Jamming at the Watsonville Berry Festivals

Jamming at the Watsonville Berry Festivals

It started out, simply enough, as a celebration of the crop that put Watsonville back on the map. The Monterey Bay Strawberry Festival had enjoyed 14 summers of peace and prosperity in various locations in and around town, where many of the men and women who pick the county’s top crop live and work, and where nationally renowned apple orchards had once reigned supreme.

Continue Reading →

Gourmet Food Director for Santa Cruz Schools

Chef Jamie Smith: not your average cafeteria lady. Photo by Pete Shea

The Santa Cruz City Schools district hired Jamie Smith, formerly of Sestri restaurant, as culinary director for Santa Cruz schools. Smith has considerable experience in planning mass food production, having worked as chef de cuisine and executive sous chef at UC Santa Cruz’s Terra Fresca. It is hoped that Smith will raise the caliber of school cafeteria food by providing freshly cooked meals using locally grown fruits and vegetables.

Continue Reading →

City Votes to Host Amgen Tour Stage

Stage 2 of the Amgen race rolls into downtown Santa Cruz in February 2009. Photo by Craig W. Smith

It may be the most prestigious bicycle race in the United States. Even Lance Armstrong participated in it this year. But let’s face it. The Amgen Tour is no Tour de France, and despite its high profile thanks to Armstrong, it is not a major spectator sport, especially when races can last for days on end. Nevertheless, Santa Cruz City Council voted to host a stage of the Amgen Tour again this year.

Continue Reading →

Missing Man’s Pickup Truck Located

A pickup truck belonging to Elias Sorokin has been found on Empire Grade Road, but the Los Angeles man himself is still missing. Sorokin was last heard from in Oakland early last week, when he texted to friends that he would be back home in a few hours. Since then, a couple tried to use his credit card at the Target store in Watsonville and a woman tried to cash a one of Sorokin’s personal checks in a bank in Santa Cruz.

Continue Reading →

‘Midtown’ Santa Cruz: Fact or Fiction?

Is it Eastside or is it Midtown? Or is it—wait for it—in the Rio District?

We’ve heard enough longtime locals sneer at the newish term “midtown”—most commonly used to describe the section of Soquel Avenue between Shoppers Corner and the Rio Theatre—to make us wonder where it came from and who uses it. Bill Tysseling, executive director of the Santa Cruz Chamber of Commerce, doesn’t. But the guy who answered the phone at the Bagelry does. In fact, he says he’s been using the term for five or six years.

Continue Reading →

Shakespeare Santa Cruz Glows in ‘Midsummer’

Crow, Oberon and Bluejay investigate matters in ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream.' Photo by r.r. jones.

Rarely has such a tortured plot been so clearly articulated. A Midsummer Night’s Dream, one of Shakespeare’s most popular offerings, explores the elaborate mistaken-identity twists that Elizabethan audiences adored. Three mortal couples—Duke Theseus of Athens and his Amazon bride-to-be, plus two sets of love-struck (but not with each other) mortals—find themselves in a wooded dreamscape rife with fairy mischief. In bravura fashion, Shakespeare adds yet another layer of play-within-a-play complexity in a sextet of rough Athenian workmen rehearsing a play they intend to perform in honor of the Duke’s upcoming wedding. Meanwhile, Titania and Oberon, king and queen of the fairies, are quarrelling over custody of a pretty Indian baby.

Continue Reading →

Californians’ Eco-Zeal on The Wane

For the second year in a row, a slight majority of Californians surveyed favor offshore oil driling.

As the economy dips, so does support among Californians for policies that curb global warming, according to the most recent Public Policy Institute of California survey. While a majority still believe it’s important to reduce greenhouse gases, the survey, Californians and the Environment, indicates that support for AB 32—the 2006 law that requires emissions be reduced to 1990 levels by 2020—has declined seven points since last year.

Continue Reading →