Love Your Local Band: Joint Chiefs

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The Joint Chiefs have been bringing soulful funk to Santa Cruz’s music scene since 1989. James Brown, Jimi Hendrix and Jaco Pastorius are just a few of the band’s main influences, and any given set will include popular covers and a few of their own R&B originals.
For singer/guitarist Don Caruth and bassist Daniel Vee Lewis, music is a full-time gig; the two stay busy giving lessons and playing in multiple bands, with shows nearly every night of the week, including regular monthly restaurant gigs and an open jam session that they host at the Pocket.
For Lewis, playing gigs every night never gets old: “I’ve had real jobs, I’ve worked 50-hour weeks, so I can compare the difference,” he says. “Any time it gets tough I’m like, ‘Wait, look what you do.’ I love it, and I’m very grateful.”
Caruth agrees. “I do it ’cause I love it, and I’m very blessed to make a living at it. But if musicians didn’t get paid anywhere, I’d still be doing it.”
Their advice to younger aspiring musicians?
“Practice and learn your craft before you just go out and start playing it in front of a bunch of people,” Caruth says. “When I was trying to get into clubs when I was young, if you couldn’t play, they wouldn’t let you in there! And these days—I don’t mean to put anybody down, but I see a lot of guys out, and they’re not ready to be out. So my advice is to practice, practice, practice.” 


The Joint Chiefs play at 9 p.m. on Friday, July 1 at the Crow’s Nest. $6.

What can we do about the needles on the beach?

“Revamp the needle exchange program. I think it’s crap, because it’s not an exchange—they’re just handing them out.”

Debra Mapes

Santa Cruz
Self Employed

“I support the one-for-one needle exchange because I think it would be better than what they have now.”

Eric Skaug

Santa Cruz
Bar Manager

“They should mark the needles so they’re able to distinguish who received the needle and hold that person accountable in some sort of way, but I don’t know how you do that.”

Aldo Oliviari

Santa Cruz
Bartender

“The exchange should be a one-for-one exchange, and that will drive down drug use and disease related to drugs.”

Bernadette Bossinger

Santa Cruz
Mother

“The needle recycle program is really critical—and easy access to the recycle program so that it’s convenient for people who need to exchange their needle. Then they don’t have to do it on the beach.”

Tracey Kahan

Felton
Professor

Opinion June 29, 2016

EDITOR’S NOTE

Why is it important to have women in the field of winemaking? It’s not a question most of us would think about very much, even if we were reading a story about women winemakers. At most, we would probably give it a sort of standard Santa Cruz-y answer like “Because gender equality is important in any field.”
That’s certainly true, but what I like most about Christina Waterscover story this week is that it goes deeper than the easy answer—it explores what unique qualities women bring to the field of winemaking, and even whether wine made my a woman might taste different than wine made by a man. Just as in winemaking, those more complex properties are what make a story like this particularly intriguing.
It’s also an interesting look at how much opportunities for women have grown—or not—in the wine industry, and a great introduction to some local winemakers you may not have met before. Let’s raise a glass to them!
STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

Door Man
Re: “Mosh Path” (GT, 6/22): The influence of Noah Levine in the Buddhist community cannot be overemphasized. He took a mostly white, fairly smug middle-class world and opened its doors to punks, addicts and other outsiders. When I first saw his book Dharma Punx, I looked at the photo of the heavily tattooed geek and said to myself, “Well, I got nothing in common with this guy,” and tossed it back on the table. Years later, I joined his sangha in Los Angeles and found his honesty, courage, inclusiveness and deep compassion wildly refreshing in a Buddhist community so busy being “politically correct” it often avoided discussion of topics on the fringe.  
Matt Perry | Santa Cruz

Defined How?
Re: “Redefining Marriage” (GT, 6/1): While many of us are striving to redefine gender, the cover graphic for this article simply serves to reinforce stereotypes (that of women in dresses/men in pants). Also, the graphic implies that the redefining of marriage seems to be that of three people with a gender-fluid person in the middle. The article content does not include this structure, so the ill-matched graphic is misleading and perhaps counterproductive. An apology from the editor is warranted.
Orly Laluz | Santa Cruz

Give and Take
Re: “Hashed Out” (GT, 5/25): The names that groups choose for themselves are often quite indicative. Take Back Santa Cruz implies that the city, in which many of them did not grow up, is rightfully theirs, but has been wrongfully taken from them, a sentiment that often derives from selfish entitlement or fear of those who are different. As local organizations go, I far prefer Santa Cruz Gives.
Mordecai Shapiro | Santa Cruz

Weaving History
Thank you Geoffrey Dunn for weaving so many pieces of Santa Cruz’s African-American history into your piece illuminating and contributing to the historical knowledge of Santa Cruz, Louden London Nelson and Juneteenth (GT, 6/8).
Dunn’s pulling together all the facts and laying them out was very enlightening for many, I’m sure.
I can think of no one better to have taken this on. In our present climate, you have given readers and our community much to ponder about where we’ve been and where we’re headed.
Our Juneteenth committee has received many comments about this article and people have been sending it to their friends and family all over the planet. It has touched many and certainly contributed to a very successful 25th Juneteenth anniversary in Santa Cruz. Thank you again!
Ana Elizabeth | Co-Producer of Juneteenth

Online Comments
Re: Measure S
The library used pollster Gene Bregman and Measure S passed. The college used pollster FM3 (like the RTC for its upcoming transportation sales tax measure) and Measure Q failed.
— Bruce Holloway
Re: Beach Flats Garden
Plants and flowers around the Boardwalk will be very nice. Outsource the nursery. Even to the gardeners. I wonder what Seaside thinks the savings or convenience will be to have their own on-site nursery.
— Lillie Ross
Re: Mark Mesiti-Miller
Okay, I agree with you, Mark—now what? When does vision become action? How does the public spearhead affordable, high density housing?
— Carol Carson


PHOTO CONTEST WINNER

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GOOD IDEA

A new bill signed by Gov. Brown last week will provide more educational opportunities to prisoners, including those who have not yet been sentenced and await trial. Until now, educational programs were available only to those already sentenced. Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley), who wrote the bill, wants to better reintegrate prisoners back into their communities through classes varying from substance abuse treatment to parenting. Participating inmates can get up to six weeks off their sentences. The law will take effect Jan. 1, 2017.


GOOD WORK

Catholic leaders across the counties of Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Benito have gotten together to fight climate change. Churches in the Diocese of Monterey have partnered with Green Power, a division of the Romero Institute, to create sustainable infrastructure at churches and get the word out about Community Choice Aggregation, a local plan to pool resources to provide cheaper, locally sourced, more sustainable energy. The campaign has announced a launch event from noon to 4 p.m. on Sunday, July 17 at the Resurrection Church in Aptos.


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“Age is just a number. It’s totally irrelevant—unless, of course, you happen to be a bottle of wine.”

-Joan Collins

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology June 29—July 5

 
ARIES (March 21-April 19): During winter, some bears spend months hibernating. Their body temperatures and heart rates drop. They breathe drowsily. Their movements are minimal. Many hummingbirds engage in a similar slow-down—but they do it every single night. By day they are among the most manic creatures on earth, flapping their wings and gathering sustenance with heroic zeal. When the sun slips below the horizon, they rest with equal intensity. In my estimation, Aries, you don’t need a full-on immersion in idleness like the bears. But you’d benefit from a shorter stint, akin to the hummingbird’s period of dormancy.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “Dear Dr. Brezsny: A psychic predicted that sometime this year I will fall in love with a convenience store clerk who’s secretly a down-on-his-luck prince of a small African country. She said that he and I have a unique destiny. Together we will break the world’s record for dancing without getting bitten in a pit of cobras while drunk on absinthe on our honeymoon. But there’s a problem. I didn’t have time to ask the psychic how I’ll meet my soulmate, and I can’t afford to pay $250 for another reading. Can you help? – Mopey Taurus.” Dear Mopey: The psychic lied. Neither she nor anyone else can see what the future will bring you. Why? Because what happens will be largely determined by your own actions. I suggest you celebrate this fact. It’s the perfect time to do so: July is Feed Your Willpower Month.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Of all the concert pianos in the world, 80 percent of them are made by Steinway. A former president of the company once remarked that in each piano, “243 taut strings exert a pull of 40,000 pounds on an iron frame.” He said it was “proof that out of great tension may come great harmony.” That will be a potential talent of yours in the coming weeks, Gemini. Like a Steinway piano, you will have the power to turn tension into beauty. But will you actually accomplish this noble goal, or will your efforts be less melodious? It all depends on how much poised self-discipline you summon.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Once upon a time, weren’t you the master builder who never finished building your castle? Weren’t you the exile who wandered aimlessly while fantasizing about the perfect sanctuary of the past or the sweet safety zone of the future? Didn’t you perversely nurture the ache that arose from your sense of not feeling at home in the world? I hope that by now you have renounced all of those kinky inclinations. If you haven’t, now would be an excellent time to do so. How might you reinvest the mojo that will be liberated by the demise of those bad habits?
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In accordance with the astrological omens, I have selected three aphorisms by poet James Richardson to guide you. Aphorism #1: “The worst helplessness is forgetting there is help.” My commentary: You have the power to avoid that fate. Start by identifying the sources of healing and assistance that are available to you. Aphorism #2: “You do not have to be a fire to keep one burning.” My commentary: Generate all the heat and light you can, yes, but don’t torch yourself. Aphorism #3: “Patience is not very different from courage. It just takes longer.” My commentary: But it may not take a whole lot longer.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You may not know this, but I am the founder and CEO of Proud To Be Humble, an acclaimed organization devoted to minimizing vanity. It is my sworn duty to protest any ego that exceeds the acceptable limits as defined by the Geneva Convention on Narcissism. However, I now find myself conflicted. Because of the lyrical beauty and big-hearted charisma that are currently emanating from your ego, I am unable, in good conscience, to ask you to tone yourself down. In fact, I hereby grant you a license to expand your self-love to unprecedented proportions. You may also feel free to unleash a series of lovely brags.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The next 28 days will not be a favorable period to sit around passively wishing to be noticed. Nor will it be a good time to wait to be rescued or to trust in others to instigate desirable actions. On the other hand, it will be an excellent phase to be an initiator: to decide what needs to be done, to state your intentions concisely, and to carry out your master plan with alacrity and efficiency. To help ensure your success during the next 28 days, make this declaration each morning before breakfast: “I don’t want to observe the show. I want to be the show.”
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “In life, as in bicycling, pedal when you have to, coast when you can.” So says author James Lough, and now I’m passing on his advice to you—just in time for your transition from the heavy-pedaling season to the coasting-is-fun phase. I suspect that at this juncture in your life story you may be a bit addicted to the heavy pedaling. You could be so accustomed to the intensity that you’re inclined to be suspicious of an opportunity to enjoy ease and grace. Don’t be like that. Accept the gift with innocent gratitude.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “When a jet flies low overhead, every glass in the cupboard sings,” writes aphorist James Richardson. “Feelings are like that: choral, not single; mixed, never pure.” That’s always true, but it will be intensely true for you in the coming weeks. I hope you can find a way to tolerate, even thrive on, the flood of ambiguous complexity. I hope you won’t chicken out and try to pretend that your feelings are one-dimensional and easily understandable. In my opinion, you are ripe to receive rich lessons in the beauty and power of mysterious emotions.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Pop artist Andy Warhol said that in the future, everyone would be famous for 15 minutes. His idea had a resonance with the phrase “nine days’ wonder,” which as far back as Elizabethan times referred to a person or event that captured the public’s fascination for a while. You Capricorns are entering a phase when you’re far more likely than usual to bask in the spotlight. Between now and September 2017, I bet you’ll garner at least a short burst of glory, acclaim, or stardom—perhaps much more. Are you ready for your close-up? Have you prepped for the influx of attention that may be coming your way?
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): One of my readers, Jay O’Dell, told me this story: “After my cancer surgery, a nurse said to me, ‘You may as well try magical thinking. Regular thinking hasn’t helped.’ I said to the nurse, ‘Well, why the hell not?’ That was seven years ago.” In bringing O’Dell’s testimony to your attention, I don’t mean to suggest you will have any health problems that warrant a strong dose of magical thinking. Not at all. But you may get wrapped up in a psychological twist or a spiritual riddle that would benefit from magical thinking. And what exactly is magical thinking? Here’s one definition: The stories that unfold in your imagination have important effects on what actually happens to you.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Let’s talk about X-factors and wild cards and strange attractors. By their very nature, they are unpredictable and ephemeral, even when they offer benevolent breakthroughs. So you may not even notice their arrival if you’re entranced by your expectations and stuck in your habitual ways. But here’s the good news, Pisces: Right now you are not unduly entranced by your expectations or stuck in your habits. Odds are high that you will spy the sweet twists of fate—the X-factors and wild cards and strange attractors—as they float into view. You will pounce on them and put them to work while they’re still fresh. And then they will help you hike your ratings or get the funding you need or animate the kind of love that heals.


Homework: For one week, pretend to already be something you’re on your way to becoming. Report results to tr**********@gm***.com.

Risa’s Stars June 29—July 5

There are many icons for the sign of Cancer. Garden gate (where spirits enter matter); crab in water, on land and under its shell; red vermillion bird, Hydra, lighthouse; and a “Lighted House to Dwell Therein.” Cancer is about one’s home and home’s comfort, roots, foundations, family history, nurturing traditions, and being patriotic. Cancer has an extraordinary memory, is very sensitive (Leos are too) and, due to the Moon’s rulership, fluctuating moodiness and a brooding over things.  
Often Cancer sensitivity can interpret situations, words and events in ways that separate them from others. Cancers, when feeling hurt, fold into their shells. Cancers are tenacious, strong willed, and, due to their cardinal energy, like to be first. Kind, nurturing and gentle, they can also manipulate, sulk, and be temperamental, all the while protecting home and family. It’s good for Cancers to exercise. It helps work off sad feelings. Cancers are wise and instinctual and later, directed by the Soul, intuitive.
Monday, July 4, is the 240th birthday of the United States (signing of the Declaration of Independence). It’s also a new moon on the U.S. Sun (both 12 degrees Cancer), next to the blue star of freedom, Sirius (13 degrees Cancer). New moons signify new beginnings. The Cancer new moon, occurring in the second house (values and resources) could initiate new economic values and agendas, an economic reorientation (of American values and resources). Perhaps our country will begin to see humanity (Cancer) and the children of the U.S. as valuable and vital resources. Cancer is the sign of humanity. Let the government of the people reach down into our nation and be no longer against our people but for our people.


ARIES – Home and how it sustains your relationship must hold your focused attention. There’s much to be done here. Ask yourself what the bigger picture is concerning your life, geography, relationships, partnerships. Careful if working in the hot sun. You may not be absorbing enough water. Maintain proper and adequate electrolytes each day. Something challenges you, calling you to consider other realities. Step into them.
TAURUS – Mercury and Venus (your ruler) surround the Sun and Moon in Cancer this week and your communication aligns with your true hopes and dreams. A line of light streams directly into your mind and heart. It unifies polarities if you love (Ray 2) and cooperate and listen more. Study and gather facts on finances, resources, gold and silver, land, gardens, foods and herbs that sustain a large community.
GEMINI: You hop, skip and jump between home and work, attempting to unify both. Home feels expansive, as if the future rests there. Work seems cloudy, old and wounding. This is a crisis! Daily life is filled with desires for change. But nothing seems to move. You’re on a cross, attention called in four different directions. Nothing’s consistent. You’re seeking, navigating the waters of change. Return to a previous spiritual study.
CANCER: Being creative is a good self-identity. Creativity seeks you every minute calling you to initiate new endeavors that respond to all the changes coming your way in terms of order and organization, relationships and self-identity, all of these important. Observe everything with calmness. Tend to health with a focus on proper digestion (probiotics, enzymes, green foods, alkaline waters, etc.). Communicate and share more.
LEO: An inner silence and solemnity is preparing for your birthday. Sitting amidst your Sun is the past, providing you with opportunities to remember, forgive and ask for forgiveness. Gratitude is part of forgiveness. You’re asked to value every person, event and occurrence in your life. When you’re able to understand and work on these, a new breath of life, a baptism fills you. And all restrictions, hindrances and obstructions disappear.
VIRGO: A new life and self identity beckon. Be sure to navigate slowly; allowing yourself rest so that your physical body, emotions and mind can catch up to the expansiveness flowing through you. You will restructure all beliefs and ideals. We need this reorientation several times in our lives so values and pioneering inner resources can emerge from spiritual sources. A new Jupiter cycle begins. Jupiter is Ray 2, expanding Love/Wisdom.
LIBRA: Communication may be difficult and you may feel anger and frustration. Simultaneously, others could be acting out those feelings for you in daily life. Just observe and know the planets are acting out, just for you. There’s a situation with money? Know whatever you give opens a gate of return, tenfold. That’s a cosmic law. Is there a wound or hurt occurring? Something you don’t understand and it’s limiting you? A cold laser light would help. And turmeric.
SCORPIO: Try not to be careless when communicating about people’s lives. Maintain ethics within the constant variations of reality. Your values have shifted so now you’re evaluating communications. This is good. Home is dissolving and coming together simultaneously as you seek comfort within groups. A wound seems to come from the future/past. Don’t worry about these strange occurrences, normal in times of reorientation.
SAGITTARIUS: A deep inner light focuses on money and resources. Questions appear concerning what you value. It’s good to create a list of values, concerning all aspects of life; personal, public, political, possessions, people. Who do you value? Why? What do you value, in terms of relationships and communication? Why? Your inner self needs to be discovered more deeply and so these questions are posed. Pluto is asking.
CAPRICORN: An illumination of new beginnings occurs this new moon which is opposite your Sun. Do you (like Virgo) feel stretched in many directions? The direction of others, of work in the world, of home, family and finally yourself (where are you)? Tension leads to polarity which leads to a sweep into the future. Acknowledge all realities including tension. It’s purposeful. Place (visualize) an angel at each of the four directions of your home (and work). Stand in the center and intelligently and lovingly conduct the symphony of your life.
AQUARIUS: Each day is busy, filled with responsibilities, tasks, errands, strivings attempting to create comfort and nurturance. Simultaneously, dreaminess seems to permeate daily life and choices. Relationships become more important and you wonder if you need to learn different communication skills. The answer is yes. Learn ones that are less strict and more conciliatory, as if you’ve been listening with loving curiosity and kindness.
PISCES: As you step more into a state of repose and reflection, hidden abilities come forth, awakening a deeper spiritual self-identity. You recognize you’re to direct, teach, learn from, work with and serve others. So many (humanity and its children) need nurturing and you need the skills. However, you feel a great tension and unease of not being in the right place. Yet you continue forward. Something will change soon. Quietly carry on.


Risa is founder of the Esoteric & Astrological Studies Institute. Reach her at ri**********@gm***.com, and find her on the web at nightlightnews.org and as Risa D’Angeles on Facebook.

Is Beach Cleanup Effort in Trouble?

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The county’s annual fifth-of-July beach cleanup crew may be slimmer than in past years, and that has begun to worry leaders from Save Our Shores, Santa Cruz’s marine conservation nonprofit. With Independence Day falling on a Monday, it will be the first time in three years that the day-after cleanup doesn’t fall on the weekend.
Ryan Kallabis, communications manager for Save Our Shores (SOS), is trying to get the word out about the cleanup, as well as the volunteer efforts on the Fourth to hand out trash bags along the coast and tell beachgoers about stewardship. With fewer volunteers expected this year, prevention will be more important, and Kallabis is launching a social media campaign to remind folks that “no one likes a dirty beach.”
The first of the group’s five tips this year is to leave Styrofoam at home. Vacationers often bring large polystyrene coolers to the beach, filled with food and drink for the holiday. Then when people head back, sometimes they realize that the beach’s trash cans are all full. They end up leaving their garbage in the coolers on the beach, and the tourists may think they’re doing everyone a favor, Kallabis says, by putting it all in one place.
“But there are waves. There are birds. There’s wind. And these things get torn apart,” he says. “You can imagine dozens of families bringing these things. The whole beach becomes a Styrofoam mess.”
The second tip is to pack food and drinks in reusable containers worth taking back home. Beach lovers should also bring party equipment in reusable bags, Kallabis recommends. The fourth tip is not to leave firework shells, tents, barbecues, coolers or chairs behind. Lastly, Kallabis says vacationers should not burn trash or put it in a fire pit because shards can get carried out to sea.
This year, SOS is shooting for a goal of 300 volunteers. Last year’s cleanup had 182. The nonprofit’s all-time high was around 600 volunteers for an Earth Day cleanup.

Meet the New Santa Cruz City Council Candidates

With the season of glossy fliers and knocking on doors approaching quickly, five Santa Cruz City Council candidates have announced their intentions to run. Though they are campaigning on similar issues, like the city wide housing crisis and homelessness, they each bring unique perspectives and solutions to the larger discussions.   
Mayor Cynthia Mathews will seek another term, and current Councilmember Micah Posner has yet to decide. Councilmember Pamela Comstock will not run, and Councilmember Don Lane is getting temporarily termed out after eight years, leaving at least two open seats. The candidacy nomination period begins July 18 and runs through Aug. 12, and the general election is Nov. 8.


Drew “Dru” Glover
A cancer survivor and photographer, Dru Glover founded Santa Cruz nonprofit Project Pollinate to promote environmental sustainability for the future by hosting educational events around Santa Cruz.
“The next generation is what we should be focusing on,” Glover says. “Our generation and the generation before us are important, but our future leaders of the community are who we need to be focusing our time and energy into.”
Glover wants to make housing more affordable by building more units, as well as improving alternate and accessible forms of public transportation—whether that means maintaining Metro routes or making it easier to cycle around town. He also wants to create more community involvement in local politics. Glover insists, though, that Santa Cruz doesn’t have any singular issues.
“All of the issues are combined, and we need to take a really holistic approach to addressing [them], educating the community, getting people involved, and brainstorming solutions,” Glover says.


J.M. Brown
J.M. Brown, a public relations representative, says his reasons for running for city council align with his background in journalism: he has a desire to serve the public.
“I got into journalism to ensure accountability in our community, be a voice to the underrepresented, and to shine light on social problems,” says Brown, a former Santa Cruz Sentinel reporter. “When I decided to leave that profession, I realized that those are the same attributes that someone should want in a city councilmember: someone who is going to ask good questions, be an independent thinker, and have the best interests of the public in mind.”
Brown wants to focus on creating and maintaining affordable housing, advocacy for the “highest and best” use of the San Lorenzo River, public safety, and mental health.
Brown has so far garnered the most impressive list of endorsements, including Assemblymember Mark Stone, County Supervisor Ryan Coonerty and former mayor Hilary Bryant, also a campaign advisor to Brown. Brown is serving as a City of Santa Cruz Parks and Recreation Commission member and a member of the Santa Cruz County Housing Advisory Commission.


Martine Watkins
Martine Watkins says she has always been a problem solver. A mother of two, Watkins works as the senior community organizer in the Santa Cruz County Office of Education.
“I come from a perspective of thinking about the future, and ensuring that the decisions that we make today are considerate of what it takes to build a healthy future,” says Watkins, who is the daughter of county schools superintendent Michael Watkins.
Martine Watkins, who grew up in Santa Cruz County before pursuing legal studies at UCSC, wants to find solutions to the housing crisis. “If we don’t think about these issues, I don’t know that our kids will be able to live here,” Watkins says. “We have to be mindful about what policies today have on those who are here to inherit the world and our community tomorrow.”


Steve Pleich
With around 150 days until the November election, Steve Pleich has already begun knocking on doors.
“I am going to be out every day asking people what their issues are, and how city council can serve them better,” Pleich says. “City council is the most powerful and influential position that people have in Santa Cruz, and it’s also the position from which you can do the most good.”
Pleich is a self-employed professional grant writer actively involved in community service and nonprofit programs throughout Santa Cruz. He has run twice before, largely on repealing the sleeping ban and other homeless issues, and says he is pushing a three-issue campaign.
“We really can make Santa Cruz a more self-sustaining community just by raising the minimum wage to a living wage, finding affordable rental spaces, and promoting sustainable transportation,” Pleich says. “All of these things are interrelated. That’s what I am going to concentrate on … It’s really a working-class campaign.”


Nathanael Kennedy
Though he has no political experience, Nathanael Kennedy wants to advocate for more public restrooms downtown, more homeless shelters and bicycle cops.  
“The number one thing I am trying to accomplish is simply getting the police some tandem bicycles, because that way two police arrive at the same time,” Kennedy said. “It’s important that when they are on bikes they can have a passenger.”
As a self-employed artist, Kennedy has made and given out more than 9,080 origami cranes this year, he says.
He’s been arrested a handful times in the past 15 years, and was convicted in a 2008 misdemeanor weapon exhibition charge—a detail he’s not thrilled to have re-hashed in the media. In 2002, Kennedy was arrested for vandalism misdemeanor charges related to sidewalk chalking. If elected, he hopes to have spaces designated for chalking downtown.


Steve Schnaar
Steve Schnaar, the latest candidate to jump into the race, is the founder and director of the Santa Cruz Fruit Tree project, and a volunteer mechanic for the Bike Church.
He is passionate about preserving the Beach Flats Community  Garden, environmental sustainability, solutions to homelessness, and affordable housing.
“Like Bernie Sanders, I’m someone with a broad vision of economic and environmental justice, and I have a very long track record of fighting for these ideals,” Schnaar tells GT via email.
He has several proposals for more affordable housing, including rent control, making it easier for homeowners to build back units and requiring the inclusion of affordable housing units in all new developments.

Film Review: ‘Genius’

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Maybe it’s because my high school mounted a stage production of Look Homeward Angel when I was a senior, and I had a big crush on the guy who played the lead, but I’ve always had a soft spot for Thomas Wolfe’s coming-of-age novel, and the mystique of its author. Both figure prominently in the literary biopic Genius, which delves into the relationship between Wolfe and his editor at Charles Scribner’s Sons, the legendary Maxwell Perkins—the designated “genius” of the title—who was, by the time he met Wolfe, already famed as the editor who shepherded both Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald to publication in the 1920s.
Based on the biography, Max Perkins: Editor of Genius, by A. Scott Berg, the movie depicts Wolfe as a larger-than-life persona, eager to swallow life whole, and blast it out again in torrents of gorgeous prose. It’s a view of the author that perhaps you can best appreciate if you fell in love with Wolfe’s great, sprawling verbiage at age 17. Jude Law is way over the top in the role, with his frenzied eyes and Southern-fried drawl, but his performance conveys the essence of a man utterly, passionately besotted by words.
In contrast to Law’s flamboyance, the movie gives us stoic, thoughtful, dependable Colin Firth as editor Perkins. At the time the movie begins, in 1929, Perkins is a happily married father of five daughters, who takes the commuter train into New York City every day, usually with a manuscript he’s reading in hand. Having wrangled with the likes of Fitzgerald and Hemingway, he chooses his words with great care, for maximum impact. Firth plays Max as a man so button-down, he never takes off his fedora, even listening to the radio at night by his own fireside.
It makes sense that the director of Genius, award-winning stage director Michael Grandage, making his film debut, is also an actor. Working from a script by John Logan (Hugo; Skyfall), Grandage turns the story of these two literary giants into a character study; a pas-de-deux between polar opposites, where the actor’s nuance is as crucial as bluster in moving the story forward. (In Law’s performance as well as Firth’s. Watch Law’s face when someone confronts Tom with a hard, unexpected truth).
Moving the story forward is also Max’s job description, and the film’s backstage look at the business of publishing, as he and Tom tussle over every line and page, is as fascinating as it is mind-boggling. Granted, Wolfe was an extreme case; in the movie, he delivers the manuscript for his second novel, Of Time and the River, in a parade of paper-filled crates, totaling 5,000 hand-written pages. (And he keeps adding more.) It takes a fleet of Scribner’s typists months to pound it into typed pages before the editing can even begin.
The movie is as in love with words and their power as Tom is. The filmmakers acknowledge Max’s point, that a book’s primary function is to tell a story, and if excessive verbiage—no matter how gloriously written—gets in the way, out it goes. But it also sympathizes with Tom’s lust for words for their own sake. When Max explains to Tom why an achingly beautiful passage has to go, first he reads it out loud, so we can all enjoy it.
Nicole Kidman adds a dark, waspish note as Tom’s unstable lover, Aline Bernstein. A stage set designer married to someone else, she’s left her family for Tom, and reacts in volatile ways to think she might be losing him to his new friendship with Max. Guy Pearce seems a bit too robust and forthright to convey the romantic tragedy of Fitzgerald, but Dominic West is great in his one scene as Hemingway.
It’s a shame this movie’s own preview trailer gave away so much; it’s difficult to get swept up in the story when you know what’s coming. But there’s still enough of interest here, in both the era and the industry, to keep us engaged, lit geeks and normal people alike.


GENIUS  
***
With Colin Firth, Jude Law, Nicole Kidman, and Laura Linney. Written by John Logan. Directed by Michael Grandage. A Roadside Attractions release. Rated PG-13. 104 minutes.

Ashby Confections Makes Sour Candy from Local Fruit

Lacking a robust sweet tooth, I was pretty picky about candy as a kid, and have become even more discerning as an adult. I usually prefer a piece of chocolate on the rare occasion that I crave something sugary.
But a bag of assorted Sour Fruit Strips from Ashby Confections may have awakened a sweet side of me I didn’t know I had—although they are pretty sour, too.
The zingy sunset-colored candies ($2.75/ounce) are packed with intense flavors like strawberry rhubarb, golden apricot and kiwi, and they seem to glow with the warmth of tree-ripened fruit sourced directly from farmers markets.
Best of all, these candies contain only five (reasonably wholesome) ingredients: fresh local organic fruit, cane sugar, glucose, pectin and citric acid—which is fantastic, because even if the kid inside of me is delighted to be eating candy, seeing a laundry list of indecipherable chemicals on the back of a package kills, with a bolt of processed lightning, whatever craving adult me was trying to satisfy.
Jennifer Ashby, the mastermind behind this fruity treat, also says that the gummies contain no GMOs and are vegan, and soon will be using only certified organic ingredients. You can’t get much more “mother approved” than that.
These sour fruit strips got their beginning as a happy accident, after a batch of fruit candy was left to sit out too long. After some tweaking and experimentation, they have become Ashby’s most popular product. Inspired by the ultra-beautiful fruit found year round at local markets and her relationships with farmers, Ashby has tried every seasonal flavor she can get her hands on, from Malaysian guava and Concord grapes to peach and Santa Rosa plum. Her Sour Fruit Strips made with fresh oranges were a finalist for a Good Food Award in 2015.
“I’ve always loved fruity candy. That was my favorite thing when I was a little kid,” says Ashby. “People of all ages appreciate candy, and even those that claim to not like fruity stuff love these.”


More info at ashbyconfections.com.

Bargetto Winery Releases 2012 La Vita

The annual La Vita release party at Bargetto Winery in June is always a sell-out affair. I found a good spot in the shade, picked up my complimentary wine glass and plate of food (included in the ticket), and began tasting their splendid wines.
But what everybody’s really waiting for is not just the release of the La Vita, but also the unveiling of the La Vita label—each year it’s a beautiful piece of art. As John Bargetto revealed the La Vita 2012 wine label, people were delighted with its Arabian theme. “It’s a 13th century piece on vellum—Arabic school—named the Grape Harvest,” says Bargetto. “The actual piece came from Baghdad.”
“La Vita wine is our finest effort in winemaking,” adds Bargetto, “from growing the grapes, to producing the wine to designing the unique package.” And although the label is certainly impressive, best of all are the contents of the bottle—the exotic wine itself—a unique blend of 49 percent Refosco, 30 percent Nebbiolo and 21 percent Dolcetto. Kudos are due to winemaker Olivia Teutschel for creating this superior nectar—one that Bargetto calls a “rich vintage.”
As the 2012 La Vita ($60) is officially released, Bargetto Winery also released one bottle from each of 14 previous vintages, adding even more pleasure to the delightful afternoon.
The Bargetto family has always supported the community, so it came as no surprise that John Bargetto announced that he is running for a position on the Soquel Creek Water District board, which, as it happens, was co-founded by his father in 1961. Let’s drink a toast to that!
 Bargetto Winery, 3535 N. Main St., Soquel, 475-2258. bargetto.com.

Opening of Urban Wine Row in Marina

Three wineries will celebrate the opening of their new tasting facility from noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday, July 2. A collaboration of Comanche Cellars, Cima Collina and Sinecure Wines, the tasting room is close to Highway 1 and located in the Marina Business Park. The cost is $15 per person, which includes three tastes at each winery. A tri-tip sandwich, salad and a cookie is $15, with proceeds benefiting Best Buddies International. Visit urbanwinerow.com for more information.  

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Meet the New Santa Cruz City Council Candidates

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Film Review: ‘Genius’

Titanic editor, star author, match wits in ‘Genius’

Ashby Confections Makes Sour Candy from Local Fruit

Ashby Confections sour fruit strips
Ashby Confections takes a different approach

Bargetto Winery Releases 2012 La Vita

Unveiling the label of this prized vintage is a long-held tradition
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