Letters to the Editor: September 5, 2018

Thanks, Milkman

I was delighted to see your article about Straus Creamery in your latest issue of Bohemian (“Cream Dreams,” Aug. 29). I love to bike the backroads of Sonoma and Marin counties, often on the same roads that milk trucks and other large farm trucks travel on. I have noticed that the drivers of the large Straus milk trucks are always courteous and patient with bikers. This is certainly not true of all drivers on these local roads. As a member of the Petaluma Wheelman bike club and Bike Petaluma, I am grateful that Straus shows the way in sharing the road. We appreciate having them as neighbors and part of the community. I go out of my way to buy their products.

Via Bohemian.com

Racists Are Sick

According to Psychology Today, racism and xenophobia of any kind is a symptom of psychological ill health. People with a stable sense of self and strong inner security are not racist, because they have no need to strengthen their sense of self through group identity. Older adults, however, have a tendency to be more prejudiced than their younger counterparts. This is due to the fact that older people grew up in less egalitarian times. There is evidence that normal changes to the brain in late adulthood can lead to greater prejudice. They are more likely than younger adults to rely on stereotypes, and they have more difficulty than younger adults suppressing their stereotypical thoughts. They are also more likely to be socially insensitive in a variety of ways. All of these effects only emerge among older adults who show signs of poor frontal lobe functioning. The U.S. Census Bureau says that 85.6 percent of Marin County is white and the majority of those are 65 years and older. Hopefully that majority embraces diversity and inclusion. If not, race relations will automatically improve with the passage of time.

Sausalito

Foggy Notions

For decades Sir Francis Drake researchers have lamented his failure to discover the great and all-weather harbor he’d been looking for, regardless of where he may, or may not have landed in California.

Duane Van Dieman (“Drake Detective,” Aug. 15) asserts Drake’s landing was at Strawberry Cove. So how is it Drake failed to see the entire great bay directly in front of him while here? A few fickle fingers of fog days might explain the error, but not the extended stay Drake supposedly made. Further, a current map superimposed over a centuries-old drawing is interesting, but nowhere near conclusive.

As for Laura Goldenerg’s decrying the word “discovery” as an insult (Letters, Aug. 22), that’s an insult to logic. A culture halfway around the world with no knowledge of inhabitants here obviously discovered new land never before known to them. Since no known inhabitants were contacted, how can this not be a discovery, much less be an offense? To whom? How? This is typical leftist PC derangement that discovers “racism” under every rock, as it undiscovers and devalues history.

San Rafael

Editor’s note: Drake’s party did contact native Miwok Indians during their stay.

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Full House

0

September marks the opening of the new artistic season for many North Bay theater companies. Here’s some of what they have in store for local audiences:

Petaluma’s Cinnabar Theater (cinnabartheater.org) transforms itself into Berlin’s Kit Kat Club and bids you willkommen, bienvenue, and welcome to the classic John Kander and Fred Ebb musical Cabaret. Broadway veteran Michael McGurk and Petaluma native Alia Beeton take on the roles that won Joel Grey and Liza Minnelli their Oscars.

The Spreckels Theatre Company of Rohnert Park (spreckelsonline.com) opens its season with the multiple Tony Award–winning Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Fans of the Mark Haddon novel about a young boy on the autism spectrum investigating the death of a neighborhood dog will find that it’s been somewhat reworked for the stage, but Tony voters liked it enough to name it 2015’s Best Play.

Sebastopol’s Main Stage West (mainstagewest.com) opens its season with the world premiere of an original comedy by local playwright Bob Duxbury. Savage Wealth examines the impact of the sale of a Lake Tahoe home and the vacant lot next to it on a pair of brothers and their childhood friend. John Shillington directs.

Dancing and singing New York “wiseguys” take over Santa Rosa’s 6th Street Playhouse (6thstreetplayhouse.com) as it presents Guys and Dolls. Summer Repertory Theatre artistic director James Newman moves to Railroad Square to helm what has been called “the greatest of all American musicals.”

Santa Rosa’s Left Edge Theatre (leftedgetheatre.com) continues to provide North Bay audiences with recently written plays never before seen in the area with the U.S. premiere of a hit British comedy. Dave Simpson’s The Naked Truth involves charity fundraising, female empowerment and pole dancing. Argo Thompson directs a cast that includes former Bohemian theater critic David Templeton.

In Guerneville, the Pegasus Theatre Company (pegasustheater.com) presents its 12th annual Tapas: New Short Play Festival. The seven short plays by Northern California playwrights will be the first production overseen by new artistic director Rich Rubin.

Healdsburg’s Raven Players (raventheater.org) open with two contemporary dramas that deal with a host of complex issues including war, PTSD, gun violence, politics and religion. Time Stands Still and Church & State will run in repertory.

Napa’s Lucky Penny Productions (luckypennynapa.com) invites you Into the Woods, where director James Sasser has apparently added another layer of fun to the musical fairy tale mashup.

Plenty of options for the avid theatregoer.

Joy of Singing

0

Internationally known singer-songwriter, producer and teacher Terry Garthwaite has lived a life of music that dates back to the late 1960s, when she co-formed and fronted Berkeley rock group Joy of Cooking.

With an inspiring musical spirit, Garthwaite has recorded dozens of albums over the years, delving into jazz, blues and folk along the way. Garthwaite recently turned 80, and is throwing a massive birthday concert on Sept. 16 at the Sebastopol Community Center that will also act as an official record-release party for her most recent album,

Shine On.

“The album came out last year, but I never did a release party,” Garthwaite says. “And I just turned 80, so I decided, OK, I’m going to celebrate the fact that I’m still making music.”

Garthwaite’s first release in over a decade, Shine On features 19 tracks that span her songwriting career, including tunes originally written in the 1970s as well as brand-new compositions. “I just don’t stop writing songs, so I had a lot of new stuff to put down,” says Garthwaite, who recorded the album at Sebastopol’s Studio E.

Garthwaite’s 45 years living in West Marin is reflected in many of the songs, and all of her tracks feature positive messages, a staple of her songwriting since the beginning.

Dating back to her time in Joy of Cooking, who regularly opened for headliners like Van Morrison, the Band and the Grateful Dead at venues like the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco, Garthwaite says music was always a joyous experience, “with people dancing because the rhythm was compelling and the lyrics were uplifting—that’s where I like to go with my music,” she says.

Garthwaite also uses her music as a teaching tool, leading songwriting workshops such as her annual Women Singing in Circle retreat, where she joins singers like Threshold Choir founder Kate Munger for a weeklong outing in the mountains of New Mexico. “It’s a perfect environment for my songs, a lot of people who come to the retreat need songs of comfort and joy,” she says.

This month’s birthday concert will be another joyous experience, as Joy of Cooking bassist David Garthwaite (Terry’s brother) and drummer Fritz Kasten join Garthwaite, along with her favorite guitarist Nina Gerber, Studio E owner Jeff Martin, vocalist Chris Webster and others.

“I wanted to have a mix of musicians on the show,” Garthwaite says. “There’s going to be a real feeling of community onstage.”

Harmony Returns

0

There was a moment last October, in
the immediate aftermath of the Tubbs fire, that Santa Rosa’s Luther Burbank Center for the Arts was thought to have been completely lost to the blaze that destroyed thousands of other homes and businesses.

While the center’s main theater ultimately survived the disaster and reopened for events within a month, an estimated 30,000 square feet of the campus was destroyed, including the musical-instrument lending library and the outdoor sculpture garden.

This month, the Luther Burbank Center marks another milestone in its recovery with the reopening of the sculpture garden on Sept. 13 with a new group exhibit, “Harmonies,” that features large-scale works from three women artists.

Curated by Kate Eilertsen and LBC programming director Anita Wiglesworth, “Harmonies” brings a new lyrical sense of nature, movement and light to the garden, whose landscape was entirely decimated along with many old-growth redwood sculptures by artist Bruce Johnson on display last October.

“Women are rarely seen in public art,” Eilertsen says. “I proposed that there were several local female artists that deserved to be seen together.”

Formerly the director of the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art, Eilertsen was approached by the center to curate a show for its garden meant to follow Johnson’s exhibit.

She and Wiglesworth visited many artists in the Bay Area and ultimately selected Kati Casida, Catherine Daley and Jann Nunn to display in the show. Daley and Nunn are both North Bay residents, and Casida is based in Berkeley.

Each artist has four pieces in the show that boast eclectic ideas and materials. “We titled it ‘Harmonies’ because the sculptures are very different from each other, but they go together very nicely,” Eilertsen says.

While the show’s concept and selection process happened before October’s fire, Eilertsen acknowledges that the show has taken on a new meaning over the last 11 months. “It became even more important after the fires to have something lighthearted and beautiful,” she says.

Scheduled for a two-year run, “Harmonies” invites the public to experience the garden with fresh eyes. “Something that I love about sculpture is that it looks so different as you walk around it,” Eilertsen says. “You can see the world in such a different way by looking at the same image from a different angle.”

All three artists will speak at the opening reception, with food and live music on hand. “It’s a chance to meet the artists,” Eilertsen says, “and see the center coming back to life.”

Aug. 30: Pizza Life in Sonoma

0

A selection at last year’s Mill Valley Film Festival, North Bay writer-director Matteo Troncone’s irresistible documentary ‘Arrangiarsi (Pizza . . . and the Art of Living)’ takes audiences on an immersive trip to Naples, Italy, which Troncone visited nine times over five years to learn about the art of pizza making. There, he also discovered the artistic tradition of arrangiarsi, meaning to make something from nothing. Foodies, history buffs, art appreciators and everyone else can enjoy the documentary, screening with pizza from Ca’ Momi and winetasting on Thursday, Aug. 30, at Sebastiani Theatre, 476 First St. E., Sonoma. 7pm. $20–$25. 707.996.9756.

Aug. 30-Sept. 2: Gypsy Jazz Jam in Mill Valley

0

Belgian-French guitarist Django Reinhardt is one of the most influential players in Europe’s Gypsy jazz movement, and is still celebrated more than 60 years after his death. This month, the 14th annual DjangoFest Mill Valley features Dutch violinist Tim Kliphuis and his trio, who open the festival, French guitar duo Antoine Boyer & Samuelito, Gypsy jazz prodigy Henry Acker and many others. Thursday to Sunday, Aug. 30–Sept. 2, at Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley. $35–$65; $199 weekend pass. 415.383.9600.

Sept. 1: Art Dreams in Yountville

0

Celebrating the idyllic scenery of the Golden State, Napa Valley Museum’s new joint exhibition, ‘California Dreamin’,’ features paintings by Melissa Chandon and Matt Rogers and surfboard art from Timothy Bessell. Chandon’s pop-art inspired work is evocative of the carefree West Coast vibes of the 1960s, when woodie-style station wagons dotted the beaches. Rogers’ landscape paintings turn palm trees into cotton candy while thematically reflecting on the state’s history of natural disasters. Rounded out by Bessell’s handmade and hand painted boards, “California Dreamin’” opens with a reception on Saturday, Sept. 1, at Napa Valley Museum, 55 Presidents Circle, Yountville. 5pm. $20. 707.944.0500.

Sept. 1: Speak Up in Sebastopol

0

Growing up in Santa Rosa, hip-hop artist Tru Lyric began on his songwriting path with parodies in high school, though in the last decade his music has taken on a significantly more personal and emotionally impactful tone, and the MC now openly talks about struggles with depression and anxiety in his multifaceted music. Sometime labeled as Christian rap, Tru Lyric preaches positivity on his new album, Beautiful Imperfections, out last month, and he takes the stage with support from Run with Patience and DJ Sticky on Saturday, Sept. 1, at HopMonk Tavern, 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. 9pm. $10. 707.829.7300.

Remembering John McCain

0

I watched you walk with difficulty down the aisle to the podium in the Senate chambers last year, your face, scarred by past and current surgeries, now confronting brain cancer. Formally recognized, you held up your arm, and with a fist and thumb, motioning downward, voted against the Republican attempt to amend the healthcare program, then quietly returned to your seat.

We have been at the opposite ends of the political spectrum for most of our lives: you, a naval aviator from a military family; I, an anti-war activist, with deep left-wing roots. But in that moment of truth, when you voiced your independence from your own party, a bond was forged between us, and many others across the political landscape.

People viewed you politically as a maverick, a rebel. I did not. I saw the wounded warrior who had come home—a humane, honest and compassionate person who had shed his armor and led not with sword, but with decency and heart. Your thoughts and feelings and actions that day spoke volumes to the basic belief that all Americans have regardless of party affiliation. Americans do not like being cheated and lied to; nor do they appreciate being ignored and kept in the dark on issues impacting their lives.

Make no mistake, Sen. McCain: Despite derisive comments
about your past military status, you were and are a war hero. You nearly gave your life for our country some 50 years ago, serving our country in an increasingly unpopular war that took an exacting toll on your mind and body, whose scars, both visible and not, you carried with you.

It’s abundantly clear when a human being faces his mortality, the ascension up the mountain summit grows steeper with every exhausting step; time and breath become more precious commodities to savor. But looking down, Senator, over the landscape of your life, will afford you a grand view.

E. G. Singer lives in Santa Rosa.

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Letters to the Editor: August 29, 2018

Legacy of Abuse

After two years of investigation, a Pennsylvania grand jury report has brought to light over a thousand cases of abuse of children by 300 Catholic priests over the last 70 years. In the words of the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, it is a moral catastrophe. This type of abuse never falls on just one state or one faith; much more remains undiscovered. The grand jury report covered six of Pennsylvania’s diocese. There are 177 diocese and archdiocese in the United States. These acts and the failure of church authorities to respond betrayed our most sacred trust. When that happens, we must respond by supporting each other as a community. Our brothers and sisters, daughters and sons in Sonoma County have been victims too. Providing the compassion and services they need is an absolute necessity.

Many of these crimes happened decades ago. They may be buried but their damage lingers, festering within. So often the truth of what happened is denied to victims. Verity, Sonoma County’s rape crisis center, provides a 24/7 crisis line that victims of sexual violence and their loved ones can call at any hour of the day and receive support from a trained advocate. The term “crisis line” can be deceiving; a crisis doesn’t need to be recent or active to deserve care. Historical reporting is an important part of what the line offers. It’s never too late to have the truth heard and recognized. You may feel that law enforcement, your pastor or priest, even members of your family, will not respond the way you need, will not support you in that moment. Verity will. There is good in speaking the truth when you are ready.

Along with dealing honestly with the past, we should respond to these horrors by protecting the future. While children are still very young, six, seven and eights years old, we should teach them about their bodily rights, boundaries and how to be assertive when faced with inappropriate behavior. We should teach teenagers that they have a right to consent (or not) to any sexual activity. We should openly discuss why people don’t report and teach them how they can respond and get help if they are abused.

Verity provides these lessons in free educational programs for any school in Sonoma County that wants them. Contact your children’s school and tell them it is time to take action, or contact us at pr********@*******ty.org or 707.545.7270 for help in bringing this information to your community. Verity also works with our local faith community to bring education and resources to your place of worship. Our legacy can be one of prevention instead of abuse.

Verity Prevention Specialist

Taking Aim

The latest mass shooting that took place in Jacksonville proves at least one thing: the NRA is right. Guns do not kill people. People who buy guns in Maryland, with the express intention of using them at a Madden tournament in Florida should they lose big, kill people. The only thing that will stop the carnage is to arm all Madden players wherever they may go.

Sebastopol

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Letters to the Editor: September 5, 2018

Thanks, Milkman I was delighted to see your article about Straus Creamery in your latest issue of Bohemian ("Cream Dreams," Aug. 29). I love to bike the backroads of Sonoma and Marin counties, often on the same roads that milk trucks and other large farm trucks travel on. I have noticed that the drivers of the large Straus milk trucks...

Full House

September marks the opening of the new artistic season for many North Bay theater companies. Here's some of what they have in store for local audiences: Petaluma's Cinnabar Theater (cinnabartheater.org) transforms itself into Berlin's Kit Kat Club and bids you willkommen, bienvenue, and welcome to the classic John Kander and Fred Ebb musical Cabaret. Broadway veteran Michael McGurk and Petaluma...

Joy of Singing

Internationally known singer-songwriter, producer and teacher Terry Garthwaite has lived a life of music that dates back to the late 1960s, when she co-formed and fronted Berkeley rock group Joy of Cooking. With an inspiring musical spirit, Garthwaite has recorded dozens of albums over the years, delving into jazz, blues and folk along the way. Garthwaite recently turned 80, and...

Harmony Returns

There was a moment last October, in the immediate aftermath of the Tubbs fire, that Santa Rosa's Luther Burbank Center for the Arts was thought to have been completely lost to the blaze that destroyed thousands of other homes and businesses. While the center's main theater ultimately survived the disaster and reopened for events within a month, an estimated 30,000...

Aug. 30: Pizza Life in Sonoma

A selection at last year’s Mill Valley Film Festival, North Bay writer-director Matteo Troncone’s irresistible documentary ‘Arrangiarsi (Pizza . . . and the Art of Living)’ takes audiences on an immersive trip to Naples, Italy, which Troncone visited nine times over five years to learn about the art of pizza making. There, he also discovered the artistic tradition of...

Aug. 30-Sept. 2: Gypsy Jazz Jam in Mill Valley

Belgian-French guitarist Django Reinhardt is one of the most influential players in Europe’s Gypsy jazz movement, and is still celebrated more than 60 years after his death. This month, the 14th annual DjangoFest Mill Valley features Dutch violinist Tim Kliphuis and his trio, who open the festival, French guitar duo Antoine Boyer & Samuelito, Gypsy jazz prodigy Henry Acker...

Sept. 1: Art Dreams in Yountville

Celebrating the idyllic scenery of the Golden State, Napa Valley Museum’s new joint exhibition, ‘California Dreamin’,’ features paintings by Melissa Chandon and Matt Rogers and surfboard art from Timothy Bessell. Chandon’s pop-art inspired work is evocative of the carefree West Coast vibes of the 1960s, when woodie-style station wagons dotted the beaches. Rogers’ landscape paintings turn palm trees into...

Sept. 1: Speak Up in Sebastopol

Growing up in Santa Rosa, hip-hop artist Tru Lyric began on his songwriting path with parodies in high school, though in the last decade his music has taken on a significantly more personal and emotionally impactful tone, and the MC now openly talks about struggles with depression and anxiety in his multifaceted music. Sometime labeled as Christian rap, Tru...

Remembering John McCain

I watched you walk with difficulty down the aisle to the podium in the Senate chambers last year, your face, scarred by past and current surgeries, now confronting brain cancer. Formally recognized, you held up your arm, and with a fist and thumb, motioning downward, voted against the Republican attempt to amend the healthcare program, then quietly returned to...

Letters to the Editor: August 29, 2018

Legacy of Abuse After two years of investigation, a Pennsylvania grand jury report has brought to light over a thousand cases of abuse of children by 300 Catholic priests over the last 70 years. In the words of the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, it is a moral catastrophe. This type of abuse never falls on...
11,084FansLike
4,606FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow