- Lake County News Reports
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Films worth the effort to see; 'The Tourist' not so much
- Editor
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Disney treatment makes 'Tangled' great family animated fun
- Editor
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Winter band concert set for Dec. 15
The concert begins at 7 p.m.
The award winning jazz band and concert band will perform on the MAC Auditorium stage, Lange Street, Lakeport.
Admission is free.
Symphony conductor John Parkinson promises a program aimed at instilling the finest and most heartwarming Christmas Spirit.
Along with a program of secular and popular holiday songs, this year will see a special presentation of “T'was the Night Before Christmas” narrated by popular local actor Bert Hutt.
Lake County's favorite jazz singer Paula Samonte returns after a one-year absence, to entertain her many fans with a medley of her signature Christmas songs.
The CLPA Youth Orchestra, under the direction of Susan Condit, will deliver two numbers. First is “A Burgundian Carol,” often better known as “Sing We Now of Christmas” with a modern arrangement of the ancient melody by Deborah Baker Monday.
The second selection, “Bobsled Run” is a snow-scene memory, not of Olympic style bobsleds, but rather the antique models pulled by horses. It was written by Lloyd Conely.
Tickets to see the show in person are still available. Tickets for a full dress rehearsal at 11 a.m. are $5 general admission and free to all youths under 18.
Admission to the 3 p.m. concert is $20 general and $15 for Clear Lake Performing Arts (CLPA) members.
Advance purchase tickets can be had by phone at 707-263-0577 or online at www.soperreesetheatre.com.
Tickets also available in person at Catfish Books in Lakeport and Lower Lake Coffee Co. in Lower Lake.
- Shannon Tolson
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Second Sunday Cinema features 'The Secret of Oz' Dec. 12
Doors open at 5:30 p.m. and the film starts at 6 p.m. at the Clearlake United Methodist Church at 14521 Pearl Ave., Clearlake.
This is no children’s movie. This documentary takes a fascinating and penetrating look at a root cause of the current financial misery suffered by so many of us and our country.
The “secret” is simply that our money is printed by the privately owned Federal Reserve rather than the Federal government.
If our money were printed by the government, rather than being borrowed from The Fed, no interest would have to be paid – and untold gazillions of dollars would be saved.
As it is, we are in the hands of bankers, who were as self-serving a century ago as they are now.
Consider this breathtakingly candid quote from a banker’s letter in 1891 to his fellow banksters: “On Sept. 1st 1894 we will not renew our loans under any consideration. On Sept. 1st we will demand our money. We will foreclose. We can take two-thirds of the farms west of the Mississippi as well, at our own price ...” (From the American Bankers’ Association, as printed in the Congressional Record, 1913.)
Frank L Baum’s children’s book expresses his concerns over the same issue in a code featuring the yellow brick road, Dorothy’s originally silver slippers, the Emerald City – and that little man behind the camera. Rarely has monetary policy been so gripping – and so very pertinent.
Creating our own local currency is one very positive solution to this problem. SSC is delighted to report that a speaker from Transition Lake County who heads up the TLC Local Currency working group will be speaking after the film.
For more information call 707-279-2957.
- Editor
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Winter band concert planned for Dec. 14
The event will feature music students from grades sixth through eighth.
The program will be on stage at the MAC auditorium, Lange Street, Lakeport.
Admission is free.