Rob Brezsny’s Astrology Jan 4โ€”Jan 10

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Light, electricity, and magnetism are different expressions of a single phenomenon. Scottish scientist and mathematician James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879) was the first to formulate a theory to explain that startling fact. One of the cornerstones of his work was a set of 20 equations with 20 unknowns. But a younger scientist named Oliver Heaviside decided this was much too complicated. He recast Maxwellโ€™s cumbersome theory in the form of four equations with four unknowns. That became the new standard. In 2017, I believe you, Aries, will have a knack akin to Heavisideโ€™s. Youโ€™ll see the concise essentials obscured by needless complexity. Youโ€™ll extract the shining truths trapped inside messy confusions.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): โ€œThe thornbush is the old obstacle in the road,โ€ wrote Franz Kafka. โ€œIt must catch fire if you want to go further.โ€ Letโ€™s analyze this thought, Taurus. If itโ€™s to be of maximum use for you in 2017, we will have to develop it further. So here are my questions: Did Kafka mean that youโ€™re supposed to wait around passively, hoping the thornbush will somehow catch fire, either through a lucky lightning strike or an act of random vandalism? Or should you, instead, take matters into your own handsโ€”douse the thornbush with gasoline and throw a match into it? Hereโ€™s another pertinent query: Is the thornbush really so broad and hardy that it blocks the whole road? If not, maybe you could just go around it.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The fictional character Scott Pilgrim is the hero of Bryan Lee Oโ€™Malleyโ€™s series of graphic novels. He becomes infatuated with a โ€œninja delivery girlโ€ named Ramona Flowers, but thereโ€™s a complication. Before he can win her heart, he must defeat all seven of her evil ex-lovers. Iโ€™m sure your romantic history has compelled you to deal with equally challenging dilemmas, Gemini. But I suspect youโ€™ll get a reprieve from that kind of dark melodrama in 2017. The coming months should be a bright and expansive chapter in your Book of Love.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): The creature known as the short-eared elephant shrew is typically four inches long and weighs a little more than one ounce. And yet itโ€™s more genetically similar to elephants than to true shrews. In its home habitat of southern Africa, itโ€™s known as the sengi. I propose we regard it as one of your spirit animals in 2017. Its playful place in your life will symbolize the fact that you, too, will have secret connections to big, strong influences; you, too, will have natural links with powerhouses that outwardly donโ€™t resemble you.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): โ€œWhen I look back, I see my former selves, numerous as the trees,โ€ writes Leo poet Chase Twichell. Iโ€™m sure thatโ€™s an experience youโ€™ve had yourself. Do you find it comforting? Does it feel like being surrounded by old friends who cushion you with nurturing familiarity? Or is it oppressive and claustrophobic? Does it muffle your spontaneity and keep you tethered to the past? I think these are important questions for you to meditate on in 2017. Itโ€™s time to be very conscious and creative about shaping your relationships with all the people you used to be.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): โ€œโ€˜Life experienceโ€™ does not amount to very much and could be learned from novels alone . . . without any help from life.โ€ So said Nobel Prize-winning author Elias Canetti, who was born in Bulgaria, had British citizenship, and wrote in German. Although his idea contradicts conventional wisdom, I am presenting it for your consideration in 2017. Youโ€™re ready for a massive upgrade in your understanding about the nature of realityโ€”and first-hand โ€œlife experienceโ€ alone wonโ€™t be enough to ensure that.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I am rooting for you to be flagrantly unique in 2017. I vehemently want you to be uninhibited about expressing your deepest, rawest, hottest inclinations. In this spirit, I offer the following four rallying cries: 1. โ€œDonโ€™t be addicted to looking cool, baby!โ€โ€”my friend Luther. 2. โ€œCreative power arises when you conquer your tendency to stay detached.โ€ โ€”paraphrased from poet Marianne Moore. 3. โ€œIf you want to be original, have the courage to be an amateur.โ€โ€”paraphrased from poet Wallace Stevens. 4. โ€œIn the beginnerโ€™s mind there are many possibilities, in the expertโ€™s mind there are few.โ€โ€”Zen teacher Shunryu Suzuki.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): โ€œThere is a desperation for unknown things,โ€ wrote poet Charles Wright, โ€œa thirst for endlessness that snakes through our bones.โ€ Every one of us has that desperation and thirst from time to time, but no one feels the pull toward perplexing enchantments and eternal riddles more often and more intensely than you Scorpios. And according to my astrological meditations on your life in 2017, you will experience this pull even more often and with greater intensity than ever before. Is that a problem? I donโ€™t see why it should be. In fact, it could make you sexier and smarter than everโ€”especially if you regard it as a golden opportunity to become sexier and smarter than ever.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I hope you will seek out a wide range of intoxicating experiences in 2017. The omens predict it. Fate sanctifies it. I hope you will gracefully barrel your way through the daily whirl with a constant expectation of sly epiphanies, amusing ecstasies, and practical miracles. There has rarely been a time in your life when youโ€™ve had so much potential to heal old wounds through immersions in uncanny bliss. But please note: The best of these highs will not be induced by drugs or alcohol, but rather by natural means like sex, art, dancing, meditation, dreamwork, singing, yoga, lucid perceptions, and vivid conversations.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I thought of you when I read a tweet by a person who calls himself Vexing Voidsquid. โ€œI feel imbued with a mysterious positive energy,โ€ he wrote, โ€œas if thousands of supplicants are worshipping golden statues of me somewhere.โ€ Given the astrological omens, I think itโ€™s quite possible you will have similar feelings on regular occasions in 2017. Iโ€™m not necessarily saying there will literally be golden statues of you in town squares and religious shrines, nor am I guaranteeing that thousands of supplicants will telepathically bathe you in adoration. But who cares how youโ€™re imbued with mysterious positive energy as long as you are?

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): When itโ€™s summer in the Northern Hemisphere, the birds known as arctic terns hang out in Greenland and Iceland. Before the chill sets in, they embark on an epic migration to Antarctica, arriving in time for another summer. But when the weather begins to turn too cold there, they head to the far north again. This is their yearly routine. In the course of a lifetime, a single bird may travel as far as 1.25 million milesโ€”the equivalent of three round trips to the moon. I propose that you make this creature your spirit animal in 2017, Aquarius. May the arctic tern inspire you to journey as far as necessary to fulfill your personal equivalent of a quest for endless summer.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In June 1962, three prisoners sneaked out of the Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, located on an island in San Francisco Bay. Did they succeed in escaping? Did they swim to safety through the frigid water and start new lives abroad? No one knows. Law enforcement officials never found them. Even today, though, the U.S. Marshals Service keeps the case open, and still investigates new evidence when it comes in. Are there comparable enigmas in your own life, Pisces? Events in your past that raised questions youโ€™ve never been able to solve? In 2017, I bet you will finally get to the bottom of them.


Homework: Send me a list of your top five New Yearโ€™s resolutions. Go to RealAstrology.com and click on โ€œEmail Rob.โ€

Opinion December 28, 2016

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EDITOR’S NOTE

Iโ€™ve been collecting songs about Santa Cruz for years, not really doing anything with them besides putting them on mixes for friends who would get a kick out of them, and occasionally playing them on a radio show. It wasnโ€™t research for anything, just a fun thing that always made me think about how interesting it is to see (or, in this case, hear) how one place can be viewed from so many different perspectives. To hear a song about your city can make you look at it in an entirely different way, or make you laugh at how much you can relate to the songwriterโ€™s point of view.

Thanks to Jacob Pierce, this Santa Cruz song habit finally has a purpose. After talking about and sitting around listening to these songs, we started hashing out a โ€œrankingโ€ of which were best. Which we took very seriously, of course; in fact, arguing passionately over this totally ridiculous and arbitrary list was my favorite thing about the doing this story. That, and all of the Santa Cruz songs I discovered for the first time. Thanks to Devil Makes Three for giving us a (flimsy) excuse to write this story, and to you, the reader, for indulging it. Hope you have as much fun with it as we did. And while Iโ€™m at it, thanks for reading every week; itโ€™s been a pleasure and a privilege to bring you the news this year. And one more big thanks to those who donated to our Santa Cruz Gives nonprofits this holiday season. If youโ€™ve been meaning to, but never quite got around to it, you can do so at santacruzgives.org through Dec. 31. Happy new year!

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

Hashtagged

Re: Year in Review (GT, 12/21): Thank you. #ThemMemesTho

Juliana Williamson-Page | Live Oak

Too Much of a Good Thing

Presidents use the National Antiquities Act to protect ecologically significant land by designating it a national monument. With few exceptions, environmentalists enthusiastically and unanimously welcome it.

Coast Dairies, the 5,800-acre property stretching up the coastal hills and canyons from Highway 1 north of Santa Cruz, is one of those exceptions. Two years ago San Mateo-based Sempervirens Fund launched a well-funded campaign to make Coast Dairies a national monument. The Santa Cruz community, with little detailed knowledge of the โ€œfacts on the ground,โ€ responded eagerly to the campaignโ€™s promises to save redwoods (actually, they were nearly all clear cut 100 years ago) and protect the property from development. Local environmental activists, who fought for years to preserve Coast Dairies, were less enthusiastic.

Why? Because that battle has already been won. Save-the-Redwoods League acquired Coast Dairies in 1998 and it was given to the federal Bureau of Land Management in 2014, accompanied by ironclad deed restrictions and a Coastal Development Permit that permanently prohibit development. Monument status will do little but greatly increase visitation to the property, without any guarantee of additional funds for stewardship, and local police, fire and rescue services, already stretched thin, will be overburdened.

The best way to ensure that Coast Dairies isnโ€™t impacted by too many human usersโ€”cyclists, hikers, equestriansโ€”is to let BLM quietly manage it, with local oversight. Monument status will just be too much of a good thing. Write or call the White House and tell the President that.

Ted Benhari | Friends of the North Coast

Itโ€™s Time to De-Escalate

I am a senior in high school who attends Aptos High, and I have found myself very concerned by the recent police shootings in my town. It seems like in our community, police are trained to confront all threatening situations by using force. This tactic does not work for every situation. Especially when dealing with people who are mentally unstable. These people require special training to be properly dealt with. When police apply their common tactics to these kinds of situations, it intensifies them, and makes them far more dangerous. I believe that the issue of police aggression is an issue that is pressing and needs immediate attention in our community. The two recent cases of police killing people who were in mental crisis are proof that the police need serious training to deal with these kinds of situations in non lethal ways. I believe that police are abusing their positions of power by becoming aggressive and killing people rather than going through the work of understanding and learning how to deal with crises in non lethal ways. I cannot understand why there is not more training in de-escalation and non lethal methods in this community where there are frequent situations in which people are in mental crisis. We as a community need to demand more training in de-escalation and less aggression so that we can all feel safe and protected and feel that our family and friends are safe and protected as well.

Ryan Peck | APTOS


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

MEAL PLAN
The holiday season isnรขโ‚ฌโ„ขt over, and even if it were, itรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs never too late to make a donation to Second Harvest Food Bank. Every $10 provides 40 healthy meals, and $25 fills an entire barrel with healthy food. Santa Cruz County Government employees raised enough money to provide 183,187 to needy individuals and families, $50,000 above the countyรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs goal. To donate to the food bank, go to santacruzgives.org.


GOOD WORK

SCHOOL BOX
One of the positive stories of 2016 was Santa Cruz County College Commitment, a collaboration between all local colleges and school districts, which has a lofty goal to prepare every student for college and a career. The group, also called S4C, offers programs for students countywide, including a fourth grade visit to Cabrillo College, a seventh grade summit at college campuses and a program to improve SAT scores and aid the application process.


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

รขโ‚ฌล“Hope smiles from the threshold of the year to come, whispering, รขโ‚ฌหœIt will be happier.รขโ‚ฌโ„ขรขโ‚ฌย

-Alfred Lord Tennyson

Music Picks Dec 28โ€”Jan 3

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WEDNESDAY 12/28

BLUES-ROCK-REGGAE

TROUBADOUR & FRIENDS

What do Steve Miller, the Grateful Dead, Bob Marley and Santana have in common? Donโ€™t think about it too long. The answer is simple: local ensemble Troubadour and Friends, who mix up tunes by these artists in their set. They also play tunes by other like-minded bandsโ€”if you can deem anything by this hodgepodge of sources โ€œlike-minded.โ€ Troubadour and Friends have been at it for more than 20 years, and leave virtually no genre unturned. All proceeds from this show will go to support the Dakota Access Line cause, with the intent of making sure the government honors their end of the peace treaty. AARON CARNES

INFO: 7:30 p.m. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $10. 335-2800.

ROCK

TESS DUNN

Years ago, Santa Cruz was introduced to Tess Dunn, a talented youngster whose musical abilities helped bring awareness to cystic fibrosisโ€”a fatal disease which Dunn has lived with since birthโ€”and earned her the moniker โ€œthe young and the fearless.โ€ Now Dunn is all grown upโ€”sheโ€™s a seven-year veteran of the West Coast Vans Warped Tour, and she has four albums to her name, including her latest, Polarity, which she recorded under the moniker T3TRA. Described as a โ€œcreative wunderkind, a dynamic performer, and a compelling example of gritty girl power,โ€ Dunn/T3TRA brings an electronic flair to her music for this one as she fearlessly forges her rocking, beautiful path. Proceeds benefit Cystic Fibrosis Research, Inc. CAT JOHNSON

INFO: 7:30 p.m. Moeโ€™s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $20/door. 479-1854.

JAZZ

HOT CLUB PACIFIC

Remember when jazz was fun? This isnโ€™t to disparage anyone that likes crazy no-rules-apply free jazz. But there was a time when jazz was top 40 music. The clarinet was the electric guitar, and people danced! Admit it, the second you hear some old-timey swing, you instantly crack a smile and tap your toes. Santa Cruz has an act that channels this era in the best way possible: Hot Club Pacific. Itโ€™s a little bit swing, but also a bit of that equally good-time-evoking gypsy jazz sound that was popular in Europe. AC

INFO: 7:30 p.m. Crowโ€™s Nest, 2218 E. Cliff, Santa Cruz. $3. 476-4560.

 

THURSDAY 12/29

FINGERSTYLE GUITAR

PEPPINO Dโ€™AGOSTINO WITH JEFF CAMPITELLI

Sicilian-born fingerstyle guitarist Peppino Dโ€™Agostino has spent decades honing a highly personal sound redolent of his Mediterranean roots, but also deeply informed by his love of European classical music, rock and jazz. While still unplugged, heโ€™ll likely be drawing more on his rock roots than usual in this duo show with drummer Jeff Campitelli, a trap set powerhouse best known for his three-decade musical relationship with hi-octane guitar wiz Joe Satriani. A gifted composer and arranger, Dโ€™Agostino has also become a muse for other composers, and his latest album, Penumbra, features two pieces written for him by celebrated Brazilian guitarist Sergio Assad. ANDREW GILBERT

INFO: 7:30 p.m. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $15/adv, $17/door. 335-2526.

SOUL

ORGONE

Orgone means โ€œuniversal life force, a cosmic unit of energyโ€โ€”a fitting name for L.A.โ€™s resident powerhouse funk collective. The groupโ€™s organic blend of dirty soul combines funk and afro-disco with a rock edge. Fearless lead singer Adryon de Leรณn lights up the stage with her magnetic presence and captivating energy. Band members have collaborated and performed with the Roots, Al Green, Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, Thievery Corporation and more. Orgoneโ€™s founding guitarist Sergio Rios says, โ€œWe intend our music to have an inhibition-canceling effect,โ€ the goal is to entice listeners to the dance floor to โ€œown the freakiness that lives inside them.โ€ Santa Cruz locals 7 Come 11 open. KATIE SMALL

INFO: 9 p.m. Moeโ€™s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. 479-1854.

HIP-HOP

SNOW SESSIONS

Del the Funky Homosapien is best known as the founder of Oaklandโ€™s Hieroglyphics crew. But heโ€™s done so much more itโ€™s hard to know even where to begin. Personally, I like Deltron 3030, his collaboration with Dan the Automator and Kid Koala. Itโ€™s a mind-warping, sci-fi hip-hop classic. Del is only one of the impressive names of the mostly West Coast rappers taking the stage at Snow Sessions. Others include Bay Area favorite Andre Nickatina, Jurassic 5โ€™s Chali 2na, Yukmouthโ€”famous for weed anthem โ€œI Got 5 On Itโ€โ€”with group Luniz, and Hieroglyphicsโ€™ A-Plus. AC

INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $29/door. 429-4135.

 

FRIDAY 12/30, SATURDAY 12/31

REGGAE

DON CARLOS

Reggae great Don Carlos grew up in a time and placeโ€”1970s Western Kingston, Jamaicaโ€”that birthed some of the finest reggae sounds and artists, including King Tubby, Junior Reid, King Jammy and Carlosโ€™ own group, Black Uhuru. Now an elder statesman of the genre, Carlos is at it still, spreading his message of love, unity and justice around the world. On Friday and Saturday, he brings the show to Santa Cruz with back-to-back performances to ring in the new year. Also on the bill: Sol Horizon (Friday), Soulwise (Saturday) and DJ Spleece. CJ

INFO: 9 p.m. Moeโ€™s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $25-$40. 479-1854.

 

SATURDAY 12/31

FUNK

EXTRA LARGE

Santa Cruz locals Extra Large will be ushering in the New Year at the Crowโ€™s Nest; the six-piece collective blends funk, Latin, rap, reggae and rock with contagious energy. Extra Large was founded in 1996 by frontman Russ Leal, with the remaining five members contributing keys, accordion, bass, guitar and percussion. The upbeat collective typically showcases a mix of covers and originals throughout their set. KS

INFO: 9:30 p.m. Crowโ€™s Nest, 2218 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. $15. 476-4560.

ROCK/TRIBUTE

CHINA CATS

The Grateful Dead had a rich tradition of playing New Yearโ€™s Eve shows that ran well into the next day and ushered in the new with music, celebration, community, love and, yes, lots of twirly dancers. China Cats keeps the Dead tradition alive with outstanding tribute shows that blend the classic Dead sound with new grooves and a unique collective sound. Comprising veterans of the Bay Area jam band scene, the band is nicely situated to pull off an unforgettable performance to put 2016 behind us and move forward into the great unknown. CJ

INFO: 8 p.m. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $30/adv, $35/door. 335-2800.


IN THE QUEUE

THE MODERN LIFE

Alternative rock out of Salinas. Thursday at Catalyst

FOREVERLAND

High-energy Michael Jackson tribute. Friday at Don Quixoteโ€™s

PACIFIC ROOTS

Santa Cruz-based reggae, ska and punk band. Friday at Catalyst

JUG BAND SINGALONG

Singalong with ukuleles, jugs, kazoos and more. Tuesday at Ugly Mug

Be Our Guest: Pride & Joy

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One of the Bay Areaโ€™s favorite party bands, Pride & Joy recreates the energy and irresistible groove of Motown-era R&B on stage. With eight band members, four of whom take turns with vocal duties, the outfit has been filling theaters for over two decades, in part, because of its uncanny ability to get audiences moving as it tears through the jams that make the classic โ€™60s soul sound transcend space and time.ย 


INFO: 8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $17. 335-2800. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 9 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.

Love Your Local Band: White Album Ensemble

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The Beatles stopped touring in the mid-โ€™60s, and many fans believe they released their best work after dropping anchor. Entire records were never performed live.

Rick Mckee was driving from San Francisco to Santa Cruz 14 years ago thinking about this, and how great it would be to see the scattered, densely packed White Album live in concert. He assembled a whoโ€™s who of local players to pull this off. The group of eight musicians played four sold-out concertsโ€”people camped out for tickets. After those four shows, he wanted to put the project to rest, but the other members didnโ€™t. He gave them the blessing to continue without him. Since then, the White Album Ensemble has expanded their repertoire to include everything from Revolver to Abbey Road. (Theyโ€™ve done Rubber Soul and Let It Be, as well).

โ€œIt was something that was a fluke that was successful,โ€ says multi-instrumentalist Dale Ockerman. โ€œItโ€™s amazing to me. Itโ€™s 14 years of covering a very narrow slice of the Beatlesโ€™ work. We squeezed three years into 14 years of looking into it. Itโ€™s sort of absurd.โ€

The project has been a gradual experiment in what they can do, and how to best do it. Currently the core group is seven members. They also have a three-piece horn section, as well as a string quartet. Thatโ€™s 14 people, all painstakingly trying to replicate the intricate sounds the Beatles created in their post-โ€œLove Me Doโ€ days.

โ€œWe started adding bells and whistles right away, because it was our bread and butter,โ€ Ockerman says. โ€œThe Beatles got to a place where they were writing music that was more complex. Weโ€™re not trying to reinvent this. Weโ€™re not going to do reggae versions. Weโ€™re just going to try to do the albums.โ€

This go-around, the band will perform Revolver on Thursday and Sgt. Pepperโ€™s Lonely Hearts Club Band on Friday.


INFO: 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, Dec. 29 and 30. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $25/gen, $45/gold. 423-8209.

What are your hopes for 2017?

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“Iรขโ‚ฌโ„ขm gonna be as epic as possible.”

Stephanie Ross

Santa Cruz
Software Development

“That the United States wakes up from this horrible dream and does something about it.”

Wrenna Ptak

South Africa/Santa Cruz
Mom

“I just want whatรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs best for the people of this country, regardless of their denomination, regardless of their beliefs.”

Jonah Ptak

South Arica/Santa Cruz
Bridge Engineer

“Just a happier vibe.”

Kristin Zawacki

Los Gatos
Recovery Advisor

“I hope that all of the good celebrities are done dying.”

Rebecca Heine

Soquel
Library Science Student

Community Foundation of Santa Cruz County CEO Plans Exit

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Lance Linaresโ€™ minimalist office at the Community Foundation of Santa Cruz County is a bright, sunlit room of concrete and glass. He sits at a small, simple table by the window, and contemplates his 21-year career as CEO at the foundation.

He took the job in 1995, tasked with growing the foundationโ€™s $6 million in assets, to fund grants to local nonprofits. At the time, he was the executive director at the Cultural Council of Santa Cruz County (now known as the Arts Council of Santa Cruz County), and prior to that, station manager at KUSP.

Back then, he had a mop of curly brown hair, which is now white.

โ€œI really only had three jobs in this county, and theyโ€™re all really pretty high-profile jobs. Which pretty much means for 40 years, all Iโ€™ve been is a boss, starting at age 26 or something,โ€ says Linares. โ€œThatโ€™s a long time in a small town to have that kind of presence and responsibility. You get tired after a while.โ€

When he became CEO, Linares says he didnโ€™t know much about community foundations. Upon his hiring, the first person to call him was Cole Wilbur, then-president of the Los Altos-based David and Lucile Packard Foundation.

โ€œHe said, โ€˜Get in your car and go visit your colleagues,โ€™โ€ says Linares. โ€œThis is an incredibly collegial industry. Cole said, โ€˜The two most powerful words in the English language are โ€˜help me.โ€™โ€

Wilbur advised him to โ€œfind what people value and honor that,โ€ Linares says.

Behind Linares is a collection of curiosities, evidence of his inquisitive personality. On a shelf above his desk is a neatly arranged row of 18 spherical objects, like baseballs (Linares is a diehard San Francisco Giants fan) and round river rocks. Apparently when people hear that he collects round objects, they give them to him as gifts. For example, in 2009, when construction teams broke ground on the $9 million Community Foundation headquarters on Soquel Drive in Aptosโ€”which undoubtedly will be part of Linaresโ€™s legacyโ€”digging crews found a few perfectly-round granite rocks, which they gifted to Linares. Those were too big for his shelf, so he placed them by the window.

The same thing goes for Linaresโ€™s steel bottle cap collection, part of which he keeps on a magnetic board behind his desk. His other roughly 9,000 bottlecaps, he keeps at home. Some of the latest additions are from India, brought to him by a foundation board member who traveled there, he says.

Foundation board member Fred Keeley, a former state assemblymember, calls Linares โ€œfun and funny,โ€ and says that people gravitate to Linares, and want to work with him.

Several colleagues say Linares is charming and friendly, yet at the same time humble and private. A Good Times cover story on Linares from 1985, when he was a KUSP station manager, was headlined โ€œA Reluctant Public Figure,โ€ which is still pretty accurate, Linares says. ย 

โ€œYouโ€™ve got to know your weaknesses, and then you hire people who complement what you do,โ€ Linares says. โ€œIโ€™ve been really lucky. I have had a really loyal staff.โ€

Another thing about Linares is that heโ€™s always thinking ahead, says Keeley. For example, he announced his retirement more than a year before it takes effect, so the organization could prepare. Board members knew months earlier, since he met with each member individually to tell them the news and give them time to envision the direction theyโ€™d like the foundation to go in.

Actually, a few years ago, Linares began annual routine discussions on a succession plan for his retirement in board meetings, so talks occurred when not in crisis mode. Linares has presented the model to other community foundations and nonprofits, as an organizational approach to leadership change.

โ€œHe was probably doing succession planning about what happens after kindergarten when he was in utero,โ€ says Keeley. โ€œItโ€™s in his nature to get ahead of things. Itโ€™s something heโ€™s really, really good at.โ€

A big part of Linaresโ€™ legacy, says Keeley, is the growth of the foundationโ€™s assets during his tenureโ€”from roughly $6 million in 1995 to more than $108 million today. Now more than 60 percent of the foundationโ€™s assets are permanently endowed, which means they make an annual income. This year alone, the foundation has given away more than $6 million in grants.

Linares says he tells donors that endowed gifts to the foundation create a lasting local impact, for whatever purpose donors want.

โ€œYou want to save the red-legged frog? We can do that. You want to endow Pop Warner football? We can do that,โ€ Linares says.

The Community Foundation has a list of more than 350 funds, some endowed for specific purposes, such as the Diversity Partnership Fund, which has raised $1 million for local nonprofits working on LGBTQ issues.

The foundation also recently unveiled its Fund for Women and Girls, a $2 million fund whose first project will be a three-year program for middle school girls in the Pajaro Valley.

The foundation hosts 50 trainings a year for nonprofits, including grant writing, board management, and a roundtable for new executive directors. Also, more than half of the foundationโ€™s 9,200-square-foot LEED-certified facility can be reserved as event space by local nonprofits, for a nominal fee. More than 9,000 people have used the building annually since it opened in 2010.

Linares says the nonprofit world has changed dramatically during his career.

โ€œEveryone of a younger age has been affected by nonprofits. That was not the case in the 1970s,โ€ Linares says.

In Santa Cruz County, wealth is unpretentious and philanthropists often fly under the radar, Linares says. Unlike in the Silicon Valley, Santa Cruz County doesnโ€™t have big-money events. Donors are regular people who go to Shopperโ€™s Corner and Gayleโ€™s Bakery, he says.

Santa Cruz County has a reputation for having a high concentration of nonprofits per capita, but itโ€™s simply not true, Linares says. Itโ€™s just that local nonprofits have had to be โ€œscrappy and entrepreneurialโ€ to get funding.

Linares says the Community Foundationโ€™s next CEO will need to cultivate the โ€œnew eraโ€ of donors. The county needs a new Jack Baskin, Dick Solari and Diane Cooley.

โ€œWe have to grow our own philanthropy. Home cooking is the best cooking,โ€ Linares says.

Santa Cruz Activists Plan for the Worst

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In between Bernie Sandersโ€™ plea for people to get involved in their communities and the fear over what Donald Trumpโ€™s election will bring, interest in local politics seems to be as strong as ever.

At an activist meeting earlier this month to brainstorm what to do during the Trump administration, there was enthusiastic participation, but not a lot of details. One activist called for Santa Cruz to become a sanctuary city (although it already is one), and another called for a constitutional amendment requiring government employees to wear microphones whenever they discuss city businessโ€”which sounds like the most boring podcast ever.

Others at the Dec. 6 meeting called for better politics coverage on TV, stronger efforts helping the homeless, stricter environmental regulations, and infrastructure improvementsโ€”one of the few expenditures Trump has (sometimes) actually supported.

The conference room at Louden Nelson Community Center was abuzz with conversation as more than 225 people crammed inside. Coordinators feverishly passed out sign-up sheets and registrations for upcoming events and gatherings, like Santa Cruz City Council meetings and get-togethers for Santa Cruz for Bernie, which is still enjoys a huge amount of support more than five months after their candidate conceded. Some attendees at the event learned how to volunteer for causes like the Warming Center, which provides a warm place for the homeless on frigid nights.

The bittersweet meeting was also part celebratory, as it was the groupโ€™s first since two of its local candidates, Sandy Brown and Chris Kohn, got elected to the Santa Cruz City Council.

On Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, Trump opponents called a nationwide strike, along with a Million Women March, both of which will have solidarity rallies in Santa Cruz.ย 

Review: โ€˜Passengersโ€™

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They donโ€™t exactly โ€œmeet cute.โ€ But as the only two people suddenly awake in the middle of a lengthy space voyage, their destiny is more inevitable than most romantic movie couples in Passengers, a rare, thoughtful sci-fi drama in which characters and human nature are far more important than immense CGI effects.

Directed by Norwegian filmmaker Morten Tyldum (The Imitation Game), from a script by Jon Spaihts, the movie ponders essential questions of the human condition within the minimalist context of a two-character drama. The story begins in deep space aboard the Starship Avalon, which has departed from Earth to colonize a planet designated as Homeworld II by the corporate entity in charge of colonization. The shipโ€™s 258 crew members and 5,000 passengers ย are in hibernation chambers during the 120-year voyage, as the ship purrs along on automatic.

But a malfunction in the system accidentally pops passenger Jim Preston (Chris Pratt) out of his sleep pod a mere 30 years into the voyage. His awe at finding himself in deep space, and having the complete run of the ship (including access to a tethered space suit that allows him to float among the stars) soon gives way to crushing loneliness. Unable to return to hibernation, with 90 years of the voyage left to go, he faces spending the rest of his life on the ship with no one for company but holograms, and an android bartender called Arthur (Michael Sheen), programmed to mix drinks, lend a sympathetic ear, and dispense cheerful platitudes.

After a year of despair, Jim makes a moral decision that will have repercussions throughout the rest of the story. He’s soon joined by fellow passenger Aurora Lane (Jennifer Lawrence), a journalist who joined the expedition to record the story of colonization for future generations. Jim is eager to leave his possibly dodgy past. (When he first wakes up, he doesnโ€™t even seem to know where he is, or why, suggesting he was recruited and signed up in haste.) Her motives are just the opposite: looking forward to a future she canโ€™t even imagine.

Aurora is also horrified to have wakened too soon. Jim has a background in mechanical engineering, but they exhaust every possibility for re-hibernating. (As in most computer systems, the shipโ€™s โ€œHelpโ€ program is completely useless). Along the way, making use of all the high-tech recreational facilities the ship providesโ€”jogging around the decks, swimming in the pool, taking part in a life-sized, hologrammatic dance-off gameโ€”they start to bond with each other.

Out of necessity, they begin warming up to the reality of spending the rest of their lives together. But thereโ€™s still plenty of room for romance, as Prattโ€™s tender-hearted Jim practices his old-fashioned wooing skills, and Lawrence’s vibrant Aurora responds with passionate gusto. Their relationship is heartfelt and frisky, until a horrible secret between them threatens to shatter everything.

The movie has the cool, antiseptic look we expect in sci-fi stories where machines are running everything. (Kudos to production designer Guy Hendrix Dyas.) Tiny robotic roombas skitter around the floors at the first trace of any disorder. The cold, empty corridors are unpopulated by any other signs of life or warmth, except for the burnished wood paneling and sparkling decanters in Arthurโ€™s bar. Jim and Aurora are dressed mostly in black, white, and grey tonesโ€”which is why her red sheath dress has such impact when they go on their first โ€œdate.โ€ The turquoise-blue water in the swimming pool, and the twilight purple starfield beyond the bubble that encloses it, evoke the idea of serenity within unimaginable vastness.

There are thrills as the ship continues to malfunction (like getting stuck in the pool during an episode of zero-gravity), and other surprises in the plot. But Tyldum wisely sticks to the human story at the center of this epic-looking tale of the vast, unchartered terrain of the human heart.


PASSENGERS

(***)

With Chris Pratt, Jennifer Lawrence, and Michael Sheen. Written by Jon Spaihts. Directed by Morten Tyldum. A Columbia Pictures release. Rated PG-13. 111 minutes.

Q&A: Wasabi Tapas

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For more than 10 years, Kae Bailes has wanted to open a Thai restaurantโ€”ever since she moved from Thailand to the states in 2005. It was in March of this year that she was finally able to realize her dream. Well, except itโ€™s a Thai and Japanese restaurant. Thatโ€™s because she found an amazing chef in Texas with 40 years of experience preparing sushi, and the idea of letting those skills go to waste just didnโ€™t seem right. Bailes talked to us about how it all came together. ย 

Why Thai and Japanese?

It seems different, right? But itโ€™s good for a family if somebody doesnโ€™t like sushi. They can also come to my restaurant and get Thai. We donโ€™t make too much Thai food. Only curries. We cannot keep up with so many different things. Itโ€™s more Japanese. We combine them for our lunch bento box. They have a choice of curries and sushi. They can have some sashimi in the bento box, or curry. We have a really good chef. Heโ€™s been working as a sushi chef since he was 18. Itโ€™s not easy to own a sushi restaurant, and not be Japanese or Korean. Iโ€™m lucky my sushi chef does a really good job.

Howโ€™d you open the restaurant?

When I moved, my English wasnโ€™t good. I went to Cabrillo and took an English as a second language class. And I came here with zero. I needed to work hard until the beginning of this year; I worked two to three jobs at a time. I found the restaurant at Brown Ranch Marketplace. I thought โ€œI can buy that restaurant.โ€ Itโ€™s a smaller spot.

Is the unusual approach getting a good response?

Itโ€™s good. But because of the location, we have more business for lunch. I want to bring customers for dinner. I have happy hour offered every night. On Monday and Tuesday, happy hour is from 5:30 p.m. until close. Wednesday through Saturdays, itโ€™s 7 p.m. till close. Itโ€™s for appetizers, some rolls, some sashimi, sushi and drinks.

Tell me about your signature items, the Tower and the Dynamite.

The Tower is originally from Texas. My chef brought that recipe. Itโ€™s a combination of homemade sauce, spicy mayo, and wasabi sauce. The Tower has rice, avocado, imitation crab meat, and ahi, with salmon egg on top. Everybody loves it because itโ€™s different. The Dynamite, we bake the crab meat or scallops with spicy mayo and wasabi sauce. We mix together and bake those. When itโ€™s done, we put a California Roll on top.

3555 Clares St., Suite M, Capitola, 464-9898.

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