In a sweeping change to keep up with the Covid-19 orders, the Crow’s Nest restaurant in the Santa Cruz Harbor has opened two new outdoor seating areas.
The first new outdoor dining spot is near the entrance, offering views of the harbor channel and all boat traffic. The second is a huge white tent stationed out back on the sand, just yards from the shoreline with views of the harbor channel, the Walton Lighthouse and, of course, the Pacific Ocean.
Crow’s Nest has also kept their permanent outdoor patio open for dining.
Restaurants statewide had to close their indoor dining after Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations started surging across California. Additional rollbacks on other sectors across Santa Cruz County went into effect Tuesday due to the surge of cases locally.
There have been 1,030 known Covid-19 cases in the county, according to data last updated Tuesday by county health officials. More than 70 of those people have required hospitalization while they were sick with Covid-19.
Amid the pandemic, many restaurants have instituted non-negotiable protocols—most set by the state—for social distancing and masks. Most customers, local servers say, have been supportive of this new normal.
With indoor dining unavailable for now, the Santa Cruz dining scene is offering up plenty of things to anticipate and enjoy outdoors or for takeout.
For around $20 you can get yourself a pretty good bottle of red wine from New Leaf. And that would be Roudon-Smith’s Cuvée—a red blend made up primarily of Syrah and Grenache and a touch of Petite Sirah.
Black plum, smoke and allspice on the nose lead to flavors of smoked meat, red currant, spice, and mesquite. This tasty blend was a bronze medal winner at the 2017 San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition; it obviously impressed the judges. Well-balanced with some “dusty tannins that will let the wine further develop over the next 5 years,” here’s a wine to keep on hand.
Roudon-Smith has a lot of history behind it. Founded in 1972 by Bob and Anna-Marie Roudon, and Jim and June Smith, the foursome set up a winery and tasting room in Scotts Valley. Over time, the tasting room was remodeled and is currently occupied by Pelican Ranch Winery.
Now owned by Al Drewke, Roudon-Smith continues to produce fine wines—with winemaker Mikael Wargin (of Wargin Wines in Soquel) at its helm.
Roudon-Smith Winery, 14572 Big Basin Way, Saratoga. 408-313-5229. roudonsmith.com.
Zizzo’s Coffeehouse and Wine Bar
Zizzo’s is a family-style coffee and wine bar locally owned by Karen and Scott Hoogner. As of press time, they’re open 7am to 2pm, but hope to extend hours soon.
Coffee is freshly roasted by Santa Cruz Coffee Roasting, and most of Zizzo’s delicious pastries are made in-house by Karen. There’s plenty of outdoor seating, and it’s a good spot to enjoy a glass of wine from Zizzo’s varied list. Wine is also available for purchase by the bottle.
We can look forward to their featured music nights coming up—and they also host events. As they say on their website, “Isn’t it time to support a local, independent coffeehouse that only cares about your happiness?” The answer is yes! And the good news is they do happy hour wine specials all day, with house wine and bubbles for $6 per glass.
Zizzo’s Coffeehouse and Wine Bar, 3555 Clares St., Suite PP, Capitola. 831-477-0680. zizzoscoffee.com.
Because many in-person events across Santa Cruz County have been canceled or postponed during the pandemic, Good Times is compiling a weekly list of virtual events hosted by local nonprofits, artists, fitness instructors and businesses. To submit your virtual event, send an email to ca******@*******es.sc.
ARTS AND MUSIC
CABRILLO MUSIC FESTIVAL The virtual Cabrillo Music Festival runs July 27-Aug. 9. All events are free and accessible on the festival’s website, cabrillomusic.org.
TOM NODDY’S BUBBLE MAGIC Tom has taken his uniquely warm and charming sense of wonder and delight in soap bubbles to audiences around the world. The bubbles are truly exquisite, and Tom’s lively humor and engaging sense of fun leave his audiences both delighted and intrigued. Free all ages library Summer Reading Program: santacruzpl.org/pages/srp. Register online: santacruzpl.libcal.com/event/6741448. Thursday, July 30, 1pm.
GHOST LIGHT THEATER Mountain Community Theater presents a digital festival, “Ghost Light Theater,” named for the safety light that theaters place on the stage between performances. The festival so far has posted five productions, with new ones being added almost every week. They include short plays, monologues, and videos of past productions. Future works will include radio plays, musical performances, behind-the-scenes interviews and panels with theater professionals, and even a participatory writers’ workshop. You can see everything at mctshows.org and on MCT’s YouTube channel. To receive notifications of new productions as they are posted, go to mctshows.org and sign up for the mailing list. We hope to see you again in person in 2021!
SPEED SKETCHING Come with paper and pencil and try your hand at speed sketching: All artistic experience is welcome. Prior to beginning the program, please select an object in your home and place it in view of your computer’s camera, and let’s have fun together and see who can draw the silliest, stylish, true to life, or abstract interpretation of it. Every Tuesday afternoon at 2pm, take a break out of your day for some fun! Register for Zoom at: santacruzpl.libcal.com/event/6780189.
CLASSES
TECH TALKS: NAVIGATING NEWS AND DISINFORMATION The online information ecosystem is polluted and polarized. It seems to be contributing to social demoralization and destabilization. We’ll discuss the primary types of disinformation and share the tools and strategies for critically examining sources of online information. Tech Talks are not your typical computer class. These are hands-on workshops that help us better understand our mobile devices. This event will be taking place online using Zoom. Registrants will receive an email with the Zoom meeting link immediately upon registering for the event. Register online: santacruzpl.libcal.com/event/6813535. Thursday, July 30, 11am.
SEVEN SIMPLE TIPS FOR CREATING YOUR SUCCESSFUL EVENT Join us for a one-hour event to learn seven simple tips for creating, promoting, inviting to, and holding your successful webinar or workshop, in person or online! Tuesday, August 4, at 1pm on Zoom. Learn more: gatherinsantacruz.com.
SALSA SUELTA IN PLACE: Free weekly online session in Cuban-style Salsa Suelta for experienced beginners and up. Contact to get a Zoom link. Thursdays at 7pm. salsagente.com.
COMMUNITY
COMMUNITY RESILIENCE PROJECT: GAINING GROUND FILM DISCUSSION The Santa Cruz Public Libraries continues its monthly discussion series intended to help build resiliency within our community. The next event in the series, Gaining Ground, takes place at 6pm on Thursday, July 30, via Zoom. Register here to participate: santacruzpl.libcal.com/event/6856867. In this event, all are invited to join Michael Watkins and Zach Friend for a discussion about the film Gaining Ground: Building Community on Dudley Street, available on Kanopy, the library’s online video streaming service. It is not necessary to watch the film beforehand but if you’d like to check it out, follow this link: santacruzpl.kanopy.com/video/gaining-ground-building-community-dudley-street. This event is brought to you by The Friends of Santa Cruz Public Libraries.
THE VIRTUAL DICKENS UNIVERSE While the originally planned program focusing on ‘David Copperfield’ and ‘Iola Leroy’ will still take place in 2021, this week of online programming will feature a range of conversations that discuss the occasion of the pair and the insights that bringing them together can offer. Over the week, scholars from Victorian studies and early African American studies will discuss linkages between their respective fields, approaches for addressing race and racism in the classroom, and productive ways to engage with Black studies in the 19th century and its transatlantic contexts. We hope that this will generate excitement to read these two novels over the next year and to join us in Santa Cruz for the full Dickens Universe conference. We hope that this week will provide some useful context for these two novels, as we read them together over the next year. In addition to providing some critical background for France E. W. Harper’s career and ‘Iola Leroy,’ it will also help place her alongside Dickens as one of the most important and prolific writers of the nineteenth century. Like Dickens, Harper was a master of many literary genres (including fiction, prose, and poetry), was deeply involved in nineteenth-century print and periodical cultures. She was a virtuoso public speaker and an activist in the anti-slavery, suffrage, temperance, and post-emancipation racial justice movements. Participation is free, but registration is required. ucsc.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_VI_xnJrWSw6E-CgXK7bMBA.
LUMA BOOK CLUB This is a time of seismic shift, and yet also one of opportunity. Luma Yoga is a community center operating on principles of inclusion, compassion, and, yes, reflection, but make no mistake—also of action. The first step in effective action is gaining knowledge. To this end, Luma is hosting a book club on the topic of racism and social justice issues. The reading groups will be held remotely (for now) over Zoom Thursday nights 7-8:15pm. The purpose of the groups is to learn the endless shapes oppression can take in the world, to recognize our own biases within ourselves, and to move from discomfort to action in support of Black and non-white POC. The groups will be facilitated by Steven Macramalla, a professor of psychology at SJSU. The Club will work on a 3- to 4-week cycle, reading one book per cycle, with several chapters covered each week. For more info visit lumayoga.com. Thursdays at 7pm.
2020 SUMMER LUNCH PROGRAM Children and youth aged 18 and under can get free lunches this summer at 12 sites throughout Santa Cruz County! The annual Summer Lunch program, sponsored by La Manzana Community Resources, a program of Community Bridges, combats food insecurity and supports good nutritional habits. The Summer Lunch program serves lunch Monday through Friday from 12-1pm. Free meals will be provided to all children, without eligibility documentation, who are 18 years of age and younger. For more info visit communitybridges.org/lmcr.
TALES TO TAILS GOES VIRTUAL Tales to Tails goes virtual to create a comfortable, neutral, and fun reading experience. Bring some books, a stuffed animal or your own pet, and come read with us! This is a YouTube livestream event so you might be reading to up to six animals at once. Woo hoo! Caregivers, you can post your child’s first name and city in the comments section, along with the book they are reading, and we’ll read off as many of those names as we can, live, during the break we need to give the dogs. Each week you register we’ll send you your dog bone “punch cards.” These will be dated dog bones your child can color and email to us. The following week, we’ll display them live on the feed. This will also be recorded so if you can’t make it live, the dogs will still be there for you. Every Wednesday, 10-11am. Learn more at santacruzpl.libcal.com/event/6764929.
GROUPS
SUNSET BEACH BOWLS Experience the tranquility, peace and calmness as the ocean waves harmonize with the sound of Crystal Bowls. Every Tuesday at 7:45pm. Moran Lake Park.
VIRTUAL YOUNG ADULT (18-30) TRANSGENDER SUPPORT GROUP A weekly peer support group for young adults aged 18-25 who identify as transgender, non-binary, genderqueer, agender, or any other non-cisgender identity. This is a social group where we meet and chat among ourselves, sharing our experiences and thoughts in a warm, welcoming setting. Our meetings will be held on Discord during the shelter-in-place order. For more info, contact Ezra Bowen at tr***@*************er.org.
LGBTQNBI+ SUPPORT GROUP FOR CORONAVIRUS STRESS This weekly LGBTQNBI+ support group is being offered to help us all deal with stress during the shelter-in-place situation that we are experiencing from the coronavirus. Feel free to bring your lunch and chat together to get support. This group is offered at no cost and will be facilitated by licensed therapists Shane Hill, Ph.D., and Melissa Bernstein, LMFT #52524. Learn how to join the Zoom support group at diversitycenter.org/community-calendar.
OUTDOOR
LABSIDE CHATS: A CONVERSATION WITH A SCIENTIST Tune in for the next Labside Chat with Mark Carr, professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UC Santa Cruz, on Thursday, July 30, at 11am, to explore the structure and dynamics of nearshore marine ecosystems. Join the conversation! Submit your questions in advance for Mark, then watch the conversation to hear the answers during the live chat. Visit the Seymour Center’s website to submit your questions in advance and to access the livestream: seymourcenter.ucsc.edu/learn/ongoing-education/labside-chats. Virtual Labside Chats are offered at no charge. Please support the Seymour Center by becoming a member or making a donation today: seymourcenter.ucsc.edu/get-involved/join.
OWLS ON THE PROWL Local California State Parks in Santa Cruz County are offering virtual junior ranger programs for children ages 7-12 during the Covid-19 pandemic. These fun, free Zoom webinars are scheduled on Mondays and Fridays at 10am each week in July. Children receive a digital stamp for each program they attend; after receiving a certain number of stamps, they can earn prizes! Do you hear owls at night? Who are they hooting at? Swoop in for a bird’s eye look into the incredible world of owls. This interactive program will be broadcast as a Zoom webinar. Registration is required. To register, visit tinyurl.com/SantaCruzJuniorRangers. Free event. Friday, July 31, 10am.
S’MORES AT THE SHORE Join us for a sweet educational campfire as we learn more about the creatures found at Sunset State Beach and play some of our favorite campfire games! Like our Facebook page to receive a notification when this pre-recorded program is premiered: facebook.com/SunsetManresaSB. Viewers will be able to post questions and comments during the premiere for a state park interpreter to answer. The program will also be available for later viewing. Free event. Friday, July 31, 7pm.
NATURALIST NIGHT: SANTA CRUZ HABITATS AND HISTORY Santa Cruz Public Libraries and the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History have partnered to bring you Naturalist Night! Join fellow nature enthusiasts for monthly explorations of the biodiversity of Santa Cruz County. Each month, Marisa Gomez from the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History will share the stories of a specific Santa Cruz habitat as we develop our skills as naturalists. This series will feature a presentation as well as an interactive session. This program occurs monthly on the fourth Tuesday from 6-7 pm. Registration is required for Zoom access link. Your registration confirmation email will have the Zoom link in it. Register online: santacruzpl.libcal.com/event/6857442.
Jana Marcus has the Good Times covers she’s been on over the years hanging on the wall of her office. The very first one is from almost 25 years ago, and it was written by … me. In fact, if I remember right, it was the first cover story I ever wrote for GT. It was a profile of both her and her father Morton Marcus, and while interviewing them together I was entertained by their dry banter and moved by the deep affection and respect they so obviously shared for each other.
So I’ve known Jana a long time, but if you had asked me then why she would be on the GT cover in 2020, I would not have guessed a true-crime book. I love that you can never really predict what she’ll be up to next, whether it’s as an author or photographer. Still, as Wallace Baine’s cover story wonderfully lays out, Jana’s core artistic values are the same now as they were back when I first wrote about her—Mort is a big part of this book, and it turns out that the mob murder at its core is part of a family secret she’s been obsessed with for decades. It’s a fascinating story with some crazy twists, and I’m pleased to bring Jana back to our cover to explore it with our readers.
Re: “Youth Movement” (GT, 7/15): As nationwide protests erupted in response to police violence against people of color, thousands marched in Santa Cruz to express their solidarity. Even the police chief knelt down with protesters, much as the SCPD has paraded with community members to celebrate the Martin Luther King holiday.
While these are certainly nice gestures, it strikes me that for many white liberals, this is more an exercise in patting oneself on the back, rather than seeking to understand and eradicate racism and injustice. Santa Cruz likes to imagine itself a special place, so tolerant and open, yet in many ways we are subject to the same tendencies as the rest of the country.
In 2007, the only nonwhite City Council member, Tony Madrigal, raised concern about an incident of racial profiling he’d witnessed. Rather than taking the opportunity for discussion, or launching an investigation, the white establishment attacked Madrigal. The Sentinel ran an editorial calling for him to resign, while fellow council members Reilly, Mathews, Coonerty, and Robinson—all Democrats—signed a statement saying that Madrigal’s allegation, “has been demoralizing to the department and harmful to its reputation.”
The council remained almost entirely white until 2018, when voters elected two young black men. Cummings and Glover won in part due to their support for rent control, which lost at the ballot, but turned out thousands of voters. Yet within days of their swearing-in, the overwhelmingly white landlord lobby began threatening a recall. Sure enough, they eventually used leftover real estate money raised to fight rent control to fund a spurious recall campaign, based largely on the narrative of Glover—a large black man—as intimidating and “bullying” to (white) women on staff.
Although an $18,000 investigation failed to substantiate all but one trivial claim, and urged Council members to resolve conflicts internally, the white liberals on council continued to play up ugly stereotypes of the intimidating black man—even as Myers herself came unhinged, shouting angrily at Glover at a meeting and pounding her fist, in behavior far worse than his alleged wrongdoings.
The real reason for the ouster of Glover, a Kingian nonviolence trainer, is that like King and many others in the movements for black liberation, he acted as a champion for the poor and marginalized, including renters and the unhoused. While these are not strictly racial issues, race plays a huge role in who owns land and wealth, due to factors ranging from redlining to inequalities in education.
It’s easy to walk down West Cliff and say one opposes racism, but it’s harder for Santa Cruz to grapple with that we allowed a group of landlords, almost all white, to buy a recall election, replacing a progressive black man who has long championed the very issues central to the current protests with a white landlord who was a lifelong Republican until last election cycle.
Similarly, Santa Cruz has a hard time considering that our police might be subject to the same problems that plague other departments. Yet SCPD shot and killed Sean Arlt, a young father experiencing a mental health crisis, for wielding a garden rake. A SCPD officer brutalized Richard Hardy, a homeless man they found passed out drunk downtown. Although he was harming no one, they roused him, cuffed him, and then when he resisted being pushed into the car, they slammed him head-first into a curb.
SCPD officials admit that law enforcement is not a solution to homelessness, yet continue to criminalize the poor, destroying camps and ticketing RVs, without offering anywhere else for people to go. Police have also spied on people organizing a parade, lied about protests, and a deputy chief went on TV to smear a progressive candidate as “a dangerous anarchist” for hanging a banner at a protest.
Santa Cruz, let’s move past gestures and work to end institutional racism and problematic policing.
Steve Schnaar | Santa Cruz
PHOTO CONTEST WINNER
Submit to ph****@*******es.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250dpi.
GOOD IDEA
RINGING ENDORSEMENT
The city of Santa Cruz has five sister cities, including the Japanese city of Shingu. In early August, the sister city committees of Santa Cruz and Shingu will host two virtual events to recognize the bombs dropped at Nagasaki and Hiroshima, as well the efforts toward peace. Anyone can participate by observing 30 seconds of silence, followed by 75 seconds of bell ringing on Wednesday, Aug. 5 at 4:15pm and Saturday, Aug. 8 at 7:02pm. Use hashtag #USJapanBells when sharing photos and videos on social media.
Mar 27, 2020 – UPDATE, Aug. 3, 6pm: A previous version of this story misreported the hashtag for the bell ringing in memory of the atomic bombs that the U.S. military dropped on Japan.
GOOD WORK
FOOT FORWARD
Santa Cruz began construction on a citywide Pedestrian Crossing Improvement Project on Monday. The project, expected to be completed in December, will include new ADA-accessible curb ramps, pedestrian-activated beacons, traffic striping, pavement markings and regulatory and warning signs. Construction will occur on weekdays from 7am-4pm. The project’s goal is to increase walking and cycling safety throughout the city. The project’s $1 million price tag is fully funded through a Highway Safety Improvement Program grant. Any concerns or questions may go to Project Manager Dan Estranero at de********@*************uz.com or 831-420-5189.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“Mysteries abound where most we seek for answers.”
Family mysteries travel across generations, sometimes hardening into taboo and disappearing in the passing years—until a member begins asking questions.
Jana Marcus was just such a renegade, but in her case the taboo was much more than an embarrassment or a scandal. It was a threat of unspeakable violence.
In the fall of 1941, Marcus’ great uncle—Abe Babchick, the brother of her paternal grandmother—was a victim of what used to be called a gangland slaying, shot to death in his car in New York City. Shortly thereafter, Babchick’s family received an ominous phone call, a male voice that said, “If anyone tries to find out what happened to Abe, we’ll kill the whole family, starting with the children.”
Now, nearly 80 years later, Marcus reaches a culmination in her decades-long effort “to find out what happened to Abe” in her new book Line of Blood: Uncovering a Secret Legacy of Mobsters, Money, and Murder.
The tale is part touching memoir, part true-crime detective story, part history of mob violence in 20th century New York, even part supernatural thriller—there’s a crime-scene psychic involved as well. It’s a story that’s been brewing for the better part of three decades.
Marcus is well-known in Santa Cruz County, primarily for her work as a photographer. She is the author of the 2012 book of photographs Transfigurations, a collection of portraiture of transgender men and women, and In the Shadow of the Vampire, a look at the culture inspired by the novels of Anne Rice. She is also known for her prominent parents—playwright and theater director Wilma Marcus Chandler, and the late poet and film critic Morton Marcus.
Her father, one of the most prominent literary figures to come out of Santa Cruz County in the last half-century, looms large in Line of Blood as a kind of co-conspirator in the effort to get to the bottom of Abe Babchick’s cold case. It was Mort Marcus who told his daughter of the ominous phone call.
“When I heard that,” she says, “chills not only went down my spine, but I knew, ‘Obviously this is something huge.’”
As a young boy, her father was sent away to boarding school, a fact that he, for much of his lifetime, attributed to that phone call. “That was my father’s theory: The reason he had been sent away was to keep him out of harm’s way. The story does expand, and every clue I found led to deeper mysteries that spread out like rings in a pond when you throw a rock in it. It just got deeper and deeper into the crime history of my father’s family that nobody knew about.”
The Secret Drawer
Jana Marcus’s formal investigation into the deep well of her family’s history dates back to 1988. She had been primed for the job, growing up under the influence of her dad’s natural talent at storytelling, which encompassed the colorful tales of various relatives in a continuously unfolding narrative he characterized as an “Oliver Twist childhood with a Jewish accent.”
As a teen, young Jana also developed an abiding interest in genealogy, but had concentrated most of her efforts on her maternal line, of which she was able to find plenty of information. Mort’s side, however, despite his stories, was sealed off by years of accumulated silences from his relatives (Mort’s father left the family early on and was never a factor in his life).
The key to learning about the mysteries of her father’s side was her paternal grandmother, Grandma Rae, a charismatic New Yorker who had been married five times. Rae, however, was never willing to open the locked closet of her family’s history.
In 1988, Jana, who with her sister Valerie had been raised in Santa Cruz, indulged her romantic love for New York City by visiting her grandmother in Rae’s swanky apartment near Central Park. Jana had moved to New York as a young adult and was busy nightclubbing and making the scene.
One January day, she arrived at her Grandma Rae’s apartment to take part in one of the family’s occasional celebratory gatherings, which would include Mort flying in from California. She described these family get-togethers featuring various cousins, aunts and uncles as “beautiful chaos, full of Slavic loudness and a Fiddler on the Roof zest for life.”
Jana’s relationship with Rae was volatile. The older woman was capable of unpredictable mood swings, from gestures of smothering love to cold fury. It was during this particular family visit that Jana, shooed away from the kitchen before the guests arrived, began looking through her grandmother’s “secret drawer,” a cache of old photos and memorabilia. It was there she found an old newspaper clipping from the long defunct New York Daily Mirror, dated September 1941.
The clipping described “thick-necked, casaba-faced” Abe Babchick, who had recently been “a victim of gang guns,” as the Mirror put it. It was the first step in a journey that would lead all the way to Line of Blood.
Later in the day, after various relatives had arrived at Rae’s place, Jana brought up Babchick to one of her aunts, who froze in apprehension. Soon, the old clipping was making the rounds with various relatives, each of whom had only vague recollections of hazy stories involving some gambler in the family who had been killed. But when Grandma Rae learned that Jana was asking about the clipping, she exploded. “Don’t ever say my brother’s name!” she screamed, slamming the door behind her.
Abe Babchick circa 1925. The mystery around Babchick’s murder is the subject of Jana Marcus’ new book. PHOTO: COURTESY OF JANA MARCUS
The Twist
Her great-uncle Abe was involved in what was known as a “policy racket,” also known as “the numbers,” a form of lottery gambling illegal at the time. Mort knew almost as little as Jana about his Uncle Abe, and almost immediately father and daughter embarked on an investigation, armed only with the yellowing newspaper article.
“I wanted to find out for my father’s sake,” says Jana, “to find out who his family was. He had a lonely childhood, and I craved a sense of family. Who were they? Between the two of us, we were eager to research. As time went on, it kind of ebbed and flowed in terms of finding information until there was just no more information to be found. As the years went by, and more hints were dropped and clues were found, I really did move from eager researcher to obsessed sleuth. It really did become an obsession for me.”
Line of Blood is not only a family story, but also kind of a technology story. In 1988, the at-your-fingertips world of the internet that is such a foundational part of life today did not exist. Investigating a secret buried in the past meant doing it the analog way, looking through boxes of microfilm in the basement of some public library. In the beginning, Jana spent hours following leads on microfilm and combing over old municipal records at the police department and the district attorney’s offices in New York while Mort followed his own leads back home in Santa Cruz.
What they found was that Babchick was linked directly to the organized crime activity of the period, namely through his relationship with another Abe, nicknamed “Kid Twist” Reles, an infamous mobster and hitman for a feared syndicate luridly known as Murder Inc.
The picture of Uncle Abe began to emerge with excruciating slowness. The establishment of the internet and such websites as ancestry.com opened up new avenues for investigation. Jana’s relationship with her grandmother became even more volatile—at one point, Rae announced to both Jana and her sister than she no longer wanted to be their grandmother. Eventually, at different times and for different reasons, both Jana and her grandmother relocated to Monterey Bay. In 2001, Rae passed away, and it was only after her death that Jana learned of the menacing phone call threatening the whole family.
Several years later, in 2009, Mort himself took ill and in October of that year, after publishing his massive literary memoir, he died at the age of 73. And, for a long while, it appeared that Jana Marcus’s long obsession with her paternal family line had died with him.
“It was heartbreaking for me,” says Jana of Mort’s death. “This was something that Dad and I spent years talking about, hypothesizing about. The book is really (divided between) before Dad dies and after Dad dies, because when he passed away, I just didn’t want to finish it. I had spent too many years looking at pictures of dead relatives, trying to make their stories come to life. And I was grieving. I just put it all away.”
It was five years later, in the fall of 2014, that the long-moribund family project was revived, thanks to an out-of-the-blue phone call. The caller was the daughter of the man who was employed as Uncle Abe’s driver, and niece of Grandma Rae’s dearest friend. The dying ember sparked again.
“It was shocking to get this phone call,” Jana says. “It was five years after my father’s death. I had just been laid off from my longtime job [at Cabrillo College] and I had time on my hands. I realized that, after speaking with her, I still had the drive to figure this out, to stay on this investigation. Plus, it was a way to stay connected with my father. In writing this book, it was an exercise for me to face my father’s death.”
Diving back into the material anew, she began to piece together the story of the Jewish mob in Depression-era New York and ventured into unusual realms in pursuit of her story, which meant contacting a crime-scene psychic. Through her connections with a previous book on the literature of Anne Rice and the vampire culture of New Orleans, Jana found a third-generation psychic who claimed to be able to communicate with the dead, and proceeded to do just that with Jana’s dead father and grandmother. From that point on, the woman became a valued part of Jana’s team of investigators.
“It was pretty astounding,” says Jana of her experience with the psychic. “She was able to tell me things it took me decades to find. Even though information is now widely available online, information about my great-uncle’s murder was not. It had been wiped from the records. She was able to channel incredible information that no one could have known about.”
Marcus and her investigation team on location on Brooklyn in 2015. Left to right: Emery Hudson, videographer; Mark Basoa, retired NYPD detective; Marcus; Maria Saganis, psychic; Eric Sassaman, researcher; Jared Ostrov, Marcus’ cousin. PHOTO: COURTESY OF JANA MARCUS
Before long, she assembled a team of investigators, including a retired NYPD police detective, her sister Valerie and cousin Jared, a research assistant, and a young videographer. In the summer of 2015, the team met in New York to revisit some of the sites that Jana had uncovered in her long investigation about Uncle Abe’s death.
Eventually, the deep dive into Abe Babchick’s murder went through revelations about Kid Twist Reles, Murder Inc., and the rich subculture of the Jewish mafia. But, to Jana’s surprise, it ended back at the feet of her Grandma Rae in what amounts to the story’s twist ending.
In the weeks leading up to the book’s publication, Jana has had occasion to share her story with many in her extended family, and the long journey into Abe’s death has afforded her the opportunity to get to know her family on a level she would have been unable to attain otherwise. She even received a letter from a woman who was the granddaughter of Mort’s half-sister, previously unknown to the family. The woman told Jana that she keeps the book by her bedside to conjure the spirits of her grandmother.
The book is dedicated to Jana Marcus’s nephew Zachary as a way to keep the tale in the continuity of the family. “He’s 15, and he went on the last on-the-ground investigation with us. There are still a few mysteries unanswered, and I’m leaving them to the next generation. It’s up to him to pick up the baton. I’ve taken this adventure as far as I can.”
Still looming over the story, however, is Jana’s celebrated father Morton Marcus. Line of Blood serves as a kind of benediction to him, more than a decade after his passing.
“It’s bittersweet,” says Jana, 57, of the publication of a book that has consumed half of her life. “There are so many times that I had wished Mort had been here to find out what I discovered. He would have loved to have been part of the adventure. He was as invested in it as I was.
“It sort of became our thing,” she laughs, bringing to mind a common nickname of the Sicilian mob, “which is what Cosa Nostra means in Italian.”
Jana Marcus, author of ‘Line of Blood: Uncovering a Secret Legacy of Mobsters, Money, and Murder’ will be in conversation with Good Times’ Wallace Baine on Aug. 11, at 7pm, in a virtual event presented by Bookshop Santa Cruz. Register for the Crowdcast event at bookshopsantacruz.com.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti is renowned for his buoyancy. In one of his famous lines, he wrote, “I am awaiting, perpetually and forever, a renaissance of wonder.” Here’s what I have to say in response to that thought: Your assignment, as an Aries, is not to sit there and wait, perpetually and forever, for a renaissance of wonder. Rather, it’s your job to embody and actualize and express, perpetually and forever, a renaissance of wonder. The coming weeks will be an especially favorable time for you to rise to new heights in fulfilling this aspect of your lifelong assignment.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I live in Northern California on land that once belonged to the indigenous Coast Miwok people. They were animists who believed that soul and sentience animate all animals and plants as well as rocks, rivers, mountains—everything, really. Their food came from hunting and gathering, and they lived in small bands without centralized political authority. According to one of their creation stories, Coyote and Silver Fox made the world by singing and dancing it into existence. Now I invite you to do what I just illustrated: Find out about and celebrate the history of the people and the place where you live. From an astrological perspective, it’s a favorable time to get in touch with roots and foundations.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “When I look down, I miss all the good stuff, and when I look up, I just trip over things,” says singer-songwriter Ani DiFranco. I wonder if she has tried an alternate approach: looking straight ahead. That’s what I advise for you in the coming weeks, Gemini. In other words, adopt a perspective that will enable you to detect regular glimpses of what’s above you and what’s below you—as well as what’s in front of you. In fact, I suggest you avoid all extremes that might distract you from the big picture. The truth will be most available to you if you occupy the middle ground.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): The Italian word nottivago refers to “night roamers,” people who wander around after dark. Why do they do it? What do they want to accomplish? Maybe their ramblings have the effect of dissolving stuck thoughts that have been plaguing them. Maybe it’s a healing relief to indulge in the luxury of having nowhere in particular to go and nothing in particular to do: to declare their independence from the obsessive drive to get things done. Meandering after sundown may stir up a sense of wild freedom that inspires them to outflank or outgrow their problems. I bring these possibilities to your attention, Cancerian, because the coming days will be an excellent time to try them out.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Notice what no one else notices and you’ll know what no one else knows,” says actor Tim Robbins. That’s perfect counsel for you right now, Leo. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, your perceptiveness will be at a peak in the coming weeks. You’ll have an ability to discern half-hidden truths that are invisible to everyone else. You’ll be aggressive in scoping out what most people don’t even want to become aware of. Take advantage of your temporary superpower! Use it to get a lucid grasp of the big picture—and cultivate a more intelligent approach than those who are focused on the small picture and the comfortable delusions.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “Look on every exit as being an entrance somewhere else,” wrote playwright Tom Stoppard. That’s ripe advice for you to meditate on during the coming weeks. You’re in a phase of your astrological cycle when every exit can indeed be an entrance somewhere else—but only if you believe in that possibility and are alert for it. So please dissolve your current assumptions about the current chapter of your life story so that you can be fully open to new possibilities that could become available.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “One must think with the body and the soul or not think at all,” wrote Libran author and historian Hannah Arendt. She implied that thinking only with the head may spawn monsters and demons. Mere conceptualization is arid and sterile if not interwoven with the wisdom of the soul and the body’s earthy intuitions. Ideas that are untempered by feelings and physical awareness can produce poor maps of reality. In accordance with astrological omens, I ask you to meditate on these empowering suggestions. Make sure that as you seek to understand what’s going on, you draw on all your different kinds of intelligence.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “I always wanted to be commander-in-chief of my one-woman army,” says singer-songwriter Ani DiFranco. I think that goal is within sight for you, Scorpio. Your power over yourself has been increasing lately. Your ability to manage your own moods and create your own sweet spots and define your own fate is as robust as I have seen it in a while. What do you plan to do with your enhanced dominion? What special feats might you attempt? Are there any previously impossible accomplishments that may now be possible?
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your meditation for the coming weeks comes to you courtesy of author and naturalist Henry David Thoreau. “We can never have enough of nature,” he wrote. “We must be refreshed by the sight of inexhaustible vigor, vast and titanic features, the sea-coast with its wrecks, the wilderness with its living and its decaying trees, the thunder cloud, and the rain which lasts three weeks and produces freshets. We need to witness our own limits transgressed, and some life pasturing freely where we never wander.” Oh, how I hope you will heed Thoreau’s counsel, Sagittarius. You would really benefit from an extended healing session amid natural wonders. Give yourself the deep pleasure of exploring what wildness means to you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Author and activist bell hooks (who doesn’t capitalize her name) has taught classes at numerous American universities. She sometimes writes about her experiences there, as in the following passage. “My students tell me, ‘We don’t want to love! We’re tired of being loving!’ And I say to them, if you’re tired of being loving, then you haven’t really been loving, because when you are loving you have more strength.” I wanted you to know her thoughts, Capricorn, because I think you’re in a favorable position to demonstrate how correct she is: to dramatically boost your own strength through the invigorating power of your love.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Aquarian author Langston Hughes (1902–1967) was a pioneering and prolific African American author and activist who wrote in four different genres and was influential in boosting other Black writers. One of his big breaks as a young man came when he was working as a waiter at a banquet featuring the famous poet Vachel Lindsay. Hughes managed to leave three of his poems on Lindsay’s table. The great poet loved them and later lent his clout to boosting Hughes’ career. I suspect you might have an opening like that sometime soon, Aquarius—even if it won’t be quite as literal and hands-on. Be ready to take advantage. Cultivate every connection that may become available.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Author Faith Baldwin has renounced the “forgive and forget” policy. She writes, “I think one should forgive and remember. If you forgive and forget, you’re just driving what you remember into the subconscious; it stays there and festers. But to look upon what you remember and know you’ve forgiven is achievement.” That’s the approach I recommend for you right now, Pisces. Get the relief you need, yes: Forgive those who have trespassed against you. But also: Hold fast to the lessons you learned through those people so you won’t repeat them again later.
Homework: What do you like best about yourself when you’re comfortable? What do you like best about yourself when you feel challenged? freewillastrology.com.
Two years ago, local rapper Alwa Gordon was finishing a therapy session when he broke down in tears. He’d started therapy because of a toxic romantic relationship that—no matter his intentions—he couldn’t seem to leave. His unresolved need for love and approval was too great.
On this one particular day, all the pain and strife of never feeling good enough for anyone came rushing up. But he remembered something his therapist told him: “You’re doing the best you can, and that’s enough.”
“That really helped me. It’s something I carry forward to this day when I feel those same negative thought patterns,” Gordon says. “You deserve to be loved. You’re doing the best you can, and that’s alright.”
The moment was transformative, the beginning of his journey to create a real sense of self-esteem and to build healthy relationships. Last year, for the first time in his life, he entered into a relationship founded on friendship, not intense emotions. He realized that all the love he’d been chasing in the past was identical to this new feeling he’d been fostering himself: self-love. Now he was capable of sharing love with a person without constantly trying to get the other person to prove they love him.
In the midst of this epiphany, he wrote “Loving Yourself,” which is the most honest and vulnerable track Gordon has ever recorded—and one of the best of his 10-plus year career. He released the song earlier this month.
“I knew that I didn’t value myself. I said, ‘This has to stop,’” Gordon says. “When you become a better person, everything in your life becomes better. It’s allowed me to be more open and vulnerable in my music. I don’t think I could make a song like ‘Loving Yourself’ a couple years ago, without going to therapy.”
The song was supposed to land on his next album, which likely would have been released back in April. He recorded the track in March. He’d taken time off of his busy live performance schedule to record the album. In addition to “Loving Yourself,” there were also some lighthearted tunes in the mix. As quarantine continued and social unrest followed, he decided to wait on putting out the album, instead cherry-picking songs to release as singles.
“A lot of the music I was going to put on the album, it didn’t really reflect the times,” Gordon says. “I didn’t feel like dropping party music. It didn’t seem relevant anymore.”
While “Loving Yourself” focuses on Gordon’s internal journey, he also drops some politically poignant lines that seem particularly relevant right now, like“Cops send you to heaven/I’m praying he don’t choose us/So don’t tell me about no freedom.” These lines draw from common themes that Gordon frequently discusses, but they also directly connect to his internal journey. When you’re Black in America, he says, your sense of self-worth is constantly under attack.
“America seems to constantly remind minorities that they don’t matter. It’s something that can weigh on you,” Gordon says. “I have to work to remind myself that I belong. You’re allowed to exist here. It can be challenging to constantly remind yourself that when the world around you doesn’t give you that same energy. And still love myself through it.”
Gordon also talks about his childhood on the album, providing some insight as to where much his struggle stemmed from. “I was 15 before I ever slept on beds,” he raps in one verse, a true statement.
“My dad had found a way for us to live in a back of an 18-wheeler truck, at an RV station here in Santa Cruz,” Gordon says. “All the kids from summer camp walked by, making fun of the family that lived in the RV park. I’m 12. It feels shameful. Maybe I’m not worthy.”
Gordon plans to write and release more songs. He has a new one called “City on Lockdown.” As for his album, he sees no reason to release it for the time being, but he might assemble an EP out of the singles he’s currently releasing.
“I don’t want to drop something that isn’t meaningful. I want to say things that are going to be important,” Gordon says. “People are losing jobs. People are dying. People are marching in the street. And I want to talk about how cool I am? Now is not the time for that.”
An oasis of bold flavors and culinary comfort, Cafe Cruz has a lot to like. But oh, the burgers ….
I first fell in love with the mighty grass fed burger a few years back when we went for a seafood lunch at the midcounty legend. Something in the way of crab cakes, perhaps. Or maybe a seared ahi niçoise salad (a salad I love). But then I saw something that changed my mind: an eight ounce burger, made of grass fed beef topped with roasted mushrooms—maybe it was the mushrooms that grabbed me—plus Vermont cheddar, shaved romaine, tomato, and red onion on a brioche bun. A mountain of perfect fries came with the burger. Well, one of us ordered that burger, but when it arrived we both fought over the last trace of medium-rare beef glistening in the juices of mushroom, tomato and cheese.
That burger still calls me, and I’ll be heading out to the heated patio at Cafe Cruz very soon. For the past 25 years, chef/owner Steve Wilson has been creating New American/California classics, enlightened comfort food that includes one of the best burgers on the planet. If you can get past all the other temptations on this menu—like the grilled skirt steak salad, or the blackened fish taco salad—do not miss this burger! The sheltered, vine-enclosed patio, with outdoor fireplace and properly distanced tables, makes a safely attractive alternative to dining chez vous.
Curbside pickup daily noon to 8pm. 2621 41st Ave., Soquel. To order, call 831-476-3801. cafecruz.com.
Ser Winery Patio Tasting
Fans of the fine wines made by Nicole Walsh under her Ser Winery label will be glad to know that the Aptos Village Ser Winery Tasting Room has expanded to include outdoor tasting. Tables, chairs, shade umbrellas, everything. Come by and taste Walsh’s new 2019 Vermentino, her celebrated rosé of Cinsaut, Bechtold Vineyard, and the new favorite vintage, the 2015 Cabernet Pfeffer honoring celebrated grower Ron Siletto.
Tasting room open Friday-Saturday 3-7pm; Sunday 2-6pm. Curbside pickup also available. 10 Parade St., Suite B, Aptos. serwinery.com.
La Posta Breads Break Out!
You know those round loaves of sourdough fresh from La Posta’s oven? Well you’ll be seeing them for sale next week at New Leaf Market! “They reached out to us a few weeks ago,” La Posta proprietor Patrice Boyle told me, “and we decided to go for it. We’ll be selling both white and brown bread Thursday through Sunday at the Westside New Leaf only.” Get a thick slab of butter ready to apply.
Odds and Ends
Sensational pickup dinner of rack of lamb from Gabriella, luscious with that chimichurri sauce that chef Gema Cruz does so well. Also extreme comfort food accompanying: perfect mashed potatoes and sauteed cabbage, kale and yellow crookneck squash. When we need serious protein, we need the Gabriella menu. Next time, I’ll have the confit of duck.
I love the local halibut I’m finding these days at Shopper’s Corner, thick and fresh, that we have along with salad made from pretty green and maroon Little Gems. Add Gruner Veltliner and it’s a summer dinner to remember.
I had another social-distanced social hour with my friend Kate over an incredible kouign amann plus an oversized almond croissant, both from Companion Bakeshop. Companion has a very smooth pickup operation at the Mission Street location. Order and insert credit card. Step back for approximately 30-50 seconds, and pick up pastry, plus perhaps a fine espresso drink, at the other window. There are clearly marked six foot standing pads, and you get to say hello to lots of folks you haven’t seen for months. And then, of course, you can take that pastry to your favorite location and inhale!
The restaurant industry has been hit harder than perhaps any other by the Covid-19 pandemic. Calling it a catastrophe would be an understatement.
Hindquarter Bar and Grille, a fixture in the local dining scene for over 30 years, is striving to push ahead and do business, even if it’s not quite business as usual. They are offering to-go food and patio dining Wednesday through Sunday from 12-8pm, as well as limited deliveries throughout the day. It continues to be a place where the elite can “meat,” albeit either outside or over takeout boxes. Kyle Greene, a manager at Hindquarter for 15 years, shares how the business has been adapting.
Have there been any menu changes?
KYLE GREENE: Yes, our menus are updated every day online. We have a lunch menu from 12-4pm and a dinner menu from 4-8pm. It’s a limited menu, and we order in a way that allows us to utilize only the freshest of ingredients. We’ve tried to keep our most popular items available, such as hickory smoked baby back ribs, applewood smoked pork chops, prime rib (available Friday, Saturday, and Sunday only), margarita steak, and fresh salmon.
How has takeout food been going?
It’s been going well. We take extra time to make sure every meal is packaged with quality and love. We put sauces and salad dressings on the side, as well as keeping buns, meats, and produce separate. Our most popular takeout items are baby back ribs, prime rib, blackened salmon Caesar salad, and our daily special desserts such as house-made cobblers, cheesecake, and crème brulee.
What has the guest response been to dining outdoors?
We have added some tables in our side courtyard to further accommodate outdoor diners, which our patrons have enjoyed. Guests also love the fully renovated, heated patio. They love the fresh breeze, and it creates a very pleasant dining experience. Because outdoor seating is limited, reservations are recommended.
Have there been any silver linings to doing business during this pandemic?
The one silver lining is the way that the guests and staff have come together like a family to help us get through this crazy time. We have regular customers that love and support us, and our staff has donated time and energy to make sure the restaurant succeeds.
Hindquarter Bar and Grille, 303 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz. 831-426-7770. thehindquarter.com.
Former San Jose City Council candidate and Bay Area Women’s March founder Jenny Higgins Bradanini has been charged with felony vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence after she fatally struck a pedestrian with her SUV in December.
Authorities say she was under the influence of a benzodiazepine, which came with a warning that users should not drive or operate heavy machinery because side effects include sedation, weakness, dizziness and unsteadiness.
At around 11:40am on Dec. 16, Higgins Bradanini was driving to a doctor’s appointment in Los Gatos when she hit 66-year-old Timothy Starkey on the 900 block of Blossom Hill Road in Los Gatos, according to police reports obtained by San Jose Inside.
Per an incident report appended to charging documents, a witness said Higgins Bradanini was “swerving and unable to maintain her lane both to the left and to the right.” The crash reportedly happened on the north shoulder of Blossom Hill Road, which had a five-foot bike lane separating the lane and shoulder.
Police say Higgins Bradanini seemed unable to recall why she veered out of her lane.
“Bradanini did not display any objective symptoms of alcohol intoxication, but was unable to clearly describe her actions just prior to the collision, had trouble focusing and articulating her thoughts or answering simple questions with slowed thinking, and apparent memory loss,” police wrote in a summary of the incident.
“I hit the car and was like oh my god, where is the guy, so l knew there was a guy there,” Higgins Bradanini reportedly told police. “Then I freaked out and these ladies called 911. I wanted to put something over him, I wanted to cover [Starkey] up and I was thinking please don’t die, please don’t die.”
Higgins Bradanini also told officers at the scene that she had taken a prescription drug prior to the collision and provided them with a blood sample. While the name of the medication was redacted in the report, it was noted that the prescription was a benzo, a Schedule IV controlled substance.
Immediately following the crash, police interviewed Higgins Bradanini at the Los Gatos-Monte Sereno Police Department building. Once in the interview room, officers report that she “spontaneously stated ‘I killed somebody.’”
She reportedly told cops that the events leading up to the crash were “blurry” to her, but she recalled seeing Starkey 30 to 40 feet before she struck him. She wondered whether she was in the process of taking off her jacket, but didn’t have a “clear recognition,” police state in their summary of the interview.
During an interview break, cops reportedly discussed evaluating Higgins Bradanini for a mental health hold “because she had mentioned to another officer about wanting to die.”
When asked if she was suicidal, Higgins Bradanini said “I just don’t want to be here. I killed somebody.” Police say she continued by asking, “How do I ever face his family? I took somebody’s life by accident, and I don’t know how you ever get past that.”
Based on speed calculations, officers determined that Higgins Bradanini was driving between 30 mph and 37 mph in the 35 mph zone.
The maximum sentence for vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence is six years in prison, according to a District Attorney’s office spokesperson.
Higgins Bradanini did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The South San Jose resident was running for Councilman Johnny Khamis’ open District 10 seat, but took third in the March 3 primary election behind Brigade-founder Matt Mahan and businesswoman Helen Wang.