah Annette Lindblad, husband and wife,

legal NOTICES ➤ continued on next page

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, SEPT. 6, 2012

43


/s Sherry Vanderpool. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 27, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00519

continued from previous page.

©2011 DAVID LEVINSON WILK

CROSSWORD By David Levinson Wilk

9/6, 9/13, 9/20, 9/27/2012 (12-249)

ANSWERS NEXT WEEK! ACROSS

documentary) 25. Fool (around) 27. Rarely, literally 31. Slangy denials 34. Was willing 35. Car loan figs. 36. Abu ____ 38. Lustful look 39. Less regular 41. Barq’s competitor 42. Stereotypically rural, literally 45. Boozehound 46. Tierra ____ Fuego 47. Crunched muscles 50. Tony-winning Tyne

51. G or R issuer: Abbr. 53. Orange or olive 54. Org. with a pair of gloves in its logo 55. Make a recommendation, literally 58. Sam Adams product 59. Absent from 60. It takes a bow in an orchestra 61. Sea, in Paris 62. Bay State sch. 63. Lumberjacks

DOWN

24. Roker and Sharpton 25. 251, to Cicero 26. Leased 27. Retailer that owns Geek Squad 28. Joan ____ 29. Tornado Alley state: Abbr. 30. Scand. country 31. Org. that included the New York Cosmos 32. Like a chimp’s thumbs 33. Woods, e.g. 36. Extreme 37. Brooding type? 40. NBA pauses 41. Feel sick 43. Gets used (to)

44. Sweetheart 47. Woolf’s “____ of One’s Own” 48. “Mr. Television” 49. Coupe alternative 50. Geom. measure 51. Manny with 150 career pinch hits 52. Droids, e.g. 53. “Two for me, none for you” sloganeer 55. Serengeti herd member 56. ____-pah-pah 57. New Deal inits.

1. See 6-Across 6. With 1-Across, “Rosebud” is her Secret Service code name 11. Outcomes of some QB sneaks 14. Doctor’s orders 15. Chaim Potok’s “My Name is ____ Lev” 16. Color 17. “Just doing my job,” literally 19. “Treasure Island” monogram 20. “____ Tu” (1974 hit) 21. 1997 Peter Fonda title role 22. Rogers and Lichtenstein 23. They’re right in front of U 24. “Facing ____” (2009 sports 1. More peculiar 2. Swine with tusks 3. Up to this point 4. Quagmire 5. Sick ____ dog 6. ____ Mae 7. “Even ____ speak ...” 8. Flat, e.g. 9. That woman 10. Animal shelter? 11. Opposite of slam shut 12. “Gotcha,” formally 13. Mtg. 18. Doozy 22. “Star Trek” baddie

EASY #14

www.sudoku.com

Solution, tips and computer program at

LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS

44 North Coast Journal • Thursday, SEPT. 6, 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

as Joint Tenants as to an undivided 20% interest, Joaquin Cruz, a married man as his sole and separate property as to an undivided 10% interest Peter Brousseau, Surviving Trustee of the Peter Brousseau Family Trust dated May 14, 1993 as to an undivided 10% interest and Lorale Tollett, an unmarried woman as to an undivided 10% interest, are named as Beneficiaries and Alliance Title Company, a California Corporation is named as Trustee, and recorded on August 27, 2007, as Instrument Number 2007-254524, Offical Records of Humboldt County, California. A Notice of Default, containing an election to sell the described real property under the above Deed of Trust was recorded on March 19, 2012 as Instrument No. 2012-6869-13, Official Records of Humboldt County, California. The following amounts represent the total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the above-described property to be sold and the estimate of costs, expenses and advances as of the time and of the initial publication of this notice of sale: Unpaid balance of obligation: $747,940.00 Unpaid Interest 94,500.00 Unpaid and Defaulted Taxes 17,517.80 Costs: 1370.66 Attorney’s Fees: 1934.93 ============= TOTAL AMOUNT: $ 863,263.39 The undersigned was appointed and substituted as Trustee under the above Deed of Trust by a substitution dated 12/8/2011 and recorded on March 19, 2012 as Instrument No. 2012-6868-10, Official Records of Humboldt County, California. This notice is given in compliance with a written request made to the Trustee by the Beneficiary. Dated: August 7, 2012 /s JAMES E. REED, Trustee Filed: August 27, 2012, #2012-021691-4 County Clerk of Humboldt County CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-248)

SUMMONS

CASE NUMBER: DR120197 NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: ROLAND BRAY YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: DALILA MORALES-JACOBS, AND ERIC JACOBS Notice! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have

a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo. ca.gov/selfhelp), your county law library, or the courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may want to call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and cost on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. SUPERIOR COURT OF HUMBOLDT COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 825 5TH STREET EUREKA, CA 95501 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF JAMES A. ZITO, ESQ., SB 96272 LAW OFFICE OF JAMES A. ZITO 611 L STREET, SUITE A EUREKA, CA 95501 707-269-0743 Dated: March 28, 2012 Clerk, by Jodie W., Deputy NOTICE TO THE PERSON SERVED: You are served as an individual defendant Filed: March 28, 2012, Superior Court of Humboldt County, California 8/30, 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/2012 (12-242)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00510

The following person is doing business as HUMBOLDT HOMEMADE MEALS, THE LIGHTHOUSE GRILL at 355 Main Street, Trinidad, CA 95570, P.O. Box 902, Trinidad, CA 95570. Sherry Vanderpool 707 Underwood Drive Trinidad, CA 95570 The business is conducted by An Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on n/a.

The following person is doing business as BEDLINERS PLUS at 1326 Koster St., Eureka, CA 95501. Victor George Blanc 261 Summit View Lane Fortuna, CA 95540 The business is conducted by An Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on n/a. /s Victor George Blanc. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 30, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 9/6, 9/13, 9/20, 9/27/2012 (12-254)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00475

The following person is doing business BUCK MOUNTAIN EXPERIMENTAL STATION at 5136 Burr Valley Rd., Bridgeville, CA 95526 Melinda Stone 5136 Burr Valley Rd Bridgeville, CA. 95526 The business is conducted by An Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on n/a. /s/ Melinda Stone This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 9, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/30, 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/2012 (12-243)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00487

The following persons are doing business as THROWTEC at 1715 Stromberg Ave., Arcata, CA 95521. Edward Harvey 3455 Zelia Ct. Arcata, CA 95521 David Sinclair 1715 Stromberg Ave. Arcata, CA 95521 The business is conducted by A General Partnership. The registrants commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/14/2012. /s Edward Harvey. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 14, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/30, 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/2012 (12-241)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00497

The following person is doing business as I-DETAIL 101 at 448 Wildwood Ave., Rio Dell, CA 95562. Daniel J. Cardarelli 448 Wildwood Ave. Rio Dell, CA 95562 The business is conducted by An Individual.


The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/17/12. /s Daniel J. Cardarelli. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 17, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/30, 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/2012 (12-245)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00465

The following person is doing business REDWOOD MUSIKGARTEN at 1735 Mygina Ave., McKinleyville, CA 95519 Anna Pinsky 1735 Mygina Ave. McKinleyville, CA. 95519 The business is conducted by An Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 6/1/2012. /s/ Anna Pinsky This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 6, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/23, 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-238)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00490

The following persons are doing business as PACIFIC MOTORSPORTS at 4001 Broadway, Eureka, CA 95503 Schneider Pacific Motorsports, Inc. 4001 Broadway Eureka, CA. 95503 The business is conducted by A Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on N/A. /s/ Veronica Sargent- Vice President This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 15, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/23, 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-235)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00492

The following person is doing business as BAYSIDE SCHOOLHOUSE at 2051 Old Arcata Road, Bayside, CA 95524 Scarlet Ibis 2051 Old Arcata Rd Bayside, CA. 95524 The business is conducted by An Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/14/2012. /s/ Scarlet Ibis This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 15, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/23, 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-236)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00473

The following person is doing business as CENTER FOR REFLEXOLOGY & INTUITIVE HEALING ARTS at 920 Samoa Blvd., #222, Arcata,

CA 95521. Alexandra L. Seymour 1860 11th St., Apt. A Arcata, CA 95521 The business is conducted by An Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/01/2002. /s Alexandra L. Seymour. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 8, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/16, 8/23, 8/30, 9/6/2012 (12-230)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 12-00478

The following person is doing business as CROSSFIT EUREKA at 3134 Jacobs Ave., Ste. B, Eureka, CA 95501. Meredith L. Launius P.O. Box 454 Eureka, CA 95502 3134 Jacobs Ave., Ste. B Eureka, CA 95501 The business is conducted by An Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on n/a. /s Meredith L. Launius. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on August 10, 2012. CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk 8/16, 8/23, 8/30, 9/6/2012 (12-232)

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV120532 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT 825 FIFTH STREET EUREKA, CA 95501

PETITION OF: SARA LOUISE CAMP TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: SARA LOUISE CAMP for a decree changing names as follows: Present name SARA LOUISE CAMP to Proposed Name SARA LOUISE CAMP SCHREMMER THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: October 10, 2012 Time: 1:45 p.m. The address of the court is: Same as noted above, Dept. 8 Date: August 24, 2012 Filed: August 27, 2012 /s/ DALE A. REINHOLTSEN Judge of the Superior Court 9/6, 9/13, 9/20, 9/27/2012 (12-255)

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV120501 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT 825 FIFTH STREET EUREKA, CA 95501

PETITION OF: MOLLY MC HENRY BERRY TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: MOLLY MC HENRY BERRY for a decree changing names as follows: Present name MOLLY MARY MC HENRY BERRY to Proposed Name MOLLY MC HENRY BERRY THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: September 21, 2012 Time: 1:45 p.m. The address of the court is: Same as noted above, Dept. 8 Date: August 6, 2012 Filed: August 6, 2012 /s/ DALE A. REINHOLTSEN Judge of the Superior Court 8/23, 8/30, 9/6, 9/13/2012 (12-240)

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV120502 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT 825 FIFTH STREET EUREKA, CA 95501

PETITION OF: PATRICIA LAI FOR KLAUS ARIEL LAI-LEVY (MINOR) TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: PATRICIA LAI for a decree changing names as follows: Present name KLAUS ARIEL LAI-LEVY to Proposed Name KLAUS ARIEL LAI THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: October 1, 2012 Time: 1:45 p.m. The address of the court is: Same as noted above, Dept. 8

Date: August 7, 2012 Filed: August 8, 2012 /s/ DALE A. REINHOLTSEN Judge of the Superior Court 8/16, 8/23, 8/30, 9/6/2012 (12-231)

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF LOIS MARIE ROGERS, ALSO KNOWN AS LOIS M. ROGERS CASE NO. PR120204

To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: LOIS MARIE ROGERS, also known as LOIS M. ROGERS A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by BRUCE R. McGILLIVRAY in the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that BRUCE R. McGILLIVRAY be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on October 4, 2012 at 1:50 p.m. at the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, in Dept. 8. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the deceased, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Probate Code Section 9100. The time for filing claims will not expire before four months from the hearing date noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER: CATHERINE M. KOSHKIN, ESQ. LAW OFFICES OF CATHERINE M. KOSHKIN 1116 ELEVENTH STREET ARCATA, CA 95521 (707) 822-2800 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT

AMENDED NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF STEPHEN L. GAN CASE NO. PR120197

To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: STEPHEN L. GAN, STEPHEN LEANDER GAN, STEPHEN GAN A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by JOHN PAUL GAN in the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that JOHN PAUL GAN be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on September 13, 2012 at 1:50 p.m. at the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, in Dept. 8. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the deceased, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Probate Code Section 9100. The time for filing claims will not expire before four months from the hearing date noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER: TIMOTHY J. WYKLE S.B.# 216943 MATHEWS, KLUCK, WALSH & WYKLE, LLP 100 M STREET EUREKA, CA 95501 (707) 442-3758 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT 8/23, 8/30, 9/6/2012 (12-234)

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF CRYSTAL C. GREENWELL, AKA CRYSTAL WATT CASE NO. PR120198

To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: CRYSTAL C. GREENWELL, aka CRYSTAL WATT A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by KATHERINE ROSE MARTIN in the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that KATHERINE ROSE MARTIN be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on September 13, 2012, at 1:50 p.m. at the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, in Dept. 8. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the deceased, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Probate Code Section 9100. The time for filing claims will not expire before four months from the hearing date noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER: JOHN R. STOKES S.B. # 67715 STOKES, HAMER, KAUFMAN & KIRK, LLP 381 BAYSIDE ROAD ARCATA, CA 95521 (707) 822-1771 AUGUST 13, 2012 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT 8/23, 8/30, 9/6/2012 (12-237)

9/6, 9/13, 9/20/2012 (12-252)

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, SEPT. 6, 2012

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Employment

Now Hiring:

14 W. Wabash Ave. Eureka, CA 268-1866 eurekaca.expresspros.com

Staff Accountant Full Charge Bookkeeper Certified Public Accountant Retail Store Manager Loan Officer

Northcoast Children’s Services

** Arcata Main Office **

PROGRAM ASSISTANT III

Perform data entry, program tracking, compile reports, maintain files & occasional front desk duties. Req 3 yrs office exp with 2 yrs computer exp & advanced clerical skills. Bilingual Spanish Required. Full-time (partial year, 2-4 wk lay-off): 40 hrs/wk (Mon–Fri, 8-4:30 pm); $10.07-$11.08/hr. Includes benefits. Application Deadline: September 21.

ASSISTANT CONTROLLER CORPORATE ACCOUNTING Dynamic international organization seeks to fill full-time, fully-benefitted position in Arcata The Assistant Controller – Corporate Accounting will supervise Corporate Accounting, including payroll. This position oversees the ongoing monitoring of transactions, analysis, and related internal controls using high-level technical accounting skills.

Submit application, resume & cover letter to: Northcoast Children’s Services

Ideal candidate has experience: • Working in non-profit accounting • Managing accounting process development, change, and implementation • Managing a small team of staff

1266 9th Street, Arcata CA 95521

(707) 822-7206 or visit our website at www.ncsheadstart.org Northcoast Children’s Services

COOK

TO APPLY: Full details and application online: www.internews.org/jobs. No Calls Please. EOE M/F/D/V

Redway Head Start Prepare, organize, set-up & clean-up meals for preschool age children. Part-Time (school year): 25 hrs/wk (Mon-Fri); $9.29-$9.75/hr

Submit application: Northcoast Children’s Services

1266 9th Street, Arcata CA 95521 For additional information, please call (707) 822-7206 or visit our website at www.ncsheadstart.org

General Manager

IT – Drupal Developer • PT Medical Assistant Office Technology Sales • Industrial Shop Manager Exec. Director, NPO • Medical Front Office Assistant Part Time Account Clerk AP/AR • Electrician Legal Assistant/ Paralegal Licensed Commercial Lines Ins

707.445.9641 www.sequoiapersonnel.com 2930 E Street Eureka, CA 95501

North Coast Co-op is seeking a General Manager responsible for the overall operation of our two large, full-service, Certified Organic Groceries. The GM will head up our management team and work collaboratively in the overall planning and management of the Co-op. Interested applicants should demonstrate an understanding and commitment to the cooperative business model and have a proven, successful management history. A background in natural foods and experience working in a union environment is preferred. BA plus five years of progressive management experience, or an equivalent combination is required. North Coast Cooperative offers a competitive wage package dependant upon experience, and an excellent benefits package. Position is open until filled, first review of applications is 9/15/12. For a complete job description and to download an application: http://www.northcoastco-op.com/about.\htm#employment Please submit application, resume, salary requirements and letter of interest to Lisa Landry, HR Director at: hr@northcoastco-op.com

County of Humboldt

CORRECTIONAL OFFICER I

$2,632– $3,378 mo. plus excellent benefits EXCELLENT CAREER OPPORTUNITY TRAINING PROVIDED

The County of Humboldt is now accepting applications for Correctional Officers I with the Humboldt County Correctional Facility. On the job and classroom training will be provided. We are seeking career minded men and women willing to commit to our agency. Must pass a detailed background investigation and be available to work all shifts. Apply by September 13, 2012. Apply online at www.co.humboldt.ca.us/jobs or contact Humboldt County Human Resources Department (707) 476-2349 Humboldt County Courthouse 825 Fifth St., Eureka AA/EOE

46 North Coast Journal • Thursday, SEPT. 6 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

A REWARDING CAREER. That lets you earn money while helping others! Want to be your own boss, set your own hours? Independent Consultants needed for Restaurant. com. Unlimited Earning Potential. No previous sales experience req’d. Tools & full training provided. Learn more at http://sales.restaurant. com/nan. (AAN CAN) (E-0913) AIRLINE CAREERS. Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-2423214. (E-0906) FISCAL ANALYST, CLASSIFIED MANAGEMENT. Humboldt County Office of Education. BA in business admin. or related field and 2 years experience in accounting or at least 5 yrs. increasingly responsible experience in school business functions & operations. Previous supervisory experience Required. F.T., M-F, 8 hrs./day. Eligible for employer paid medical, dental, vision and PERS retirement. $49,734-$70,623/Yr. Application available at HCOE or online: www. humboldt.k12.ca.us Reply to: PERSONNEL, HCOE, 901 Myrtle Ave., Eureka, CA 95501. Closes: 9/19/2012, 4 p.m. (E-0913) HOOPSTERS YOUTH BASKETBALL COACHES . Calling all coaches! Volunteer opportunities available to teach youth sports skills and provide positive, fun experiences. Help the youth of our community reach their full potential through recreation basketball. Applicants must be over 18. No experienced needed, will train. Email Steve at senes@ ci.eureka.ca.gov or call 441-4245 for more info. (E-0906)

CHER-AE HEIGHTS CASINO PART-TIME POSITIONS

Surveillance Technician Crown Club Rep 2 - Deli Valet Janitorial Security Officer Shuttle Driver Busser/Host SEASCAPE, PART-TIME POSITIONS

Cook Host/Hostess Dish/Bus

Cher-Ae Heights Indian Community of the Trinidad Rancheria Employments Applications available in Human Resources/ Seascape/ Cher-Ae Heights Casino or our website at www.cheraeheightscasino.com Cher-Ae Heights is an alcohol and drug free workplace with required testing.

ZUMBA ON THE WATERFRONT! The Adorni Center, the City of Eureka’s primary recreation facility, is looking for self-motivated, enthusiastic Zumba Fitness Instructors. Enjoy a positive, team-oriented work environment. Flexible hours. Must provide proof of current ZUMBA certification. $14.70$17.90/hr. Email Mo at mmerrell@ ci.eureka.ca.gov or call 441-4374. (E-0906) HOME CAREGIVERS PT/FT. Nonmedical caregivers to assist elderly in their homes. Top hourly fees. 442-8001. (E-1227)

County of Humboldt

ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER

$2,430– $3,119 monthly, plus excellent benefits, including 2.0% PERS retirement.

Under general supervision, investigate complaints and enforce County laws regarding stray, dangerous and nuisance animals; capture and humanely control animals for impounding; explain local codes and ordinances to the public; promote responsible pet ownership; issue citations. Desirable qualifications would include some related education or training and two years of animal care or control or law enforcement support experience. Valid CA driver’s license required. Must pass a personal background investigation prior to appointment. Final filing date: September 13, 2012. Application materials available at Humboldt County Human Resources, 825 5th Street, Room 100, Eureka, CA, or apply online at www.co.humboldt.ca.us/jobs. AA/EOE


Rentals

Employment

LIVE AMONG THE ELK & THE REDWOODS FOR LESS Come join our dedicated team of professionals who are committed to compassionate care.

Full-Time Positions MEDICAL RECORDS CLERK, McKinleyville MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST-Pediatrics, McKinleyville MEDICAL BILLER 2 F/T Arcata RN CLINIC COORDINATOR, Crescent City MEDICAL ASSISTANT, Willow Creek REGISTERED NURSE, Arcata BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE PROVIDER

(Requires LCSW or Licensed Psychologist), Arcata

Part-Time Positions DRUG AND ALCOHOL COUNSELOR, Crescent City Go to www.opendoorhealth.com for online application Call 707-826-8633 ext. 5140 for information

ACTORS/MOVIE EXTRAS. Needed immediately for upcoming roles $150-$300/day depending on job requirements. No experience, all looks. 1-800-560-8672 A-109. For casting times/locations. (AAN CAN) (E-1115) TAP & JAZZ INSTRUCTOR. 4421939. (E-0906) BILINGUAL CLIENT ADVOCATE. North Coast Rape Crisis Team has opening for a 40+ hr/wk Bilingual (Spanish/English) Client Advocate w/excellent benefits for a team oriented, self-motivated person who wants to provide in-person and phone support to survivors of sexual assault. Call 443-2737 for info. EOE (E-0913) BECOME A MENTOR! California Mentor is seeking committed, positive people willing to share their home & help an adult with developmental disabilities lead and integrated life in the community. Become part of a professional team and reive a competitive monthly reimbursement, training & continuous support. Contact Matthew, (707) 442-4500 ext. 14, 317 Third St., Eureka. www.mentorswanted. com (E-1227) HELP WANTED!!! Make money Mailing brochures from home! FREE Supplies! Helping HomeWorkers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No experience required. Start Immediately! www. theworkhub.net (AAN CAN) (E0927)

$$$HELP WANTED$$$ Extra Income! Assembling CD cases from Home! No Experience Necessary! Call our Live Operators Now! 1-800-405-7619 EXT 2450 http:// www.easywork-greatpay.com (AAN CAN) (E-0920)

Rentals ARCATA 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOME. Carpet, washer/dryer hook-ups, parking. $950, (707) 443-4357 www.TheRentalHelpers. com. (R-0906) ARCATA 1 BEDROOM APT. Some utilities paid, parking, available Mid-Sept. $615, (707) 443-4357, www.TheRentalHelpers.com. (R0906)

HUMBOLDT PLAZA APTS.

Openings soon available for HUD Sec. 8 Waiting Lists for 2, 3 & 4 bedrm apts. Annual Income Limits: 1 pers. $20,300; 2 pers. $23,200; 3 pers. $26,100; 4 pers. $28,950; 5 pers. $31,300; 6 pers. $33,600; 7 pers. $35,900; 8 pers. $38,250.

EHO. Hearing impaired: TDD Ph# 1-800-735-2922. Apply at Office: 2575 Alliance Rd. Arcata, 8am-12pm & 1-4pm, M-F (707) 822-4104

• PRIVATE FISHING LAKE • Clean bathrooms, free hot showers • Full hookups, laundromat • Campfires allowed • 2 Well behaved pets OK • Dry Lagoon Beach & market nearby • $400/mo. plus electricity • RETIREES, HSU STUDENTS, FULLTIMERS WELCOME

• Must have RV on trailer Call 707-488-2181 or write bobmccormick@etahoe.com for details

ARCATA 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Garage, washer/dryer hook-ups, yard. $1375 (707) 443-4357, www. TheRentalHelpers.com (R-0906) EUREKA 1 BEDROOM APT. All utilities paid, fridge, stove. $600. (707) 443-4357, www.TheRentalHelpers.com (R-0906) EUREKA 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX. Yard, onsite laundry, parking. $750. (707) 443-8227, www.TheRentalHelpers.com. (R-0906) EUREKA 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Garage, yard, washer/dryer hookups. $1300. (707) 443-4357, www. TheRentalHelpers.com (R-0906) FORTUNA 2 BEDROOM APT. Laundry facilities, some utilities, $750. (707) 443-4357, www. TheRentalHelpers.com (R-0906) FORTUNA 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Garage, laundry hookups, woodstove, $1300. (707) 443-4357, www. TheRentalHelpers.com (R-0906) MCKINLEYVILLE 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOME. Carport, onsite laundry, some utilities. $750. (707) 443-4357, www.TheRentalHelpers. com (R-0906) MCKINLEYVILLE 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Yard, garage, laundry hook-ups. $1400. (707) 443-4357, www.TheRentalHelpers.com. (R0906) EUREKA UPSTAIRS COTTAGE. Garage, coin-op laundry, W/G paid, section 8 OK. No smoking/ grow. $585/month, $600/deposit, references and credit check. Call 725-4676. (R-0912) ALL AREAS-ROOMMATES.COM. Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http://www.Roommates.com. (AAN CAN) (R-1213)

CONTINUED ON PAGE 48

Business Rentals Real Estate

Auto

RETAIL & OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE. In historic Jacoby’s Storehouse. Call 826-2426. (BR-0913) SPACIOUS DANCE STUDIO RENTAL. The Studio of Dance Arts in Eureka offers rental space for the performing, creative and visual arts. 2 huge studios, full length mirrors, maple floors and marley. Performance opportunities! Call Jane 442-1939. View the studios at studioofdancearts.com. (BR-0906) DANCE STUDIO RENTAL. Humboldt Capoeira Academy offers rental space for the performing arts, beautiful 2800 sq. f.t dance space offers hardwood floors, wall-to wall windows, full length mirrors, and dressing rooms. Convenient location is visible from the plaza, and will help you to promote your classes. Check with us for rates and availability. Contact Sarara at (707) 498-6155, or sararacdo@hotmail.com. (BR-1227)

CASH FOR CARS. Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1-888-420-3808 www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN) (A-1004) YOUR ROCKCHIP IS MY EMERGENCY! Glaswelder, Mobile, windshield repair. 442-GLAS, Humboldtwindshieldrepair.com (A-1227)

Real Estate

GET MONEY

HERE

bob@humboldtmortgage.net 707.445.3027 WILLOW CREEK PROPERTY. 1.33 acres, Willow Creek Community Service District Water, underground power & phone at property. R-2 soils report and perk tested. Approved septic system design by Trinity Engineering. Property is zoned RST. Property is located off Highway 299 on private road one mile east of Willow Creek. Ready to build. $99,900 will consider offers. (530) 629-2031 (RE-1227)

Lodging/Travel

Eureka Office Building

Commercially zoned Victorian near Ingomar Club. Renovated and up to code from the perimeter foundation to the solar panel roof. $265, 000

VACATION RENTAL. King Range, Great for family gatherings, workshops, small events, solar powered, easy access, handicap friendly. min. 3 nights www. chemisemountainretreat.com, 986-7794. (L-1025)

www.eurekaoffice4sale.com

FSBO HUMBOLDT HILL 3BD/2BA 1120 SF. Quiet Neighborhood. Tiled kitchen counters, oak cabinets, dishwasher, windows, sliding glass door upgraded, furnace 11 years old, fireplace with insert, large fenced yard, new deck, attached garage, new water heater, new laminate floor, all appliances. 442-0373. (RE-0927) MOVE TO THE SUNSHINE. 2200 sf., 4 bedroom, 3 bath, Mt. Shasta view, 1.62 acres. Fruit Trees, garden area. Will consider trade in Eureka. $235K. (530) 475-3875 (RE-0927) TRINITY VILLAGE 1.3 ACRES WITH CREEK. 3BD/2BA main house. PLUS: Guest House, Art Studio/Workshop, Pool, Sauna, 2 Car Garage, Amenities Galore. $375,000. Call Gail Packard Realty, Owner/Broker, (530) 629-4181. (RE-0927)

PLACE YOUR AUTO AD!

20 words and a photo, IN FULL COLOR for only $25 per week! Call 442-1400 or e-mail classified@northcoastjournal.com

Buy/Sell/Trade CUSTOMER APPRECIATION BLOW OUT SIDEWALK SALE! Truck Loads of Clothing & Shoes 50¢ each! $1 Lunch: BBQ Hot Dog, Drink & Chips. Plus In Store Specials. Sat., Sept. 8, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Dream Quest Thrift Store in Willow Creek. Providing Opportunities for Local Youth. (BST-0906)

Weekly specials available on Facebook 3954 Jacobs Ave. Eureka 443-7397

It’s here! The 2012 Wedding Guide is available at newsstands and wedding retailers throughout Humboldt.

INSID E

Venues Jewelry Gowns and Tuxedoes Flowers Bakeries And More

View it online on our Special Publications page.

Hiring?

Post your job opportunities in on Page 51

www.northcoastjournal.com • 442-1400

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Buy/Sell/Trade

O

L NEW

in ION CAT

Old

SPECIAL NOTICE

n Tow

616 Second St. Old Town Eureka 707.443.7017 artcenterframeshop@gmail.com

FLASHBACK 443-3259 116 W. Wabash Approx. 1-6 Closed Tues & Sun 50% OFF SALE:

SELECT Summer Clothing

DISHES & KNICK KNACKS 1/2 PRICE. Green Tagged Clothes 25¢ each! Sept. 4-8. Dream Quest Thrift Store in Willow Creek. Providing Opportunities for Local Youth. (BST-0906) WANTED OLD LIGHTERS. 1 lighter or collection. Any make, working or not. Collector will pay top dollar. Call (800) 379-3415. (BST-0906) REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! Get a 4-Room All-Digital Satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting at $19.99/ mo. FREE HD/DVR upgrade for new callers, CALL NOW. 1-800925-7945 (AAN CAN) (BST-0906)

3 BIG

AUCTIONS! THURS. SEPT. 6TH 5:45 PM SUN. SEPT. 16TH 10:30 AM THURS. SEPT. 27TH 5:45 PM Check our website for more info, pictures and preview times.

3950 Jacobs Ave. Eureka • 443-4851

www.carljohnsonco.com

Vintage Clothing Furniture, Housewares & more! THE

CLOTHING DOCK &

      

 

Services

Pets

Yard Sale 996 1 1th s t.

le garage sa › this way

Rummage

SALE KITS • $7

K STREET ANNEX

11th & K Streets, Arcata

822-8288

THE BEAD LADY. For all your needs in beads! Glass beads, leather, shells, findings, jewelry. Kathy Chase Owner, 76 Country Club Dr Ste 5, Willow Creek. 530629-3540. krchase@yahoo.com. (BST-1227)

LOOK FOR KITTENS AT PETCO. Sat.s, 11-3 p.m. Our kittens are always fixed, vaccinated, and deparasited $66. Non-Profit. Bless the Beasts. or call (707) 444-0408 (P-1227)

310 F Street., Eureka, CA 95501 Phone 442-1400 • Fax 442-1401 www.northcoastjournal.com carmen@northcoastjournal.com

Micronized Compost Tea & MICRO-ORGANICS line Go Green-Tranzition-Blissful Bloom

www.sensational-solutions.com

by Sophia Dennler •

For more information and to order

www.sophiadennler.com/pets PAWS OFF MY HERBS. 8% OFF SALE! Bulk herbs aren’t taxed and Buster still gets a break. It’s a dog’s life. Dot’s Vitality, Dot’s Veggie Vitality and Dot’s Arthritis. Find Dot’s at: Moonrise Herbs, Arcata, Humboldt Herbals, Eureka, or order online at www.humboldtherbals.com (P-1227)

Services SEA BREEZE CLEANING CO. The home service professional at Sea Breeze will prepare a cleaning service designed around the unique detail of your home,and personal cleaning requirements. Licensed/Bonded Call 834-2898 (S-0906) CREATIVE WRITING COACH/ EDITOR Nurturing, collaborative editing and creative coaching will make your work shine. All styles welcome. C.Baku, MFA. www. carlabaku.com. (S-0207)

Services

On the Plaza

837 H Street, Arcata, CA 95521

707.825.7100

Sales

Service

Solutions

HELICOPTER FLIGHT LESSONS/ SCENIC TOURS. Redwood Coast Helicopters, based in Humboldt County. Whatever your helicopter needs, we will accommodate you! $160/hour. redwoodcoasthelicopters@gmail.com (S-1115)

Pets

PLACE YOUR PET AD!

Manufactured in Humboldt County

Custom Pet Portraits

Harvey’s Harvey’s Ha H arvey’s a arvey y at

ALL UNDER ER HEAVEN HE H EA AV VE EN N

Old Town, Eureka 212 F St., 444-2936

&

Arcata Plaza 825-7760

New In Old Town 20 words and a photo, IN FULL COLOR for only $25 per week! Call 442-1400 or e-mail classified@northcoastjournal.com

48 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

alterations & custom sewing 407-3527 | M-F 11-6 ✂ Sat 11-2 | 621 3rd Street, Eureka 95501

REACH 5 MILLION. hip, forwardthinking consumers across the U.S. When you advertise in alternative newspapers, you become part of the local scene and gain access to an audience you won’t reach anywhere else. http:// www.altweeklies.com/ads (AAN CAN) (S-0913) 2 GUYS & A TRUCK. Carpentry, Landscaping, Junk Removal, Clean Up, Moving. Contact (707) 8453087. (S-0906) LIFE CYCLE LANDSCAPING. Garden Maintenance, Restoration and Design. Serving All of Humboldt County, (707) 672-4398 (S-1206) HOUSE CLEANING BY JEANNIE. Residence $15/hour, Move-outs $20/hour. Call 921-9424. References Available. (S-0927) A’O’KAY JUGGLING CLOWN & WIZARD OF PLAY. Amazing performances and games for all ages. Events, Birthdays, Festivals, Kidszones. I’ll Juggle, Unicycle, & bring Toys. aokayClown.com, (707) 499-5628. (S-1227) TAI CHI GARDENER. Maintaining balance in your yard. Well equipt. Maintenance + Projects 18 yrs experience. Call Orion 825-8074, taichigardener.com. (S-0927)


CAPTURING YOUR DAY IN THE WATER.

SET UP YOUR SHOOT TODAY:

drewhylandstudio.com/surf HUMBOLDT HOUSE CLEANING. Licensed & Bonded #3860. Summer Cleaning Special! (707) 444-2001. (S-1011) ERIC’S SERVICES. Home Repair, Maintenance, Affordable Prices (707) 499-4828. (S-0808) ALLIANCE LAWN & GARDEN CARE. Affordable, Dependable, and Motivated Yard maintenance. We’ll take care of all your basic lawn and garden needs. Including hedging, trimming, mowing, and hauling. Call for estimates (707) 834-9155, (707) 825-1082. (S-1122) SEWING SERVICE. Stitch in Time repairs & alterations. Fri. and Sat. 11 a.m.- 5 p.m. 1038 11th street, Arcata. 707-496-3447 (S-1227) ARCATA CLEANING COMPANY. The non-toxic cleaning solution for your home or office. 707-8227819. (S-1227) CLARITY WINDOW CLEANING. Services available. Call Julie 8391518. (S-1227) WRITING CONSULTANT/EDITOR. Fiction, nonfiction, poetry. Dan Levinson, MA, MFA. 443-8373. www.ZevLev.com. (S-1227) DIRECTV OR DISH NETWORK. LOW INTRODUCTORY RATES. Commitment and Credit/Debit required. LOCAL CALL NOW! 826-0203 (S-0927)

Legal Services Kathleen Bryson Attorney DUI & DMV Hearings Cultivation/Possession Juvenile Delinquency Misdemeanors & Felonies Former Hum. Co. Deputy DA Member of CA DUI Lawyers Assoc. FREE CONSULTATION 732 5th Street, Suite C, Eureka, CA 95501 707.268.8600 kbesq@sbcglobal.net

Music PIANO LESSONS BEGINNING TO ADVANCED ALL AGES. 30 years joyful experience teaching all piano styles. Juilliard trained, remote lessons available. Nationally Certified Piano Teacher. Humboldtpianostudio.com. (707) 502-9469 (M-1115) PIANO LESSONS. Beginners, all ages. Experienced. Judith Louise 476-8919. (M-1227) ROAD TRIX ENTERTAINMENT. Live Music. Private Parties, Bars, Gatherings of all Kinds. Bookings, Bradley Dean, 832-7419. (M-1108) MUSIC LESSONS. Piano, Guitar, Voice, Flute, etc. Piano tuning, Instrument repair. Digital multitrack recording. (707) 476-9239. (M-1122)

&Spirit

SAXOPHONE/FLUTE LESSONS. All ages, beginner-advanced, jazz improvisation, technique. Susie Laraine: 441-1343. (M-1227) GUITAR/PIANO LESSONS. All ages, beginning and intermediate. Seabury Gould 444-8507. (M-1227)

CONTINUED ON PAGE 50

Sabrina Knight MA, MFT

Community THE PRESIDENT’S FAITH, DOES IT MATTER? How the President’s faith affects their decisions while in office is a matter of debate. Discuss it at LifetreeCafe this week, Sun. Sept. 9, 7 p.m. 76 13th St., Arcata. 672-2919, www. campbellcreek.org for more info. (C-0906) SEX/ PORN DAMAGING YOUR LIFE & RELATIONSHIPS ? Confidential help is available. saahumboldt@yahoo.com or 845-8973 (C-1227) PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Talk with caring agency specializing in matching Birthmothers with Families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions 866-413-6293 (Void in Illinois) (AAN CAN) (C-0906) BECOME A FOSTER PARENT. Provide a safe and stable environment for youth 13-18 for them to learn and grow in their own community. Contact the Humboldt County Department of Health and Human Services Foster Care Hotline at 441-5013 and ask for Peggy. (C-0124)

Music

Services

body, mind

Marriage & Family Therapist Individuals & Families

443-3611  517 3rd Street, Suite 21 Eureka, CA 95501

TIME FOR A MASSAGE? Therapeutic Massage CommUnITy CrISIS SUpporT:

Gift Certificates Available (707) 599-5639

Valerie Schramm

Certified Massage Therapist

Make-up classes available

Humboldt Co. mental HealtH Crisis line

445-7715 1-888-849-5728

Humboldt domestiC ViolenCe serViCes

443-6042 1-866-668-6543

Award Winning Hollywood Makeup Artist

N. Kristine Chadwick introduces:

AMA approved quality.

Cinema Secrets professional mineral makeup line

Low prices, free makeover demo & $10 gift certificate drawing.

Call 707-768-3677 for an appointment. #7 Fifth Street, Eureka frommalibutoyou@aol.com

rape Crisis team Crisis line

445-2881

Wallet ID cards available (707) 826-1165

national Crisis Hotline

1-800 SUICIDE (1-800-784-2433) national suiCide preVention lifeline

1-800-273-TALK

www.northcoast-medical.com

Ongoing Classes Workshops Private Sessions Diana Nunes Mizer Parent Educator

YoutH serViCe bureau YoutH & familY Crisis Hotline

444-2273

707.445.4642 www.consciousparentingsolutions.com

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6 2012

49


body, mind ▼

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 49

&Spirit

LIGHT FORCE

CHIROPRACTIC

PAIN RELIEF

DEL REY • 599-0440 • 1989 HARRISON AVE., EUREKA

Do it Legally

with Margy Emerson Martial Arts Academy Sunny Brae Shopping Ctr., Arcata 13-Week Session Starts Week of Sept 17

3 ProgrAMS: • Traditional T’ai Chi

Low Cost 215 Evaluation Center All Renewals Starting At

$ 85

Renew Your 215 From Any Doctor or Clinic For Less Walk-ins Welcome Wed & Sat 12-6pm Special discount for Seniors, SSI , Veterans & Students New First Tim MMJ Patie e nts S

A

VE $ 50

-private lessons availableFor Schedule and Fees: www.margaretemerson.com or

822-6508 Visit any class free!

LOSE WEIGHT/GAIN HEALTH, FROM THE INSIDE OUT. Dave Berman, Certified Hypnotist and Master Practitioner of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). (707) 845-3749. www. ManifestPositivity.com. Helping the YOUniverse conspire on your behalf. (MB-0906) PELVIC/TRANSVAGINAL MESH? Did you undergo transvaginal placement of mesh for pelvic organ prolapse or stress urinary incontinence between 2005 and present time? If the patch required removal due to complications, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Johnson Law and speak with female staff members 1-800-535-5727. (MB-0906)

with men tion of this ad

Lowest Price Evaluations in HC

Medical Cannabis Consultants

(707) 407- 0527 508 I Street, Eureka

(across from HC Court House)

BREATHE LOVE, AXIS MUNDI ASTROLOGY INTEGRATED WITH YOUR SUBTLE ENERGY. Gain clarity for self-empowerment. Rev. Elisabeth Zenker, MSW; (707) 845-1450. www. sacredenergyspace.com (MB1122) NEEDING SOME SUPPORT RIGHT NOW? Experienced counselor & therapist Linda Nesbitt, MSW, LCSW (Lic#18830) is expanding her practice and welcoming new clients. Focusing on stress/anxiety, depression, grief/loss, trauma recovery, relationship challenges and postpartum support. EMDR Advanced Trained. (707) 2680929. (MB-1025)

Coming to Arcata.

We understand your personal needs and provide care for every phase of a woman’s life.

825-0200 | 822-9664 | 3798 Janes Rd., Ste. #10 in front of the Mad River Emergency Room NEW CLIENTS $10 OFF. Myrtletowne Healing Center 1480, #A Myrtle Ave. A Hidden Gem on Myrtle Ave., specializing in therapeutic massage. We will assist you on your road to recovery or work with you on that chronic pain issue. Swedish, deep tissue, trigger point, reflexology, acupressure, uterine centering, lymph drainage, lomi lomi, and more. Founders Hilary Wakefield and Sarah Maier are both Doulas, we do pregnancy massage as well! You are worth it, call today (707) 441-9175 (MB-0927) EVERY PART OF YOU HAS A SECRET LANGUAGE, YOUR HANDS AND YOUR FEET SAY WHAT YOU’VE DONE. Rumi. Learn their language. Reflexology classes start Oct. http:// www.reflexologyinstruction. com/ (707) 822-5395 (MB0927) DIVORCE SUPPORT GROUP. Connect with others and feel less alone. Learn effective coping skills, ways to manage strong emotions how to heal and live the life you want. Group meets Mon. evenings, 6-7:30 pm. For more info. and to register call (707) 834-3747. Facilitated by Tamara Severn, MFT, #49815 (MB-1115) POSITIVE CONNECTIONS. In this world of negativity and lack of connection create and participate in a positive social network based on strengths and optimism. In a group format, learn to improve your relationships with yourself and others. Meets once a week for 6 weeks. Offered by Tamara Severn, MFT, #49815. For info and to register call 834-3747 (MB-0913)

50 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, SEPT. 6 2012 • northcoastjournal.com

CO LO N H Y D ROT H E R A P Y WITH MOLLY LEUTHNER . At Jade Dragon Medical Spa. Closed System. Using an F.D.A. approved medical device, warm water is gently inserted into the colon. When the colon contracts, the water is flushed out through the device. Take an internal bath! 822-4300. (MB-1011) do TERRA ESSENTIAL OILS. Amazing results with no side effects. Maureen Brundage, (707) 498-7749, www.thinkdoterra.com/19719 (MB-1115) CERTIFIED MASSAGE THERAPIST. Samantha DudmanMiller, (707) 616-6031. (MB-0124) TAROT AS AN EVOLUTIONARY PATH. Classes in Eureka and Arcata. Private mentorships, readings. Carolyn Ayres, 4424240, www.tarotofbecoming. com. (MB-1227) COACHING FOR PERSONAL EVOLUTION WITH REBECCA OWEN. Access your wholeness by cultivating your Presence in the Now and learning to clear old patterns. 822-5253. (MB-0920) THE SPINE IS YOUR CONDUIT FOR LIFE-FORCE ENERGY. Open to the Alignment of Your Whole Self: Chiropractic by Dr. Scott Winkler, D.C. and Energy Work by Rebecca Owen. 8221676. (MB-0920) HIGHER EDUCATION FOR SPIRITUAL UNFOLDMENT. Bachelors, Masters, D.D./Ph.D., distance learning, University of Metaphysical Sciences. Bringing professionalism to metaphysics. (707) 822-2111 (MB-1227)

Treating Bulimia, Anorexia, Binge-Eating. Kim Moor, MFT #37499

Call 441-1484

ZUMBA WITH MARLA JOY. Elevate, Motivate, Celebrate another day of living. Exercise in Disguise. Now is the time to start, don’t wait. All ability levels are welcome. Every Mon. and Thurs. at the Bayside Grange 6-7 p.m., 2297 Jacoby Creek Rd. $6/$4 Grange members. Every Wed. 6-7 p.m. in Fortuna at the Monday Club, 610 Main St. Every Tues. at the Trinidad Town Hall, Noon and every Thurs. at the Eureka Vets Hall, Noon. Marla Joy (707) 845-4307, marlajoy. zumba.com (MB-1227) AIKIDO. Is an incredibly fascinating and enriching nonviolent martial art with its roots in traditional Japanese budo. Focus is on personal growth and pursuit of deeper truth instead of competition and fighting. Yet the physical power you can develop is very real. Come observe any time and give it a try! The dojo is on Arcata Plaza above the mattress store, entrance is around back. Class every weeknight starting at 6 p.m., beginning enrollment is ongoing. www. northcoastaikido.org, info@ northcoastaikido.org, 8269395. (MB-1227) ARCATA ZEN GROUP MEDITATION. Beginners welcome. Sun., 8 a.m. North Coast Aikido Center, on F St. between 8th and 9th in Arcata. Wed., 6-7 p.m. at First Christian Church, 730 K, Eureka, ramp entrance and upstairs; newcomers please come 5 minutes early. Sun. contact, 826-1701. Wed. contact, barryevans9@yahoo. com, or for more info. call (707) 826-1701, www.arcatazengroup.org. (MB-1227)

ASTROLOGY & TAROT. With Salina Rain: Readings, Counseling and Classes. Mon., 1:25 p.m. KHSU 90.5 FM. (707) 668-5408. astro@salinarain.com, www. salinarain.com. (MB-1227) DANCE-FIT. Dance, aerobics & strength training all in one class! Mon., Wed. & Fri. 9-10 a.m First class is free. Drop in for $5 per class or 14 classes for $55. No Limits tap & jazz studio, corner of 10th & K st. Arcata. 825-0922 (MB-1227)

Place your ad www. online! northcoastjournal.com

• T’ai Chi for Back Pain and Arthritis • 42 Combined Forms

CENTER FOR WOMEN’S HEALTH CARE


Looking for testers for a new poison oak treatment. FREE SAMPLES

Redwood Pharmaceuticals 2107 Harrison Eureka, CA 502-3616

Depressed? Anxious? Relationship issues? Family problems? Just need someone to talk to? Counseling services available for individuals, couples and families.

Bonnie M. Carroll, LCSW LCS # 23232

1225 Central Ave. Suite 3 McKINLEYVILLE

839-1244

Fall Class Starts 9/17/12, Call Now to Enroll! Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sat. 9 to 5; Sun. 12 to 4

725-9627

739 12th St., Fortuna

www.lovinghandsinstitute.com

overwhelmed with sTuff? Are your crowded shelves an earthquake hazard? List it all here. 442-1400. Visa/MC

www.northcoastjournal.com

GOT POISON OAK?

2850 E St., Eureka (Henderson Center), 707

269-2400

2355 Central Ave., McKinleyville 707

839-9093

www.communityrealty.net

real estate

this week Scan this code to see our listings online. Scan ad codes to visit our realtors’ websites directly.

real est

Zoom in on our online map to see this week’s featured properties.

Check out our Real Estate & Rental Listings in our Marketplace ■ DOW’S PRAIRIE

NEW

this we

$319,000

$449,900

4 bed, 3 bath, 2,650 sq ft custom Fortuna home, amazing property, dreamlike setting in lush landscaping encircled by forest, koi pond, waterfall, gleaming wood floors, spacious gourmet kitchen

Eureka four-plex that has been well maintained and landscaped, on site coin operated carpeted laundry room, enclosed carport off alley, off street parking, great investment

$155,000

real estate 3 bed, 1 bath, 975 sq ft cheery bright and clean Eureka home, newer windows, newer roof, and newer forced air unit, remodeled bath & kitchen, hardwood and laminate flooring

this week

An Association of Independently Owned and Operated Realty Brokerages

LISTI

NG!

Charlie Tripodi Land Agent #01332697

7 0 7. 8 3 4 . 3 2 41

707.445.8811 ext.124

NEW DIRECT LINE - 24/7 - 707.476.0435

BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM HOME WITH DRAMATIC ENTRY! Soaring ceilings in this lovely 2005 home. The cook’s kitchen adjoins a large dining area, the library/office has many built-in bookcases, and the master suite is downstairs. Includes a secondary, completely separate, home for rental or extended family. mls#236296 $699,500

Sylvia Garlick #00814886 Broker GRI/ Owner 1629 Central Ave., McKinleyville 707-839-1521 • mingtreesylvia@yahoo.com

Pine Creek Summit +/-160 & +/-180 acre parcels available off of Bair Road near Redwood Creek. enjoy sweeping views, great exposure, good road access and year round water.

Need help finding the home improvement experts?

home & garden

service directory

$275k & 375k

South Fork of the Trinity Land/Property

Barry Summit Land/Property

$325,000

$350,000 each

Breathtaking +/-55 acres of trinity river frontage. Sloping to flat topography, oak woodlands, and year round creek. no deeded access.

Four +/-160 acre parcels located 45 minutes from arcata near Barry Summit. properties boast timber, breathtaking views, water, deeded access and close to county road. owner will carry!

2120 Campton Rd. Ste #C – euReka, Ca 95503

w w w. h u m b o l d t l a n d m a n . c o m

JOURNAL• • Thursday, THURSDAY,Aug. SEPT.23, 6, 2012 northcoastjournal.com North COAST Coast Journal northcoastjournal.com •• NORTH

51


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~hAA;AJ~路

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