Pacific Sun 05.28.2010 - Section 1

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M AY 2 8 - J U N E 3 , 2 0 1 0

MARiN’S BEST EVERY WEEK

QUOTE OF THE WEEK:

Irreverence in West Marin turned out to be a mortal and expensive sin. [SEE PAGE 8]

Behind the Sun

Eating

Single in the Suburbs

More teacher’s dirty looks…

Picnics, Marin style

Howdy, neighbor!

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›› LETTERS Has taqueria had its chips? Don’t let our desire for quality tutelage overshadow our desire for quality tortas.

The College of Marin proposal to build a large new “gateway” building at the corner of Sir Francis Drake Boulevard and College Avenue has generated a fair amount of controversy. One aspect of the plans that I have not seen mentioned in any of the articles is the fate of the Taqueria Mexican Grill now on that corner. In these hard times, it is important to sustain the small businesses in our communities. The Taqueria has been there for years, run by good people providing tasty, affordable, convenient food. The restaurant serves both the COM students and the residents of Kentfield and other nearby towns; just the kind of “town and gown” interface that community colleges should want. I hope the college administrators are planning to provide space in one of their new buildings for this local business, and perhaps a temporary spot while construction is under way. It would be a shame to lose it. Jeff Lapic,Kentfield

Vote for me for state Assembly I would like to first thank Ms. Gina Channell-Allen, the Pacific Sun publisher, for the opportunity to answer questions brought up

by the Pacific Sun in their endorsement of my opponent, incumbent Jared Huffman, in the Democratic primary race for state Assembly. Mr. Huffman justifies his mediocre record by excuses about the situation in Sacramento. For many Democrats, Mr. Huffman is the problem. His voting with Republicans on the budget means the Democrats, the majority party in the legislature, do not have the votes to do the serious work that needs to be done. Mr. Huffman’s lack of courage to stand up to the governor seems to mark his political career. While political parties may not be popular, legislators do get elected to represent a party and its position or the “party platform.” Where is Mr. Huffman on the platform and issues outside his expertise in environmentalism? We don’t know and have no way of knowing where he will end up, regarding his positions. The impact of his budget vote is like a football team when in the middle of the game, key players switch sides. His vote in 2009 on Republican budget trailer bills weakens the majority party and the Democratic legislators’ ability to effectively use their votes. The result of his vote caused a loss of over $1.7 million just in Social Security Income payments to people in the 6th District—these are people who are elders and people with significant disabilities who receive $200 to $300 per month. The cuts in In Home Supportive Services mean that many 90-year-old independent folks now have no shopping assistance or housecleaning. This will condemn many to facilities at incredible taxpayer cost, as both the legislative-analyst and UCLA reports lay out. To save a few bucks for political expediency, we all will be paying with our tax dollars years after he has left office and most of us

›› TOWNSQUARE

TOP POSTINGS THIS WEEK

California To Observe First Harvey Milk Day Presidential Medal of Freedom? Got that. A place in the California Hall of Fame and Sean Penn playing you on-screen? Those, too. Now, Harvey Milk has... Upfront: The other ‘community choice’ In response to the Mazzoni position that the county should have waited to proceed with a clean energy plan and should slow efforts on bag bans, sustainability proponents argue... Endorsements: Measures A, B and C This trio of library funding measures for the county libraries, as well as San Anselmo and San Rafael libraries, is asking for a $49 per year parcel taxcompany’s...

Your soapbox is waiting at ›› pacificsun.com will end our lives in facilities at incredible costs instead of living our lives in our homes. Mr. Huffman’s vote has been to embrace classic “Reaganomics.” His ban on metal baseball bats in school sports is a prime example of poor legislation used for public relations purposes. If the young man who was hit this year had permanent injuries, the cuts Mr. Huffman voted for would mean his family would have no long-term care support. Instead of legislation to solve real problems, Mr. Huffman took the opportunity to grandstand, making sure to ignore school officials who, once they knew of the problem, had already banned the bats. I am not a one-issue candidate. I do have expertise in independent living and social services. I have a track record of community organizing, mobilizing volunteers and activism. I also have experience in media both in producing a weekly radio show plus receiving a great education in media as chair of KQED’s Community Advisory Panel. In addition, as an artist and as a policy consultant I have small business experience. Visit www.connally4assembly.net. Patrick Connally, San Rafael

Valley to take on San Rafael’s sewer liabilities. Ross Valley voters need to be concerned about our pipes and assets and should not trust San Rafael with them. Most importantly, RVSD has a fully funded 10-year $63 million plan for upgrades. Contrast this with San Rafael’s $10 million upgrade plan that expires in 2014. Ross Valley Sanitary is financially sound, pensions are fully funded, and has approximately $63 million in assets. Compared to San Rafael’s $37 million assets, 145 miles of pipes and pumps that are aging, and the city’s $140 million pension shortfall. With a little fact-checking the Sun would have also found that the sewer rates are in line with all the sewer agencies in Marin. Increases are due to the need to upgrade the aging infrastructure or suffer severe fines. Legal fees are primarily around a 1999 sale of RVSD’s surplus property that was consummated by prior boards. The developer owed RVSD $12 million, they have demonstrated that they cannot come up with our $12 million. This is the majority of the legal fees. The property worth about $25 million is now ours again. There are three seats up—please vote for Peter Sullivan, Pat Guasco and Pam Meigs. Bruce Baum, San Anselmo

RVSD’s fact-checkered past... It’s unfortunate the Pacific Sun did no fact checking when it made its Ross Valley Sanitary District endorsements. Incumbent board members Peter Sullivan and Pat Guasco have focused on pipes, pumps and sewage and keeping it out of our yards and creeks. They have implemented a successful sewer lateral grant program for homeowners while expertly implementing other leading-edge programs and managing our finances. Rick Holland, a perpetual candidate for many offices, fails to substantiate his assertions and misleads in order to sensationalize. Holland’s campaign charges are refuted by information easily obtained in the public record. The fact is there is no proposal to consolidate sewer districts between Corte Madera, San Rafael and RVSD. Corte Madera dropped out in May 2007. This is a merger with San Rafael. Studies have found there are no benefits to the residents of the Ross

Nightmare on Drill Street Even Freddy is repulsed by heartless actions of British Petroleum.

Is the Gulf of Mexico going to be a mess for years? You bet your BP! P.S.: Gonna be a lotta new Freddy Kruegers this Halloween. Yep! Kimberly Clark, Greenbrae

Put your stamp on the letters to the editor at ›› pacificsun.com MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 7


›› UPFRONT

Shock and awful Behind PG&E’s plans to unplug community choice once and for all by Pe t e r S e i d m a n

W

hen Marin Clean energy flipped the switch May 7 to send electricity flowing to the first community choice aggregation customers in the state, PG&E was ratcheting up its attack on local-power initiatives with a June 8 ballot measure that’s a cynical dagger aimed at the heart of community choice. PG&E is running wall-to-wall television ads in which an attractive, mild-looking woman looks earnestly into the camera and says The Taxpayers Right to Vote Act will protect California residents from dangerous politicians eager to usurp their democratic rights. A full-page newspaper advertisement touts “Protect Your Right to Vote! It’s Your Money.” The thrust is that Proposition 16 will keep avaricious politicians from sneaking taxpayer money into public-power coffers. But the money behind public-power startups comes ratepayers, not taxpayers, say opponents. That’s the same money ratepayers now shovel into PG&E coffers. The opponents favor a public-power paradigm in which agencies such as Marin Clean Energy (MCE) can keep ratepayer dollars local, where ratepayers and residents have much more control over their energy future than if they hitched their electricity wagon to the PG&E star. A short history of Proposition 16 illustrates the reality behind PG&E’s conten-

tion that the company has placed it on the ballot to protect taxpayers in the name of democracy and the “right to vote.” When PG&E first introduced the proposition, its title was “The Taxpayers Right to Vote Act.” The title infuriated proponents of public-power plans. County Supervisor Charles McGlashan is chair of the Marin Energy Authority, the joint powers agency that gave birth to MCE. McGlashan and MCE filed a complaint with the state attorney general charging that PG&E was using deceptive practices in naming the proposition. The attorney general agreed and forced the utility to change the name to the “New Two-Thirds Vote Requirement for Local Public Electricity Providers; Initiative Constitutional Amendment.” The name change accurately reflected the intentions at the highest level of the PG&E administration. “The word ‘Orwell’ keeps on coming up,” says Paul Fenn. “This is a corporation playing an old approach to trick voters into seeing the government as an opponent and playing the game using freedom of speech as a tactic.” Fenn is the founder and president of Local Power. The Marin resident wrote AB 117, the state legislation that allows municipalities to choose energy providers for their communities. The 2002 law paved the way for MCE, the first public-power plan to actually 10 >

›› NEWSGRAMS Nonprofit buys‘Point Reyes Light’ A new finger is at the switch of the Point Reyes Light, as a deal was sealed last Friday to put the pages of the West Marin newspaper in the hands of fledgling nonprofit group Marin Media Institute. Robert Plotkin, who’d purchased the Light from longtime publisher David Mitchell in 2005, sold the paper to the newly created Point Reyes Light Publishing Company, a“low profit, limited liability company”owned by Marin Media. Marin Media spokesman Mark Dowie declined to state how much it paid for the Light, but did say the nonprofit had raised more than $325,000 in anticipation of the venture and that the purchase price was below that.The Point Reyes Light made national headlines in 1979 when it earned a Pulitzer Prize for“public service”for its reporting on the Synanon cult.The Light’s current circulation is around 3,000, according to Dowie. In a press release sent out Wednesday, Marin Media describes itself as a collective of“journalists, writers, educators and philanthropists”hoping to“forge a new path forward”for the struggling weekly, which has not been profitable in years. Marin Media’s nine-member board of directors includes such locals as MALT co-founder Phyllis Faber and West Marin journalist Norman Solomon. In a statement to the press, Marin Media says its goal with the Light is to create a hybrid of a “traditional newspaper”and a nonprofit that will foster“community education and communication in a variety of media and formats.”Dowie says talks are in the works for the paper to partner in various ways with Point Reyes Station-based radio KWMR.The paper’s focus, says Dowie, will remain on the immediate community. But, he adds, an effort will be made to“bring more national and international stories into the Light, but only stories that are of complete and total relevance to [West Marin].” The Light currently has a staff of six—editor Tess Elliot, plus a business manager, office manager, a reporter and two interns. Marin Media had also tried to work out a deal with the Light’s competing newspaper, the West Marin Citizen.“We made the Citizen an offer, they declined,”says Dowie.“I’m not sure the West Marin media market can support two publications, but we’ll see.” As for Plotkin, the Bolinas resident told the Sun he wasn’t yet sure about his immediate plans, but he’d like his post-Light career to include the launch of an anti-genocidal nonprofit. Plotkin came to the Light with the idea of melding community journalism with a New Yorker sophistication—a brassy style that often put him at odds with readers who enjoyed the paper’s folksy ways. His half-decade tenure as publisher of the Light made local headlines in itself—from restraining orders between Plotkin and Mitchell to feuds between Plotkin and the community to competition from rival publications bent on siphoning advertisers and readers from the Light. Plotkin has issued a written statement to the press in which he wishes the paper’s new owners well and acknowledges the“discord”that grew between himself and the West Marin community. In typical self-assured style, he writes about how his plans to turn the Light into a beacon of journalistic distinction turned awry: “Sadly,West Marin did not want editorial excellence.They did not want to see behind the curtain, they did not want to meet the sweaty, profane man inside the Mickey Mouse costume. They wanted a newspaper that would record their births, celebrate their accomplishments and habitually congratulate them on living here. But most of all, the neo-romantics of West Marin took themselves way too seriously.They wanted reverence where I provided irreverence. And irreverence in West Marin turned out to be a mortal and expensive sin.”—Jason Walsh EXTRA! EXTRA! Post your Marin news at ›› pacificsun.com

8 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010


›› BEHiND THE SUN

From the Sun vaults May 29 - June 4, 1975

A farewell to marms Marin school teacher to Pacific Sun—you’ll never amount to anything! by Jason Walsh

35

The Pacific Sun brought chewing gum for the whole class 35 years ago this week. Despite the possibilyears ago ity of having its knuckles rapped by the business end of a splintery wooden hand ruler, the Marin newsweekly cornered tough-as-nails school teacher Valerie Ansel for an interview in May of 1975. The 83-year-old Ansel—make that Miss Ansel—began teaching in San Anselmo in 1914 for $75 a month and led elementary classes at the Main School—now Wade Thomas—for 45 years. She favored clear penmanship and sturdy posture—and took no lip. “Because of her strictness in the classroom,” wrote Sun reporter Lorna Cunkle, the students dubbed her “Little Napoleon.” And, aside from a few impish spitball hurlers, she was beloved by all. Well, some, anyway. (Despite her advanced years at the time of the Sun’s interview, Ansel’s Pledge of Allegiance days were far from over—she lived to the ripe old age of 96.) Trading in its dunce cap for a reporter’s hat, the Pacific Sun was once again under the stern glare of a thorny Marin schoolmarm. But this time the Pacific Sun was asking the questions. What was teaching like in 1914? The classes were very large in those days, you never had fewer than 36 in a class. There was no kindergarten then. The mothers got together later and petitioned for that. Mr. Wade Thomas was the superintendent. He was a good educator and he had wonderful schools. He was never in the red; he was very conservative. The kids used to have to line up outside, girls in one line and boys in another and Charlie Saunders would play the drums while they all marched in. How were the 1914 kids different from the kids you had later? Fortunately, in my day, parents thought that teachers were pretty fine people. We had excellent cooperation from our parents. But since I’ve been out [of teaching] permissiveness has set into the schools. Teachers today tell me they’ll say something like, “Johnny, get your math paper, I want to correct it,” and he’ll say, “I don’t want it corrected now—and go to hell.” That’s common talk. My God, I’d a had him outta that room so fast—into the kitchen and soap his mouth!

Miss Ansel, 1975.

What should we be teaching kids— besides the 3 Rs? I think you want to teach them the value of living, and the value of citizenship. When I was growing up we had one subject that was called history and another subject that was called geography. Each was its own little area. Nowadays, this business of “social studies,” what a mish-mash that is. I do think we ought to have good old American history and no one knows geography any more. These kids don’t know the presidents. They don’t know anything about George Washington. A lot of students come from other countries. I think this Vietnamese thing is a great thing, trying to help these orphans. What a wonderful welding of people; it was to do good. I’m a Pollyanna over things like that. How at 83 do you live such an active life? Well, I’ve been darn lucky. I’ve had good health. I play bridge, I belong to two foursomes. And I’m interested in my church. Then my family is so good to me. I have great-greats [nieces and nephews], not only greats. What do you think about the women’s movement? I believe that women should be compensated for doing work that a man is doing in the same area. But this business of all these queer things like [prefacing a single woman’s name with] “Ms.” Oohh, whenever I get a letter with that on it, I just put a big M-I-double S [over it]. And I’ve written to some of them, “If you’re going to address me that way, don’t expect any donations.” If you had gotten married, would they have expected you to quit teaching?

›› TRiViA CAFÉ

by Howard Rachelson

1. What three colors make up the s-shaped logo on Golden Gate Transit buses and boats? 2. How many teeth do these animals have? 2a. Humans #2a 2b. Dogs 2c. Cats 3. Pictured below: Give the title of this 1998 film comedy and name the movie’s three main stars. 4. What food item (still popular today) did the Grey Poupon company begin producing in 1777? 5. Disneyland in California and Disney World in Florida are located, coincidentally, in counties with #2b the same name. #3 What is it? 6. Albert Einstein was working in a European capital city when he developed his Theory of Rela#2c tivity. What city was it? 7. If all the Ivy League colleges were listed in alphabetical order, what would be the first four on the list? 8. Which two chemical elements are most commonly used as a disinfectant or antiseptic? 9. During the Vietnam War, North Vietnamese forces were able to move soldiers and supplies along the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which passed along the border of Vietnam and what two countries? 10. If you roll a pair of dice one time, what is the probability that the sum of the dice will be an even number greater than 5? BONUS QUESTION: What well-known London landmark is named after Sir Benjamin Hall, British commissioner of works in the 1850s? Howard Rachelson, Marin’s Master of Trivia, invites you to a live Team Trivia Contest every Wednesday at 7:30pm at the Broken Drum in San Rafael. Send your best trivia question (with your name and hometown) to howard1@triviacafe.com; if your question is used in the ‘Pacific Sun,’ we’ll give you credit!

Some districts in California had trustees who would say, “Married Women Need Not Apply” on the application. San Anselmo’s didn’t say that; however, Mr. Thomas preferred the unmarried teachers. Of course, all the teachers were women. What do you think of male teachers? I think since the men have come into the elementary schools, they’ve helped to wreck the schools. Why do you feel women are better teachers? The children then were more or less tied to the apron strings. But possibly in the seventh or eighth grade I could accept a man teacher. One that could discipline the kids, and one they could look up to.

Answers on page 32

Would you like to see more women in government? Now there’s a spot. I’d like to see the women run this government for a while, because the men have made a helluva mess of it and I vote for women every chance I get. And if you ask me why I’d tell you. I feel that basically women are more honest. When it comes to this bribery stuff, and taking money to raise the price of milk and all that stuff, I think a woman would think twice about that. If a woman had anything to do with it in any country, there’d be no war. It’s the men that want to go around killing each other. ✹ Share your good ol’ Golden Rule Days memories with Jason at jwalsh@pacificsun.com.

Blast into Marin’s past with more Behind the Sun at ›› pacificsun.com MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 9


›› UPFRONT < 8 Behind PG&E’s plans to unplug community choice start supplying electricity to customers; other jurisdictions across the state are now looking to Marin as they contemplate their own energy future. That interest elicited a response from PG&E—Proposition 16. The story line that PG&E is using in its advertising rests on the corporation’s undying interest in protecting California voters and their right to stop government intrusion into their power stream. But no less a personage than Peter Darbee, PG&E’s CEO, drove a wedge into his own company’s thematic pursuit of Prop 16 when he addressed an investor conference March 1 in New York. This was about a month after the company announced it was amassing a $35 million war chest to push Prop. 16. It wasn’t out of bounds for investors to wonder what they would be getting for their money. Audio of the conference went up on the company’s website for all to hear. Darbee said Prop. 16 came about when, a few years ago, elected officials in Woodland, Davis and West Sacramento supported a proposal from the Sacramento Municipal Utilities District to supply electricity at rates below PG&E’s. Darbee told investors in March it cost his company between $10 million and $16 million to block ballot measures in Sacramento and Yolo counties that would have cleared the way for

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the SMUD expansion. The money worked. A measure that called for breaking away from PG&E failed by a substantial margin in Sacramento. In Yolo County, however, the proposal to join SMUD lost by less than 1 percent. PG&E also spent millions blocking a public-power plan in San Francisco, and more money opposing a plan in the Central Valley. Darbee conferred with PG&E Vice President Nancy McFadden and Prop. 16 was born. The June election “seemed more favorable” than a November ballot, Darbee told investors. “As the time approached, it also occurred to us that people aren’t very pleased with the job that government is doing these days in general, you know, across the board,” an outlook PG&E capitalizes on repeatedly in television and print ads. Darbee made some remarkable statements at the investors’ conference: “And the idea was to diminish [individual public-power efforts], you know, rather than year after year different communities coming in as this or that and putting this up for vote and us having to spend millions and millions of shareholder dollars to defend it repeatedly, we thought that this was a way that we could sort of diminish that level unless there was a very strong, you know, mandate from voters that this was what they wanted to do.” Prop. 16, in other words, is a good investment for shareholders. “So this was re-

ally a decision about [whether we could] greatly diminish this kind of activity for all going forward rather than spending $10 million to $15 million a year of your money to invest in this.” Darbee told investors Prop. 16 would create “some flap,” but after the election, the company would “mend any broken fences.” Prop. 16 mandates a two-thirds vote of residents before a municipality can form a community choice aggregation energy agency such as MCE. It also makes it even harder for public-power agencies to grow and compete against utilities, including PG&E. If a publicpower agency wants to expand its customer base, it first must receive approval from two-thirds of its current customers and also from two-thirds of residents in the proposed expansion area. Some Marin cities chose not to join MCE. City councilmembers said perhaps their cities would consider joining in the future. But if Novato, for example, wanted to join after Prop. 16 passed, MCE would have to garner that supermajority vote of current customers and of future customers in Novato. (Even Novato and other cities currently hesitant to joining public-power systems are opposing Prop. 16.) PG&E representatives say the company only wants to ensure that residents can tap into the democratic process before their communities join a pub-

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tired? depressed? irritable? low libido? poor sleep? brain hot f lashes?

lic-power system. But critics say the super-majority requirement belies that sentiment. Almost all political experts in California agree a two-thirds vote ensures that nothing ever happens, no matter what the issue. And when dealing with the details of power generation and transmission, that two-thirds requirement skews the democratic process to the side that can throw the most money at dumbed-down TV ads. Fenn is blunt when he puts the PG&E push for Prop. 16 into a wide-frame context: “We just went through this huge crash in the legitimacy of corporatism in the United States on Wall Street [and in the oil market and the banking industry]. This is an event on that radarscope for the nation. This is an attack on government. It’s disaster capitalism. It’s shock doctrine. They are f--king with us. The action is monopolization. The historical context is deregulation.” Mindy Spatt, communications director at TURN, The Utility Reform Network, echoes Fenn’s outrage. Her language is less salty but just as charged. She says it’s absurd for PG&E to talk about protecting the democratic process for ratepayers and residents. “I am a PG&E customer. I got no chance to vote on Darbee’s $10 million pay package. I didn’t vote on their $9 billion bailout, and I don’t vote on rate hikes. For PG&E to present itself as somehow being a bas-

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“The PG&E strategy is so hubristic,� says Fenn, “that the blowback could be pretty broad. If they lose, they face having wasted not just the money on the campaign, but also the [millions] they have spent since 2002 on improving their image: all the billboards, all the buses, all the ads.� The push to promote public power in California, and PG&E’s pushback in the form of Prop. 16, is a battle of great consequence and epic proportions, according to Fenn and other proponents of clean, renewable, local power plans. “PG&E is focused on leading the nuclear and gas solution, and on cap and trade to support that solution. This is probably the most important demand-side energy war in the world. Can the U.S. get the energy industry out of its ass?� There may be at least one positive that comes out of the Prop. 16 debate, according to Fenn. For years, the vast majority of the state’s residents knew little or nothing about community choice aggregation. “It was such an obscure policy. To have it go [primetime] is fun as hell.� The week MCE flipped the switch, inquiries already were coming in from Illinois and Denver about how the Marin experience could translate to other jurisdictions. “It shows that just by virtue of having tried this, we already have helped the market and have had an effect on policy across the United States,� says McGlashan. “A whole bunch of market actors are praying that Prop. 16 fails so that we can open the doors on a new paradigm of renewable energy in the state.� ✚ Contact the writer at peter@pseidman.com.

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the wildowers in bloom, Marin’s trails are full of weekend warriors biking, hiking and horseback riding. Avid Pac Sun reader Larry suggested it’s the perfect time to recognize Mike Lilly, a dedicated Marin County Open Space volunteer and our Hero of the Week. For years, Mike has spent nearly every weekend maintaining the Big Trees Trail as well as other trails throughout Novato. Tireless in his efforts as a caretaker of the land, Mike helps keep our footpaths debris-free and provides proper runoff for rainwater. He’s always smiling and happily shares information about the local habitat, wildlife and history of the land. If you see Mike’s friendly face out there on a Novato trail, make sure to tip your hat or helmet and say thanks.

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tion of democracy is absurd. Customers have far more input into public power than they do with PG&E.� After the Enron-era energy debacle and deregulation chaos, PG&E went bust and sought that $9 billion in public money. “For PG&E to keep talking about risks [of public-power plans] is absurd,� says Spatt. “No public-power entity has received a dime in bailout money, yet PG&E received $9 billion.� Prop. 16 has the support of many chambers of commerce and the usual anti-tax contingent. In the Bay Area, Jim Wunderman, president and CEO of the Bay Area Council, is a key advocate. And the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 1245 also is on the list. Labor has pension money invested in PG&E, which may explain their support. Opponents count cities and towns up and down the state in their camp. Editorial boards of virtually every major newspaper in the state have come out against Prop. 16. Even some Republican groups have joined the opposition. One interesting note: the Southern California utility companies, which are sitting out the campaign. Conservative political opponents and editorial boards at conservative papers oppose Prop. 16 because of the super-majority requirement, which they say is clearly undemocratic. The danger, they stress, is that the initiative process is dominated by money. In February, PG&E pledged to spend $35 million on its Prop. 16 effort. Spatt says opponents have a little less than $35,000 in their war chest. Gov. Hiram Johnson created the initiative process about 100 years ago to give the little guy some clout in fights such as his battles against the Southern Pacific Railroad and Harry Chandler, the powerful and wealthy owner of the Los Angeles Times.

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arin County could be on the brink of losing its grave distinction as the world’s breast cancer capital, thanks to droves of women abandoning a drug that pharmaceutical manufacturers and doctors once marketed as a miracle way to combat menopausal symptoms and postpone aging. In 2002, heeding public-health warnings that hormone therapy could give them breast cancer, more than 57 percent of Marin women quit taking the prescription medication. At about the same time, a study released last week shows breast cancer rates for non-Hispanic white Marin women ages 50 and older slid a whopping 33 percent—dipping below the state’s average for the first time in a decade. The initial results from the Marin Women’s Study add weight to other statewide and national investigations showing that when women stopped taking estrogen and progestin therapy, striking reductions in breast cancer incidence followed. “This is compelling evidence,” says Rochelle Ereman, a Marin County epidemiologist and principal investigator for the study published this month in BMC Public Health, a peer-reviewed online journal. “This shows that the drop in estrogen and progestin led to a dramatic drop in the breast cancer rates.” Launched in 2006 in hopes of solv-

12 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010

ing the mystery of why Marin women were at one point 38 percent more likely than other urban California women to be diagnosed with breast cancer, the Marin Women’s Study has enrolled more than 14,000 women volunteers at mammography centers. The BMC Public Health report examines survey results from 1,083 participants. It is the first in a series of reports researchers expect to write analyzing respondents’ answers to 87 wide-ranging questions—from when the women began to menstruate, when and if they bore children and breastfed, how much they drink alcohol, if they used lawn-care services, birth-control pills, fertility drugs or hormone-replacement therapy. Ereman was filing early completed questionnaires when she noticed a recurrent theme. Many of the women said they had stopped taking combination hormone therapy. An analysis of the data shows that between 2001 and 2004, half of nonHispanic white Marin women 50 years and older who had been taking so-called combination hormone therapy stopped. During the same period, breast cancer rates for the group fell 33.4 percent. The report says the drop spared some 50 Marin women a year from the disabling, disfiguring and emotionally wrenching diagnosis of breast cancer. “This type of change in a risk factor is almost unheard of,” Ereman says. “We’re not going to see dramatic changes in other breast

R

Marin Women’s Study links sky-high cancer numbers to sky-high hormone therapy

cancer risk factors—alcohol use, menarche or child-bearing. This answers a piece of the puzzle of why Marin’s rates are high.” Marin’s breast cancer rates for white women ages 50 and above dropped so significantly in 2003 and 2004 that they were lower than the state’s average. The rates climbed back up from 2005 until 2007, the most recent years available, but remained lower than they had been through much of the 1990s. Investigators are anxiously awaiting new data to see if the trend holds. For reasons it took researchers years to tease out, Marin served as a so-called canary in a coal mine for combination hormone therapy and breast cancer. Women in this mostly white, affluent county of 250,000 were more likely to take combination hormone therapy, and they were quick to abandon it in 2002, after a large national study called the Women’s Health Initiative exposed myriad health risks from the treatment. ●

COMING ON THE heels of other studies that reported similar though less dramatic findings, the precipitous drop in Marin women’s hormone therapy use followed by the stunning drop in breast cancer rates did not shock Janice Barlow, executive director of San Rafael-based Zero Breast Cancer. What does surprise her, she says, is that more has not been done to stop pharmaceutical companies from market-

While estrogen replacement has revealed its own ill-health effects, it was the progestin-estrogen therapy that contributed to Marin’s alarming breast cancer rates.

ing combination hormone therapy eight years after the Women’s Health Initiative concluded it harms significantly more women than it helps. “There just wasn’t enough outrage over hormone-replacement therapy when the Women’s Health Initiative came out,” Barlow says. “Neither the American Cancer Society nor the American Association for Cancer Research has taken a position. They’re avoiding it because it’s political. Nobody’s coming out strongly against taking hormone-replacement therapy. “To me, the message from a public health perspective is to get women and physicians to stop taking and prescribing hormone-replacement therapy.” Where doctors once prescribed the therapy routinely to middle-age women whether they complained of menopausal symptoms or not, most doctors now recommend the therapy only to relieve hot flashes and other problems associated with a drop in estrogen levels as a result of menopause. Furthermore, physicians nowadays are more likely to prescribe the treatment for a limited time—rather than from middle age until death, as doctors did before. In 1998, more than 21 percent of white Marin women ages 50 and above took combined hormone therapy. By the years 2006 and 2007, the number shrank to 6.7 percent. A San Anselmo woman says her doctor reassured her two years ago that she could safely take combination hormone therapy.


“I was burning like someone put me in a 500-degree oven. So my gynecologist gave me this medicine,” she says. “Doctors didn’t know either. They thought it was good for you. “I wasn’t blindly taking these medicines. My doctor said: ‘Don’t worry about it. These are the new medicines. If you take estrogen with progestin, it protects you from cancer.’” Ironically, researchers believe it is the progestin—added to the estrogen therapy in the 1980s, when Getchell began taking the drug, to protect women against uterine cancer—that leads to breast cancer. ●

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IN A CRUEL twist, in the 1970s, endometrial cancer rates began spiking among Bay Area women. Turns out women here had been taking more estrogen than women elsewhere. After researchers connected endometrial cancer with the estrogen, Bay Area women largely abandoned the hormone therapy. Then the uterine cancer rates —particularly elevated in Marin—dove. In response, the pharmaceutical industry repackaged hormone therapy to give women a second hormone, progestin, along with estrogen. Progestin protects women with intact wombs against endometrial cancer. What physicians did not initially realize was that progestin exposes women to increased risk of heart disease, stroke and breast cancer. Researchers continuing to follow the Women’s Health Initiative participants also have reported an increased risk of lung cancer, particularly in smokers, among women who took the combination therapy. “Breast cancer may be only the tip of the iceberg in terms of hormonereplacement therapy,” Barlow says. In the 1990s, Marin breast cancer survivors, some of whom subsequently died from the disease, formed the nonprofit Marin Breast Cancer Watch, now called Zero Breast Cancer, to examine why Marin women were so much more likely 14 >

(Partial list) ORGANIZATIONS The Pacific Sun Sierra Club California Nurses’ Association (CNA) American Nurses Association - California Marin County Deputy Sheriff’s Association Marin Professional Firefighters’ Association Marin County Fire Department Firefighters Assn. Marinwood Professional Firefighters Assn. National Women’s Political Caucus Marin Democratic Party Democracy for America Marin Peace and Justice Coalition SEIU Local 1021 SEIU/United Health Care Workers West ELECTED OFFICIALS Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey State Senator Mark Leno Supervisor Harold C. Brown, Jr Supervisor Charles McGlashan San Rafael Vice Mayor Damon Connolly San Rafael Councilman Greg Brockbank Dixie District Trustee Andrew Hyman Marinwood CSD Director Bruce Anderson Sanitary District Director Megan Clark Healthcare District Trustee, Jennifer Rienks College District Trustee Diana Conti COMMUNITY LEADERS (Organizations listed for purposes of identification only) Julie Allecta, Wildcare Karen Crockett, former Dixie trustee Don Dickenson, County Planning Commissioner Gary Ford, Civic Leader Helge Hellberg, Marin Organic Tamara Hull, Gallinas Watershed Heidi Kuhn, Roots of Peace Patty Garbarino, Marin Sanitary Service, CEO Dr. Marty and Joyce Griffin, Environmental Leaders Kel Harris, Safe Routes to School Patrick J. Murphy & Nina Lilienthal-Murphy, Lincoln-SR Hill Neighborhood Assn. Steve Patterson, Federation of San Rafael Neighborhoods Michael Pritchard, Comedian Barbara Salzman, Wetlands Advocate Dan Sonnet, SR Planning Commission Jean Starkweather, Conservationist DISTRICT 1 SUPPORTERS Louise Aldrich Trip Allen Connie Barker Marjorie Barter Jerry Belletto Robin Joy Berenson Rocky Birdsey Marion Blanton Dr. Ed Boyce & Nancy Boyce

Epidemiologist Rochelle Ereman was the principal investigator for the Marin Women’s Study.

Supervisor Susan Adams

Susan Adams works for us, not special interests.

RONNIE CHOHEN

The 52-year-old San Anselmo mother who spoke on the condition of anonymity says she was not tuned into news reports about menopausal treatments in 2002, years before she began to experience symptoms, when researchers halted the combined hormone therapy arm of the Women’s Health Initiative because women taking the drugs were getting sick. The San Anselmo mother says her physician put her on hormone therapy after she complained of hot flashes and difficulties controlling her emotions. She said the physician told her hormone therapy would be good for her heart, her bones and might protect her against Alzheimer’s. There is evidence that combined hormone therapy protects against broken bones, but there is no evidence that it wards off Alzheimer’s. Furthermore, the Women’s Health Initiative, in comparing women taking combination hormone therapy to those taking placebos, found those on combination therapy were 26 percent more likely to develop breast cancer, 29 percent more likely to have a heart attack and 41 percent more likely to have a stroke. “I took it because I had a change in personality,” the San Anselmo mother says. “I basically had no patience with anyone, and I was snapping and yelling at my children and alienating my daughter. I guess I made the decision that I would rather risk breast cancer than to drive my daughter away.” Keriman Getchell, 70, of Tiburon, wishes she had the wisdom of the Women’s Health Initiative and the Marin Women’s Study before she began taking estrogen and progestin. When she complained about hot flashes, her doctor put her on hormone therapy. Getchell took the pills for 17 years, until 2002, right about the time the results of the Women’s Health Initiative were released, when she was diagnosed with breast cancer. While her husband was bedridden with Parkinson’s disease, Getchell underwent a double mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation.

Felix Braendel Stuart and Jean Brown Julie Bryant Robin Buccheri, DNSc., MHNP John and Marti Buffum Anne & John Caple Joseph W. Caramucci William Carney Cameron Case Susan Chapman Arlette Cohen Cecily Cosby Christine Cowan Frank Cox Mel Croner Leslie Crane Dave & Meredee Crutcher Kathy Cuneo Virginia Davis Jim Dillon Lillian Dreyer Jane G. Droogsma Roger Duba Patrick Duffy Edward Duggan Joel Fay Shirley Fischer Marie Fisher Richard Foldenauer Mary Foley RN, MS, PhD Jonathan Frieman Alison Fuller Barbara George Kathleen Gaines Shirley Graves Blair Gray Florence Graybill Mary Hanley Bill Hansell Alfred & Ruth Heller Robin & Gaspare Indelicato Leo Isotalo Leland Jordan Peter Joseph Laura Kantorowski & Mike Bates Kay Karchevski Reed & Margaret Kathrein Mike Kavanagh Nicole and Ernest Klock Vicki Lamborn Richard Langford Kiki La Porta Marcie Leach Douglas Lee Henri Lese Linda Levey John Ledecker

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While hormone replacement therapy is the prime suspect in Marin’s breast cancer mystery, investigators stress that environmental, genetic and lifestyle factors are cohorts, as well.

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< 13 Their breast guess to develop breast cancer than women elsewhere. They looked for the cause in the air, the ocean, on Mount Tamalpais, in the oil reďŹ nery across the bay, in pesticides, fertilizer, on their clothes, their lawns, their pets. They looked for a smoking gun but found none. They did look inside their medicine cabinets at birth-control pills and hormone-replacement therapy. But researchers assured them that these pharmaceuticals were not the culprit. What those researchers failed to realize and epidemiologist Ereman caught is that women in Marin were less than half as likely as their counterparts in other parts of the state to have had a hysterectomy. Women with hysterectomies who take menopausal therapy take estrogen alone. Consequently, although Marin women were no more likely than other California women to be on hormone therapy, they were more likely to be taking estrogen plus progestin, leading to more breast cancer cases. Researchers say it is too early to tell if removing so many doses of combination hormone therapy from Marin will

Just the facts, ma’am To read the study,“Recent trends in hormone therapy utilization and breast cancer incidence rates in the high incidence population of Marin County, California,� go to http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1471-2458-10-228.pdf.

14 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010

permanently remove the excess cases of breast cancer in Marin. “I think it tells us an important piece of the puzzle,â€? says Fern Orenstein, a breast cancer survivor, founding member of Marin Breast Cancer Watch and one of the study’s authors. “But the puzzle is bigger.â€? In addition to having mammography patients ďŹ ll out questionnaires, the Marin Women’s Study, funded by the federal Centers for Disease Control, has been collecting saliva samples and plans to analyze the bio-specimens to learn more about the causes of breast cancer. “We’re going to put these pieces of the puzzle together in the next few years,â€? Ereman says. “The Marin Women’s Study will continue to try to come up with additional leads to help drive the rates even lower,â€? says Dr. Christopher Benz, an oncologist and one of the study authors. “This is just a ďŹ rst report, and there’s a lot more that’s going to come out.â€? As far as whether hormone therapy rules out an environmental smoking gun causing breast cancer, Barlow says no one has yet begun a serious hunt for environmental causes. “We haven’t really studied the environment,â€? she says. “We haven’t had the tools. “I don’t want people to go away like this is the answer.â€? Everyone involved in the research agrees that hormone therapy was one part of the reason for Marin’s elevated rates. They all also agree that breast cancer is a complicated disease stemming from an interaction of environmental, genetic and lifestyle risk factors. “It was so much easier when people could go around and say—‘It’s the environment,’â€? Barlow says. “I just don’t think you can do that anymore.â€? ✚ Contact Ronnie Cohen at ronniecohen@comcast.net.

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›› STYLE

Now featuring the work of local artists:

Style, and how to live it Marin-inspired show puts the style back into lifestyle

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lisabeth Laurence wants to inspire you to live a life of style. And she’s created a top-notch vehicle to do that in her Marin County-created TV show Lives of Style. Laurence, a Tiburon resident who has developed or hosted more than 50 television projects and shows, is especially excited about this one. “Our mission is to show how everyone can live a life of style,â€? she says. “Throughout my years of writing and doing television I have been fortunate enough to meet extraordinary people and cover fabulous events. Many of these people share personal insights and reveal secrets to their success, and show us how they really live their lives.â€? This is a show that might broaden your idea of what’s stylish. Laurence’s point of view is that “style means basically living the best life you can. Walking on the Tiburon bike path and looking at the bridge, that’s stylish.â€? Laurence has lived all over, but Marin is her favorite place. She appreciates the rich opportunities we have in the Bay Area to enjoy style. Laurence wants her show to be a bright light for everyone. This is not a new version of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. Although her subjects may very well be rich and famous, she’s interested in bringing to Laurence had an epiphany about the show while walking viewers the qualities of the people behind the on the Tiburon bike path. glitz and the glitter. She says, “I am the audience.â€? She asks the questions that the au- local who graduated from Redwood High dience would want to ask. She’s the conduit School. She now splits her time between Los Angeles and Marin. “We’re treasure-hunting between us and the style-makers. the world for the best products, places, She wants you to know that people and events,â€? Erin says, style doesn’t have to be about “and bringing them back to San spending money. “Hiking Mt. Francisco.â€? Tam, picking up a gorgeous As a team, they bring differower, enjoying natural fabrics, “We really ent talents to the project. They buying locally grown produce, tried to show work really well together claims that’s living a life of style,â€? she Elisabeth. “Erin is creative, but says. Although the show brings the humanity focused on the production,â€? a worldview to the subject and of these says Elisabeth. As a mother/ has a lot of New York, Paris daughter team, they’re proud and Milan in it, she stresses the designers.â€? to be reaching people from 20 show’s Bay Area connections. years of age to 40 and beyond. Laurence got the idea for Lives They have two other projects in of Style about ďŹ ve years ago while development as well. walking on the Tiburon bike path, her favorLaurence says of the designers she inite place. She told me about the vision she got terviews, “We really tried to show the hu“right there on San Rafael Avenue by the water.â€? She realized that “we could inspire peo- manity of these designers.â€? Many of these ple and use all my background and contacts. style-makers started from very little. Behind Someone passed us on the path and said the high-intensity music, celebrities sitting ‘you’re smiling,’ and that was the beginning.â€? in the front rows and electric energy of a She has a great producer to help her—her runway show, there’s a humility about the designer’s life that she wants us to see. Laudaughter Erin, former producer for Diane Sawyer at 20/20, Good Morning America and rence feels that learning the real story about these people will give us all insights 17 > Primetime at ABC network news. Erin is a

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at-home visits with owners of fine homes and estates, as well as segments on dining with great chefs who explore food, wine < 15 Style, and how to live it and entertaining. Laurence sees wellness and inspiration. Many people assume sucas a subject of style and in that she brings cessful people are just “lucky” or have fortuto the viewer sources nate breaks and lead a for travel destinations, charmed life. She says, spas and resorts. “Most successful peoShe says, “We’re inple we’ve interviewed viting Bay Area viewers have worked hard for to interact with us—to their success and they contact us with people, are realistic, oftentimes places and things they are pretty humble and think would be great have tips or roadto feature on Lives maps for us on how to of Style.” There are achieve success.” examples of the best-ofThis is a local show the-best in every neighbut has the look of borhood in the Bay a first-rate network Area from Santa Cruz show. Lives of Style to San Jose to Santa has a newsmagazine Rosa—and of course, format. The subject San Francisco, Marin of beauty is explored County and Sonoma/ through interviews Napa wine country are with runway makefeatured. “We are rooted up artists as well as in the Bay Area and reviews of the latour San Francisco team est breakthroughs in has resided here for beauty, skincare and decades.” cosmeceuticals. Style Those looking is explored beyond Laurence gets haute couture with designer Ralph to find style in an fashion through a Rucci in an upcoming episode. economical way will look at rare jewelry be happy to know that and collectibles including exotic cars, an“we’ll be doing segments on ‘style for less,’ tiques and art. There will be up-close and

‘Lives of Style’ will catwalk across the airwaves on June 6.

ways to maximize style and ‘real-people’ style,” she says. This show gives us the heavy hitters in the fashion world. Some highlights include Donna Karan discussing the celebration of her brand’s 25th anniversary, what she’s proudest of and how she balances her life. Ralph Rucci gives an inside look into the life of an American couturier and what it’s like to dress some of the most iconic women in the world. Narciso Rodriguez recounts what it’s like to dress first lady Michelle Obama and shares how a movie poster can influence a collection. Nadja Swarovski reminiscences about Alexander McQueen’s stamp on the fashion world and what it’s like to be part of a dynasty that’s provided crystals for women

from Queen Victoria to Oscar-winner Sandra Bullock. There’s even a feature on a celebrity philanthropist who plays a sexy siren on TV. Lives of Style is planning to donate 5 percent of net profits to charity. Ready to follow Laurence’s vision of style as grace, beauty, wellness and joy? Then catch the show locally on KRON-4 TV Sundays, starting June 6. If waiting until then is too hard, you can watch a trailer at www.livesofstyle.com. ✹ Brenda Kinsel is a fashion and image consultant based in Marin. Check out her Website at www.brendakinsel.com.

Offer some helpful fashion advice on TownSquare at ›› pacificsun.com

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A hoisin in the sun Nothing says ‘summer’ like spring rolls... by Br o o ke Jac k son

“M

mmm...the flavors of summer.” That’s what I think whenever I take a bite of a Vietnamese spring roll. Also known as summer rolls and salad rolls, these handheld packages are bursting with flavors and textures from fresh herbs, crunchy lettuce, rice vermicelli and, traditionally, shrimp. But the beauty of Vietnamese spring rolls is that the fillings can be shaped and designed to whatever strikes your fancy (or is in your fridge!). Think juicy pieces of grilled rare steak paired with basil and mint, halved prawns and papaya, seared ahi alongside ripe avocado or lemongrass tofu and crisp bell pepper. Pile in crispy cukes, bean sprouts, julienned carrot and leaves of tender lettuce and the roll becomes a little meal. The brighter the contrasts in flavors and textures, the better the rolls turn out. Spring rolls are always served with dipping sauces that can run the gamut from the traditional Nuoc Cham to spicy peanut sauce to hybrid dips made from hoisin, almond butter or even apricot preserves mixed with sweet chili sauce. What complements the taste of the rolls best are the cornerstones of Vietnamese cooking: salty, sour, sweet and spicy with a little umami (the “je ne sais quoi” of flavors, a savoriness imparted by protein-heavy foods). Nuoc Cham is generally a combination of fish sauce with an acid such as rice vinegar and/or lime juice, sugar, some spicy chilies and garlic. This is the traditional accompaniment but it’s fun to try different sauces to tingle the tongue and add to the flavor explosion. There are a few key ingredients that may require a trek to an Asian market. The rice papers come in 8-1/2-inch rounds, which are the best to use when you first start out rolling. There are also 6-1/2-inch rounds that are a great size for finger food appetizers but may be harder to roll until you have some experience under your belt. Look for fish sauce that is the color of tea, not the darker varieties. I like the Mae Ploy brand of sweet chili sauce and Huy Fong’s sambal oelek (fresh chili paste). Vermicelli or bean thread noodles can be found at some regular grocery stores. The Asian Market in San Rafael, near Whole Foods, is well stocked or you may want to do a field trip to Ranch 99 in Richmond where you can find almost every Asian ingredient under the sun. Rolling the spring rolls takes a little practice. I remember working in catering and my manager had the cooks make some of these for a party. None of us had worked with the rice papers before and initially they turned to gelatinous goo because we soaked them too long. Once we mastered the correct soaking

20 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010

lettuce leaf and continue with the rest of the rolls. You can cut these in half if they are appetizers or even assemble everything and allow guests to make their own combinations and do their own rolling. Combination suggestions: 1. Butter lettuce leaves, thin papaya slices, julienned cucumber and carrot, leaves of mint, basil and cilantro, bean sprouts, vermicelli and large shrimp halved lengthwise. 2. Baby spinach, steamed asparagus spear, rare teriyaki steak, julienned cucumber and carrot, vermicelli, basil and cilantro leaves. 3. Butter lettuce leaves, avocado slices, julienned cucumber and carrot, vermicelli, seared ahi, mint and basil leaves. 4. Red leaf lettuce, firm tofu marinated in lemongrass, garlic, tamari sauce, sugar and lime juice then sauteed, julienned red bell pepper, cucumber and carrot, vermicelli, mint and cilantro leaves. -------------------------

STEP 2

STEP 3

Spicy Peanut Sauce: It is believed spring rolls first appeared in Asia during China’s Jin dynasty—around the year 300.

time though, rolling them tight enough was quite tricky. The crew never really got the hang of it; we turned out some very loosely rolled packages that evening, most of which slopped down the front of the guests once they took their first bite. With some clear instructions, though, you’ll be rolling like a pro in no time. As soon as you have all the ingredients together and are ready to roll, it’s easy and oh so satisfying. When that first bite hits your taste buds, they will be singing about the flavors of summer, imparted from a little package of flavor perfection. Follow these steps for perfect rolls: 1. Assemble all your ingredients beforehand. 2. Fill a pie plate with 1 inch of warm water. Dip a rice paper in the water to cover for about 2 seconds. You want it to soften slightly but still be somewhat stiff. It’s a common mistake to soak the paper too long so that it’s soggy or floppy. Be aware that the paper will continue to absorb moisture and get more pliable as you pile on your ingredients, so just dip it in and out of the water. 3. Lay on a clean dry surface—a dinner plate works well. Use a small amount of each ingredient, putting any of the sharper things in the middle of the pile—like the bean sprouts—so they won’t poke through and make a hole in the paper. I layer a small lettuce leaf, cukes, carrots, bean sprouts, vermicelli then a shrimp, pressing down to compact the parts into a neat pile. Position the pile near the lower third of the rice paper. 4. Fold the bottom of the paper over the filling then fold in both sides. Start to roll the pile up toward the top of the plate, tucking the filling in on the first turn to get a tighter roll. 5. Continue rolling until all the rice paper is used up, then roll back and forth once just to compress and tighten the roll. 6. Cover with a damp paper towel or

1 teaspoon each finely minced garlic and ginger 3 tablespoons smooth peanut butter, heated slightly 1 tablespoon sweet chili sauce 1 tablespoon tamari sauce 1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper (or to taste) 2 or 3 tablespoons hot water

STEP 4

Mix all ingredients together, adding enough water to make a saucy consistency.

Nuoc Cham 1 tablespoon sugar 2 tablespoons warm water 2 tablespoons each of lime juice, fish sauce and rice vinegar 1 teaspoon minced garlic 1/4 teaspoon chili garlic paste (sambal oelek)

STEP 5

Dissolve the sugar in the warm water. Whisk in the remaining ingredients until combined. Taste and adjust to your liking. ✹ Roll with Brooke at brooke.d.jackson@gmail.com.

Give us a taste of your thoughts at ›› pacificsun.com FINISHED!

PHOTOS BY BROOKE JACKSON

›› FOOD & DRiNK


›› EATiNG Let Cook for You on Memorial Day Weekend

Ants marching Don’t let the thought of a picnic turn you into a basket case

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by M at t hew St af for d

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t’s late springtime in Marin County, and a middle-aged man’s fancy turns to thoughts of enjoying the sunshine, wildowers and soft ocean breezes—and getting something to eat at the same time. The local opportunities for embracing the great outdoors are, of course, abundant: the meadows, canyons and promontories of Mt. Tamalpais; the dramatic seascapes of the Marin Headlands; Point Reyes and its beaches and pastures; Sausalito’s seawall, Mill Valley’s redwoods, the wide open spaces of Angel Island, China Camp and San Geronimo. But occasional blackberry bush notwithstanding, is there anything out there for a nature lover to feast upon? Of course there is, especially if you cart it in yourself. The picnic has been the postNeanderthal’s preferred form of alfresco dining at least since the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (“A book of verse beneath the bough/ A loaf of bread, a jug of wine and thou...â€?) and Edouard Manet’s rather saucy Le dejeuner sur l’herbe. Today’s picnic might be an elegant tete-a-tete of caviar sandwiches, fresh raspberries and chilled champagne, a company blowout complete with softball, Frisbees and barbecued chicken, or a solitary hiker pulling a peanut butter sandwich out of her knapsack and enjoying the view. Picnics can take place in a community setting as well: a Fourth of July parade, say, or a band concert or some other outdoor performance (think Stinson’s defunct Shakespeare at the Beach, Sausalito’s Jazz and Blues by the Bay or the countywide Film Night in the Park series). Two excellent examples are the 100th Dipsea Race on June 13 and the annual Mountain Play, running through June 20. This year’s offering is Guys and Dolls, so you might want to heed one of the plot points and pack a cheesecake. What other dining items go well with fauna and foliage? A roast chicken is always nice and easy to prepare, per Atlanta chef Linton Hopkins’ recipe in the May issue of Esquire. Season a 3- or 3 1/2-pound free-range organic chicken with sea salt and freshly ground

pepper, stuff the cavity with garlic cloves and fresh rosemary, place it in a cast iron skillet and roast at 450 degrees until done (about 45 minutes). Bring it to room temperature, chill in the fridge and stick it in the hamper along with a loaf of sourdough, a jar of mayo and plenty of napkins. Potato salad is another classic picnic dish, and this (from Nika Hazelton’s The Cooking of Germany) is the best version you’ll ever taste. Boil 2 lbs. of potatoes until al dente, then drain, peel and slice. Bring 1 cup chopped onion, 2/3 cup chicken stock, 1/3 cup olive oil, 1 tbsp. white wine vinegar, 2 teaspoons hot mustard, 2 tsp. salt and 1 tsp. pepper to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer 5 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in 1 tbsp. fresh lemon juice. Pour over the potato slices, stir and cool. It’s a perfect complement to summer’s sweet vine-ripened tomatoes, sliced and marinated in 1/4 cup olive oil, 2 tbsp. vinegar, 2 tsp. mustard, a clove of crushed garlic, chopped fresh basil and salt and pepper to taste. If your picnic

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site includes a grill, your noshing options become even tastier. Burgers (made of coarsely ground chuck or brisket, preferably) and sausages (pre-simmered in a nice lager, perhaps?) are always delectable, as is corn on the cob slathered with butter, pepper akes and lime juice, sweet peppers running the spectrum from green to orange to purple, and eggplant, zucchini and portabellas brushed with a little oregano-ribboned walnut oil. A cooler of ice, prosecco,

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chardonnay and hefeweizen is a must, and don’t forget dessert: the season’s outstanding cherries, apricots, peaches and nectarines, a few varieties of artisan cheese (have you tried Cowgirl Creamery’s Red Hawk?), an entire watermelon ready for carving, individual strawberry or boysenberry tarts. It’s a happy coincidence that the picnic season coincides with the arrival of the year’s most glorious produce, and Marin’s many farmers markets are ideal for satisfying your hamper-ďŹ lling needs. If you’d like to have someone else do the cooking, San Rafael’s Thursday evening market on Fourth Street is a ďŹ ne example of outdoor dining in an urban context, as dozens of food purveyors serve up snacks, bites and full-on meals from several ethnic traditions. Other options along these lines include the Mountain Home Inn, where you can enjoy a ďŹ ne meal on a veranda overlooking a redwood-perfumed canyon; Sam’s in Tiburon, a dockside resource for cioppino and peanut butter pie for lo these many decades; the Left Bank, a classy yet casual Parisian sidewalk cafe transported to Larkspur’s Magnolia Avenue; and the hot dog stand at Stinson Beach, perhaps the most primal and satisfying food ‘n’ sunshine option of them all. Don’t forget the corkscrew. ✚ Share favorite picnic spots with Matthew at mstafford@ paciďŹ csun.com.

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›› THAT TV GUY

by Rick Polito

Each comes FRIDAY, MAY 28 Wife Swap Etiquette school mom trades away with a new places with a mom whose family enjoys appreciation of mud racing. We never knew that you were the other’s point supposed to curtsy before climbing into of view, until Mom finds her your swamp buggy. ABC. 8pm. Student Seduction The shapely Elizabeth car wrecked and Berkley of Showgirls infamy plays the tutor all her prescripto a troubled teenage boy. Don’t get excit- tion pills missing. (2003) ABC Family. 9pm. ed, this is Lifetime, not Cinemax. The boy’s Bret Michaels After suffering a brain hemorrhage and stroke, the advances are rejected. heavy metal rock star He accuses her of sexual gives new meaning to misconduct. There may the term “head banger.â€? be some crying and hugVH1. 10pm. ging involved, but that’s The Tonight Show And about as hot as it gets. then Mickey Rourke (2003) Lifetime. 9pm. serves as a different but Yeti A plane carrying a colequally chilling cautionlege football team crashes ary tale. NBC. 11:35pm. in the Himalayas and the players are stalked by an abominable snow beast. TUESDAY, JUNE 1 We can accept the Yeti part, Wipeout Fat, clumsy but where was football people pulling face team going? The Yak Butter plants in the mud; the But can he play left guard? Friday at 10. Bowl? (2009) SyFy.10pm. Roman games but with cellulite. ABC. 8pm. Life Unexpected Lux wants to be an emanSATURDAY, MAY 29 Can’t Hardly Wait Jennifer Love Hewitt cipated minor.This gives young people all stars as the lifelong love interest of a shy the responsibilities of an adult, but without the ability to buy liquor, a high school boy who situation defined in legal waits till the last day terms as “a total ripoff.â€? of their senior year to CW. 9pm. declare his love in the film that gave hope to aspiring stalkers everyWEDNESDAY, JUNE 2 where. (1998) MTV. 7pm. Dad Camp This new Lost They are showing reality show follows six the series finale again. So irresponsible young you have another shot at men as they learn maybe understanding it. about the realities of We’re waiting for them Probably could’ve waited. Saturday at 7. impending fatherhood, to play it backwards. including such lessons ABC. 8pm. as changing diapers, calming fussy babies Amusement Park Eats Because what you and how to use another child to meet hot really want to do is feed people a bunch of chicks. VH1. 7pm. deep-fried sugar and fat Carole King and James before they get on the TiltTaylor: Live at the a-Whirl. Food Network.8pm. Troubador The iconic vocalists sing songs from That Album Everybody’s S U N D AY, M AY 3 0 Mom Had. KQED. 9:30pm. Billy the Exterminator Marathon An entire evening of Billy dealing THURSDAY, JUNE 3 with bees, raccoons, rats, CSI: Crime Scene Invessnakes, alligator, spiders tigation This week’s and reality film crews. murder victim is a porn A&E. All night. producer. They don’t Not ‘Too Late’ after all‌Wednesday, Private Chefs of Beverly 9:30pm. make a petri dish big Hills It’s hard being a chef enough to process that in a town where the customers are on crime scene. CBS. 9pm. extreme diets and the dishes must all be Yellowstone: Battle for Life These are the “gluten freeâ€? and “purge friendly.â€? Food animals struggling for survival in a landNetwork. 5pm. scape of harsh extremes. The humans are 60 Minutes Presents: Gotti All the other covered in another special: Yellowstone: Batmobsters are going to be jealous. CBS. 7pm. tling for a Parking Spot Close to the Visitors Center. Animal Planet. 9pm. ✚ MONDAY, MAY 31 Critique That TV Guy at letters@paciďŹ csun.com. Freaky Friday Jamie Lee Curtis and LindTurn on more TV Guy at say Lohan play a mother and daughter ›› paciďŹ csun.com who magically switch places for a day.


›› SiNGLE iN THE SUBURBS

Thank You Marin For Voting Us #1 Again!

Love thy neighbors Love spying on them, that is...

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by N ik k i Silve r ste in

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ot much is happening right now alone with the pup and stopped to pet with my gal pals and me. No bad Bagel. “Your dog is so sweet,â€? she said. dates, which is good. But, no good “It’s my wife’s dog,â€? he snarled. dates, which is bad. I asked everyone I know Since that atypical outburst, we haven’t for a juicy story and I got nada. had a glimpse of the wife or Bagel. What In times like this, I attach my dog to his leash we have seen is the husband with a much and go for a walk. Sometimes I ďŹ nd someone younger-looking woman. on the trail with a tale and sometimes I don’t. “Maybe it’s his daughter.â€? I speculated. For the past couple of weeks, I “New girlfriend,â€? haven’t. Then I realized I have Emma said. what I need right in front of Last Saturday, Emma me. The fact is I’m a Nosy and I were coming off Parker, and I’m not alone. the trail when we saw the I’ve lived on this Sausalito man and his girlfriend hill on and off for 20 years. driving away. We took With several complexes up that prime opportunity here, it’s not the most intito scope out his balcony. mate place; however, after This involved going down a while, you notice things the hill and standing in about the neighbors. It’s waist-high weeds. We’re hard not to when you have very subtle. a dog and you’re outside The pretty planter quite a bit. My girlfriends Who says folks don’t try to get to know their boxes ďŹ lled with spring here know even more about neighbors these days? owers that used to what’s going on than I do. adorn the balcony— (Frankly, my eyesight isn’t that great, or I’d gone. In their stead, we found a skull and probably be the biggest busybody of the crossbones ag and a punching bag. (I bunch.) swear. I couldn’t make that up.) Since this isn’t exactly Mr. Rogers’ quaint We craned our necks to get a better look little neighborhood, we have more than at some large silver objects behind the deck our share of resident characters. My hiking railing. “What are those things?â€? I asked. buddy Fran and I dubbed one couple “The “Kegs. Two beer kegs.â€? Emma answered. Walkers.â€? Mrs. Walker walks compulsively. Maybe this middle-aged guy needs a We know Mr. Walker takes the bus to and lesson from me about how to move beyond from work so, during the day, she walks his Peter Pan complex. Or perhaps he just alone. When he comes home, he joins her. needs to blow six months’ salary on a sports Down the hill, up the hill, on the trail. car. Oh wait, he was behind the wheel of a Rain or shine, until nightfall, they’re usually Porsche when he zoomed by us. out there. Her face is windburned in the If only women rebounded this quickly. winter and sunburned in the summer, but Even when I’m the dumper rather than the still she walks. He doesn’t suffer from the dumped, it takes me forever to mend my elements the way she does. broken heart. Well, I wish him the best he They’re a pleasant couple, mostly keepcan do and truly hope his wife and Bagel ing to themselves, though they always aren’t waiting by the phone for him. respond when we greet them. Recently, she Emma and I continued gawking until spoke to my dog and I was surprised to a neighbor walked by and gave us a funny learn that she knew Bruno’s name. look. Moving on, Emma told me we have a To me, the most fascinating thing about hoarder living among us. the Walkers is that they found each other “A real one? Like on the TV show?â€? I and somehow share this passion for walkasked. ing. All of my boyfriends were content sit“Yep. If his curtains are open, I’ll show ting in front of the TV while I took the dog you,â€? she said. out. I can’t seem to ďŹ nd a man who wants “We really are nosy.â€? to walk around the block with me and Mrs. “No,â€? Emma replied. “We’re observant.â€? Walker found one who will walk to the ends Call it what you will, I think we probably of the earth with her. need to just cut it out and spice up our own My neighbor Emma is the one who nolives. Maybe I’ll buy a sports car. ✚ ticed that the Madly in Love Couple is now E-mail: nikki_silverstein@yahoo.com just one angry man. We used to see the two of them holding hands while walking their Offer Nikki some helpful advice on TownSquare at cute beagle named Bagel. ›› paciďŹ csun.com Not too long ago, Emma saw the man

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›› MUSiC

Django all the way Gypsy jazz has settled permanently ently with guitarist John Jorgenson by G r e g Cahill

A

sk guitar master John Jorgenson whyy he has devoted much of his professional career er to the music of Django Reinhardt, the legendary 1930s and ’40s Gypsy swing-jazz guitarist, and the popular country and jazz picker is quick to reply. “He was the first,” Jorgenson says in a soft, ft, but matter-offact manner. “He was the first guitarist to be the frontman of his own band. I mean, there were otherr guitarists, like Eddie Lang before him and Charlie Christian stian later on, who were featured in various bands, but they weren’t up front like Django. “Django was the first guitar hero.” Jorgenson is something of a guitar hero in his own right. In the 1980s, as a member of the Desert Rose Band, along with ex-Byrd Chris Hillman, an, Jorgenson racked up three Country Music Awards as Guitarist of the Year. After leaving the band nd in 1990, Jorgenson co-founded (with Will Rayy and Jerry reat rootsDonahue) the critically acclaimed triple-threat rock guitar band the Hellecasters. he Desert Two years ago, Jorgenson reunited with the n a second Rose Band for five shows and is currently on reunion tour that will bring the band to the Mystic Theatre in Petaluma on Saturday, May 29. But it his longstanding connection to the Hot Club

COMING SOON The John Jorgenson Quintet performs June 11-12, 8pm, at Djangofest, four days of concerts and workshops, at 142 Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley. $45-$60. 415/383-9600.

music and Gypsy-jazz style shaped by the late, l great French/Belgian guitar master that occupies most of his professional pursuits these days days. Jorgenson—a classically trained Souther Southern California native whose father served as music director for jazz great Benny Goodm Goodman’s band—was first bit by the Django bug in 1979. “I had just gotten a job at Dis Disneyland—it was supposed to be a three-month job playing bluegrass and Di Dixieland music,” recalls Jorgenson during a phone call from his vacation on the th Florida Gulf Coast. “I didn’t know how to play either of those styles of mu music, but I bought a mandolin and started learning. A couple of guys I knew w who were really into 1920s and ’30s-style swing jazz told me I should check o out Django. So I bought an album. “As soon as I heard it, I freaked out! No one else I’d heard played with the wildness and intensity inten of Django—he reminded me of Jeff Beck or Just call him Gypsy Jimi Hen Hendrix.” Rose Jorgenson. Sin Since 1988, Jorgenson has gone on to release eight Gy Gypsy swing-jazz recordings and toured extensively wi with his talented quintet. His enthusiasm for Django hasn’t waned. “The vitality and the excitement of his recordings have never lost their appeal,” he says, “much in the sam same way that early Beatles recordings or early Elvis records—the music is of a certain period, yet there is a timelessness that appeals to people peo throughout the years. “You don’t need to be a jazz fan or a guitar aficionado to be reached by that music. mu It has an exotic side—that Gypsy element is in the music and adds a to the mystique and the mythology. Django’s music is romantic, romantic accessible, joyful and melancholy—all at the same time. “There’s also an athletic element—I know that I certainly enjoy watching Biréli Lagrène and other adherents of Django’s music vaulting all over the fingerboard.” ✹ Whistle a tune with Greg at gcahill51@gmail.com.

›› SPiN OF THE WEEK Clovis People, Vol. 3 (Telarc) Otis Taylor Singer, songwriter and guitarist Otis Taylor continues to reinvent the blues with songs that blend wistful moods, serious narratives (including several about race and society) and the jazz trumpet of Ron Miles and electric guitar of Gary Moore. No first or second volumes precedes this nugget, which derives its odd title from the little-understood Paleo-Indians, but a deep and abiding wisdom pervades this powerful set of songs. Once again, Taylor has set a new standard in contemporary blues.—GC

Tune up to the Marin music scene at

›› pacificsun.com 24 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010


›› THEATER

Luck be a Sleeping Lady! Mountain Play rolls dice, wins big with ‘Guys and Dolls’ by Le e Brady

J

ames Dunn, longtime Mountain Play di- fore.” Everything brings on a song: Nathan rector, pulls off another theatrical miracle and his crew sing “The Oldest Established on Mt. Tam as dames and dolls, macho Permanent Floating Crap Game in New men and missionary posturing fill the stage in York,” while Adelaide and Sarah join forces Guys and Dolls. A big hit in the ’50s, this rous- on “Marry the Man Today, and Change ing look at love as a gamble still works. Rick His Ways Tomorrow.” Dunn keeps the acWallace’s choreography is contagiously ener- tion fast and engaging as the four leads sing getic; Patricia Polen’s costumes are eclectically their way to a happy ending that had an colorful; Ken Rowland’s bold sets effectively enthusiastic opening-weekend audience on revolve; and a delightful and its feet. talented cast of singing and The sum is more than dancing actors does the rest. the parts, however, and NOW PLAYING They deliver Frank Loesser’s the aptly named chorus Guys and Dolls runs through appealing songs and bring to of gamblers shares June 20 at the Cushing joyful life Damon Runyon’s credit: Joshua Castro Memorial Amphitheatre, New Yawk low-lifes. as Nicely-Nicely, Benny 801 Panoramic Highway, Mill The plot, already thick Southstreet (Michael Valley; 415/383-1100, www. with love complaints from Cassidy), Rusty Charlie mountainplay.org. Nathan Detroit’s (Randy (Tim Ryan) and their Top Girl runs through June Nazarian) longtime girlrival from Chicago, Big 20 at the Barn Theatre, Marin friend Adelaide (Kimberly Jule (Chad Williams). Art & Garden Center, 30 Sir Jensen), takes off when Debra Chambliss and Francis Drake Blvd., Ross; Nathan, who is seeking a her tuneful backstage 415/456-9555, www.rossvalleyplayers.com. venue for a game, bets Sky orchestra, the Men’s Masterson (Tyler McKenna) Chorus, The Hot Box that he can’t take missionGirls and several small ary Sarah Brown (Susan but important roles Zelinsky) on a date to Cuba. Of course, the make the production feel like Broadway dangerously handsome Sky and the virtuously on the mountain. All contribute to making pure Sarah fall in love, which brings on the Guys and Dolls a fun afternoon that sends haunting duet, “I’ve Never Been in Love Be- audiences home smiling—and singing.

Street dice is known for its sharps, cheats and heartbreakingly lofty falsettos.

A

udiences are warned that Top Girls is a challenging play that opens with five women telling their stories—at the same time. It’s a bold move that sets both style and theme in playwright Caryl Churchill’s 1982 look at the price women pay for success in the world. Marlene (Loring Williams), just promoted (over a man) to the top job at Top Girls employment agency, invites five historical women to share her success: Pope Joan (Carolyn Power), Isabella Bird (Michelle Darby), Lady Nijo (Lina Makdisi), Patient Griselda (Theresa Miller) and Dull Gret (Susan Donnelly). Wine flows as freely as the talk of sacrifices these women have made, mostly to do with lost children, makes it clear to Marlene that success in a patriarchal world has its costs. When this invigorating first scene ends and we move to the sleek, modern offices of Top Girls, we see that things haven’t improved much, as several women talk about their employment history. Louise (Power) has given her life to a company only to hit a glass ceiling; Jeanine (Melissa Claire) doesn’t want to be just a housewife, but has no idea where to go from there. Mrs. Kidd (Donnelly) is

there to protect her husband’s job. Employment counselors Nell (Melissa Claire) and Win (Makdisi) have their own workplace issues and clearly see Marlene as a Margaret Thatcher wannabe who has all the faults of a male boss with none of the attributes. When the action moves to a small town in England, we get the backstory on Marlene, one that doesn’t make her any more sympathetic. And when her niece (possibly her daughter) Angie (Miller) shows up at the office, Marlene’s two lives intersect. Cris Cassell directs the eight excellent women in this complex, multi-character play like a sensitive traffic officer. She nimbly keeps time and place clear on David Apple’s workable set (transparent, movable flats), and she uses Les Lizama’s distinctive light design (screens take on various emotive colors) to keep audiences in the here-and-now or the back-then. This is the second Caryl Churchill play to hit Marin this month (Owners is running at AlterTheater in San Rafael), and hit is a good word to describe the dramatic intensity of both. ✹ Tell Lee to break a leg at freshleebrady@gmail.com.

Break a leg with more theater reviews at ›› pacificsun.com

The Ross Valley Players give it their best da Vinci.

The Ross Valley Players Presents

Top Girls by Caryl Churchill Directed by Cris Cassell

May 21 to June 20

Buy Tickets Online: www.rossvalleyplayers.com Or call 415-456-9555 $15-$25

The Barn Theatre, Marin Art & Garden Center Sir Francis Drake Blvd. at Lagunitas, Ross MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 25


›› FiLM

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T O A D V E R T I S E C A L L : E T H A N S I M O N AT 4 8 5 - 6 7 0 0 X 3 11 26 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010

by Re nat a Po l t

“F

ootballâ€?—what we call soccer—is to the British what our football and baseball combined are to us. And football heroes, even retired ones, are royalty. So, although the name Eric Cantona (accent on the ďŹ nal a) may not mean anything to many Americans, the French-born former star of Britain’s beloved Manchester United is royalty to Brits—“King Eric.â€? Ken Loach’s Looking for Eric is about that Cantona really blows his own trumpet in this movie‌ real Eric and another one, the ďŹ ctitious Eric Bishop (Steve Evets), a Manchester postman. cache, the footballer, now bearded and more This Eric, veteran of two failed marriages, has portly than in his glory days (and, in real life, been left with two unruly teenage stepsons, an actor and TV personality), drops morsels one of whom is about to get into serious of wisdom such as, “You’ve got to trust your trouble with the law. Eric is still carrying a teammates—always.â€? torch for his high school sweetheart and ďŹ rst Director Loach is best known for his realwife, Lily (Stephanie Bishop). He’s a mess at istic, socially conscious ďŹ lms (Kes, The Wind home and at work, stashing that Shakes the Barley) about piles of undelivered mail in working-class Brits. With its a cupboard. What’s a bloke magical realism and folksy OPENING SOON to do? Looking for Eric opens humor, Looking for Eric is a After Eric crashes his car Friday at the Rafael. distinct departure. As Eric B. and ends up in the hospital, See page 27 for showtimes. gains conďŹ dence in himself his mail-room mates conand his mates, the ďŹ lm’s tone vene an impromptu group of despair turns hopeful. therapy session, involving The acting is accomplished, visualizing and emulating a person each with loose-limbed Steve Evets (try reading it admires. The names that come up are Sammy backwards) credible as the sad-sack postman, Davis, Fidel Castro, Frank Sinatra and—Eric and Eric Cantona apparently acting his realCantona. life, blustery but chummy self. Afterward, at Eric B.’s house, Cantona, If only there were subtitles! Between the playing himself, steps out of a life-size poster thick-as-treacle Manchester accents and and starts giving moral encouragement and Cantona’s almost cartoonish French one, the aphoristic advice. Between tokes on a joint dialogue is, as often as not, unintelligible. ✚ that Eric B. has swiped from his stepsons’ Review our reviews at letters@paciďŹ csun.com.

ViDEO

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Scenes from the dark side Cormac McCarthy’s post-apocalyptic novel The Road was a publishing event, and the buzz surrounding its film production was bigger than for any of McCarthy’s previous book adaptations. Thankfully, the writer-director team of Joe Penhall and John Hillcoat has kept its movie hats on, Post-apocalypse, or cozy late-autumn in New undaunted by the literary monster before them. England? Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee star as the unnamed father and son uprooted by an environmental holocaust (nuclear, I’d wager) that has turned the American southeast into a moonscape. Everything is dead, and what few survivors there are seem to be proceeding off their basest instincts, from pillaging to cannibalism. With food and ammo running out, father and son begin a last-ditch pilgrimage south to Florida in hope of something better. THE ROAD truly haunts, and stripped of McCarthy’s fancy-pants prose stylings its story seems something of a throwback. For me, the sight of this age-old pair trudging the gray landscape with their simple words and feelings brought to mind characters from some cinema golden age, making their way through a strange new world of YouTube and cell-phone screens. Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall and Guy Pearce round out the amazing supporting cast.—Richard Gould


›› MOViES

Friday May 28 -Thursday June 3

Movie summaries by Matthew Stafford

Samuel L. Jackson and Naomi Watts bond in ‘Mother and Child.’

Babies (1:20) Thomas Balmes’s documentary follows four babies (a Namibian, a Mongolian, a Japanese and a San Franciscan) from birth to their first tentative steps into toddlerhood. ● City Island (1:43) Hilarious havoc ensues when a middle-aged wannabe actor introduces his family to his long-lost ex-con son. ● Date Night (1:28) A married couple’s night on the town goes kerblooey when they’re mistaken for a pair of desperados on the run from the Mob; Tina Fey and Steve Carell star. ● Exit Through the Gift Shop (1:27) Challenging prize-winning documentary about English graffiti artiste Banksy and his friends and fans. ● The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2:32) Stieg Larsson’s bestseller hits the big screen with Michael Nykvist as a down-and-out newspaperman out to crack a long-forgotten unsolved murder. ● Harry Brown (1:43) Michael Caine as a law-abiding bloke who goes all vigilante when his best friend is murdered. ● How to Train Your Dragon (1:38) Cartoon about a Viking dragonslayer-intraining who outrages his tribe by befriending one of his fire-breathing foes. ● Iron Man 2 (2:05) Robert Downey, Jr. is back as the now-famous superhero inventor, trying to keep his crime-fighting secrets out of the wrong hands; Don Cheadle and Mickey Rourke costar. ● Just Wright (1:51) Physical therapist Queen Latifah falls for her latest client, an oblivious NBA all star. ● Letters to Juliet Vanessa Redgrave and Franco Nero, together again in the story of a woman who returns to Shakespeare’s Verona in search of a long-lost love. ● Looking for Eric (1:56) A dorky British soccer fanatic gets advice, insights and dollops of wisdom from the realized spirit of Manchester United football star Eric Cantona. ● MacGruber An unorthodox all-American Green Beret/Navy SEAL/Army Ranger is ●

called out of retirement to track down a rogue nuclear warhead. ● Mother and Child (2:05) Annette Bening, Kerry Washington and Naomi Watts as three women experiencing child adoption in different ways. ● Please Give (1:30) Catherine Keener is steeped in bittercomic ennui as a Manhattan success story confounded by the ethics of her marriage, family and livelihood. ● Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (1:56) Iraqi princeling Jake Gyllenhaal takes on the Forces of Evil with plenty of help from a comely sorceress. ● Robin Hood (2:20) The greatest guerrilla insurrectionist in history is back (in the person of Russell Crowe), robbing from the rich, giving to the poor and wooing the spirited Maid Marian (Cate Blanchett). ● The Secret in Their Eyes (2:07) A retired Argentine criminal investigator confronts his inner demons as he writes a novel based on a rape and murder that took place 30 years earlier. ● Sex and the City 2 (2:00) Manhattan’s female fab four escape the bonds of marriage and motherhood with a great escape to alluring Morocco. ● Shrek Forever After 3D (1:34) The now-domesticated ogre, yearning for the hair-raising days of yesteryear, gets mixed up with con man Rumpelstiltskin; Mike Myers, Jon Hamm and Antonio Banderas provide the voices. ● Some Like It Hot (1:59) Jazz Age musicians Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon escape the Mob by posing as members of an all-girl band, but ukulele player Marilyn Monroe makes the gender confusion even more confusing; Billy Wilder directs. ● Touching Home (1:57) Local filmmakers Logan and Noah Miller write, direct and act in this memoir of their homeless father and their dreams of baseball stardom; Ed Harris stars.

›› MOViE TiMES Babies (PG) ★★★★ Rafael Film Center: Fri 4:30, 6:30, 8:30 Sat 12:30 (Baby Hattie in person), 2:30, 4:30, 6:30, 8:30 Sun-Mon 12:30, 2:30, 4:30, 6:30, 8:30 TueThu 6:30, 8:30 City Island (PG-13) Century Northgate 15: 2:50, 7:50 CinéArts at Marin: Fri-Mon 3, 7:30 Tue-Thu 7:20 Date Night (PG-13) ★★1/2 Century Northgate 15: 12:25, 2:45, 5:05, 7:25, 9:40 Exit Through the Gift Shop (R) CinéArts at Marin: Fri 5:20, 9:50 Sat 12:50, 5:20, 9:50 Sun-Mon 12:50, 5:20 TueThu 4:45 The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (Not Rated) ★★★★ Rafael Film Center: Fri, Sun 4:15, 7:30 Sat, Mon 1, 4:15, 7:30 Tue-Thu 7:30 Harry Brown (R) Century Northgate 15: 7:15, 9:50 How to Train Your Dragon (PG) ★★1/2 Century Northgate 15: 11:55, 2:25, 4:50 Iron Man 2 (PG-13) ★★1/2 Century Larkspur Landing: Fri 7:30, 10:25 Sat-Mon 1:15, 4:15, 7:30, 10:25 Tue-Thu 6:50, 9:40 Century Northgate 15: 11:20, 12:50, 2:20, 3:55, 5:20, 7:10, 8:20, 10:05 Century Rowland Plaza: 11:15, 2, 4:45, 7:30, 10:25 Fairfax 5 Theatres: Fri 4:15, 7:15, 10 Sat-Sun 1, 4:15, 7:15, 10 Mon 1, 4:15, 7:15 Tue-Thu 4:15, 7:15 Just Wright (PG) Century Northgate 15: 12:15, 5:10, 10:15 Letters to Juliet (PG) ★★ Century Regency 6: Fri-Sun 11:40, 2:15, 4:50, 7:30, 10:05 Mon-Thu 11:40, 2:15, 4:50, 7:30 CinéArts at Sequoia: Fri 5, 7:45, 10:15 Sat 2:30, 5, 7:45, 10:15 Sun 2:30, 5, 7:45 Mon-Thu 5, 7:45 Lark Theater: Fri-Sun,

= New Movies This Week

Wed-Thu 4:20, 6:45, 9 Mon 2, 4:20, 6:45 Tue 4:20, 6:45 Tiburon Playhouse 3: Fri 4, 7, 9:25 Sat-Sun 1:20, 4, 7, 9:25 Mon 1:20, 4, 7 TueThu 4, 7 ❋ Looking for Eric (Not Rated) Rafael Film Center: 9:15 SatMon 1:30, 9:15 MacGruber (R) Century Northgate 15: 12:55, 3:10, 5:25, 7:45, 10:10 Century Rowland Plaza: 12:50, 3, 5:10, 7:50, 10 Mother and Child (R) ★★ CinéArts at Marin: Fri 3:30, 7:15, 10 Sat 12:40, 3:30, 7:15, 10 Sun-Mon 12:40, 3:30, 7:15 Tue-Thu 4:30, 7:40 Please Give (R) ★★★★ Century Regency 6: Fri-Sun 12:45, 3:05, 5:25, 7:45, 10 Mon-Thu 12:45, 3:05, 5:25, 7:45 ❋ Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (PG-13) Century Larkspur Landing: Fri 5, 7:45, 10:30 Sat-Mon 1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:30 Tue-Thu 7, 9:45 Century Northgate 15: 11:15, 12, 12:45, 1:30, 2:15, 3, 3:45, 4:30, 5:15, 6, 6:45, 7:30, 8:15, 9, 9:45, 10:30 Century Rowland Plaza: 11:40, 2:20, 5, 7:40, 10:20 Fairfax 5 Theatres: Fri 3:40, 6:40, 9:30 Sat-Sun 12:45, 3:40, 6:40, 9:30 Mon 12:45, 3:40, 6:40 Tue-Thu 3:40, 6:40 Robin Hood (PG-13) ★★ Century Larkspur Landing: Fri 7:15, 10:20 Sat-Mon 12:45, 4, 7:15, 10:20 Tue-Thu 6:45, 9:50 Century Regency 6: Fri-Sun 1, 4:05, 7:10, 10:10 Mon-Thu 1, 4:05, 7:10 Century Rowland Plaza: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10 Fairfax 5 Theatres: Fri 4, 7:10, 10:05 Sat-Sun 12, 4, 7:10, 10:05 Mon 12, 4, 7:10 Tue-Thu 4, 7:10 Tiburon Playhouse 3: Fri 3:40, 6:40, 9:45 Sat-Sun 12:45, 3:40, 6:40, 9:45 Mon 12:45, 3:40, 6:40 Tue-Thu

3:40, 6:40 The Secret In Their Eyes (R) ★★★ CinéArts at Sequoia: Fri 4:30, 7:20, 10:05 Sat 1:40, 4:30, 7:20, 10:05 Sun 1:40, 4:30, 7:20 Mon-Thu 4:30, 7:20 Sex and the City 2 (R) Century Larkspur Landing: Fri 7:05, 10:20 Sat-Mon 12:10, 3:35, 7:05, 10:20 Tue-Thu 6:30, 9:45 Century Regency 6: Fri-Sun 10:40, 11:30, 12:30, 1:55, 2:50, 3:45, 5:15, 6:10, 7, 8:40, 9:30, 10:15 MonThu 10:40, 11:30, 12:30, 1:55, 2:50, 3:45, 5:15, 6:10, 7, 8:40 Century Rowland Plaza: 11:30, 12:40, 2:50, 4, 6:10, 7:20, 9:30, 10:30 CinéArts at Marin: Fri 3:45, 7, 10:15 Sat 12:30, 3:45, 7, 10:15 Sun-Mon-Thu 4:15, 7:30 Fairfax 5 Theatres: Fri 3:50, 6:50, 9:50 Sat-Sun 12:15, 3:50, 6:50, 9:50 Mon 12:15, 3:50, 6:50 Tue-Thu 3:50, 6:50 Tiburon Playhouse 3: Fri 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 Sat-Sun 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 Mon 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 Tue-Thu 3:30, 6:30 Shrek Forever After (PG) ★★1/2 Century Cinema: Fri-Mon 11:30, 2, 4:30, 7, 9:20 Century Northgate 15: 12:05, 12:30, 1, 1:35, 2:30, 3:05, 3:30, 4, 5, 5:30, 5:55, 6:30, 7:35, 8, 8:30, 8:55, 10, 10:25; 3D showtimes at 11:30, 2, 4:25, 7, 9:30 Century Rowland Plaza: 11:50, 1, 2:10, 3:20, 4:30, 5:40, 7, 8, 9:20, 10:15 Fairfax 5 Theatres: Fri 2:40, 4:50, 7, 9:20 Sat-Sun 12:30, 2:40, 4:50, 7, 9:20 Mon 12:30, 2:40, 4:50, 7 Tue-Thu 2:40, 4:50, 7 ❋ Some Like It Hot (Not Rated) Rafael Film Center: Sun noon (free screening) Touching Home (PG-13) ★★1/2 Rafael Film Center: Fri-Mon 4, 6:45 Tue-Thu 6:45

Showtimes can change after we go to press. Please call theater to confirm schedules.

›› THEATERS CinéArts at Marin 101 Caledonia St., Sausalito • 331-0255 CinéArts at Sequoia 25 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley • 388-4862 Cinema 41 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera • 924-6505 Fairfax 9 Broadway, Fairfax • 453-5444 Lark 549 Magnolia Ave., Larkspur • 924-5111 Larkspur Landing 500 Larkspur Landing Cir., Larkspur • 800-326-3264 Northgate 7000 Northgate Dr., San Rafael • 800-326-3264 Playhouse 40 Main St., Tiburon • 435-1234 Rafael Film Center 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael • 454-1222 Regency 80 Smith Ranch Rd., Terra Linda • 479-5050 Rowland 44 Rowland Way, Novato • 800-326-3264

Celebrate the hundredth running of the Dipsea with an al fresco screening of Rob Nilsson’s ‘On the Edge’ at San Anselmo’s Creek Park Saturday night at 8pm. Info: 272-2756. MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 27


SUNDiAL ] [ Highlights from our online community calendar— great things to do this week in Marin

F R I D AY M AY 2 8 — F R I D AY J U N E 4 Pacific Sun‘s Community Calendar

Go island hopping at the Asian Pacific Heritage Festival this Saturday at the Bay Area Discovery Museum.

Check out our Online Community Calendar for more listings, spanning more weeks with more important event information. ‘‘ pacificsun.com/sundial

Live music 05/28: Damir Stosic Easy listening rock covers. 8-10:30pm. No cover. Max’s of Corte Madera, 60 Madera Blvd, Corte Madera. 924-6297. www,maxsworld.com 05/28: DickyGee and Jan Guitar and mandolin duo. 5:15pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www.bookpassage.com 05/28: Jazz Philosophy Modern jazz. 7-10pm. Saylor’s Restaurant & Bar, 2009 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 332-1512. www.saylorsrestaurantandbar.com 05/28: Nigel Healy Solo guitar. 7-10pm. Saylor’s Restaurant & Bar, 2009 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 332-1512. www.saylorsrestaurantandbar.com 05/28: Sofi Rox, The Pine Needles Live Music every Friday at Marin Country Mart at Larkspur Landing 5:30-8:30pm. Free. Marn Country Mart at Larkspur Landing, 2257 Larkspur Landing Circle, Larkspur. 606-7435. 05/28: Super Diamond Neil Diamond covers. Doors open at 8pm. 9:30-11:45pm. $30. Mill Valley Masonic Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. 389-6637. www.woodsmv.com 05/28: The Rancho Allstars With Mike Duke. In the Bar 8pm. Rancho Nicasio. 662-2219. www. ranchonicasio.com 05/28: The Shuffle Kings Rock. 6:30pm. Free. Oak Plaza, Northgate Mall, San Rafael. 472-3212. www.shopatnorthgate.com 05/29: Sandy and His Fly-Rite Boys Rockabilly/ traditional country. 8:30pm. $15. Rancho Nicasio. 662-2219. www.ranchonicasio.com 05/29: Eugene Huggins Blues and rock. 7-10pm. Saylor’s Restaurant & Bar, 2009 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 332-1512. www.saylorsrestaurantandbar.com

05/29: Jesse Kincaid and New Rising Sons

with Boudeeka 60’s Dance Party 8:30pm. $7. Presidio Yacht Club, Travis Marina/Fort Baker, Sausalito. www.presidioyachtclub.org

05/30: Ann Brewer, Jorge Castellanos and Larry Dunlap Jazz. 6pm. No cover. Savory Orient, 1025 C St., San Rafael. 459-4593. www.savoryorient. com 05/30: Joan Getz Jazz Quartet Jazz standards, brazilian gems and blues. 6:30-10pm. No cover. The Sleeping Lady, 32 Broadway, Fairfax. www.sleepingladyfairfax.com 05/30: The Blues Broads Barbecue on the lawn. Tracy Nelson, Annie Sampson, Dorothy Morrison, Angela Strehli. 3pm. $20. Rancho Nicasio, Nicasio. 662-2219. www.ranchonicasio.com 05/30: The Detroit Disciples Rock. 7-10pm. No cover. Wild Fox, 225 Alameda Del Prado, Novato. 883-9125. www.wildfoxrestaurant.com

05/30: Sun Kings at the Larkspur Flower and Food Festival Beatles band. 4pm. Free Magnolia Ave., Downtown Larkspur. 924-3803. 05/31: Pablo Cruise Memorial day barbecue. Celebration of Bud Cockrell’s life. 3pm. $32-35. Rancho Nicasio. 662-2219. www.ranchonicasio.com 06/01: Swing Fever With Bryan Gould. 7-10pm. No cover. Panama Hotel and Restaurant, 4 Bayview St., San Rafael. 457-3993. www.panamahotel.com 06/02: Ducey, Huget, Klein & Dudnick Originals, jazz and blues standards. 7-10pm. Panama Hotel Restaurant and Inn, 4 Bayview St., San Rafael. www.panamahotel.com

06/02: Jesse Kincaid and New Rising Sons with Boudeeka Classic rock. 8pm. 19 Broadway, 23 Broadway, Fairfax. www.19broadway.com

06/02: Rowan Brothers 8pm. Free. Iron Springs Pub, 765 Center Blvd., Fairfax. 485-1005. www.ironspringspub.com 06/03: Prima Vera Latin jazz. 7-10pm. No cover.

Panama Hotel & Restaurant, 4 Bayview St., San Rafael. 457-3993. www.panamahotel.com

06/04: Dennis Haneda of The Courtney Janes Electro-acoustic folk. 8pm. No cover. Max’s Cafe, 60 Madera Blvd., Corte Madera. 924-6297. www.maxsworld.com 06/04: Kevin Russell Contemporary blues. 8:30pm. $10-12. Rancho Nicasio, Nicasio. 662-2219. www.ranchonicasio.com 06/04: Swamp Thang Jam band. 9pm. Smiley’s Schooner Saloon and Hotel, 41 Wharf Road, Bolinas. 868-1311. www.myspace/smileysschoonersaloon 06/05: Rowan Cunningham Band Wonderful fiddle player Sue Cunningham joins forces with the mighty Rowan brothers and bassist Joshua Zucker. 8pm. $20. Mill Valley Masonic Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. 389-6637. www.woodsmv.com Fridays: Jose Neto Brazilian guitarist. 8-10:30pm. No cover. Whipper Snapper Restaurant, 1613 Fourth St., San Rafael. 256-1818. www.whipsnap.biz Masala Music Mondays Live Indian Classical Music presented by Kukoo G. Singh and Ben Kunin. 7-9pm. Free, with dinner. India Palace Restaurant, 707 Redwood Hwy., Mill Valley. 819-8730. www. kukoogsingh.com

BEST BET

Concerts

Musical pioneers

06/03: Left Coast Chamber Ensemble A

Tickets are now available for the third annual TIBURON MUSIC FESTIVAL. The musical series will highlight the works of two of the most acclaimed Romantic-era composers—Frederic Chopin and Robert Schumann—in honor of their 200th birthdays (guys, you don’t look a day over 170). The weeklong auditory celebration will include intimate chamber concerts and contempoThis year’s fest sings the praises of Chopin rary opera in English, just in case your Ital- and Schumann. ian isn‘t up to snuff. In addition to featuring the two men of the hour, performances will range from Bach to cabaret-inspired pieces to please the European in all of us. June 19-26 at St. Hilary Church, 761 Hilary Dr., Tiburon. All tickets $10. Info: Dearg1@cs.com.—Sarah Strand 28 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010

program of works by Martin Bresnick, Brahms, Jacob ter Veldhuis, Lou Harrison, and a premiere of Kurt Rohde’s Concertino for Violin and Chamber Ensemble featuring the composer. 8pm. $15-20. 142 Throckmorton Theatre, Downtown, Mill Valley. 383-9600. www.142ThrockmortonTheatre.com

06/04-05: Mayflower Community Chorus Celebrate the 30th year of the Mayflower Community Chorus as it performs traditional American, world and classical music. Directed by Daniel Canosa and accompanied by David Manley, the chorus features voices of more than 45 Marin residents. 8pm. $5-17. Marin Veterans’ Memorial Auditorium, Ave. of the Flags, San Rafael. 499-6800. www.mayflowerchorus.org 06/04: Mill Valley Philharmonic “All Things 10.” 10th season finale. Works by Schumann, Glazunov and Wreede, Sedler & Alrich. 8-10pm. Free.

Mt. Tam United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley. 383-8013. www.millvalleyphilharmonic.org

Dance 05/29: Fourth Annual Big Tea Dance With the Albany Big Band. Champagne, tea, and cakes available 2:30-5:30pm. $10-12, kids and teens free. Dance Palace, Pt Reyes Station. 459-5859. www.dancepalace.org 06/05: Rocco Dance Onstage An evening of progressive dance featuring over 400 RoCo dancers of all ages and the Body Language modern dance ensemble. 4:30 and 7:30pm shows. $18-27. Marin Veterans’ Memorial Auditorium, Ave. of the Flags, San Rafael. 499-6800. www.marincenter.org

Theater/Auditions Through 05/30:‘Owners’ Dark comedy by renowned British playwright Caryl Churchill. $25. AlterTheater Ensemble, 1701 Fourth St., San Rafael. 454-2787. www.altertheater.org Through 06/13:‘Cactus Flower’ Novato Theater Company presents this musical which had a long Broadway run and was made into a 1969 film starring Goldie Hawn. 8pm. $15-25. Pacheco Playhouse, 484 Ignacio Blvd., Novato. 883-4498. www. pachecoplayhouse.com Through 06/20:‘Guys and Dolls’ Luck be the theatergoers, today! The Mountain Home Play production will be performed on May 23 and 30, June 6, 12-13, and 20. All Shows begin at 1pm. Preshow activities and entertainment begin at 11am. 11am. $21-36, children 3 and under are free. Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre, 801 Panoramic Hwy., Mill Valley. 383-1100. www.mountainplay.org Through 06/20:‘Woody Guthrie’s American Song’ Songs and writings by Woody Guthrie. Conceived, adapted and directed by Peter Glazer. Musical follows Guthrie as he rambles coast to coast and features many of his most famous songs. 8pm. $20-540. Marin Theatre Company, 397 Miller Ave., Mill Valley. 388-5208. www.marintheatre.org


BEST BET

Through 06/13:‘H2O: The Watery Medium in Art’ Group exhibtion. Deborah O’Grady, large format photographs John de Lormimier, paintings. ‘The Latin Photo Project.’ From Gallery Route One. 1-5pm. Free. Bolinas Museum, 48 Wharf Road, Bolinas. 868-0330. www.bolinasmuseum.org

It’s all Greek to us Bay Area residents can celebrate their Greek heritage and Mediterranean love in style at the Memorial Day weekend MARIN GREEK FESTIVAL. Music, dance, cooking, children‘s activities and a marketplace provide plenty of action, but there is no shame in coming for the main act: authentic homemade Greek food. For a relatively small island nation, Greece— and now the Marin Greek Festival—is home to a colorful and delicious array of There’s never a dolma moment at the Marin Greek Fest. dishes. Fine wines and good company round out this ambrosial weekend celebration. Friday, May 28, 11am-3pm lunch, 5-10pm dinner; Saturday, May 29, and Sunday, May 30, 11am-10pm. Nativity of Christ Greek Orthodox Church, 1111 Highland Dr., Ignacio. $5 adults, $4 seniors, children 12 and under free. Info: nativityofchrist.org.—Sarah Strand

Art 05/28-06/28: Evvy Eisen's "Oyster Farm." Black and White gelatin silver prints. Opening reception 6-8pm June 2. San Marcos Gallery, Alemany Library, San Anselmo. 485-3253. www. dominican.edu.

05/28-07/05: ‘Mysterious Vistas and Unexpected Terrain’ Marty Knapp, photography. Opening reception 3-6pm May 29. Free. Marty Knapp Photo Gallery, 11245 Highway One, Point Reyes Station. 663-8670. www.martyknapp.com

05/29-06/13:‘Picture Novato: Celebrating the City’s 50th Anniversary’ Opening reception 3-5pm May 29. Free. MarinMOCA, 500 Palm Dr., Novato. 506-0137. www.marinmoca.org

05/29-31: Point Reyes Memorial Day Open Studios Map to the studios available online and at local merchants. 11am-5pm. Free. Various studios, Point Reyes Station. 663-9646. www.pointreyesart. com

05/29: Marin Society of Artists 60th Annual Auction Member donated works at far below the usual prices. 7-10pm. Donations accepted. Marin Art and Garden Center, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross. 454-9561. www.marinsocietyofartists.com Through 05/28:‘Global Paw Prints’ Animals around the globe photographed by Allison Levenson.

Free. Mill Valley Library, 375 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley. 389-4292. www.millvalleylibrary.org

Through 05/29: Falkirk Juried Exhibition Annual Donna Seager gallery juried exhibition. Artworks in all media by forty Marin and Bay Area artists. Free. Falkirk Cultural Center, 1408 Mission Ave., San Rafael. 485-3328. www.falkirkculturalcenter.org

Through 05/30: KWMR’s 8th Annual Art Exhibit and Auction “Homegrown Radio.” Silent fundraising art auction. Closing event 3-5pm May 30. See website for more details. Free. Toby’s Gallery, Main St., Point Reyes Station. 663-8068, ext. 3. www. kwmr.org

Through 06/01:‘Figuratively Speaking’ Figure Artists Glen Miller, Oola Mar, Ayris Hatton, Larry Bencich display their approaches to depictions of the human body. 11am-6pm. elsewhere gallery, 1828 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Fairfax. 747 8696. www. elsewhere.com

Through 06/02:’Get Covered’ Exhibition Marin Magazine’s contest winner Edgar Soberon’s still life paintings. Gallery Bergelli, 483 Magnolia Ave., Larkspur. 945-9454. www. bergelli.com

Through 06/04: Art of the Automobile’ Multimedia automotive fine art group show. “Three Degrees of Separation.” Mary Valente, Patricia Leeds, Patricia Oji, new works. 10am-5pm. Free. Art Works Downtown, 1337 Fourth St., San Rafael. 451-8119. www.artworksdowntown.org/

Through 06/14: Tiburon Art Festival 2010 Call to Artists The Art Festival is now accepting applications for their juried art event by the Bay. Seeking painting, sculpture, glass, woodwork, jewelry, photography and mixed media works. $25 application fee Historic Ark Row, Tiburon. 435-5633. www. tiburonartfestival.homestead.com

Through 06/20: Mary Mountcastle Eubank, Linda MacDonald and Suzanne Parker “Flotation Devices/Letting Go” and “Stories from the North Woods.” 11am-5pm. Free. Gallery Route One, 11101 Highway One, Point Reyes. 663-1347. Through 06/25: Marin/Scapes Preview An early opportunity to view and arrange to purchase selected pieces of the Marin/Scapes artwork by Buckelew artists. Proceeds from Marin/Scapes support Buckelew Employment Services. Noon-6pm. Free. Bank of Marin, 50 Madera Blvd., Corte Madera. 457-6964 x386. www.buckelew.org/ marinscapes/

Through 06/30:‘Ancient Process: New Perspectives’ Elisabeth Setten, new works on paper exploring indigenous dyeing techniques. 9am-5pm. Free. Bear Valley Visitor Center, 1 Bear Valley Road, Point Reyes Station. 464-5100. www.nps.gov/pore/ index.htm

Through 07/04: Jan Gross and Gael Hunt Exhibition Pastels, monotypes and mixed media works. Opening Reception 3-5pm May 30. Landscapes, 625 San Geronimo Valley Dr., San Geronimo. 488-0105. Through 07/15:‘Where You Are’ Exhibition of mixed media artwork inspired by environmental issues. Open 9am-5pm Monday-Friday. Free. Marin Community Foundation, 5 Hamilton Landing # 200, Novato. 459-4440. www.marinarts.org

Through 07/18:‘Sudden Intended Exhilaration: Art to Recall’ Exhibition featuring fifteen Bay Area artists. Noon-4:30pm. Free. Mona Lease Gallery, 39 Greenbrae Boardwalk, Greenbrae. 461-3781. www.monaleasegallery.com Through 09/30:‘Artistic Sausalito’ Free exhibit featuring original works by artists from the 1940s and ‘50s who gave Sausalito its reputation as an art colony. Hours: Wednesdays and Saturdays 10am-2pm. Free. Sausalito Historical Society, 420 Litho St.,, Sausalito. 289-4117. www. sausalitohistoricalsociety.com

Talks/Lectures 05/29: Financial Planning for Teens Alex Reyes of Reyes Capital Management will present a workshop on financial literacy for teens. Learn the basics of budgeting and managing bank accounts and more. Handouts and discussion. 1-3pm. Free. San Rafael Public Library, 1100 E St., San Rafael. 458-2389. www.marinlibrary.org 06/01: Defending Wild and Sacred Australia An Australian Aboriginal activist and conservationist will share their struggles to protect whales, sea turtles and sacred land from oil and gas exploration in the Kimberley region. 6:309pm. $5-15, sliding scale Pt. Reyes Dance Palace, 503 B St., Point Reyes Station. 663-8590, ext. 104. www.seaturtles.org

06/01: Real Dharma Buddhist Meditation and Inquiry Taught by Hal Blacker. 7:30-9pm.

You’ll be made in the shade May 30 at the Larkspur Flower and Food Fest.

No charge, donations accepted. The Common Well, 85 Bolinas Road, Fairfax. 305-2101. www. realdharma.com 06/02: ‘Making Films That Matter’ “A List Series Conversation.” Jane Ganahl interviews local filmmakers Will Parrinello and John

Antonelli. 7:30pm. $12-15. 142 Throckmorton Theatre, Downtown, Mill Valley. 383-9600. www.142ThrockmortonTheatre.com 06/02: Birth of Impressionism Talk Marsha Holm will give an illustrated talk on the current exhibition at the de Young which features masterpieces from the Musee d’Orsay. 1 and 3pm. Free. San Rafael City Council Chambers, 1400 Fifth Ave., San Rafael. 485-3321. 06/03: Dealing Kids Back In Beyond Differences nonprofit will assemble a panel of expert educators and school-based program representatives to address the problem of social isolation. 7pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www.bookpassage.com

06/04: Marin Audubon Society Speaker Series “Impressions of the Galapagos,” talk by wildlife biologist Jack Barclay, on the islands’ geology, weather and the extraordinary experience of observing wildlife there. 8pm. Free. Richardson Bay Audubon Center, 376 Greenwood Beach Road, Tiburon. 388-2821. www.marinaudubon.org

Readings 05/28: Paul Provenza and Dan Dion The authors discuss “Satiristas: Comedians, Contrarians, Raconteurs & Vulgarians.” 7pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www. bookpassage.com 05/29: Martha Engber The author discusses her novel “The Wind Thief.” 4pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www. bookpassage.com 05/29: Minrose Gwin Gwin talks about her new novel “The Queen of Palmyra.” 2pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www.bookpassage.com 05/30: Ruth Daigon Memorial Group Poetry Reading with David Alpaugh, C.B. Follet, Jack Foley, Lynne Knight, Jacqueline Kudler, Susan Terris and others reading in honor of poet Ruth Daigon. 2pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www.bookpassage.com 06/01: Kathy Griffin The comedienne introduces and signs copies of her new book “A Memoir According to Kathy Griffin.” 6pm. Free. Book Passage, 1 Ferry Plaza, San Francisco. 835-1020. www. bookpassage.com 06/01: Open Classroom Poetry Night Lagunitas School students from 1st through 6th grades will read their poetry. 7pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www.bookpassage.com 06/01:Traveling Show Poetry Marin Poetry Center’s Summer Traveling Show presents Alyse Rall, Budd Winston, Lynn Ireland, Carol Ingram, Louise Yahnian and Gloria North in a reading hosted by Angelika Quirk. 7-9pm. Free. Rebound Bookstore, 1611 Fourth St., San Rafael. 382-0550. www.marinpoetrycenter.org 06/02: David Helvarg Helvarg discusses his memoir “Saved by the Sea.” 7pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www. bookpassage.com 06/03:Toxic on the Job Mitchell Kusy talks about “Toxic Workplace: Managing Toxic Personalities and Their Systems of Power.” 6pm. Free. Book Passage, 1 Ferry Plaza, San Francisco. 835-1020. 06/03:Wilbert Rideau Rideau talks about “In the Place of Justice: A Story of Punishment and Deliverance.” 7pm. Free. Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 927-0960. www.bookpassage.com

Film Events 05/28:‘Twilight’ Film Night in the park presents this ‘biting’ teen vampire drama. Popcorn, candy and sodas available. Bring blankets, pillows, backrest and MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 29


low chairs. 8pm. Donations appreciated. Creek Park, 400 block of Sir Francis Drake Blvd, San Anselmo. 272-2756. www.filmnight.org 05/29: Dipsea Film Night In celebration of the Dipsea Centennial, the 1980s movie “On the Edge” will be screened. The movie, based on the Dipsea Race, was filmed in Marin. It stars Bruce Dern, plus hundreds of Marin runners. The evening opens at 8pm. with short talks by Dipsea legends, followed by a screening of “Survival Run." Bring a blanket. 8-10:30pm. $8. Creek Park, San Anselmo Ave., San Anselmo. 454-2769. www.filmnight.org 05/30: Everybody’s Classics Series “Some Like it Hot.” Starring Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe. Noon. Free. Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael. 454-1222. www. cafilm.org 06/04: Film Night in the Park “Napoleon Dynamite.” Popcorn, candy and sodas will be available. Bring blankets, pillows and low chairs. Film Night suggests leaving pets at home. 8-10pm. Donations appreciated. San Geronimo Valley Community Center, 6350 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., San Geronimo. 272-2756. www.filmnight.org

MAY & JUNE For tickets and more info:

www.woodsmv.com Doors open an hour before showtimes

FRIDAY, MAY 28

SUPER DIAMOND THE ALTERNATIVE NEIL DIAMOND EXPERIENCE

A glittering, smoke-filled show performing Neil Diamond’s power ballads and uptempo hits with unrestrained enthusiasm. Doors and DJ Matt Weeder at 8pm

THE WOODS HOUSE BAND WITH JIMMY DILLION AND RYTHMTOWN-JIVE

Git your mojo workin’ on Fat Wednesdays as The Big Easy comes to Downtown Mill Valley.

EVERY MON, 8PM FREE OPEN MIC With host Austin de Lone. Acoustic piano and P.A. provided.

Community Events (Misc.) 05/29: Free Song Workshop Play your favorite

Mon. and Wed.: Sliding Scale Community Acupuncture Affordable acupuncture. 11am-

SAT JUNE 5, 8PM

FRI JUNE 11, 9PM TUFF LION, ABJA & IBA LUMANATION, SOFI ROX – Roots and Dub Reggae

FRI JUNE 18, 9PM

7ELCOME TO -AX´S &RIDAY -USIC .IGHT Food & Drink Specials

including $3 Trumer Pils & Firestone Honey Blonde Ale appetizers from $3 – $6 (In bar during music)

THE EDGE - Rock FIVER BROWN BAND –

$AMIR 3TOSIC Date: Friday May 28, 2010 Time: 8PM - 10:30PM

Soulful Americana

SAT JUNE 19, 9PM HONEY DUST – Hot Rod Rock & Roll

$ENNIS (ANEDA OF #OURTNEY *ANES Date: Friday June 4, 2010 Time: 8PM - 10:30PM

FRI JUNE 25, 9PM ARAM DANESH & THE SUPER HUMAN CREW –

4ERRY 3AVASTANO

Date: Friday June 11, 2010 Time: 8PM - 10:30PM

Guitar Driven Hip Hop SAGE – Island Rock

SAT JUNE 26, 7PM MITCH WOODS – Blues, Jump ’n’ Boogie 415-38WOODS 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley 30 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010

05/30: 21st Annual Larkspur Flower and Food Festival A lovely day to hang out and enjoy

in San Rafael which will be decked out with design spaces put together by top Bay Area designers. Proceeds benefit the Center for Volunteer and Nonprofit Leadership. Catch the shuttle at Montecito and Summit Ave. in San Rafael. See website for more details. 11am-4pm. $25-30. Rosegarden Estate, San Rafael. 479-5710. www.marindesignersshowcase.org

event and a fundraiser for the infamous volunteer Muir Beach firefighters with live music, barbecue, raffle, kids activities. Noon-5pm. $20 per car, includes $10 worth of tickets for food or activities. Muir Meadows, Franks Valley Road, Muir Beach. www. muirbeachfire.com

Dancin’ at the Woods!

Americana and Bluegrass

1pm. Sliding Scale $20-40. Healing Arts of Marin, 7075 Redwood Blvd. Suite L, Novato. 250-4009. www.healingartsofmarin.com/communityclinic.htm

05/30: 38th Annual Muir Beach Volunteer Fire Department Barbecue Oh my, this is a fun

AUSTIN DE LONE AND JIMMY DILLION

ROWAN CUNNINGHAM BAND with the Bueno Brothers –

tunes and learn some new ones. All ages and levels welcome. Bring whatever musical instrument you like and enjoy an hour of casual music making. 12:30-1:30pm. Free. String Letter Music School, 55 San Anselmo Ave., San Anselmo. 451-1708 ext.221. www.stringlettermusicschool.com yummy food, flowers, lots of live music, artisan vendors and a totally fun kids area. 11am-6pm. Free. Magnolia Ave., between Ward and King Streets, Downtown Larkspur. 924-3803. www.teamproevent. com

FRI JUNE 4, 9PM

th -AX´S "EER ""1 "ENE½ T ust 7Proceeds donated to Gilead House of Novato

Aug

A transitional house for homeless single moms

60 Madera Blvd., Corte Madera 924-6297 www.maxsworld.com

Downtown San Rafael Thursday Evening Market Thursday nights through September. Farmers market, food, live music and bouncies. 6-9pm. Free. Downtown San Rafael, 4th St. between Lincoln and B St., San Rafael. 492-8007. www.sanrafaelmarket.org Fridays: Eckhart Tolle Techniques Group support in applying Eckhart’s techniques in balancing form and being well in our lives. RSVP to Libby Darda for address. $5 donation San Anselmo. 456-3341.

WEDNESDAYS IN JUNE

THE MUSIC OF NEW ORLEANS

Center This year the Marin United Veterans Council will dedicate a new monument to the Marin County soldiers who lost their lives in Iraq. US Coast Guard flyover at noon. 9:30am-12:15pm. Free. Veterans Memorial Auditorium, Avenue of he Flags, San Rafael. 897 5845. 06/04: Changing Lives Brick by Brick Nepal slide show by Jay Tamang, followed by ice cream and homemade Nepalese tea to benefit FREED, foundation for educational development in rural Tibet. 3-4:30pm. $20 suggested donation. Park School Auditorium, 360 East Blithedale, Mill Valley. 2445874. www.nepalfreed.org 06/05: Bike Swap Free. 8am-2pm. Mill Valley Middle School, 459 Sycamore, Mill Valley. www. mvbikeswap.com.

Through 06/05: 2010 Marin Designer Showcase Tour the historic Rosegarden Estate

Through 09/28: Tamalpais Valley Tuesday Farmers Market Local and regional farmers and food purveyors will showcase their high quality, seasonal bounty of organic and specialty foods. 3-7pm. Free. Tamalpais Valley Community Center, 203 Marin Ave., Mill Valley. 388-6393. www.tcsd.us

05/31: Memorial Day Ceremony at Civic

BEST BET Away from the hustle and bustle... There’s more to West Marin than lofty views, lovely wildlife and lovable eccentrics this holiday weekend as the POINT REYES OPEN STUDIOS sets up its canvases. The event brings art and nature lovers alike the incomparable opportunity to explore behind-the-scenes artisan locations throughout the county’s western reaches. Thirty-five creative individuals will open the doors to their workspaces to showcase Peter Sheremeta’s pottery will really bowl their artistic processes—and show off some you over. fantastic sculptures, photographs, pottery, paintings, prints, woodwork and other works. Maps outlining the free, self-guided tour can be found at Pelican Studio, the Station House Cafe, Toby‘s Feed Barn and other local business throughout Point Reyes Station and surrounding towns. The semiannual event invites visitors to get indoors and discover art in one of the most scenic areas on the West Coast. May 29-31, 11am to 5pm. Free. Artist information and tour maps available online at pointreyesart.com.—Sarah Strand


Composer Kurt Rohde will join the Left Coast Chamber Ensemble for the premiere of his ‘Concertino for Violin and Chamber Ensemble’ on June 3 in Mill Valley.

Kid Stuff 05/28-06/05:‘Guys and Dolls’ Move over big guys at Mountain Play! The Marin Youth Performers are putting their mark on this classic musical as well this season. 7:30pm. $14-18. 142 Throckmorton Theatre, Mill Valley. 383-9600. www.142throckmortontheatre.org

05/29-08/15: Living in Space Special Exhibit Take an out-of-this-world journey to the International Space Station in this brand-new, hands-on exhibit. Explore a “slice of life� in outer space as you live, work and play “aboard� the International Space Station. Free with museum admission. Bay Area Discovery Museum, 557 McReynolds Road, Sausalito. 339-3900. www.badm.org 05/29: Asian Pacific Heritage Festival Learn about and experience the different traditions of Asian and Pacific Islander communities of the Bay Area through performances, food and the arts. Performers include the Dragon Horse Lion Dancers and other groups throughout the day. Sample foods from different regions of Asia. Free museum admission. 10am-5pm. Free. Bay Area Discovery Museum, 557 McReynolds Road, Sausalito. 339-3900. www. baykidsmuseum.org 05/30: Caledonia Street Spring Faire Family friendly street faire sponsored by the City of Sausalito Recreation Dept and Sausalito Nursery School. Fun for all ages, includes artisan vendors, live music, kid zone and food. 11am-6pm. Free admission. Caledonia St., Sausalito. 289-4152. www.caledoniastreetspringfaire.com

06/04-06/30:‘Where the Mountains Meet the Sea’ An interdisciplinary exhibit of art, photography and writing from students of Bolinas/Stinson School, Inverness School, Papermill Creek Children’s Corner- Supported by First Five of Marin, Tomales High School and West Marin School. Reception with the artists 1-3pm June 6 after the Western Parade. Free. Toby’s Feed Barn, 11250 Hwy. One, Pt. Reyes Station. 663-1223. www.tobysfeedbar.com

Outdoors (Hikes & Bikes) 05/28: Marin Moonshiners Hike & Picnic Three mile hike with mid-hike picnic dinner at moon rise/sunset. Hike begins and ends at the Pelican Inn Pub. 8-11pm. $15. Marin Moonshiners Hike, Pelican Inn, Muir Beach, CA. 331-0100. www. meetup.com/moonshinershike

05/28: Marin Moonshiners Hike & Picnic Three mile hike plus mid hike picnic dinner with at sunset. Hike begins and ends at the Pelican Inn Pub. 8-11pm. $15. Marin Moonshiners Hike, Pelican Inn, Muir Beach. 331-0100. www.meetup.com/moonshinershike

05/30: Larkspur Flower and Food Festival needs Volunteers Join the fun at the Larkspur Flower and Food Festival. Volunteers needed for easy 2 hour shifts to set up or work the beverage booth. Shifts start at 9am and go to 6pm. Call Joanie at 9243803 today! Free Magnolia Ave., Betwn. Ward and King, Larkspur. 924-3803.

Through 06/20: Birdwatchers Needed for Heron Research Project Audubon Canyon Ranch’s Cypress Grove Research Center seeks birders to monitor an assigned heron and egret nesting site with scopes and binoculars from March-June. Contact for detailed information. Free Audubon Canyon Ranch’s Cypress Grove Research Center, Tomales Bay. 663-8203. www.egret.org

Food and Drink

Dinner and a Show

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05/30: Duxbury Reef Tidepooling Explore Duxbury Reef with Dr. Rebecca Johnson and Farallones Marine Sanctuary staff and discover the world of tidepool life. Meet species with unique adaptations: anemones, sea urchins and chitons. 7am. $5. Duxbury Reef, Bolinas. (650) 712-8948. www.farallones.noaa.gov Thursdays: Walk for Fun Put on your walking shoes and have a 2-3 mile walk around Tam Valley. Hang with old friends and make new friends. Every Thursday through the end of the year. 5pm. $10 donation per month Tamalpais Valley Community Center, 203 Marin Ave., Mill Valley. 388-6393. www.tcsd.us Tuesdays: Outdoor Fitness 50+ Exercise outdoors with yoga teacher/fitness coach and make new friends. Exercise and then walk around Lake Launitas followed by picnic lunch. 9:45am-1pm. $7. Lake Lagunitas Picnic Area, Fairfax. 456-3341.

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Ross Valley Thursday Farmers Market Meet and shop local, organic and regional farmers and artisan producers. 3-7pm. Free. Marin Art & Garden Center, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Ross. 382-7846. www.magc.org

Sausalito Downtown Friday Farmers Market Local and regional farmers and artisinal food producers showcase an organic & seasonal bounty of fresh produce, flowers, breads, pastries and more. 4-8pm. Free. Sausalito Farmers Market, Bridgeway @ Bay St., sausalito. 382-7846.

Support Groups Sundays: Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous Free yourself from excess weight and/ or obsessional thoughts about food and body image. Meetings are open and free to the public. 6:30-8:15pm. Free. Kaiser Permanente, 99 Montecillo Road, Parking lot A, San Rafael, CA. www. foodaddicts.org

Thursdays: Mindfulness in Healing Wellbeing Support Group Sharing experiences of well being inspire us to take charge of our own healing. 7-8:30pm. Free. Pine Street Clinic, 124 Pine St., San Anselmo. 461-6476. www.2wellbeing.org Tuesdays: Parent Support Group Are you worried about your sssdfon age twelve or older? Get help from teen expert/parent coach, Richard Platt, LMFT. 6:45-8:30pm. Free. Church of Our Savior, 10 Old Mill St., Mill Valley. 760-8541. www.teensolutions.info ✚

May 23, 30, June 6, 12, 13, 20 Mt. Tamalpais Amphitheatre Tickets: www.MountainPlay.org or call 415 383 1100 Submit your event listings at ‘‘ pacificsun.com/sundial MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 31


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Eckhart Tolle Community of Marin Sausalito Singles Mixer

140 Lost & Found

GAIN NATIONAL EXPOSURE Reach over 5 million young, educated readers for only $995 by advertising in 110 weekly newspapers like this one. Call Jason at 202-289-8484. This is not a job offer. (AAN CAN)

Lost Blue Stone Earring Opal earring in gold setting lost on May 17 while shopping in and around Corte Madera. Reward for return.

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) Match Your Key Singles Dance

FOR SALE 201 Autos/Trucks/ Parts

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220 Computers/ Electronics Computer Recyling Tax Deduction

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133 Music Lessons COMPASSIONATE PIANO LESSONS

32 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010

330 Child Care Offered Local Babysitter Avail Summer Childcare Available Experienced 18 year old. First Aid Trained. Can cook. Sarah 415 686 7449 segghead@gmail.com

340 Child Care Wanted Responsible Babysitter

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john deere 1989 755 tractor 1989 john deere 755 tractor, 23 hp diesel,320 hours, $3500, deere@hemtudom.net

215 Collectibles & Antiques

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CITP Marin Welcomes New Members

115 Announcements

The publisher waives any and all claims or consequential damages due to errors. Embarcadero Publishing Co. cannot assume responsibility for the claims or performance of its advertisers. Embarcadero Publishing Co. reserves the right to refuse, edit or reclassify any ad solely at its discretion without prior notice.

1. Green, red, blue 2a. Humans: 32 2b. Dogs: 42 2c. Cats: 30 3. VISUAL: There’s Something About Mary, starring Cameron Diaz, Matt Dillon and Ben Stiller 4. Dijon mustard 5. Orange County 6. Berne, Switzerland 7. Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth (followed by Harvard, Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania, and Yale) 8. Iodine, chlorine 9. Laos and Cambodia 10. 39 percent

135 Group Activities

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230 Freebies Free Background Checks - FREE

237 Barter

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furniture - $435 total furniture - $380 Solid Oak Wooten Style Desk - $950.

245 Miscellaneous DISH Network FREE 6-Room Satellite System! FREE HD-DVR! $19.99/mo, 120+ Digital Channels (for 1 year.) Call Now - $400 Signup BONUS! 1-877-415-8163 (AAN CAN) 1926 Classic Yacht - $149K LUCCHESE BOOTS Exquisite W or M $155.00 BO Nikkon N80,with lens - $650 VHS Movies 400 Used VHS Top Movies. A fine collection with the cases. $1/movie; fixed price for collection. Call 415-332-6106. W & N WATERCOLORS KIT & CASE $20.00 Yoga Life Tees

250 Musical Instruments BB King Lucille 1 0f 17 482-9261 $6,000. BB King signed Lucille Guitar - $6,000.

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This section is for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork or Healing ONLY. Readers are encouraged to contact the Pacific Sun if they find that any of these practitioners are falsely advertising in this section.

450 Personal Growth Quality of Life News TRANSFORMATIONAL COUNSELING Gloria Wilcox 479-HOPE www.gloriawilcox.com

430 Hypnotherapy Patricia Daneman Amster CCHT Eating/Weight Issues & More. Free Phone Consult. (415) 459-3057 Thea Donnelly, M.A. Hypnosis, Counseling, All Issues. 25 yrs. experience. 415-459-0449.

440 Massage Therapy Therapuetic Massage Experienced skilled Asian Masseuse (CMT). SR Massage Studio. Free parking. 1st time $55/hr. (415) 827-8699.

628 Graphics/ Webdesign

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Baby Grand Available

240 Furnishings/ Household items

The Pacific Sun makes every effort to ensure that our Massage & Healing Section contains only legitimate advertisors who strictly adhere to professional standards of conduct.

425 Health Services Hair Pullers & Skin Pickers: I can help. Claudia Miles, MFT, www. claudiamiles.com. San Rafael. 415-4609737.

BUSINESS SERVICES

ATTENTION PACIFIC SUN READERS

GREEN TECHNOLOGY Online, at Home Business. @ www. ecobusiness.com/businessoverview or Call 650-793-5119.

560 Employment Information $$$HELP WANTED$$$ Extra Income! Assembling CD cases from Home! No Experience Necessary! Call our Live Operators Now! 1-800-4057619 EXT 2450 http://www.easyworkgreatpay.com (AAN CAN)

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HOME SERVICES 715 Cleaning Services ADVANCED HOUSE CLEANING Licensed. Bonded. Insured. Will do windows. Call Pat 415.310.8784 All Marin Housecleaning Licensed, Bonded, Insured. Will do Windows. Ophelia 415-717-7157 415892-2303 House Cleaning Service Full-service house cleaning at reasonable rates. Excellent refs. Free estimates. Call Cathy @ 415-892-0153 or 415-572-6773.

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Matt Morris – Owner Licensed & Insured • Lic #14036

seminars AND workshops SINGLES WANTED Tired of spending weekends and

holidays alone? Join with other singles in nine-week coed group to explore what’s keeping you single, learn intimacy skills and meet other singles. Group meets for nine Thursday evenings, beginning June 10 (no meeting 7/1). Also, Women’s Group and Coed Intimacy Groups for both single and partnered/married, as well as individual and couples sessions. Space limited. Central San Rafael. For more information, call Renee Owen, MFT#35255 at 415/453-8117.

THERAPEUTIC HORSEMANSHIP FOR CHILDREN (7-12) WITH ADD/ADHD OR RELATED SYMPTOMS USING EQUINE FACILITATED PSYCHOTHERAPY. Starts Monday, June 7

for six weeks, 4-5:30pm in Novato. Groups are limited to six children and are structured to allow the horsechild interaction and activities to facilitate change. This hands-on, goal-oriented treatment group allows each child to manage their unique being in relation to the horse. Contact Judy Weston-Thompson, MFT, CEIPMH at 415/457-3800 or visit www.EquineInsight.net. Fee negotiable. Most insurance accepted.

To include your seminar or workshop, call 415/485-6700 x 303.


745 Furniture Repair/Refinish

757 Handyman/ Repairs

FURNITURE DOCTOR Ph/Fax: 415-383-2697

748 Gardening/ Landscaping YARDWORK LANDSCAPING â?– General Yard & Firebreak Clean Up â?– Complete Landscaping â?– Irrigation Systems â?– Commercial & Residential Maintenance â?– Patios, Retaining Walls, Fences For Free Estimate Call Titus 415-380-8362 or visit our website www.yardworklandscaping.com

Chris Ratto 717-2837 HOME MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR

IRIS IRRIGATION

Fully Insured/Bonded Cal Lic #873002

Rendell Bower 457-9204 Lic. #742697

Lic # 916897

Low Volume, Automatic Drip System, Local References, Landscaping, Maintenance

767 Movers KIRK’S CARRY ALL MOVERS Moving Marin 1 box at a time since 1989! Lic. & insured (CalT181943). Tel.415-927-3648. Cell: 415-4970742.

HOME REPAIR Handyman Services

Carpentry, Electrical & Plumbing 30 yrs Exp. References Free Estimates • Lic. 639563 C. Michael Hughes Construction

FREE ESTIMATES 435-2187

Irrigation Systems New Projects Garden Renovations

771 Painting/ Wallpaper

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759 Hauling

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Carports • Additions • Concrete

Tom Daly Construction Free Estimates Lic. # 593788

3 8 3 . 6 12 2 2 7 2 . 9 1 7 8 c el l

Marcus Aurelius Construction NOTICE TO READERS It is illegal for an unlicensed person to perform contracting work on any project valued at $500.00 or more in labor and materials. State law also requires that contractors include their license numbers on all advertising . Check your contractor’s status at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800-321-CSLB (2752). Unlicensed persons taking jobs that total less than $500.00 must state in their advertisements that they are not licensed by the Contractors State License Board

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775 Asphalt/ Concrete

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Julio Guzman Small Tree trimming and removal. Yard and garden clean-up, maintenance, rototilling. New Sod Irrigation, labor, hauling, power washing & more. Call 415-460-0813. Call 415-902-4914

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840 Vacation Rentals/Time Shares 6br! MarinVacationHm-Sleeps16-Vu Lovely Mill Valley Summer Rental

860 Housesitting ENGLISH HOUSESITTER Will love your pets, pamper your plants, ease your mind, while you’re out of town. Rates negotiable. References available upon request. Long term/short term. Leave message for Jill 415-927-1454

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7BB MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 33


››

STARSTREAM Week of May 27-June 2, 2010 by Ly nd a R ay ARIES (March 20 - April 19) Off-the-wall Uranus officially enters your sign this week. Aries is an independent and rebellious sign and adding Uranus energy to the mix takes it up a notch. You’ve got a long holiday weekend to get accustomed to this electrifying element in your chart before exposing your boss and co-workers to it on Tuesday. TAURUS (April 20 - May 19) Fidgety Mercury in your sign makes you rather restless. Over the long weekend make plans to visit siblings or cousins who live in the vicinity. In fact, having your ruler (lovable Venus) in the sentimental sign of Cancer provides pleasant experiences with family members in general. The new location of Uranus has a wild influence on your dreams. GEMINI (May 20 - June 20) Your birthday celebration continues with outrageous Uranus taking over your friendship house. An influx of new pals can be expected. Also, as one who hates being bored, you can count on life having several new twists in the group activities department, such as organizing a protest or putting together a fundraiser for endangered species. CANCER (June 21 - July 21) The week begins with Thursday’s Full Moon in upbeat Sagittarius and Uranus’s entry into rambunctious Aries. If you aren’t feeling lively, you need to increase your caffeine intake. Meanwhile, serious Saturn comes to a standstill in the sector of your chart ruling your immediate environment on Sunday. Problems with the neighbors or detours on your local streets are possible results. Ah, summer. LEO (July 22 - August 22) As unpredictable Uranus heads into your house of exploration, taking a trip will require a certain level of flexibility. Travel can be exciting for the next few months. I’m not suggesting that a UFO will stop to pick you up, but I’m not ruling it out either. If you do accept that intergalactic ride, make sure they have first-class seating. VIRGO (August 23 - September 21) Saturn has been moving back through your sign, but puts the brakes on this week and starts moving forward again. You can make progress, assuming you have learned from Saturn’s lessons in reality in the last few years. In regard to your relationships, quirky Uranus is giving you a break between now and August. Enjoy it while it lasts. LIBRA (September 22 - October 22) As mentioned last week, the friendly Sun in your house of travel and higher learning inspires you to take a trip or sign up for a class. The problem now is convincing your ruler (Venus) in the cautious sign of Cancer that it is all right to spend the money. Meanwhile, if you’re in a flawed relationship, you are likely to look for a way out soon. SCORPIO (October 23 - November 21) If you’ve been hyper-focused on your career for the last five months, this week you become aware of the accompanying sacrifices you’ve made in your personal life. Now is a chance to rebalance things. It’s a holiday weekend—a time for friends and family rather than work. Throw together a picnic and join in. Do NOT take your briefcase with you. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 - December 20) Anytime a major planetary player moves into your house of romance, creativity and entertainment, it is OK with you. This is the playful sector of your chart, and Uranus now intends to electrify this part of your life. Since Uranus is sticking around until August, your summer could be one for the books. CAPRICORN (December 21 - January 18) There is something unsettling about Uranus moving into Aries for you. It affects your sense of stability. Uranus in Aries rushes into things, makes changes on the run and delivers unexpected surprises. The more you try to contain this excitable energy, the more likely it is to explode. So for the next few months, nothing is completely predictable. AQUARIUS (January 19 - February 17) The big news this week is in regard to your ruler, eccentric Uranus. After years of swimming through the ethereal waters of Pisces, he enters the dynamic fire of Aries. The initial sensation is one of sizzling as your energy heats up. You want to go out and conquer something (or someone). Altruistic, meet egotistic. PISCES (February 18 - March 19) Unpredictable Uranus is out of your sign for the next few months. Feel free to make plans that will probably NOT be disrupted by unexpected circumstances at least through July. On Monday, your ruler (visionary Neptune) comes to a standstill in your imagination house. Please take this holiday weekend opportunity to create or use your artistic talent to its full capacity. ✹ Email Lynda Ray at cosmicclues@gmail.com or check out her website at www.lyndarayastrology.com 34 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010

PUBLIC NOTICES 995 Fictitious Name Statement FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123885 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as POCKET POOCHES GROOMING, 1135 MISSION AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: ROBIN BOUCHARD, 1135 MISSION AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County ClerkRecorder of Marin County on April 28, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123876 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as VANDER AUTOMOTIVE, WOODLAND AVE. 24-A, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: VLANDERLEY SOUSA DE PAIVA RESENDE, 244 N. SAN PEDRO RD., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County ClerkRecorder of Marin County on April 26, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123922 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as FRANCESCA GALLERY, 52 PRINCESS STREET, SAUSALITO, CA 94965: KATJA FRANCESCA TAPIA, 52 PRINCESS STREET, SAUSALITO, CA 94965. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on May 1, 2010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 3, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123899 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as XTREME GREEN CLEANING SERVICES, 44 MARINER GREEN DRIVE, CORTE MADERA, CA 94925: LUCENITA COSTA GOODEN, 44 MARINER GREEN DRIVE, CORTE MADERA, CA 94925. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on April 29, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123788 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as BAY AREA LEGAL DOCUMENT ASSISTANCE, 316 SANTA MARGARITA DRIVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: DAVID LEE WEISSMAN, 316 SANTA MARGARITA DRIVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901 . This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on April 1, 2010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on April 12, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123903 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as SUGAR MAGNOLIA, 546 MAGNOLIA AVENUE, LARKSPUR, CA 94939: LESLIE LA RHETTE, 72 LOVELL AVENUE, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant will begin transacting business under the fictitious busniess name listed herin on May 10, 2010. This statement was filed with the County ClerkRecorder of Marin County on April 30, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123907 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as M.V. PROPERTIES, 158-164 EAST BLITHEDALE, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941: JILL S. SIROIS, 1158 EASTMAN LANE, PETALUMA, CA 94952; HEATHER S. HILBERT, 195 HARVARD DRIVE, LARKSPUR, CA 94939. This business is being conducted by an unincorporated association other than a partnership. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on April 30, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123976 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as THE RICHMOND PATIENT’S GROUP, 733 BOLERO CT., NOVATO, CA

94945: DARRIN PARLE, 733 BOLERO CT., NOVATO, CA 94945. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 7, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 14, 21, 28; June 4, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123971 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as BAYAREA QUICKBOOKS, 295 BLACKSTONE DR., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903: MONICA FEELY, 295 BLACKSTONE DR., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 7, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 14, 21, 28; June 4, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123970 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as OLIVE MARKET, 1904 4TH ST., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: SILK ROAD ODYSSEY INC., 1005 S. ELISEO DRIVE #16, GREENBRAE, CA 94904. This business is being conducted by a corporation. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 7, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 14, 21, 28; June 4, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123901 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as EQUINOX PARTNERS, 50 HILLSIDE AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: CHRISTIAN DE RYSS, 50 HILLSIDE AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901 . This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on April 28, 2010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on April 30, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 14, 21, 28; June 4, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123864 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as BECCACCIO AND ASSOCIATES, 27 VISTA WAY STE.B, FAIRFAX, CA 94930: TONY BECCACCIO, 27 VISTA WAY STE.B, FAIRFAX, CA 94930. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on April 22, 2010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on April 22, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 14, 21, 28; June 4, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124003 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as SPOTLESS CLEANERS, 732 B FOURTH ST., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: SEDIGHEH SAMI, 21 EDGE WATER CT., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903; SHAYAN SAMI, 21 EDGE WATER CT., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903 . This business is being conducted by an co-partners. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 11, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 14, 21, 28; June 4, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124012 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as MARY’S JEWELRY & ACCESSORIES, 1099 4TH ST. B 1/2, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: MARIA SOLEDAD CORADO, 63 CORTE MESA AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 12, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123986 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as Q INDOOR AIR, 446 W. LIVE OAK DRIVE, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941: MICHAEL A. QUIJAS, 446 W. LIVE OAK DRIVE, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 10, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123963 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as ALI AKBAR COLLEGE OF MUSIC STORE, 215 WEST END AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: ALI AKBAR COLLEGE OF MUSIC, 215 WEST END AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA

94901. This business is being conducted by a corporation. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 6, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124023 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as CADTRAK ENGINEERING, LLC, 31 SANTA BARBARA AVE., SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960: CADTRAK ENGINEERING, LLC, 31 SANTA BARBARA AVE., SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960. This business is being conducted by limited liability company. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 13, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2010124016 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as MARIN HORTICULTURE LLC, 1 QUINCE CT., NOVATO, CA 94947: BENJAMIN G. BERMAN-BRADY, 1 QUINCE CT., NOVATO, CA 94947. This business is being conducted by limited liability company. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 12, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 123960 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as DIVINE DIVA/LITTLE BLESSINGS FAMILY HOME DAYCARE, 141 DRAKE AVE., MARIN CITY, CA 94965: KELLYE EBONI MCKINLEY, 141 DRAKE AVE., MARIN CITY, CA 94965 . This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 6, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2010124006 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as SOLE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, 420 FAWN DRIVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960: SOPHIE PAPPAS, 420 FAWN DRIVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960; PETER PAPPAS, 420 FAWN DRIVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960 . This business is being conducted by a husband & wife. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on May 1, 2010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 11, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2010124010 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as MISSION BLUE CONSULTING, 27 AQUINAS DRIVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: KATHERINE D JOHNSON, 27 AQUINAS DRIVE, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 12, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124052 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as LIVINGSTON CARE, 270 BEL AIR DR. #31, VACAVILLE, CA 95687: RUDOLF LAURETA, 270 BEL AIR DR. #31, VACAVILLE, CA 95687. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 17, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2010124053 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as RACHEL WEILL PHOTOGRAPHY, 31 SANTA BARBARA AVE., SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960: RACHEL W LEVITT, 31 SANTA BARBARA AVE., SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 17, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124061 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as THE GRACE INSTITUTE, 645 TAMALPAIS DRIVE STE A, CORTE MADERA,

PUBLIC NOTICES CONTINUED ON PAGE 35


PUBLIC NOTICES CONTINUED FROM PAGE 34 CA 94925: SUNRISE CENTER INC, 645 TAMALPAIS DRIVE STE A, CORTE MADERA, CA 94925 . This business is being conducted by a corporation. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 18, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124004 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as GENJI SUSHI, 731 E. BLITHEDALE AVE., MILL VALLEY, CA 94941: GENJI RETAIL SUPPORT INC, 1500 JFK BLVD. SUITE 725, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19102. This business is being conducted by a corporation. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 11, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124005 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as GENJI SUSHI, 340 THIRD ST., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: GENJI RETAIL SUPPORT INC, 1500 JFK BLVD. SUITE 725, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19102. This business is being conducted by a corporation. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 11, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124021 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as D&M ASTOBIZA DBA: SOLE DESIRE, 5800 NORTHGATE MALL STE 130, SAN RAFAEL, CA 94903: D&M ASTOBIZA INC, 1400 GUERNEVILLE RD STE 4, SANTA ROSA, CA 95403. This business is being conducted by a corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on 1990. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 13, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 11, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124078 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as EAST BAY MODERN REAL ESTATE, 1292 LINCOLN AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: MARIN MODERN REAL ESTATE INC., 1292 LINCOLN AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. This business is being conducted by a corporation. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 19, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2010124077 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as BIG NOSE, LITTLE TOES PET SERVICE, 241 FAWN DRIVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960: LAUREN E MACKBIADA, 241 FAWN DRIVE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on June 15, 2010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 19, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124070 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as KUMON MATH & READING, 818 FIFTH AVE., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: JOHN R HAEUSER, 128 LAUREL PL., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious busi-

ness name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 19, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124104 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as ATTUNEABLE WOOD, 424 A IRWIN ST., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901: NEWCOMB BARGER, 424 A IRWIN ST., SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 21, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124121 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as HORIZON GLASS TINTING, 39 DUTCH VALLEY LANE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960: DAVID CLEVENGER, 39 DUTCH VALLEY LANE, SAN ANSELMO, CA 94960. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on January 1, 1977. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 24, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124111 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as MARIN DATA CONSULTANTS, 53 TAYLOR DR. #101, FAIRFAX, CA 94930: JOHN R DANATO, 53 TAYLOR DR. #101, FAIRFAX, CA 94930. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on May 22, 2010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 24, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124108 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as ROYALTY SPA, 314 MILLER AVE., MILL VALLEY, CA 94941: SOON AE SHIN, 1052 REDWOOD HWY #201, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 24, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 124097 The following individual(s) is (are) doing business as ARCO, 789 REDWOOD HIGHWAY, MILL VALLEY, CA 94941: MEHRZAD SHAMSIAN, 14 ACELA DR., TIBURON, CA 94920. This business is being conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Marin County on May 21, 2010. (Publication Dates: May 28; June 4, 11, 18, 2010)

997 All Other Legals ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF MARIN. No. CIV 1002181. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner MEGHAN MARIE GRUDZIEU filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: MEGHAN MARIE GRUDZIEU to MEGHAN MARIE MILIC. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition

should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: July 1, 2010, 8:30 a.m., Dept. E, Superior Court of California, County of Marin, 3501 Civic Center Drive, Room E, San Rafael, CA, 94913-4988. A copy of this ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in the county of Marin: PACIFIC SUN. Date: April 27, 2010 /s/ JAMES R. RITCHIE, JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT (Pacific Sun: May 14, 21, 28; June 4, 2010) NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: HAROLD R. MCCULLOUGH, aka HAROLD MCCULLOUGH. Case No. PR-1002453. To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of HAROLD R. MCCULLOUGH, aka HAROLD MCCULLOUGH. A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by: RUTH A. DE MARTINI in the Superior Court of California, County of MARIN. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that RUTH A. DE MARTINI 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 in this court as follows: June 14, 2010 at 8:30 a.m. in Dept.: K, Room: K, of the Superior Court of California, Marin County, located at Superior Court of California, County of Marin, 3501 Civic Center Drive, San Rafael, CA. 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 decedent, 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 section 9100 of the California Probate Code. 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: /s/ DAVID S. THOMAS, POST OFFICE BOX 346, PINE GROVE, CA 95665, (209) 296-2220. (Publication Dates: May 21, 28; June 4, 2010)

›› ADViCE GODDESS® by Amy Alko n

Q:

How do you know whether a guy is worth staying with, or if you’re on a slowly sinking ship? My boyfriend of three-and-a-half years treats me well, but he suffers bouts of depression and his divorce six years ago has hung a shadow over our relationship. He’s never told me he loves me, which I need at this point. His divorce also left him financially scarred, and he’s taken a roommate, who happens to be female, to stave off foreclosure. It turns out she was raped some time ago. Soon after moving in, she told my boyfriend she was uncomfortable with others in the house having sex. She doesn’t have a job now, so even afternoon trysts are out. I think it’s terrible what happened to her, but I also find it awfully presumptuous of her to dictate this aspect of our lives. We can’t have sex at my place, except when my kids can stay at my mom’s. I needed more from my boyfriend even before the roommate came, but too often now, there’s only that seven-minute exhausted call at 11:45 at night. I’m disturbed that he’d basically sell out our relationship for some rent money.—Sexless In The City

A:

Are you on a slowly sinking ship? Well, if this were the Titanic, DiCaprio and Winslet would’ve had time before the ship went down to have four kids, three affairs and a bitter divorce. It’s terrible what happened to his roommate, but moving into somebody’s place and then announcing, “Oh, by the way, I’m traumatized by people having sex...” is like saying, “Did I mention that I’m deathly allergic to cats? Not to worry, I hear they don’t feel a thing when they get put down.” Of course, a guy who wants to have sex with his girlfriend but takes in a roommate who’s “uncomfortable” with it passes on the bad news: that he’ll be giving said roommate time to pack, not that he’ll be sleeping with the girlfriend from 11:45 to 12:02, but only over the phone, and he really does mean “sleeping.” If you were boyfriend-shopping right now, imagine answering this ad: “Emotionally and financially devastated divorced man with deeply troubled roommate seeks girlfriend: no pets, no sex, no ‘I love you.’” Clearly, what you really need to hear isn’t “those three little words” but those eight: “I just can’t give you what you want.” Chances are, you succumbed to what economists call “the sunk cost fallacy”—investing more and more time in this relationship because you’ve already invested so much time. You should instead be looking at what the guy currently has to offer: basically, seven minutes a night for you to work on convincing him “If you really loved me, you’d be living out of your car.” Is it possible he’ll change? Sure it is—if he wins the lottery and meets a good witch who’ll wave her magic wand over him, instantly curing his depression, or if you can invent a time machine so he can go back and stay in bed with a hangover on the day he met his now ex-wife. On the bright side, you should find it easier to coax him into saying “I love you”...at gunpoint, or by attaching jumper cables to his nipples.

Q: Visit pacificsun.com for information on publishing your legal notice

PUBLISH YOUR LEGAL AD Fictitious Business Name Statement Change of Name or Summons Contact us @ (415)485-6700 x.301

My boyfriend of three years has always suspected that I had a sexual history with one of my male friends. I lied and said I didn’t. (The sex was a one-time mistake, three years before I met my boyfriend.) The problem is, I have lunch with this friend two or three times a year to catch up (always in public places). So far, I’ve refused to stop seeing my friend, which hurts my boyfriend. Should I cut him off to spare my boyfriend’s feelings?—Just Friendly

A:

Poor Booboo, does he have an ouchie day, two or three times a year, whenever you bring home mints from the Olive Garden? There’s a telltale sign—that you had lunch. Your boyfriend, like too many grown adults, is under the impression that life should always be one long Princess cruise. Sure, he feels jealous (and apparently, that you’re sleazy, trampy and not to be trusted). Being jealous is human nature, and reflects insecurity on his part, which you shouldn’t be catering to by cutting friends out of your life. Continue keeping mum about your sexual history, and help your boyfriend feel more secure by letting him know how hot and wonderful you find him and by being touchy-feely, like you can’t keep your hands off him. Of course, these tactics are most effective if you also avoid returning from lunches three days later, claiming to have escaped your kidnappers, the Mexican drug kingpins. ✹ © Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. www.advicegoddess.com. Got a problem? E-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com or write to Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave. #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405.

Worship the goddess—or sacrifice her at the altar on TownSquare at ›› pacificsun.com MAY 28 – JUNE 3, 2010 PACIFIC SUN 35


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LABEL DESIGNS MAY VARY

4HIRD 3T s 3AN 2AFAEL s AND 2ED (ILL !VE s 3AN !NSELMO s

3TORE (OURS -ON &RI AM PM s 3AT AM PM s 3UN AM PM )TEMS PRICES IN THIS AD ARE AVAILABLE FROM May 29th-June 6th !LL PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE UP OR DOWN ONLY WHEN OUR COST CHANGES 7E RESERVE THE RIGHT TO CORRECT PRINTED ERRORS .O SALES TO DEALERS OR INSTITUTIONS 36 PACIFIC SUN MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2010


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