Holiday Gift Guide: Uncommon gifts for the common family

by Katie Rice Jones

Each year the holiday season seems to roll around earlier than the last. While premature displays of holiday giftables, in the month of September, can make retailers look pushy, this general advancing of the holiday buying season can be advantageous for the shopper. Those who shop early have both time and selection on their side.

When it comes to holiday giving, my loved ones have come to expect a lot from me in the gift department and why not? I do technically shop for a living. However figuring out what to buy for whom can at times be a tad stressful (even for a professional shopper). This is especially true if your gift list contains people or “personalities” of various ages, tastes and interests. So to ensure that the gifting pressure doesn’t dampen my holiday cheer, I choose to shop early, really early. This year I bought my final holiday gift on Oct. 1. Each year the holiday season seems to roll around earlier than the last. While premature displays of holiday giftables, in the month of September, can make retailers look pushy, this general advancing of the holiday buying season can be advantageous for the shopper. Those who shop early have both time and selection on their side.

Since I have already scouted local artisans and local stores as well as online retailers for uncommon gifts for my common family, I decided to pull together a round-up of this year’s best gifts by personality type.

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If you are like me, you love to give holiday gifts that surprise, amuse and delight, but these reactions are not easy to come by if you wait until the last minute to shop or if you don’t consider the personalities you’re buying for. If you wish, use this gift guide round-up as your own personal shopping list or simply as an inspiration board. Remember—if all else fails, there’s always eggnog.

Katie Rice Jones is the Pacific Sun’s lifestyle editor-at-large, a Marin-based style expert and author of the maternity fashion book titled, Fashion Dues & Duen’ts; a Stylist’s Guide to Fashionably Embracing Your Baby Bump (Know Act Be Books, 2014). Available NOW at Amazon.com. Learn more at FashionDue.com.

Love: Wino forever

by Annie Spiegelman, the Dirt Diva

Last month I attended a Battle of the Bands event at Trek Winery in Novato. I personally knew many of the teenaged musicians who were competing against each other. I wanted them all to win … so I had to drink to endure.

While I sat there on a comfy leather lounger-style chair, with my locally crafted glass of chardonnay, listening to original rock tunes and jazz by teens-with-too-much-talent, I realized how much I loved chilling at Trek Winery. “I could easily move in here, under those Aspen trees and live happily ever after,” I said to a nearby parent who was glaring over the shoulder of one of the judges. The parents were all trying to play it cool on the outside. But inside, parents of musicians (yours truly) are just as annoying and competitive as those obnoxious soccer parents. You want your own kid’s band to win or there’ll be a screaming match with the coach. In this case, Andy Podshadley, owner of Trek Winery.

After the show I stalked, I mean, “introduced myself” to Mr. Podshadley. I was trying to shield him from the brutal thugs (parents of musicians) hovering nearby. But I learned that the winner of the Battle of the Bands would not be chosen for another week. Phew, he was safe. At least temporarily.

I learned that the 11,000-square-foot building has a private tasting room, a kitchen, a lab, a main tasting area with a bar, and a spacious patio with a waterfall and koi pond. The winery, which opened its doors in 2012, hosts various events and is becoming the local spot to view the Academy Awards each February. (The money raised that night is donated to the Novato Theatre reconstruction project.)

The winery is located at the old (1940s) Tresch Electric Building at the corner of Machin and Sweetser avenues. This green winery, renovated by mostly volunteer friends and family in 2011, has become a happy and relaxed gathering place for the Novato community, which is just what Podshadley, a Novato native, and his wife, Liz, had hoped. I talked to Andy to get a behind-the-scenes look at the family business.

OK, let’s start with the name of the winery. Trek bicycles and CBS Studios both had their knickers in a twist because you used the Trek name. You survived a lawsuit from the bike company and a threatening letter from CBS, who later, decided to leave you alone. Explain why you chose the name Trek Wines?

The name has two meanings. We enjoy the outdoors and also as a wine educator I feel people taste many wines as they progress through the wine spectrum. They take their own wine trek. We started the winery as a way to blend our love for outdoor exploration with our love for making great wine. I even wanted to have a climbing wall inside the winery, too, but Liz said no.

You are considered a green winery. Even your icemaker recycles water. Well done!

All materials used in the building and remodeling of the building were focused on someday becoming LEED-certified. We also recycle all our wine production water. We installed a 3,000-gallon cistern that catches all the wine production water. We add microbes and air and adjust the PH as needed and then we use that water to fill our pond and water the garden.

We have found that our ice machine wastes 1.2 gallons in a 24-hour period and our ice machine is small. We catch the water in a 55-gallon drum and reuse that water. We also want to have the entire winery solar-powered. We have a very large footprint on our roof and want to make use of as much as possible. We’re hoping to talk to Marin Clean Energy and others to see if they are interested in the power we do not use. We should have the solar project done by spring 2015.

For years you and Liz leased a warehouse in Sonoma to make the wine and operated the rest of the business out of your home. What gave you the idea to open a winery in Novato?

I started making wine as a home winemaker 25 years ago. I worked for Allied Domecq Wines, USA. This was the largest wine company at the time with wineries such as Clos du Bois, Gary Farrell, Mumm Napa and may others. Liz and I decided about seven years ago to have an urban winery in a downtown setting. Not a wine bar but a place for people to relax after a day’s work with a glass of wine.

It’s family-run. My son, Michael and daughter, Hannah work here when on break from college. We also wanted the facility to serve as a local venue providing weekly entertainment including music and stand-up comedy, as well as a space for private corporate events, parties and fundraisers.

You don’t actually grow the grapes. Who is your grape supplier? Where are they grown?

Our grapes come from some of the best growers in Northern California. Each area produces its signature varietal and we purchase grapes that are highlighted from those specific areas. Such as zinfandel cabernet and cabernet franc syrah from Dry Creek Valley, pinot noir and chardonnay from the Russian River, Napa Valley cabernet sauvignon, sangiovese and syrah from the Sierra Foothills and a few others.

You won the Pacific Sun’s 2014 Best of Marin category for Best Local Winery. What is your favorite wine to recommend to new wine enthusiasts?

Syrah, cabernet franc and grenache. Like most of the Trek Wines these wines are full-bodied and everyone seems to enjoy them.

Ask Annie what her favorite wine is at th*********@*******nk.net.

Trek Winery is located at 1026 Machin Avenue in Novato. Call 415/899-9883 or visit www.trekwine.com.

Mention this interview and receive 15 percent off a bottle of Trek Wine for the month of December!

 

 

Theater: Twofer One

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by Charles Brousse

To celebrate the holidays and generate a little extra cash from performance spaces that otherwise would remain dark, theater companies often schedule special productions that lean more toward family-friendly entertainment than their regular season list. The favorite, of course, is the classic stage adaptation of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, which offers an unbeatable combination of memorable characters, an engaging story and a colorful 19th century London setting. Still, producers who have grown weary of Scrooges, Christmas ghosts, Tiny Tims, and the “whole damn Cratchit clan” (as they were once described to me)—or who worry that their audience would prefer a wider choice—often are tempted to experiment with alternatives. Here’s a brief look at two such ventures currently playing at Marin venues.

The Complete History of Comedy (abridged), Marin Theatre Company: One might think that making fun of the things that have caused people to laugh over the centuries would be a slam dunk. One would be wrong. It’s like squeezing an orange the second time around. There’s no juice left. The original comic force has already been spent.

So it is with this attempt by the Reduced Shakespeare Company to journey through 2,000-plus years of comedy in roughly two hours on MTC’s Mill Valley stage. Not that the creative team of Reed Martin and Austin Tichenor, supplemented here by Dominic Conti, are inexperienced at these mach speed journeys that rely on nonstop physicality and a sharp sense of the absurd to puncture the solemn veneer of cultural icons. They, their predecessors and licensees, have been doing it in this country and abroad with great success ever since the company was born in 1981 amidst the joyful chaos of Marin’s late, deeply lamented Renaissance Pleasure Faire. Lampooned subjects have included the entire Shakespeare canon, American history, the Bible, sports and a number of other worthy targets.

Comedy, however, is a different animal. No matter how hard this accomplished trio works to try to make a funny thing funnier (and you get the impression that they’re working very hard), it’s a losing proposition. Some of the 13 chapters of what they call “The Art of Comedy,” loosely modeled after the ancient Chinese classic, The Art of War, by Sun Tzu (punned here as “Ah Choo”—ouch!) succeed precisely because their subjects were not originally intended to elicit laughter. A parody of the current U.S. Supreme Court, using large puppets to portray the justices, is one such, but an evening that begins with a promising cascade of chuckles and groans gradually settles into that most dreaded enemy of comedy: silence.

Inspecting Carol, Novato Theater Company: A small professional nonprofit theater company that has seen its quality slide amidst financial problems and internal dysfunction, is pinning its hopes for a better future on a reimagined multi-cultural production of A Christmas Carol. A few weeks before Opening Night, the National Endowment for the Arts, which had cancelled the company’s annual grant, gives notice that it will be sending a representative to assess the group’s artistic progress. Can the producers rally the troops for what may be a life or death visitation?

Collaboratively developed in 1991 at the Seattle Repertory Theatre as a substitute for classic Dickens, Inspecting Carol has enjoyed limited popularity because of its insider focus. The first act in particular, centering on rehearsal problems, financial issues and other matters that don’t necessarily resonate with a general audience, is a difficult slog. Under the guidance of director James Nelson, things liven up after intermission as two of the production’s most effective actors—Chuck Isen as Scrooge and Milt Jordan, Jr. as an African-American Marley—team up for some nicely-rendered scenes. Good as they are, this taste of the original only raises the hope that some local group next year will gift us with an inspired version of the real thing.

Charles can be reached at cb******@*tt.net.

Style: ’Tis the Season for Sequin

by Katie Rice Jones

Everything seems to shine a bit brighter—including our wardrobes—during the holidays; after all, ’tis the season for sequin.

While most every holiday party welcomes a guest wearing a touch of glitz, throwing on any old sequin number isn’t a foolproof plan for a glamorous holiday look. When it comes to sequin, all that glitters is not fashion gold. So it is best to understand how the dos and don’ts of sequin size, color, placement and design can affect your chicness factor.

Tis the season for sequin
Katie Rice Jones is the Pacific Sun’s lifestyle editor-at-large, a Marin-based style expert and author of the maternity fashion book titled, ‘Fashion Dues & Duen’ts; a Stylist’s Guide to Fashionably Embracing
Your Baby Bump’ (Know Act Be Books, 2014). Available NOW at Amazon.com. Learn more at FashionDue.com.

Local News: Get a ‘kick’ outta this!

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by Bob Heinen

Support our Kickstarter campaign! This week we launch a campaign to raise funds to develop a Best of Marin mobile app. Since 1963, the Pacific Sun has brought you free, quality journalism—features and content like Best of Marin. We’ve always relied on the generosity and support of our local Marin readers and advertisers to make this happen each week, and we ask you to join us once again in helping our new Kickstarter campaign reach its goal.

With a Best of Marin mobile app, you will be able to vote for your favorite sustainable restaurant, best caterer, best children’s clothing store or favorite hiking trail. With the touch of your fingers, this information will be seconds away.

The Best of Marin is a valued reader’s survey that gives Marin the best of the best. This is a great county that we live in, and the Pacific Sun wants our community to be able to nominate and suggest great businesses and ideas for the Best of Marin. A Best of Marin app simplifies the voting process. If you are out and enjoying a great meal with friends, you can support the establishment by nominating it or voting for it. The Best of Marin mobile app will also help you find these great places.

To build this mobile app, additional resources are needed. The Pacific Sun is launching new initiatives for 2015 and the mobile app is an important first step. Our goal is to continue to innovate and provide the best locally produced stories about Marin and to give our readers instant access to them. As more of us move to our mobile devices for daily needs, the Best of Marin mobile app will make this happen. You will be able to access information 24/7, and it will be ready at your fingertips.

The funds we raise will be used to build the mobile app and create a Best of Marin homepage on our new PacificSun.com website. Our Best of Marin homepage will be managed by our editorial staff and contain vital information, as well as photos and reviews. To keep this information free to our community, we ask you to join us today and contribute to the Best of Marin Kickstarter campaign.

To support our Kickstarter campaign, go to www.kickstarter.com and search “Best of Marin mobile app.”

All of us at the Pacific Sun thank you for being part of our creative team and wish you a safe and happy holiday season.

Ask Bob what he thinks is the ‘best’ in Marin at bh*****@********un.com.

Newsgrams: Habitat for Humanity Project in Novato

Zero interest mortgage, zero down payment—Habitat for Humanity is building 10 Craftsman-style homes in Novato at Mt. Burdell Place near downtown, scheduled to open in the spring of 2016. Habitat’s affordable home ownership program requires candidates to: have the need, the ability to pay a mortgage and to become a willing Habitat partner—which among other things includes donating 500 hours of labor to the partnership. Annual income requirement for a family of four ranges from $40,000 to $55,000. “We sell the homes, we don’t give them away,” said Jamin Sartor McVeigh, Habitat’s development and marketing officer. The Mt. Burdell project is unusual in that Habitat purchased the land. “We use HUD guidelines and have licensed construction workers on site,” McVeigh said. Info: www.habitatgsf.org.

Joanne Williams

Newsgrams: Board of Supes Approves Housing Element

The Board of Supes reviewed and unanimously approved the Draft Housing Element plan on Dec. 9 at a public hearing, which addressed housing needs for unincorporated areas of Marin.

The draft, according to a county press release, includes eight existing sites in unincorporated Marin already zoned for additional housing. “The draft is not a development plan,” the press release reads. “Rather, it identifies opportunities that already exist.”

The 2015-2023 planning period identifies fewer housing units than the previously certified 2007-2014 plan. The 2007-14 plan listed a total of 791 homes necessary to meet the county’s Regional Housing Need Allocation, whereas the approved Housing Element will include 378 units. The total units, the press release reads, will include 221 at the St. Vincent/Silveira property east of Marinwood near San Pablo Bay, and 82 units across Highway 101 at the Marinwood Plaza shopping center site.

“For development on any site to move forward, a specific project has to be pursued by the property owner,” the press release reads. “No homes would be approved or built without land owners and developers being required to submit detailed plans subject to thorough review by the county and public input.”

In order to adjust to this new allocation, the plan will maintain a portion of the eight unincorporated sites in addition to a cut in the number of units listed in these sites.

California state law cites that every city, town and county must adopt a Housing Element as part of its General Plan. The county’s Housing Element has been amended and updated five times since state law went into effect in 1969. In the past two years, the Community Development Agency held 19 public meetings to discuss the housing needs of different income groups within the county. —Janelle Moncada

Newsgrams: Should Tour Buses be Curbed on Long and Winding Roads?

The wheels on the bus may not be going round and round on Marin County back roads as much as they used to, as the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will weigh the merits of a proposed ordinance limiting large vehicles on narrow roads.

According to a county staff report, the Supes are concerned “that certain roads, because of their narrow lanes, topography and substandard sight distances are unsafe for vehicles in excess of 36 feet.”

Not only that, but the Supes have heard a plethora of complaints from neighbors that tour buses traveling to Muir Woods National Park are sometimes going through residential neighborhoods in order to avoid traffic on regular bus thoroughfares. Neighbors, according to the report, are particularly annoyed by the noise and size of the vehicles.

At the Dec. 9 meeting, the Board had plans to conduct an initial reading of the proposed ordinance and set a merit hearing on the proposal for Dec. 16. If the proposal gets the thumbs up from the Supes on Dec. 16, they’ll also that day consider a companion resolution that details which streets will be subject to restrictions and sets penalties for violations to the ordinance.—Jason Walsh

Music: Love me two times

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by Greg Cahill

One of the hallmarks of the modern world is the rise of retro culture—the fashionable AMC hit series Mad Men helped fuel millennials’ fascination with mid-century style; the contemporary string-band movement is giving 20-somethings a taste of old-timey music; the ’90s rockabilly and lounge scenes paved the way for today’s cult of cocktails, ukuleles and all things tiki; and the vinyl revival is in full spin.

It’s a crazy, mixed-up, shook-up world, to paraphrase pop philosopher and social observer Ray Davies.ne of the hallmarks of the modern world is the rise of retro culture—the fashionable AMC hit series Mad Men helped fuel millennials’ fascination with mid-century style; the contemporary string-band movement is giving 20-somethings a taste of old-timey music; the ’90s rockabilly and lounge scenes paved the way for today’s cult of cocktails, ukuleles and all things tiki; and the vinyl revival is in full spin.

And that cross-generational pollination makes it all the easier to buy gifts for boomers and hipsters alike.

Here are a few ideas:

The Beatles in Mono (Capitol): Here’s something fab for the holidays. This weighty box set delivers a hefty helping of audiophile-quality vinyl constituting the entire monaural output of the world’s premier pop band. These 13 discs (including the band’s first 10 studio recordings) provide scrupulously remastered versions of the rare mono mixes, which were different from the common stereo mixes (the band was present for the mono mixes, but not for the stereo mixing), providing added detail and a unique listener experience. The Beatles influenced everyone—after a half-century, these songs still sound fresh.

Bob Dylan & the Band: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 11, The Basement Tapes, Complete (Columbia/Legacy): This six-disc box set, which includes an essay by author, musician and Dylan authority Sid Griffin and a 120-page hardbound book of photos and memorabilia, makes available for the first time all 138 tracks created at one of the most productive songwriting sessions in the history of popular music. (The Basement Tapes Raw, featuring highlights, has been released on two discs and a three-LP set on 180-gram vinyl.) Looking for the roots of the alt-country and Americana movements? They’re grounded in The Basement Tapes—everyone from Ryan Adams to My Morning Jacket to Wilco owes a debt of gratitude to Bob.

Simon & Garfunkel: The Complete Albums Collection (Columbia/Legacy): The angelic vocal harmonies and gentle sounds of this 1960s folk- and folk-rock duo reverberate in the Milk Carton Kids and a host of similar modern folk acts. This box set gathers all seven studio and four live concert recordings that span Simon & Garfunkel’s chart-topping career.

Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble: The Complete Epic Recordings Collection (Epic/Legacy): Guitarists Gary Clark Jr., John Mayer and Kenny Wayne Shepherd have pumped up the volume on their tasty recordings, but Texas axeslinger Stevie Ray Vaughan is the patron saint of power blues. From the lyrical instrumental ballad “Lenny” to the soaring confessional “Life Without You,” Stevie Ray blended his reverence for Jimi Hendrix with his Texas roots to create an enduring legacy.

Bill Evans: The Complete Village Vanguard Recordings, 1961 (Riverside/Concord): This brilliant jazz pianist performed on all but one track on Miles Davis’ landmark 1958 album Kind of Blue (Evans co-wrote the Spanish-influenced “Flamenco Sketches” and the jazz standard “Blue in Green” from that album) before leaving to form his own band. This classic LP set, complete with alternate takes, captures Evans in concert with bassist Scott LaFaro (who died two weeks after this performance) and drummer Paul Motian—one of the most creative jazz trios of all time. This collector’s edition is pressed on audiophile-quality 180-gram vinyl and includes a poster and new liner notes.

Blue Note: Uncompromising Expression (Chronicle Books): This authoritative 400-page book compiles the definitive history of what was arguably the most influential jazz label in the history of modern music. On the 75th anniversary of Blue Note—and through the use of narrative, rare photos of the artists and reproductions of the iconic album cover art—author and editor Richard Havers chronicles the genre’s social history and traces the evolution of jazz, from the boogie-woogie and hot jazz of the 1930s through bebop, hard-bop, avant-garde and fusion, and right up to the label’s current eclectic mix of straight-ahead jazz and R&B.

Sinatra: London (Capitol): Mid-’60s mod-era London became Ground Zero for swingers, but Old Blue Eyes got the party started in 1962 with an extended visit that resulted in the studio album Sinatra Sings Great Songs from Great Britain. This new three-CD/one DVD box set has 50 previously unreleased tracks and includes studio sessions as well as a 1962 BBC “Light Programme” radio special with introductions to each song by the ring-a-ding King of Cocktail Culture himself, a 1953 live session for BBC Radio’s “The Show Band Show” and a Royal Albert Hall concert from 1984 (the DVD offers a previously unreleased 1970 concert featuring Francis Albert filmed at Royal Albert Hall). Ring-a-ding, baby.

Ask Greg which gifts he’s giving at gc*******@***il.com..

 

Letters: ‘Twas the stuff before Christmas

So folks, here we is, the Toys R Us time of year with the hyped expectations and hollow promises of new stuff being true happiness and making everything all better! Time to consume, go into debt and buy stuff for other people? Please consider that we are on the environmental edge if not well beyond it. Do we really need more “stuff”?

Here we are, 2014, with endless wars, fracking poisoning the aquifers, Merry Nukes a spewing, tarsands a piping, (you know the tune) GMO allergens hopping, and the commons of nature-ecosystems, being obliterated by egosystems of greed, gluttony, ownership and profit as more valuable than clean air, pure water, or healthy soil.

Perhaps the best gifts we can give, are our actions and involvement in a world worth living in for future life? Perhaps living diverse environments have more value, and are more loving, kind, and generous presents to those we love (and all other life) than a bunch of shiny disposable products, and the resultant landfills and wastelands, black water, brown air and toxic soils, remaining where life once lived?

I wonder what that radical Jesus dude would be doing, or what he would think of the ways we live and treat each other and all life? No food in Somalia? Let’s send cake?

We treat the earth as an unlimited piggy bank and we trade our lives for money and stuff. Too few of us look at the remains, as we drive in circles.

Let’s look in our own trashcans, packed with lifeless “goo” we throw “away” continually. There is NO away, but there are toxic wastelands, dead waterways, and lousy air. Cancel your garbage service.

Do look into our trash, because it IS the future we are leaving. Impossible you say? Seriously, go live with our wastage, and consider the future.

Black Friday, Giving Tuesday, and, what are we giving back? How are we living, treating each other and all life/environments the other 362? Are we indebted consuming Neanderthals on Friday, and repentant givers of money on Tuesday, etc.? What about EVERYDAY?

Please, DO consider, the effectual slaves which make our products, and that bargain price disposable products are no bargain for the water, air, or soils.

Perhaps the best gifts are immaterial, love, community, friendships and not stuff?

Is it time to begin giving back to the environments which sustain all life, including ours?

Why not Merry Christmas, everyday?

Sierra Salin, Fairfax

Holiday Gift Guide: Uncommon gifts for the common family

2014 Holiday Gift Guide
by Katie Rice Jones Each year the holiday season seems to roll around earlier than the last. While premature displays of holiday giftables, in the month of September, can make retailers look pushy, this general advancing of the holiday buying season can be advantageous for the shopper. Those who shop early have both time and selection on their side. When it...

Love: Wino forever

by Annie Spiegelman, the Dirt Diva Last month I attended a Battle of the Bands event at Trek Winery in Novato. I personally knew many of the teenaged musicians who were competing against each other. I wanted them all to win ... so I had to drink to endure. While I sat there on a comfy leather lounger-style chair, with my...

Theater: Twofer One

Marin Theater 12-14
by Charles Brousse To celebrate the holidays and generate a little extra cash from performance spaces that otherwise would remain dark, theater companies often schedule special productions that lean more toward family-friendly entertainment than their regular season list. The favorite, of course, is the classic stage adaptation of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, which offers an unbeatable combination of memorable characters,...

Style: ’Tis the Season for Sequin

Tis the Season of Sequin
by Katie Rice Jones Everything seems to shine a bit brighter—including our wardrobes—during the holidays; after all, ’tis the season for sequin. While most every holiday party welcomes a guest wearing a touch of glitz, throwing on any old sequin number isn’t a foolproof plan for a glamorous holiday look. When it comes to sequin, all that glitters is not fashion gold....

Local News: Get a ‘kick’ outta this!

Best of Marin App on Kickstarter
by Bob Heinen Support our Kickstarter campaign! This week we launch a campaign to raise funds to develop a Best of Marin mobile app. Since 1963, the Pacific Sun has brought you free, quality journalism—features and content like Best of Marin. We’ve always relied on the generosity and support of our local Marin readers and advertisers to make this happen each...

Newsgrams: Habitat for Humanity Project in Novato

Zero interest mortgage, zero down payment—Habitat for Humanity is building 10 Craftsman-style homes in Novato at Mt. Burdell Place near downtown, scheduled to open in the spring of 2016. Habitat’s affordable home ownership program requires candidates to: have the need, the ability to pay a mortgage and to become a willing Habitat partner—which among other things includes donating 500...

Newsgrams: Board of Supes Approves Housing Element

The Board of Supes reviewed and unanimously approved the Draft Housing Element plan on Dec. 9 at a public hearing, which addressed housing needs for unincorporated areas of Marin. The draft, according to a county press release, includes eight existing sites in unincorporated Marin already zoned for additional housing. “The draft is not a development plan,” the press release reads....

Newsgrams: Should Tour Buses be Curbed on Long and Winding Roads?

The wheels on the bus may not be going round and round on Marin County back roads as much as they used to, as the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will weigh the merits of a proposed ordinance limiting large vehicles on narrow roads. According to a county staff report, the Supes are concerned “that certain roads, because of their...

Music: Love me two times

by Greg Cahill One of the hallmarks of the modern world is the rise of retro culture—the fashionable AMC hit series Mad Men helped fuel millennials’ fascination with mid-century style; the contemporary string-band movement is giving 20-somethings a taste of old-timey music; the ’90s rockabilly and lounge scenes paved the way for today’s cult of cocktails, ukuleles and all things tiki;...

Letters: ‘Twas the stuff before Christmas

The Stuff Before Christmas
So folks, here we is, the Toys R Us time of year with the hyped expectations and hollow promises of new stuff being true happiness and making everything all better! Time to consume, go into debt and buy stuff for other people? Please consider that we are on the environmental edge if not well beyond it. Do we really...
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