Literary calendar for week of April 2
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
BLACK/KELLER: Cara Black and Rebecca A. Keller in conversation moderated by Jess Lourey. In Black’s novel “Night Flight to Paris,” Kate Rees has been dragged back into the British Secret Service by her former handler for a risky mission in Paris. Keller’s “You Should Have Known” is about retired nurse Frannie Greene who moves into a senior living apartment and makes friends with a woman married to a judge Frannie believes is implicated in the death of her beloved grandmother. Lourey’s latest novel is “The Quarry Girls.” 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 4, Once Upon a Crime, 604 W. 26th St., Mpls.EKPHRASTIC EXTRAVAGANZA!: Poets Margaret Hasse, Tish Jones, Freya Manfred and Joyce Suphen read poems they’ve written about the art and life of Tressa Sularz, a Minneapolis basket maker and fiber artist who uses ancient techniques of wicker, plaiting, coiling and twining to make things. The reading is part of an opening of Sularz’s retro...Ask Amy: Conservative man ponders preaching on gender
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
Dear Amy: I am a 60-year-old conservative Catholic male.I believe that gender is determined by physiology, not psychology. I don’t believe transitioning to another gender is the answer to gender dysphoria. My views about transitioning and giving puberty-blocking drugs to youths are in line with my very conservative perspective.My best friend “Martin’s” child (born male) is transitioning to female. She’s 25. Since I value Martin’s friendship, I refer to his child as “your daughter,” and I use his daughter’s new name and refer to her with female pronouns.The only advice I have given is to get a second opinion before any surgery (which is advice I would give to everyone before any surgery).Other than that, I provide Martin with emotional support, and I keep my mouth shut about my opinions.Some of my church friends think that I should be preaching to Martin every day about the evils of being transgender. On the other hand, my liberal friends think I need to...Two arrested in slaying of man found burning in rural Solano County
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
Two West Sacramento residents were arrested Tuesday on suspicion of murder in connection with the discovery of a body Monday in rural Vacaville.On Monday, callers reported a fire in a field near Elmira Road and Tulip Street, Solano County Sheriff’s officials said. Responding fire crews subsequently discovered a burned body.Investigators determined the remains were of a man who suffered severe head and facial injuries and burns over much of his body. Originally listed as a John Doe, the victim has been identified as Theodore Washington, 35, of Sacramento.Using Flock Safety cameras, detectives identified a vehicle suspected to be involved in the death. Later that night, the vehicle was located on West Capitol Avenue and stopped by West Sacramento Police. Solano deputies responded to the scene.Related ArticlesCrime and Public Safety | Redwood City police seek information after fatal hit-and-run crash involving bicyclist Crime and Public Safety | East Bay man ...California’s tough, fast-growing, drought-tolerant golden wildflower, the poppy
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
California poppies are common along Marin’s rocky slopes, bluffs and roadsides. The California poppy, Eschscholzia californica, is a tough, fast-growing, drought-tolerant, self-seeding California native wildflower. It is indigenous to western North America.In 1816, a ship from the Imperial Russian Navy arrived in San Francisco Bay. Aboard was a Russian naturalist named Adelbert von Chamisso. He wrote about the California poppy he saw in the Presidio, giving it the name Eschscholzia californica after his friend Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz, a physician on the ship.Early Spanish settlers called the plant “copa del oro,” or cup of gold, after a legend that said the petals filled the soil with gold.In 1903, the California poppy became the official state flower of California. Perhaps it represented the “fields of gold” sought during the Gold Rush. It is commonly seen blooming in spring and summer along country roads and freeways, rocky slopes, maritime bluffs and dunes, making i...Protesters demand action in probe of controversial arrest in Marin County
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
Demonstrators rally at San Rafael City Hall in support of Julio Jimenez Lopez, who they allege was the victim of police brutality last summer, during a Cesar Chavez Day rally in San Rafael on Friday, March 31, 2023. Demonstrators marched from the Marin Civic Center and Pickleweed Park calling for Marin County District Attorney Lori Frugoli to criminally charge the officers involved. (Sherry LaVars/Marin Independent Journal)Emilio Pineda, center, and other marchers head up D Street to a rally in support of Julio Jimenez Lopez, who demonstrators allege was the victim of police brutality last summer, during a Cesar Chavez Day rally at City Hall in San Rafael on Friday, March 31, 2023. (Sherry LaVars/Marin Independent Journal)Organizer Cesar Lagleva applauds a speaker during a Cesar Chavez Day rally at San Rafael City Hall in San Rafael on Friday, March 31, 2023. (Sherry LaVars/Marin Independent Journal)Marchers arrive at a Cesar Chavez Day rally outside San Rafael City Hall in support ...State pursues receivership for Big Basin Water
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
BIG BASIN — After years of unreliable service, code violations and failures to respond to regional authorities in a timely manner, the California Water Resources Control Board Division of Drinking Water says it has engaged the Office of Enforcement to begin the process of pursuing a receivership for Big Basin Water Co.According to a letter sent by the control board to the company’s private owners Jim and Shirley Moore in late February, the company has been falling short of its duty to consistently provide safe, potable water to its customers in the Santa Cruz Mountains.“BBWC (Big Basin Water Company) is not currently satisfying that obligation as it does not have the technical, managerial, and financial capacity to operate a public water system, and it is unresponsive to the rules and orders of the Division,” wrote Office of Enforcement attorney Laura Mooney in the letter.Mooney concluded the seven-page report by stating: “In our view, a receiver should be appointed to assume posses...Many electric vehicles to lose big tax credit with new rules effective this month
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
By Tom Krisher, Fatima Hussein and Matthew Daly | The Associated PressFewer new electric vehicles will qualify for a full $7,500 federal tax credit later this year, and many will get only half that, under rules proposed Friday by the U.S. Treasury Department.The rules, required under last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, are likely to slow consumer acceptance of electric vehicles and could delay President Joe Biden’s ambitious goal that half of new passenger vehicles sold in the U.S. run on electricity by 2030.The new rules take effect April 18 and are aimed at reducing U.S. dependence on China and other countries for battery supply chains for electric vehicles.Electric vehicles now cost an average of more than $58,000, according to Kelley Blue Book, a price that’s beyond the reach of many U.S. households. The tax credits are designed to bring prices down and attract more buyers. But $3,750, half the full credit, may not be enough to entice them away from less-costly gasoline-powered...This drought-tolerant plant is eye-catching and easy to grow
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
My amole (Beschorneria yuccoides) is blooming and as it is adjacent to the sidewalk, passersby stop and stare. There really is no parallel to amole in the plant kingdom and it is seldom seen – although it is ridiculously easy to grow, being stoutly drought tolerant.The flower is incredibly unique and evokes Audrey, the carnivorous plant in “Little Shop of Horrors.” Each flower stalk can grow up to six feet in length with small pendant flower clusters appearing every few inches as each section of the stalk opens up. Although related to yuccas and agaves, amole foliage is soft and smooth. And although it produces pups like agaves do, it is not monocarpic; that is, it does not die after flowering but persists for years.In the language of the Aztecs, “amole” means detergent or soap and refers to the fact that this plant’s roots, in the manner of agave and yucca roots generally, have cleansing properties. San Marcos Growers has four types of Beschorneria in stock; to find a nursery near ...California attorney claims husband pressured her to gamble millions owed to loan company
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
A Newport Beach attorney who allegedly scammed a lender out of $10.2 million in 2022 to fund a six-month stay at a swanky Las Vegas resort where she frequented casinos around-the-clock now claims her husband pressured her to gamble millions in an effort to win enough to repay the loans.Sara Jacqueline King, 39, who operates King Family Lending and is a partner of the King Reuben law firm, was sued in February by LDR International Limited, based in the British Virgin Islands, for breach of contract, fraud and theft.LDR International allegedly extended 97 loans to King Lending for third-party borrowers from January to October 2022. The borrowers’ loans purportedly were secured by collateral that included luxury automobiles, boats, yachts, jewelry, watches, valuable coins, and earnings from guaranteed professional sports contracts.However, in each instance, King allegedly provided LDR International with phony title documents, appraisals, photographs, and contracts, as well as proof of ...The Queen Mary is officially open for public tours — sparking excitement about what’s to come
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:58:58 GMT
Tour guide Paul Knox talks about engine room 2 on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023, as visitors board the Queen Mary in Long Beach on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)Tour guide Paul Knox tells visitors about the aft steering area on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023, as visitors tour the Queen Mary in Long Beach for the first time in about three years on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)Visitors tour one of the engine rooms on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023, aboard the Queen Mary in Long Beach on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)A youngster mans the aft steering wheel during a tour of the Queen Mary in Long Beach on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)Visitors tour one of the engine rooms on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023, aboard the Queen Mary in Long Beach on Saturday, Apr. 1, 2023. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)Visitors to...Latest news
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