Monday, 30 September 2024

Arts & Life

LAKEPORT – Faded At Four will host its own Halloween Eve Frightfest on Friday, Oct. 30.

The event will take place at TJ's Downtown Bar and Grill at 370 S. Main St. in Lakeport.

Halloween isn't just for kids, and there will be Halloween treats the night before the ghosts and goblins come knocking at your door.

Get out your costume, dress up and come rock with us at TJ's in Lakeport.

There will be a costume contest, drawings and great music.

The fun will start at 9:30 p.m. The event is limited to those aged 21 and over.

There will be a $5 cover charge.

 Image

 

 


UPPER LAKE – A music CD release party will be held on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 25, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Lake County Wine Studio on Main Street Upper Lake for the Lake County band Paris & Frindt & Friends.


The album is entitled “Blues Moon” and contains 10 original songs written by Janis Paris and Paul Frindt.


The CD will be played at the event, along with background music compiled by music connoisseur Morrie Powazek.


Hors d’oeuvres, coffee and tea will be furnished, and wine tastings are available at $1 apiece (glasses of wine are available at varying prices).

 

“Blues Moon” was recorded in Paris and Frindt’s home studio and mixed/mastered by Bobby Cochran at Laughing Coyote Productions in Potter Valley.


The album features many talented local artists – the friends in “Paris & Frindt & Friends” – and the music is a combination of light rock and blues.


Paris and Frindt freely admit to being influenced by music from the 70s, and in live performance do more than a few classics from this era – a sound the couple laughingly calls “geezer pop.” The public is invited to this event; for more information, phone 707-998-0249.

 

The street on the block First to Second is scheduled to be dug up Wednesday through Friday. Folks should plan on parking on First Street and previous block of Main Street between Washington and First as they come up from Highway 20.


For those that want to avoid Main Street altogether, they should turn North up Mendenhall and make a right onto First street and park on First or Sabini (west of Main Street, Sabini wraps from First back down to Mendenhall).

 

If Main Street parking on the Washington Street to First looks full, folks can turn right onto Washington which then curves left up to First Street on the east side of Main.

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – The 100-year-old California Writers Club invites everyone to submit predictions on the future of print media, for inclusion in a time capsule to be opened in 2035 on the occasion of Mark Twain’s bicentennial.


What will we be reading in 2035? Will we still have conventional newspapers, magazines and books? Will we still have e-books, or will something have come along to replace them? What impact will state-of-the-art technology have on news reporting? On fiction and nonfiction? Short stories and poems? Reference works and other resources? Memoirs and love letters? What collateral effect will it have on the various aspects of daily life?


“It seems hard to believe, but that year will just about mark the mid-century point for the Internet,” said California Writers Club president Casey Wilson. “This isn’t a contest. We’re not holding our breath for deathless prose. We just want to collect people’s thoughts now and, in 2035, see how accurately they predicted what it would actually be like.”


The CWC will receive submissions through Aug. 25, 2010 (174th birthday of Bret Harte, one of California’s first great storytellers).


Anyone interested in participating should mail his or her essay to California Writers Club, P.O. Box 484, Ridgecrest, CA 93556, and include the author’s name, age, address, and permission to publish all or part of the essay when the capsule is opened.


California had only been a state for about 50 years when Jack London and some of his friends started their informal get-togethers. These gatherings became the California Writers Club, the oldest professional writing organization in the West. Today the CWC has more than 1200 members in 18 branches throughout the state.


The organization encourages everyone to check www.calwriters.org periodically for membership information and updates on branch and centennial activities.

LAKE COUNTY – October is a big month for the Lake County Arts Council.


On Wednesday, Oct. 28 we will hold our 28th annual meeting, and once again Tulip Hill will graciously host the meeting from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the winery.


Lake County Poet Laureate Mary McMillan will open the meeting with a reading of one of her poems, and we will be entertained by that maestro of the keyboard, David Neft. The arts council will provide a ham so bring whatever goodies you think will complement this evening's potluck celebration.


The auction of Joan Holman's photography brought in some additional dollars to the coffers, but not what we had anticipated in spite of the hours that Xian Yeagan and Bert Hutt put into organizing the event and the presence of Joan's stepdaughter, Heidi Holman at the auction.


Compliments to the Soper-Reese Committee on the fine job that they did in orchestrating the first dinner-dance fundraiser at the Soper-Reese. The atmosphere was out of the ordinary and conducive to dancing to the big band sounds of John Parkinson. It was a delightful evening, due to the hard work and dedication of this well directed committee. Thank you!


Carol Dobusch's acting class 200 from Mendocino College is progressing well with 20 plus aspiring actors/actresses in attendance. We are fortunate to have this opportunity to partner with the college in this educational effort in promoting the arts.


Mendocino College is a big plus to our community, providing us with many avenues for expressions in dance, theater, education and ultimately dollars to the community. I personally support the college remaining and expanding in Lakeport and would encourage that commitment from this board.


The gallery continues to grow and offer better shows each month. Richard Seisser's pastel class continues to draw in new students along with the faithful who have been taking the class for 18 months. Visitors to the gallery are always interested and curious in the goings-on. Diana Liebe is also offering a watercolor class on Monday mornings.


With the aid of the technical grant awarded us by the California Arts Council, Ginger Ingersoll and I will be attending a professional grant development workshop in Portland in November. We look forward to coming back with new skills and new ideas on how to further the efforts of the arts council.


The gallery also participated in a sidewalk sale with other downtown merchants and sponsored by the Main Street Association and continue to work with them in other avenues of development in Lakeport.


Halloween is around the corner and the gallery will remain open late, along with other merchants, to provide goodies and surprises to trick or treaters. Come in costume and enjoy the fun.


My thanks to so many who make the Lake County Arts Council such a special association to many people in so many avenues. It's your energy and spirit that continue moving us forward. Now onward to even more successes in our upcoming 29th year.


Shelby Posada is executive director of the Lake County Arts Council.

 Image

 

 


Salem Witch Judge, by Eve LaPlante.

(NY: HarperCollins, 2007. 352 pp. $25.95, ISBN 978-0-06-078661-8)

Biography/American History


One of the fiercest criticisms leveled against politicians comes when they are perceived to “flip-flop.” It is a common strategy to display an incumbent candidate’s voting record on an issue “then” and “now,” implying that because they flip-flopped they cannot be trusted, but is that what flip-flops prove?


Eve LaPlante’s book “Salem Witch Judge: The Life and Repentance of Samuel Sewall” tells a different tale. Sewall is one of the many judges who participated in the 1692 Salem Witch Trials, and she quotes from this politician’s diary, “Men think ‘tis a disgrace to change their mind … But there is not a greater piece of folly than not to give place to right reason.”


Sewall knew what he was talking about; he was the only judge from the Salem Witch Trials to ever publicly repent of his part in the hysteria.


The opening chapters unfold slowly and may be tedious for those not passionate about American history, but they effectively lay the groundwork to understand the mind set of 17th century New Englanders in such a way that you can almost understand how things got so bad.


How bad was it in 1692 New England? “In total 185 people – 141 women and 44 men – were accused of witchcraft. Of the 59 people tried, 31 were convicted and 20 were executed,” LaPlante writes.


Somewhere around 50 people confessed, several (including children) under torture, to escape the death penalty. What may surprise the reader is how forward thinking the judges thought themselves to be!


Judge Hathorne (the great-great grandfather to Nathaniel Hawthorne, author of “The Scarlet Letter,” whose deep shame at his ancestor’s involvement caused him to change the spelling of his last name) was particularly proud of the proceedings because they weren’t using the European method of testing witches by “tying a suspect’s thumbs to her toes and throwing her into deep water.” In Europe, those who floated would be executed as witches, those who drowned were posthumously declared innocent.


As the book unfolds the reader is captivated by the struggle of Judge Sewall as he begins to doubt the righteousness of the trials and then to grieve with him as he comprehends the true evil he participated in.


Though his public confession in 1694 is a turning point, Judge Sewall realizes that true repentance is a process, not a one time action.


The process leads him to write on many topics considered to be “firsts” in defending the rites and privileges of others. He is the first to publish a booklet against slavery in America, which stops not at abolition but argues for racial equality (no he didn’t own any slaves)!


A popular question of the age was whether or not women would be in heaven after resurrection “since they were no longer needed.” He wrote in his diary how the very question “irritated him” and wrote a book, “Talitha Cumi,” that defended women’s place as partners in creation and equal before God.


His writings on the environment have been compared to Emerson and Thoreau and called a “harbinger of the environmental movement.”


Sewall’s “flip-flop” seems sensible to us but he was shunned by his fellow judges when he made his confession and he was not exonerated by historians in own time even though he had confessed.


When the madness stopped and the histories began to be recorded almost 30 years later Sewall was shocked to find entries about himself as a Salem Witch Judge in David Neal’s 1720 book, “History of New England to 1700.”


They may not be popular but perhaps what we need today are more politicians like Sewall, ready to flip-flop when reasons demands.


“Salem Witch Judge” should be required reading for every American public servant.


Geri Williams is a local book fancier.

Upcoming Calendar

14Oct
14Oct
10.14.2024
Columbus Day
31Oct
10.31.2024
Halloween
3Nov
11Nov
11.11.2024
Veterans Day
28Nov
11.28.2024
Thanksgiving Day
29Nov
24Dec
12.24.2024
Christmas Eve

Mini Calendar

loader

LCNews

Award winning journalism on the shores of Clear Lake. 

 

Newsletter

Enter your email here to make sure you get the daily headlines.

You'll receive one daily headline email and breaking news alerts.
No spam.
Cookies!

lakeconews.com uses cookies for statistical information and to improve the site.

// Infolinks