Helen Ellerbe

Original Sin


Janet Orsi

At peace: Helen Ellerbe dedicates her book to freedom and dignity.

Probing the dark side of Christianity

By Gretchen Giles

I am fascinated by the role that religion plays, and how religion is such a powerful tool, and how when it is misused, it can really crush a person’s spirituality,” says Helen Ellerbe softly, sitting among the floral sofa cushions of her San Rafael home. “And spirituality is really something that can be one of the most empowering phenomenons there is–to have a personal relationship with the divine, with the sacred. You can move mountains when you’re in touch with that. [I’m interested in] how that relationship can become confined and put in a box called religion and then used as a political tool.”

Tall, sweet-faced, and sitting in a home filled with her handmade dolls and hand-painted furnishings, all vibrantly adorned with the colors of the sunrise, Ellerbe doesn’t look like a candidate to have written The Dark Side of Christian History (San Rafael: Morningstar Press, $12.95), a searing indictment of the past actions of the Catholic Church. And it’s not exactly what she set out to do.

Five years after she was first prompted to research the history of the church by a friend’s assertion that Christianity had done more good than harm, Ellerbe’s bleak, well-written account is into its second printing. “I was looking for this book,” she says. “I really had no intention of writing this book.”

What struck her immediately in her research was the lack of information on the less savory side of Christian history–witch-hunts, inquisitions, the forcible conversion of non-believers, and the banning of the arts during the early Middle Ages. Ellerbe acknowledges that there is a growing library of academic and theological works on this subject, but her book–which she will discuss April 5 at Sonoma’s Readers’ Books–is written for the lay person. And it is written by someone with a firm grip on her own spirituality.

“People who I have found trying to write an expansive Christian history generally write from an atheist’s standpoint,” says Ellerbe, who was raised Episcopalian. Speaking for the atheist, she continues, “The problem with the church has been that it bought into all of this supernatural, magical garbage, and that this is all a bunch of hogwash. If you were coming from a more rational, scientific standpoint, you would never have believed all that in the first place. Well, that is not the standpoint that I take in this book. In many ways the church built the foundation for the Age of Enlightenment and for the Newtonian world view of physics.”

Tracing the rise of the Christian church from the century after Christ’s birth, Ellerbe states in the Preface that her intention was never to give a balanced view of Christian history, but rather to chronicle only those little-examined events “which hurt so many and did such damage to spirituality.” Ellerbe believes that the synthesis of the church as a powerful leader came from a small core of Orthodox Christians who strove to have “a strong church that would be symbolic of a strong, tyrannical God–that was very much in keeping with their belief structure, and I think that that is part of the reason why they ended up prevailing.”

And prevail they have. In her concise and one-sided telling of almost 2,000 years of history, Ellerbe persuasively chronicles how the church sought to divorce humanity from the earth, to exorcise the pantheon of natural spirits whom man had long worshipped, teaching parishioners to despise their bodies and sexuality, admonishing against bathing and other pleasures of the flesh, burning or slaughtering all who opposed church dictum or who lived outside societal norms, denying education and the arts, subjugating female power and ancient healing knowledge, and–at one particularly low time in the Dark Ages–even killing those commoners who possessed a Bible.

“When I first started the research on this book,” Ellerbe comments, “I already knew a great deal about Christian history and its dark side, but I was not aware of the extent of it, so I went through a period of really being horrified when I started putting everything together.

“But the thing that I value the most from having written the book is the sense of peace that I’ve come to about the role of religion. It has been ugly–there’s no question–and yet, understanding it and knowing what’s happened has allowed me to avoid totally shutting down when I hear anything about the church.”

Surprisingly, reaction from clergy has been mild. “I was really frightened of the reaction of the church when I first started doing research,” Ellerbe admits. “And I was very angry as I put more and more [information] together, and I realized that this many people were hurt and this many lives were lost, all in the name of God. It’s one thing when you kill someone because you want their property; it’s another thing to go do that in the name of God, and to say that you are working on God’s behalf. There is something so abhorrent in that.

“This isn’t about blaming Christians, you know,” she asserts. “I don’t feel that I’m getting that kind of reaction at all. I don’t mean to condemn the Catholic Church more than [other faiths]. It just has a longer history.”

Helen Ellerbe will read from and sign The Dark Side of Christian History on Good Friday at 7:30 p.m. Readers’ Books, 127 E. Napa St., Sonoma. Free. 939-1779.

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of the Sonoma Independent

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

Mare Winningham

0

On Her Mind


Janet Orsi

Georgia peach: Mare Winningham in her Oscar-nominated 1995 role.

‘Georgia’ star Mare Winningham tunes into Sonoma

By David Templeton

Mare Winningham peers out from behind the ancient, musty, 20-foot-high, red velvet curtain that veils the Sebastiani Theatre’s equally antiquated movie-screen. She’s inspecting, checking things out. “Roger,” the Oscar-nominated, Sonoma-based act-ress/singer teases. She steps into the light spilling onto the wooden stage where proprietor Roger Rhoten is waiting. “Roger, you’ve really got to get a new curtain up here. This thing’s just shot!”

“It’s on the list,” he chuckles, sounding like a businessman with a very long list.

At stage center, turning to face the rows of empty, darkened seats, she notices the banner stretching across the doorway: Mare Winningham in Concert. “Nice job, Roger,” she commends, adding, “God! I hope someone actually shows up for this thing.”

This “thing” is a benefit for the lovely but cash-strapped Sebastiani, the 63-year-old downtown Sonoma landmark that Rhoten has spent years steadfastly developing into a community center for the arts, presenting everything from the annual local children’s production of the Nutcracker to showings of little-seen art films and reissues of classics.

“The Sebastiani is a treasure,” Winningham offers fervently, explaining her motivation for volunteering to do the upcoming musical performances with her band consisting of local musicians, all of whom perform with folk-rocker John Wesley Harding.

Winningham’s passion for the Sebastiani began when she relocated to Sonoma several years ago from the Plumas County ranch where she lived a simple, isolated life far from the Hollywood spotlight. She became an ardent fan, as much of the whimsical, soft-spoken Rhoten (who is known to perform magic tricks on stage before the shows) as of the theater itself. Learning that the theater often operates at a loss, she volunteered to help out, offering to bring her band to the Sebastiani. “Roger shouldn’t be worrying about how to make ends meet,” she says. “He should be worried about fitting in all the programming he can.”

Winningham’s own aforementioned worries appear to be for naught: tickets are selling briskly, evidence that plenty of folks want to hear Mare Winningham sing and help the theater rebound from adversity.

Winningham’s own acting career has done some impressive rebounding of its own in the past year. In Georgia, she portrayed a famous and beloved folksinger in a problematic relationship with her less talented, spectacularly self-destructive sister Sadie, played ferociously by Jennifer Jason Leigh. Barbara Turner, Leigh’s mother, wrote the screenplay. That riveting, unsettling 1995 movie earned Winningham an Oscar nomination (the Academy Award went instead to Mira Sorvino) and the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Actress in an independently produced film.

The performance by Winningham, known mainly for her sympathetic portrayals of resolute yet vulnerable people, was a stunner, partly for the stark, emotionally closed invulnerability of her character, and partly for the magnificent sweetness and purity of her clear and haunting singing voice.

Georgia marked the first time since singing in the bathtub in Paul Simon’s 1980 movie One Trick Pony (her motion picture debut) that Winningham, the star of numerous big-screen and television films (St. Elmo’s Fire, The Thorn Birds, Amber Waves, Turner and Hooch, The War, Wyatt Earp), had the opportunity to demonstrate her considerable musical abilities on film. “I didn’t know you could sing” are words she’s heard often since Georgia‘s release, a comment she enjoys though she’s been singing like that all of her life.

And not just in the bath-tub. Winningham has toured with intellectual folk-rocker John Wesley Harding, has opened for legendary Celtic folkie Richard Thompson, and has performed for almost 10 years with her own band. She writes her own songs, two of which were used in the film, and she’s recorded a striking, hard-to-find album, the folk-tinged What Might Be, released on the now-defunct Bay Cities Records label.

Unlike the character of Georgia, who repeatedly states that she didn’t seek fame as a musician, Winningham has worked hard at her music over the years, sandwiching gigs in between acting assignments and family time (she and her husband, Bill, have five children). In various interviews she’s given since doing Georgia, Winningham has openly admitted that she’d like nothing more than wide success as a singer and a fat recording contract with a major label to boot.

So far, though, her wishes have not materialized. The seemingly no-brainer task of putting out a Georgia soundtrack album became lost in a legal thicket following the bankruptcy of the company that financed the film. And for now at least, Winningham remains an un-signed talent.

Winningham doesn’t miss the irony of having played a famous musician when most people who know of her are not even aware she can sing. “At the time it bothered me,” she says. “It wasn’t altogether easy to make the decision to do it. It’s like being a painter and working very hard and want-ing to be true to your paintings, and then playing the part of a painter and paying a lot of people to behave as if you were a painter. It actually made me a little edgy.

“Maybe, if I hadn’t been working so hard on my music, I could have done it without a second thought. I could have enjoyed it more and relished it. But, that’s not how it was for me.”

When Oscar nominations rolled around this year, Winningham found herself in an uncomfortable position: She was nominated, for the first time, yet Jennifer Jason Leigh–a friend of Winningham’s since they attended summer camp together as teens–was absent from the list, despite having received the New York Critics Circle Award for Best Actress. “I felt incredibly honored and touched to be nominated,” Winningham admits. “I was floored, actually. But it was hard to be separated from Jennifer, because she was the heart and soul of that film.

“While we were making the movie, I thought not only that she would get a nomination, but that she would win. I saw the kind of work she was doing. In my mind she will always be the greatest performance of that year, and a lot of other people thought so, too.

“Meryl Streep grabbed me at the Academy Awards,” she adds, eyes widening in wonder. “She said, ‘Jennifer should be here!’ and I said, ‘I know!'”

The Independent Spirit Awards, which honor work done in films made outside of the Hollywood system, were a different story. Leigh was nominated as well as Winningham, along with Ulu Grossbard, the film’s director. Winningham ended up taking Best Supporting Actress honors. “I was glad I won,” she says softly, “because I got to get up there on that stage and look at Jennifer and say, ‘I will support you any day!’ I truly feel it was a privilege to support her in that role. She was the whirling dervish of that movie. She was the center of the film. What a thing to support!”

Support. It seems to be emerging as the theme of the day. As we sit in this memorabilia-filled lobby (the immense stuffed teddy bear reminds Winningham of Roger Ebert), the conversation returns to this weekend’s benefit concert. “I trust Roger,” she smiles. “His sensibilities are attuned to what is great about creative opportunity. If he had more money, he’d just keep upgrading the theater. There’d be a better stage and the ballerinas would have a better time, and a better sound system so the bands would have a better time. There’d be more opportunities to hire people to help with children’s theater programs.

“People should support him,” she rallies. “They should support this theater!” She pauses, laughing. “So I’ll show up with my band, and if people turn up to see us, we’ll make this an annual thing. And hopefully we’ll make a chunk of money.” She stands up, smiling, glancing about for Rhoten.

“And then,” she adds, loudly, “I want to see a brand-new curtain in this place! OK, Roger?”

Mare Winningham will perform Friday and Saturday, April 5 and 6, at 8 p.m., at the Sebastiani Theatre, on the Plaza in Sonoma. Tickets are $15. 996-9756.

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of the Sonoma Independent

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

John Lee Hooker

0

Deep Blues


Kim Komenich

Boogieman: John Lee Hooker, the elder statesman of the blues.

Blues legend John Lee Hooker makes rare local appearance

By Greg Cahill

Where I came from in Mississippi was like being in hell,” says bluesman John Lee Hooker, recalling his roots as the uneducated son of Delta sharecroppers. “And it was hell! You had to enter stores through the backdoor and sit on the back of the bus. Of course, in those days blacks had to do just about anything anybody told them to do.

“And when I look back on it, leaving that state as a kid was just like leaving hell.”

At 75, Hooker has finally found his little patch of blues heaven. For the past six years, this influential guitarist, songwriter, and singer has been riding a wave of critical and commercial success the likes of which he hasn’t seen since his landmark jump-style R&B recordings established him as the King of the Boogie in the late 1940s and resulting in three Grammy nominations (he also won the Best Traditional Blues category in 1990) and three W.C. Handy National Blues Awards.

In semi-retirement since 1994, Hooker is the elder statesman of the blues. “While I’m here, I’m just gonna try to do the best I can,” he says, during a phone interview from his East Bay home, his Southern drawl shaded by a deep growl.

“I’m just gonna keep giving them what I’ve got.”

His most recent release, last year’s Chill Out (Pointblank/
Virgin), teams him with Van Morrison and Carlos Santana. But it was 1989’s Grammy-winning album The Healer (Chameleon)–which featured Santana, Bonnie Raitt, Robert Cray, and George Thorogood, among others–that rekindled his career. “That really kicked it off, didn’t it,” Hooker laughs when asked about the comeback.

“I feel good about that.”

The dream began amid the poverty and racial hatred of Coahoma County, in the heart of the Mississ-ippi Delta. Hooker, who spent his youth singing spirituals in the community church choir, credits his stepfather, Will Moore, with introducing him to the raw, African-derived sound endemic to the region. Hooker picked up his first guitar at age 13, and a year later, knowing that he wanted to play the blues, ran away to Memphis. “If I had stayed in Mississippi, I would have been a cotton picker and farmer,” he muses. “I would have just struggled in a day job, paying the rent from day to day.”

Hooker still had his share of struggles, drifting from jobs as a movie-house usher in Memphis to a gospel singer in Cincinnati. By 1948, he was working days in a Detroit auto plant and playing blues at night in Southside ghetto clubs. That year, he received his first electric guitar, a pawn shop gift from legendary Texas bluesman T-Bone Walker. “I thought he was Jesus,” Hooker recalls. “I mean, if anybody said anything bad about T-Bone, they had me to whup. I followed him around like a pet dog follows his master.

“And he was a good man, too.”

Hooker’s big break came that same year. His recording of “Boogie Chillen,” an up-tempo number with a lean, threatening edge, sold several hundred thousand copies–an unprecedented feat at that time for a blues record.

“The thing caught fire,” Hooker says. “So I quit my job at the factory. I said, ‘No, I ain’t working no more.'”

Over the years, Hooker has adapted his sound to match musical trends. When R&B burned out commercially in the late ’50s, he became a solo act, playing acoustic guitar and cleverly cashing in on the growing folk circuit hungry for authentic folk-blues. By the mid-’60s, he had re-emerged as an electric blues star, coming to the attention of a growing legion of white rock fans who had learned a paler version of the blues through such British Invasion bands as the Rolling Stones and the Animals. While Hooker had a bigger following in Europe, plenty of U.S. bands refined their own versions of his one-chord boogie beat, including Thorogood, Foghat, J. Geils, and ZZ Top.

Most of those acts have fallen by the wayside, but Hooker has continued to record a string of challenging recordings, including 1990’s Hot Spot (Antilles) soundtrack with jazz legend Miles Davis and others. And the kid who wanted to be a blues star is a blues legend.

“It may sound stupid,” he says with a gravelly laugh, “but I never knew what a legend was. I guess it’s just someone who’s paid a whole lot of dues. In my mind, my greatest achievement has been to make people happy all over the world and to know that when I’m gone I will never be forgotten–my name and my music will always be here for the people to enjoy, generation after generation.

“And that’s a good feeling.”

John Lee Hooker headlines A Celebration of the Blues on Tuesday, April 9, at 7 p.m., at LBC, 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. John Hammond and Duke Robillard also perform. Tickets are $22.50. 546-3600.

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of the Sonoma Independent

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

Cannard Farms

Natural Phenomenon


Janet Orsi

Puppy Day Afternoon: Bob Cannard and his little doggy take a rare break from the labor-intensive, hand-grown cultivation of his famous fields.

A poster boy for ’90s micro-farming, Bob Cannard produces prized veggies for Chez Panisse and Odwalla, uses dowsing techniques to test the virility of the soil and, most of all, doesn’t suffer fools

By Christina Waters

With its unruly hedgerows of rosemary, processions of peach trees and musical creek meandering down the mountain, Cannard Farms in Sonoma is, by any standards, a rustic Eden. It was an exuberant endorsement by Greg Steltenpohl, founder of Odwalla juices, that brought me here: “Bob’s carrots are amazing–he’s a carrot shaman!” Steltenpohl had put his money where his mouth was, retaining Bob Cannard to develop Odwalla’s new 65-acre carrot patch, whence flowed the very roots of the company’s ubiquitous carrot juice.

After putting two and two together and realizing that this was the same Bob Cannard who grew some of the most celebrated designer vegetables in California–those adorning the menu of Alice Waters’ Chez Panisse and Wolfgang Puck’s Postrio–I had to see for myself.

House wide open, encircled by barns, out buildings, odd bits of weathered tools, a pickup truck and a small, bouncing puppy–Cannard appears on the rough-hewn front porch like a Wild West apparition. Dressed in mountain-man standard issue–romantically frayed flannel shirt, blue jeans, muddied work boots and knit cap–he ushers me in and puts on the kettle, leaving me to examine the display of beautifully colored rocks lined up in four neat rows on the kitchen counter.

“Most people think that rocks are dead,” he says, without turning from the sink. “They’re alive.”

Chunks of amber honeycomb lay oozing in a wooden bowl and outside the window the fields exploded with early spring mustard. We sat down–so help me–at a log table. He is Jeff Bridges by way of Elmer Gantry. Tanned and weathered, Cannard’s face is illuminated by sky-blue eyes, his long hair shot through with silver, his body lanky and lean. Shaman or not, he is one heavy dude and the air inside his kitchen was soon thick with charisma.

Cannard likes to pontificate about the stupidity and greed of conventional high-yield farming. He’d also like to wander off in the direction of planetary doom and the destruction of the earth’s fecundity. The hippie in him is obliged to inform me that he keeps his phone in the barn. And that he wouldn’t even have one if his kids hadn’t insisted. So booming are his pronouncements, so maverick his colorful homilies, that I begin to think he’s strictly from Central Casting. But later, when we walk the land, smell the soil, sample the results, I realize that he’s the real thing.

The Loyal Following of Bob Cannard:

The Buddhist Healer

The Restaurateur

The Grape Grower

The Scientist

The Student

Maybe somewhere in his mid-40s, Cannard has roamed, worked, loved and improved these 172 acres (30 of which he cultivates) for the past 20 years, during which he also taught classes in garden crop production at Santa Rosa Junior College.

In 1960, the Pennsylvania native arrived in the Santa Rosa area, where his family ran a nursery raising ornamental plants. “That was growing as an industry,” he grumps. But at least he was around plants–always loved being around plants. “I went to school at Fresno State and I thought I wanted to study horticulture. But what I was really interested in was plants.” He beams paternally. “The ease with which they grew in the wild, their fullness and softness.”

Loving that essential plantness of plants, Cannard was disappointed to find “that the educational system was only training you for a job in some industry.” Of his formal training, he is willing to recall only that he had “a lot of inquiry, and they suppressed inquiry.” So after a brief stay, Cannard ditched academia and in 1972 started Sonoma Mission Gardens.

“I’d been around plants all my life. It didn’t make much sense for me to take those basic courses,” he observes, careful to sound modest. “I got kicked out because I was too much of a shit disturber,” he growls happily. Besides, “plants weren’t getting what they wanted from those additives, all those systemic fungicides the petrochemical people used.”

So Cannard has spent the past 20 years finding out what plants want and helping them get it.


Janet Orsi

Walkin’ Tall: Bob Cannard makes the daily rounds of his 172 acres, where the unconventional grower interacts with the landscape in a healing, almost beyond organic, manner.

Dowsing the Right Fantastic

Like the reincarnation of Rudolph Steiner–founder of the biodynamic farming movement currently enjoying recycled vogue–the shit-disturbing grower describes plant cultivation in terms more suited to psychology than chemistry. Dashing up from the table, Cannard bounds out the front door, grabs two handfuls of Italian parsley from different sections of a nearby plot and throws them down on the table when he reappears.

One, I’m invited to realize, is weaker, less vigorous in color and flavor. “It was too easy to pull out, the roots weren’t very deep,” he instructs. The other, we both agree, has more “integrity.” It’s bigger, bolder, hard to uproot. What that means to Cannard is that the more luxuriant parsley was well suited to its growing area. “It was happy where it was–it had bonded with that spot.”

A firm believer in finding out what makes plants happy, Cannard works by patient observation and keeping an open mind. He also works a bit like P.T. Barnum, treating me to an impromptu performance of another of his plant surveillance methods–vegetable dowsing.

From out of nowhere he produces an old rusty chain. “I dowse with an old rusty chain,” he says, flashing a wicked grin, “because I’m just a simple farmer.” Right on cue, the dowsing chain makes smooth, pliant circles over the “good” parsley. It stutters in uncertain, short, back-and-forth motions over the weaker herb. It’s possible that I’m being played for a media fool. It’s also possible that Cannard himself is not firmly rooted on this planet. Either way, the good parsley tastes like the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.

“I’m inclined to grow food of its own volition,” he says, being cryptic on purpose. “It’s very much a spiritual venture. I just allow it to be itself.” Back at his father’s nursery, the plants “were just these little numbers. I’d look at all those thousands of plastic pots and I’d just see money. They weren’t individuals.”

Twenty years of natural farming–in which Cannard is a collaborator with, not master over, the land, seasons and crops–have taught him otherwise. “Plants aren’t deceptive. They don’t run away, they don’t adorn themselves with trickery,” he says evangelically. “They’re naked and open. They’re passive, generous, willing. … So we think plants are stupid.”

Clearly Cannard does not. “The arrogance of one species deciding that it can administer to another,” he fumes, and pours another glass of green tea.

Like many growers who believe that the ideal farm should be conceived as a self-sustaining organism, Cannard feels he improves his farming by getting to know the history and cycles of his crops. “You can see the plant’s past by looking at the leaves, seeing the struggles and tribulations, the lean years, the years of flood, in the oldest leaves, or in the growth patterns, the signs of stress within the bark of the tree,” he says with biblical bravura. “You can see whether it’s suffered or whether it’s gone through stuff. We can get an understanding of what it was, all the way to where it is now. Once you get grounded in its history, you can figure out what they need. You create a stress-free environment and you get strong plants.” Like the parsley on the table in front of us. “You want to grow food that will connect us in that way with nature.”

Jumping up, he herds me out the door. “That’s enough writing. Let’s walk.”


Janet Orsi

Bin There, Done That: Containers delicately packed with minutes-old vegetables wait to be loaded onto the trucks that will take them to Postrio in San Francisco and Berkeley’s Chez Panisse.

Between a Rock and a Sweet Place

The tour starts with a quick look at a greenhouse and drying shed, where huge mounds of wheatgrass destined for Chinese medical healers are yielding up their moisture. Then we stick our hands in silvery hills of soft, powdered igneous Napa Valley rock, whose virtues as a soil enhancer Cannard tirelessly extols. He enjoys recalling a visit from “some of the UC-Davis guys who laughed all the way back to Davis about my powdered rock.” Cannard claims his critics no longer laugh but are making tectonic shifts over to the powdered rock bandwagon.

The licorice scent of fennel emanates from a steaming row of compost hills. These very hills are most famously known as the ultimate exercise in designer recycling, since they are fed twice a week by the kitchen scraps of Chez Panisse restaurant. These very hills, in turn, are fed back into the fresh produce Cannard is commissioned to grow for the restaurant.

“The people from Chez just brought stuff in–they must have been cooking with fennel last night,” he says. In the raised beds we straddle rest perfect miniature bouquets of lettuces, mâche, kale, bok choy, mustard, broccoli and raddichio, all impossibly beautiful, all fed by the compost.Cannard’s larger growing fields, not the photo opportunity in March that they will be in June, appear to be inundated by high weeds. In fact, the tiny bundles of red chard are all but invisible under their canopy of wild radish free-associating with calendula.

This is one of his master strokes. “I grow one crop for humans, and one crop for the land,” he explains.The “weeds” are a blend of native volunteers and last year’s crop allowed to bolt. Both cover crops will be mowed and hand turned to replenish nutrients–but only when they’re mature. “Plowing immature crops for green manure kills the plant before it’s ready–sort of like shooting a teenager.”Cannard loves speaking in this sort of provocative sound bite. When he says things like “Phylloxera is a totally insignificant bug–easily cured,” you know he’s trying to shock.

“Plants secrete sugars and they stimulate bacteria colonies and are sucked up by the plant.” says Cannard, the teacher. “When you grow crops, you’re really cultivating bacteria.” Cannard loves the fact that his favorite cover crop of weeds is both free and native. Sure, it might slow down the pace of growth or affect yield.

He makes no bones about his farm not growing big bucks, the way the Evil Petrochemical Empire does. “Their way of improving the soil with imported commercial fertilizers or composts costs many times more than mine, with weeds and powdered rock,” he points out. “My way is much cheaper and doesn’t need rigs, applicators, chemicals.” Bombast softens when he admits that his style involves “a different pace. It’s a little slower. And it’s sure as hell more labor-intensive.”

Cannard’s hand-cultivated harvests are invariably smaller, as well. “With commercial additives you can harvest 50 tons to the acre,” he says “but those vegetables have been sprayed, weakened. I can only get 12 tons to the acre. I can’t compete on the quantitative level.”

Picking leaves from time to time, stretching, pulling, feeling for strength, he admits, “There’s hardly any money in agriculture.” At least not the way he does it.

“I used to do farmers’ markets,” he says as we ford a stream and swing past barrels of wine vinegar being made in the shade of towering live oaks. “They worked well for me–it was cash money. But I was approached by Alice’s dad to grow for the restaurant. They interviewed 17 farmers [actually it was 10] and picked me.” Grin. “Now they come twice a week, three times in the summer, and they bring compost. I pick what they’ve ordered and box it. They drive it back to the restaurant.”

Now he’s given up farmers’ markets and stopped teaching, too. He grows vegetables for Chez Panisse and Postrio, carrots for Odwalla on acreage seven miles from this farm, and some pinot noir grapes on vineyards nearby. He also is starting an ambitious olive orchard. Consulting about weeds and soil to other farmers and vineyardists brings in most of the $100,000 he’ll make to support himself and two workers in a good year.

“Color can tell me a lot too,” he says sitting me down among huge fava-bean blossoms and tiny heads of teal-green lacinato kale. Lady bugs cling to chartreuse tangles of frisée. The oak leaf lettuce shimmers. “A lot of this is wild,” he says. “It’s reseeded stuff from last crop–and it’s pickable for free. This land has tremendous depth. Even the things that didn’t work helped teach me something for next time.”


Janet Orsi

Lettuce Give Thanks: Grower Bob Cannard casts a critical eye on Chez Panisse kitchen scraps destined for compost.

Vibrating Landscape

For a man with an ego as large as his land, Cannard is remarkably candid about his trial-and-error experiments. “Not everything works,” he smiles, pointing toward the frost-damaged corpses of infant purple-top turnips. “And it’s constant work.” We smell the fragrance of soil that has been so personally tended. Even the gone-to-seed heads of arugula are pungent without a trace of bitterness.

On our way toward a sunny slope where bee houses of Cannard’s own hexagonal design hum with activity, he points excitedly, “There’s where we picked the lettuce and got a second cover crop for mulching.” You sense that after all these years, he’s still discovering what the land can do–when it wants to. Whatever–and however–Cannard does what he does, it works. This land is so alive it practically vibrates.

Bob Cannard does not vacation in Tuscany. “I’m always here. What I love to do is take care of it all,” he says. “That mountain up there, and the creeks.” He wants to restore the balance and health lost to logging and erosion. “We’re running at 40 percent life capacity on this land since the white man came.”

The mountain is especially important, he says. “Small handfuls of the tea of the mountain are what really grow everything here. All the bacteria, the minerals are in solution and flood onto the land.” Cannard is a firm believer in recycling nature’s own nutrient power, so in addition to the compost, he adds vitality to his crops by turning his water supply into a liquid fertilizer. He stocks his water tank with bits of nettle, pine boughs, “seaweed if I go to the coast”–anything that will fortify the broth’s potency.

In his spare time, he thins the trees up on the mountain, ministering to the renewal of the forests and the creeks. “My goal,” he says, “is to get the creeks higher, to catch the load of creek water and spread it out on the land, not let it just run off down the hill.” So he plugs creeks with rocks and branches and is proud of the renewal of the willow and red alder populations filling in the banks.

For those less interested in the healing balance of the planet, the bottom line about what Cannard does is culinary quality. “The chefs don’t really care so much about flavor,” he scoffs with bravado. “The chefs want it to be easy. They want to be able to take it out of the box and plop it down on the counter and cook with it. But Alice cares about the flavor.” Flavor that’s alive.

“It’s not me, it’s the plants,” he says.

There is no single part to this labor. On his land, Cannard has connected the dots among crops, native plants, trees, creeks, birds, bees and wild boars. It is all necessary to what he does: “I grow food.”

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of Metro Santa Cruz

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

The Buddhist Healer

The Learning Tree

Spiritual leader Chiu-Nan Lai found healing in Bob Cannard’s crops

By Christina Waters

With a doctorate in chemistry from MIT, Chiu-Nan Lai did cancer research at the University of Texas for a decade until she walked away from Western science to found the Land of the Medicine Buddha spiritual center in Soquel. Today she lectures on Chinese healing techniques throughout the Pacific Rim through her Santa Cruz-based Lapis Lazuli Light Institute. Lai also provides healing therapy to the gravely ill, partially through the use of natural foods grown by Bob Cannard.

“My father is a soil chemist,” Lai says. “I’ve been brought up with chemistry and my grandfather started two agricultural colleges, so I already believed that soil was fundamental to a country’s health. When I would teach in Taiwan, I was frustrated because there was only pesticide-laced food, and many of the people I was trying to help couldn’t get the right food.”

When a friend put Lai in touch with Cannard’s naturally farmed foods, she invited him to speak at a health workshop.

“It’s really heartwrenching for me to watch the cancer rates rise as Asia becomes more allegedly modern in its farming techniques,” Lai says. “I told Bob that I was in despair, and he offered to grow some things for my cancer patients.” The food Cannard grew proved a revelation even to the Chinese medical practitioner. Beet- root broth was found to be an especially potent supplement to the total health package–which includes diet and lifestyle changes–championed by Lai and her Lapis Lazuli Light Institute colleagues.

“Now Bob’s farm is one of the favorite stops for visiting Asian health practitioners involved in our work,” Lai says.

Lai also uses Cannard’s specially dried fruits, wheatgrass and root crops to introduce the uninitiated on three continents to healthful food. “Once they know what good food tastes like, they finally realize what they’re missing. Bob’s food is an education. His sensitivity to the plant world goes beyond organic farming. He communicates with the plant world and really understands soil.”

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of Metro Santa Cruz

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

The Scientists

The Name of the Game Is Survival

By Christina Waters

In response to Bob Cannard’s passion for rock dust as a soil enhancer, UC-Davis soil specialist Stuart Pettygrove politely points out: “The minerals in rock dust are quite low in solubility. But if you grind a material fine enough, it is possible to have enough dissolved to supply some nutrients to plants.” However, Pettygrove continues, “conventional manufactured fertilizers, crop residues/green manures and livestock manures are the usual, cost-effective methods for supplying any nutrient that is deficient in the soil. … I would be skeptical of claims that the rock dust can perform as well with the same or lower cost as the above-mentioned materials.”

Michael J. Singer, professor of soil science at UC-Davis, goes further. “There is nothing new about crushing rocks and adding the material to soil to improve fertility. Rock phosphate fertilizer is exactly that. But,” he emphasizes, “rock phosphate is very slow to dissolve, so it is typically processed with acids to create new, more soluble minerals that will provide nutrients when the plants need them.”

Offering a personal observation, Singer says, “the new wave farmers just don’t strike the right chord in me. These ‘innovative’ folks are using techniques that were abandoned long ago by the modern farmers who they disdain. Farming is not a religion or a yuppie sport. It is a necessary part of our survival. Lucky for us there are farmers whom use modern techniques so you and I don’t have to spend our days doing manual labor so we can eat. Hey, we even have the luxury of spare time to go to Chez Whatever to eat. We also spend a tiny fraction of our income for food, unlike most of the remainder of the world. Lots of forces influence the price we pay for food.

“I respect Mr. Bob Cannard’s decision to grow yuppie food for people who want to pay 30 to 50 percent more for it,” Singer continues. “Just don’t let the public think that it is a good idea to grow all food this way. Remember, there are lots of people out there who don’t have the luxury to allocate their incomes to eat at Chez Whatever. Farmers need modern tools, including petrochemicals, to produce abundant food so that everyone can afford to eat well.”

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of Metro Santa Cruz

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

The Grape Growers

The Passionate Purist

Sonoma vineyard manager John Rauck finds more than a little wisdom in Bob Cannard’s maverick ways

By Christina Waters

I think Bob is right,” says John Rauck, president of the Sonoma County Grapegrowers’ Association and manager for Burdell Properties’ 850 acres of grapes in Sonoma and Napa counties. “Though I don’t want to minimize its impact, phylloxera is not as big a thing as it’s cracked up to be.”

Rauck called upon Cannard to come out and look at some vineyards after having heard him speak at a conference on alternatives to methyl bromide. “After quite a few other speakers, including entomologists from UC-Davis, up strides Cannard and lets loose with a torrent of prose about life abundance. My vineyard manager’s jaw dropped when he heard Cannard essentially saying that what we needed was more nematodes, not less,” Rauck chuckles.

Cannard’s mission is to tune up the environmental balance, making plants strong enough to host phylloxera without buying the farm. “Agriculture throws nature out of balance, there’s no doubt about it,” Rauck says. “And Bob is exploring how to restore that balance.” On the other hand, Rauck admits that, like many growers, he is tearing out phylloxera-infested vines, a move that ironically opens the way for replanting with more appropriate grapes for climate and market.

“It’s a lot like the difference between approaches to human health,” Rauck observes. “Western medicine spends all its time trying to kill the virus, while Chinese medicine tries to boost the immune system.”

Rauck also agrees with Cannard that “a more biologically diverse environment would delay the devastation of phylloxera. But I don’t think you can make a vulnerable, depleted rootstock survive in the long run–you just can’t turn back the clock. Bob would point out that today we’re overcropping. And he’s right. It would be better to plant fewer vines, farther apart. But your accountant wouldn’t be very happy about it.”

Rauck adds, “I think Bob’s theories have potential validity–up to a point. I admire what Bob believes. He’s a real purist and there’s a place for purists.”

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of Metro Santa Cruz

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

Project Censored

0

Raking Muck


Janet Orsi

The godfather: Project Censored director Sonoma State University professor Carl Jensen is the recent recipient of the Society of Professional Journalists lifetime achievement award.

Changes carry SSU’s Project Censored into its second generation

By Bruce Robinson

Twenty years ago, I thought it was the greatest thing since sliced bread, and I have not been disappointed,” says Carl Jensen–the “father” of Project Censored–of his enduring brainchild. Even though the Sonoma State University communications professor is retiring at the end of the school year, he continues to have great expectations for the nationally renowned project, which ranks the year’s most underreported news stories. “I don’t think we’ve reached the peak at all.”

The new Project Censored director is Peter Phillips, an SSU sociology professor whose thesis focused on Bohemian Grove, and who Jensen says has “two great talents which I didn’t have: organization and fundraising.” While the benefits of the latter are obvious, the additional organizational capacity is enabling Project Censored to extend its outreach deep into cyberspace. Its network of participating readers identified 700 stories that were reviewed in 1995; with expanded Internet contacts, that number is expected to swell to 2,000 this year, with as many as 500 net surfers contributing suggestions.

The Internet also gives Project Censored access to a broader range of sources, such as the top story on the latest list, which came from an Internet newsletter. The well-known co-author of that story, consumer advocate and presidential candidate Ralph Nader, will be the keynote speaker at the New York announcement of the Top 10 list for 1995, to be held in the same room at Columbia University in which the Pulitzer winners are announced.

While Nader is expected to draw some extra media attention, Jensen says that neither the Columbia Journalism Review nor the New York Times has ever mentioned Project Censored. “It’s an embarrassment that they have ignored the nation’s oldest ongoing news media research project,” he grumbles.

This is exactly the sort of thing that Project Censored was created to combat, adds assistant director Mark Lowenthal, as the underlying intent of their list is to redefine censorship. “Censorship needs to be broadened to include not just overt censorship, but self-censorship as well as underreporting,” he explains. “The stories that we cite from the [Washington] Post and the [New York] Times and other mainstream outlets are what we call hit-and-run coverage.

“Just because the story appears in one of these outlets does not mean that it reached the public; any story that is going to embed itself in the public consciousness requires repetition.”

But repetition is also cropping up in the annual list of censored stories, says Judith Krug, director of the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom. Krug is a long-term member of the panel of media judges who choose the Top 10 from a list of 25 finalists that are selected by the Project Censored staff and SSU students. Other judges include UC Berkeley professor emeritus Ben Bagdikian and author Susan Faludi. Krug observes that while the subjects of those stories overall “have become more global,” she is seeing less change in the list from year to year, “which means that despite Project Censored, a lot of these stories are not getting out. Which is a concern. A lot of the stories we’re dealing with really need to get aired, and we’re not getting through.”

“Part of the problem,” adds Berkeley writer and lecturer Michael Parenti, another Project Censored judge, “is that we become victims of the very censorship we’re trying to confront. The project and our findings are routinely ignored by the mainstream multinational media.”

There’s a good reason for that, Jensen suggests. “These are the kinds of stories that tend to alienate the administration and corporate America, the power elite in our country,” he says, “and the power elite is still fighting what we’re trying to get out here.”

At the same time, Lowenthal notes that the Top 10 Censored Stories list has been used “as a kind of tip sheet” by CNN and other news organizations. That is gratifying, to a degree, he says, “but sometimes too much attention gets placed on the stories, and the more important point is why there is a list, not what’s on it.”

With that noted, here is the newly released list of underplayed stories from 1995:

Telecommunications Bill. The story most in need of broader exposure this year, the Project Censored judges concluded, was the new federal telecommunications bill, particularly its implications for the further concentration of media ownership, and other consequences of deregulation. Co-written by Ralph Nader, this story originally appeared online, in the Internet newsletter of the Consumer Project on Technology. According to Nader, the bill will permit major media monopolies on both national and local levels.

Balancing the Budget. “Cut Corporate Welfare: Not Medicare” was the title of John Canham-Clyne’s piece, which contended that the national budget could be balanced by 2002 without cutting social programs if breaks for business were cut instead. It appeared in the lightly circulated bimonthly Public Citizen.

Child Labor. American children are working in dangerous and unhealthy environments, and the problem is getting worse. This article appeared in Southern Exposure, a regional magazine.

Privatization of the Internet. This report on the transfer of Internet infrastructure from government to private industry, and what that means for free speech in cyberspace, appeared last summer in The Nation.

U.S. Nuke Spending. A Washington Post story detailed the military’s plans to fund production of tritium, a gas used to boost the power of nuclear weapons, even as the United States is urging nuclear disarmament elsewhere in the world.

Plans for Radical FDA Cuts. Mother Jones revealed the plans of the Speaker’s Progress and Freedom Foundation to privatize many of the Food and Drug Administration’s review and approval functions.

Russian Nuclear Waste. The USSR has been pumping billions of gallons of its hazardous nuclear waste underground for more than 30 years, according to this New York Times report.

Medical Fraud Costs Billions. Another Mother Jones article, titled “Medscam,” investigated medical fraud claims and discovered they are so extensive, no one even knows how much is lost, nor is there a way to find out.

The Fight Over Methyl Bromide. Although this issue recently has gained a higher profile in California, the cited article about the chemical industry’s determination to protect the ongoing use of this toxic, ozone-depleting pesticide appeared last summer in the Bay Area-based Earth Island Journal.

NAFTA’s Broken Promises. Two articles on this subject were noted by the Project, one from Mother Jones and the other from Covert/Action Quarterly. Both detailed betrayals of American and Mexican workers by corporate NAFTA members.

An additional 15 stories in the also-ran listing this year included such topics as the Gulf War Syndrome coverup, oil companies’ more than $1.5 billion debt to the federal government, our lagging maternal health standards, the continuing dangers of dioxin, a rebirth of slavery in the Sudan, and the carcinogenic dangers of fiberglass.

From the April 4-10, 1996 issue of the Sonoma Independent

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

Election ’96

0

Unexpected


Michael Amsler

Pressing flesh: Supervisor Ernie Carpenter, left, congratulates political hopeful Eric Koenigshofer, who faces a runoff in November.

Election upsets set stage for hot November contests

By Bruce Robinson and Greg Cahill

“We’re the giant killers,” Virginia Strom-Martin exulted, as election day slowly morphed into the morning after. Her cautiously hopeful Tuesday night vigil at the Santa Rosa office of the California Teachers Association had gradually loosened into a too-good-to-be-true celebration as the returns mounted from the far-flung state 1st Assembly District and showed the longtime elementary school teacher slowly overtaking and then pulling away from ex-Rep. Doug Bosco of Sebastopol and “his million-dollar name recognition” in a five-way bid to replace veteran state legislator Dan Hauser–a key race in the fight for partisan control of the Legislature.

Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Petaluma, who was unopposed in the primary but will face Marinite Republican Duane Hughes, stopped by briefly and joined in the celebratory dancing as bandleader Jerry Hertz improvised anti-Bosco lyrics to the familiar oldies that his four-piece group casually churned out. But the music was long over and most of the residue of the underdog victory party had been cleaned away before Strom-Martin, who garnered 45 percent of the votes, finally was able to relax and savor her triumph. Serious thoughts about Willits businesswoman Margie Handley, who handily prevailed in the Republican primary, would have to wait.

As in other races in Sonoma County and the North Coast, the final outcomes in Tuesday’s primary defied the pre-election conventional wisdom, and set up a November contest that should engage voters’ attention through the long stretch until fall. The strong showing of political newcomer Michela Alioto, 27, of St. Helena, who overcame Democratic Party insider Monica Marvin, was another surprise. But the least predicted outcome in this rare early election was the finish in the west county supervisorial election.

“It’s going to be interesting,” declared an ebullient Ernie Carpenter, as he looked ahead to the November runoff between Eric Koenigshofer and Mike Reilly in the 5th Supervisorial District. That contest will pit two well-respected west county activists against each other for the chance to succeed Carpenter on the county Board of Supes. Interested observers echoed Carpenter’s non-committal term throughout the west county. Most had expected either Koenigshofer or Reilly to ultimately confront conservative businessman Bill Dowd of Guerneville. Koenigshofer captured 28 percent of the votes, Reilly snared 24 percent, and Dowd just 20 percent.

Having poisoned relations with the front-runner through a vicious last-minute mailer that tried to link Koenigshofer with a convicted S&L figure, Dowd and his backers are not expected to reconcile with Koenigshofer in the coming months, which could leave Reilly as the chief–if indirect–beneficiary of the Dowd hit piece. But there are still more voters to court who supported the other four unsuccessful candidates in the primary.

The relatively strong showing of fourth-place finisher Shela Furze, who garnered 2,191 votes, was another surprise. Eschewing most campaign advertising except for a multitude of roadside signs, Furze received strong support from conservative churches, which reportedly equated support for her with a show of faith. Furze’s polar opposite, lesbian activist Maddy Hirschfield, ran a solid fifth as the county’s first openly gay candidate, but nearly quadrupled her vote total as the top finisher in another seven-way race, for a seat on the county’s Democratic Central Committee.

The Koenigshofer-Reilly runoff will be the only Sonoma County race carrying over to the November ballot. Incumbent Supervisors Tim Smith and Mike Cale both easily won re-election, while Mark Tansil buried his two rivals to claim a seat on the Superior Court bench.

In a major upset, Alioto trounced Napa County attorney Marvin, who had raised more than $225,000 from Democratic backers across the country. “We’ve had a very positive campaign that’s been based on the issues,” said an excited Alioto from her St. Helena campaign headquarters late Tuesday night. Alioto received 22,965, or 42 percent, of the votes to Marvin’s 18,829.

She must now combat Rep. Frank Riggs, R-Windsor, to make good on her goal of becoming the youngest woman to ever serve in Congress. “Age, in my opinion, is probably one of my positives. We’re energized and we’re going to go in there and change things,” Alioto said enthusiastically after her victory.

Evidently the former aide to Vice President Al Gore is a quick study in campaign spin manipulation. She rebuffed “carpetbagger” charges from her rivals, after having moved to the district just weeks before the filing deadline, and noted that she is a fourth-generation Northern Californian “with very deep roots in Del Norte, Humboldt, and Mendocino counties.” She also said that Riggs has voted with House Speaker Newt Gingrich 93 percent of the time. “I think he’s been representing the state of Georgia better than his constituents in California,” she said. “If anyone is a carpetbagger, we should be calling him a carpetbagger–he’s been representing the state of Georgia.”

So, as they will say in Georgia this summer, let the games begin.

From the March 28-April 3, 1996 issue of the Sonoma Independent

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
&copy 1996 Metro Publishing and Virtual Valley, Inc.

Best Arts & Entertainment

0

Readers’ Survey Winners

Arts & Entertainment

Best Actor:
Eric Cook

Honorable mention:
Tom Waits

Best Actress:
Guenevere Wolfe

Honorable mention:
Terra Shelman

Best Art Gallery:
Ren Brown Collection
1781 Hwy. 1
Bodega Bay, 875-2922

Honorable mention:
The Quicksilver Mine Co.
154 N. Main St.
Sebastopol, 829-2416

Best Band–Acoustic:
Spiral Bound

Best Band–Punk:
Ground Round

Honorable mention:
Crop Dusters

Best Band–Reggae :
Strictly Roots

Honorable mention:
Raw Juice
Cardiff Reefers

Best Band–Rock:
Sorentinos

Honorable mention:
Hangman’s Daughter

Best Bookstore–New Books:
Copperfield’s Books Inc.
650 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 545-5326;
2402 Magowan Drive
Santa Rosa, 578-8938;
153 Kentucky St.
Petaluma, 762-0563;
540 Raley’s Town Centre
Rohnert Park, 584-4240
138 N. Main St.
Sebastopol, 823-2618

Honorable mention:
Barnes & Noble Bookstore
700 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 576-7494

Best Bookstore–Used Books:
Copperfield’s Books Inc.
176 N. Main St.
Sebastopol, 829-0429;
650 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 545-5326;
153 Kentucky St.
Petaluma, 762-0563

Honorable mention:
Treehorn Books
625 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 525-1782

Best Café Scene:
A’Roma Roasters & Coffee House
95 Fifth St.
Santa Rosa, 576-7765

Honorable mention:
Coffee Catz
6761 Sebastopol Ave.
Sebastopol, 829-6600

Best Country and Western Bar:
Marty’s Top o’ the Hill
8050 Bodega Ave.
Sebastopol, 823-5987

Honorable mention:
Kodiak Jack’s Saloon
256 Petaluma Blvd. N.
Petaluma, 765-5760

Best Dance Company:
Redwood Empire Ballet
709 Davis St.
Santa Rosa, 523-3046

and (tie)

Ann Woodhead Dance Company
Sonoma State University

Honorable mention:
The Dance Center of Sonoma County
15 Third St.
Santa Rosa, 575-8277

Best DJ–Country:
Rick Jackson

Honorable mention:
Pat Karrigan

Best DJ–Dance Club:
Aaron at the Funhouse
120 Fifth St.
Santa Rosa, 545-1773

Best DJ–Rock:
Bill Bowker

Honorable mention:
Zoe

Best Festival:
Health and Harmony Festival

Honorable mention:
Apple Blossom Festival

Best AM Station:
KSRO (1350)

Best FM Station:
KRSH (98.7)

Honorable mention:
KJZY (93.7)

Best Live Music Venue:
Luther Burbank Center
for the Performing Arts
50 Mark West Springs Road
Santa Rosa, 527-7006

Honorable mention:
Mystic Theatre & Dance Hall
23 Petaluma Blvd. N.
Petaluma, 765-6665

Best Movie Theater:
The Raven Theater
115 North St.
Healdsburg, 433-5448

Honorable mention:
Sebastopol Cinemas
6868 McKinley Ave.
Sebastopol, 829-3456

Best Museum:
The Sonoma County Museum
425 Seventh St.
Santa Rosa, 579-1500

Honorable mention:
California Museum of Art
Luther Burbank Center
for the Performing Arts
50 Mark West Springs Road
Santa Rosa, 527-0297

Best Music Store–New Stuff:
The Last Record Store
739 Fourth St.,
Santa Rosa, 525-1963

Honorable mention:
Copperfield’s Books Inc.
650 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 546-9253
Copperfield’s Books Inc.
146 N. Main St.
Sebastopol, 829-1286

Best Music Store–Used Stuff:
The Last Record Store
739 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 525-1963

Honorable mention:
Backdoor Disc & Tape
7665 Old Redwood Hwy.
Cotati, 795-9597

Best Place for Intelligent Conversation:
A’Roma Roasters & Coffee House
95 Fifth St.
Santa Rosa, 576-7765

Honorable mention:
The Road House
8430 Old Redwood Hwy.
Windsor, 837-0589

Best Place for Mindless Chatter:
A’Roma Roasters & Coffee House
95 Fifth St.
Santa Rosa, 576-7765

Honorable mention:
The Road House
8430 Old Redwood Hwy.
Windsor, 837-0589

Best Place to Dance:
The Funhouse
120 Fifth St.
Santa Rosa, 545-1773

Honorable mention:
The Cantina
500 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 523-3663

Best Singles’ Spot:
The Cantina
500 Fourth St.
Santa Rosa, 523-3363

Honorable mention:
The Funhouse
120 Fifth St.
Santa Rosa, 545-1773

Best Sports Bar:
Don’s Bar & Sports
5000 Commerce Blvd.
Rohnert Park, 584-0235

Honorable mention:
The Funhouse
120 Fifth St.
Santa Rosa, 545-1773

and (tie)

Santa Rosa Brewing Co.
458 B St.,
Santa Rosa, 544-4677

Best Theater Troupe:
Main Street Theatre
104 N. Main
Sebastopol, 823-0177

Honorable mention:
Sonoma County Repertory Theatre
415 Humboldt St.
Santa Rosa, 544-SCRT

Best Video Store:
Box Office Video
2700 Yulupa Ave.
Santa Rosa, 575-8383

and (tie)

Video Droid
1240 Mendocino Ave.
Santa Rosa, 526-3313

Honorable mention:
The Video Store
600 Gravenstein Hwy. N.
Sebastopol, 829-2200

Best Web Site:
Kendall Jackson Winery’s Santa Rosa-based
World Wide Web site
www.kj.com

From the March 28-April 3, 1996 issue of the Sonoma Independent

This page was designed and created by the Boulevards team.
© 1996 Metrosa, Inc.

Helen Ellerbe

Original SinJanet OrsiAt peace: Helen Ellerbe dedicates her book to freedom and dignity.Probing the dark side of ChristianityBy Gretchen GilesI am fascinated by the role that religion plays, and how religion is such a powerful tool, and how when it is misused, it can really crush a person's spirituality," says Helen Ellerbe softly, sitting among the floral sofa...

Mare Winningham

On Her MindJanet OrsiGeorgia peach: Mare Winningham in her Oscar-nominated 1995 role.'Georgia' star Mare Winningham tunes into SonomaBy David TempletonMare Winningham peers out from behind the ancient, musty, 20-foot-high, red velvet curtain that veils the Sebastiani Theatre's equally antiquated movie-screen. She's inspecting, checking things out. "Roger," the Oscar-nominated, Sonoma-based act-ress/singer teases. She steps into the light spilling onto...

John Lee Hooker

Deep BluesKim KomenichBoogieman: John Lee Hooker, the elder statesman of the blues.Blues legend John Lee Hooker makes rare local appearanceBy Greg CahillWhere I came from in Mississippi was like being in hell," says bluesman John Lee Hooker, recalling his roots as the uneducated son of Delta sharecroppers. "And it was hell! You had to enter stores through the...

Cannard Farms

Natural PhenomenonJanet OrsiPuppy Day Afternoon: Bob Cannard and his little doggy take a rare break from the labor-intensive, hand-grown cultivation of his famous fields.A poster boy for '90s micro-farming, Bob Cannard produces prized veggies for Chez Panisse and Odwalla, uses dowsing techniques to test the virility of the soil and, most of all, doesn't suffer foolsBy Christina WatersWith its...

The Buddhist Healer

The Learning TreeSpiritual leader Chiu-Nan Lai found healing in Bob Cannard's crops By Christina WatersWith a doctorate in chemistry from MIT, Chiu-Nan Lai did cancer research at the University of Texas for a decade until she walked away from Western science to found the Land of the Medicine Buddha spiritual center in Soquel. Today she lectures on Chinese healing...

The Scientists

The Name of the Game Is SurvivalBy Christina WatersIn response to Bob Cannard's passion for rock dust as a soil enhancer, UC-Davis soil specialist Stuart Pettygrove politely points out: "The minerals in rock dust are quite low in solubility. But if you grind a material fine enough, it is possible to have enough dissolved to supply some nutrients...

The Grape Growers

The Passionate PuristSonoma vineyard manager John Rauck finds more than a little wisdom in Bob Cannard's maverick ways By Christina WatersI think Bob is right," says John Rauck, president of the Sonoma County Grapegrowers' Association and manager for Burdell Properties' 850 acres of grapes in Sonoma and Napa counties. "Though I don't want to minimize its impact, phylloxera is...

Project Censored

Raking MuckJanet OrsiThe godfather: Project Censored director Sonoma State University professor Carl Jensen is the recent recipient of the Society of Professional Journalists lifetime achievement award.Changes carry SSU's Project Censored into its second generationBy Bruce RobinsonTwenty years ago, I thought it was the greatest thing since sliced bread, and I have not been disappointed," says Carl Jensen--the...

Election ’96

UnexpectedMichael AmslerPressing flesh: Supervisor Ernie Carpenter, left, congratulates political hopeful Eric Koenigshofer, who faces a runoff in November.Election upsets set stage for hot November contestsBy Bruce Robinson and Greg Cahill"We're the giant killers," Virginia Strom-Martin exulted, as election day slowly morphed into the morning after. Her cautiously hopeful Tuesday night vigil at the Santa Rosa office of the...

Best Arts & Entertainment

Readers' Survey WinnersArts & EntertainmentBest Actor:Eric CookHonorable mention:Tom WaitsBest Actress:Guenevere WolfeHonorable mention:Terra ShelmanBest Art Gallery:Ren Brown Collection1781 Hwy. 1Bodega Bay, 875-2922Honorable mention:The Quicksilver Mine Co.154 N. Main St.Sebastopol, 829-2416Best Band--Acoustic:Spiral BoundBest Band--Punk:Ground RoundHonorable mention:Crop DustersBest Band--Reggae :Strictly RootsHonorable mention:Raw JuiceCardiff ReefersBest Band--Rock:SorentinosHonorable mention:Hangman's DaughterBest Bookstore--New Books:Copperfield's Books Inc.650 Fourth St.Santa Rosa, 545-5326; 2402 Magowan DriveSanta Rosa, 578-8938;153 Kentucky St.Petaluma,...
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