Palo Alto Free Press website covers Grand Jury report about 27 Uni

And my response:
Good story, Chad. Another point about 27 University is it is actually simultaneous with 456 University potentially back-online as a place for public events: City of Palo Alto staff actually took what they were hearing from residents about wanting leadership to work with the landlord (not Arrillaga) at The Varsity Theatre and suggested to Arrillaga that his massive office towers monument would go over better with Theatreworks as the poster-boy, or patsy or whatever you want to call it.

There are relatively fewer people these days passionate about the fate of 456 University and what government could or should do to enact the people’s will, but the historical context is that in the 1990s thousands of citizens signed a petition trying to urge City Council to not grant the zoning change that resulted, for 15 years or so, in a retail use for the historic Theatre.

The Grand Jury report of June 6, 2014 finds there is corruption involving one developer and two deals, but it remains to be seen how widespread is the rot or what anyone can do about it.

Not sure why you picture the editor of a local paper here, but the local press — the Weekly, the Post and to a lesser extent the Daily News — were cheerleaders of the project in their real-time coverage of it and certainly not aware and were not looking for any pattern of secret dealings or corruption. They under-play the report, in my opinion.

Who are taking credit for being the whistle-blowers? (I don’t blame them for being discrete).

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Pablo Cruise Palo Alto roots

Pablo Cruise was all over the radio in 1977 “Place in the Sun”.
Years later it was Gil Draper of Draper’s Music who hipped me to the fact that the band had Palo Alto roots.

Here is a glib from People Magazine of the time, although it actually describes the band as part of the Marin County scene.

Pablo’s roots go back to the Greek-descended (Corey) Lerios’ band at Palo Alto H.S. His classmate Steve Price signed on as a roadie (because he owned a van), then switched to drums. After brief passes at college, they joined with Jenkins (originally from Ypsilanti, Mich. and the group’s only non-Californian) in a San Francisco band called Stone-ground. They split off to form Pablo Cruise in 1973, working at first for $25 a night and, in Jenkins’ case, surviving on food stamps. The fourth member, Day, who once played in a high school band with Carlos Santana, joined in 1977.

I got onto this today because Terry and I plan to ride our Schwin’s to Rinconada Park at 7 to hear AJ Crawdaddy band, part of the City of Palo Alto Twilight Series, that features Angelo Rossi, who is also from Palo Alto and apparently an associate since the old school days of Lerios and Price and played with Pablo Cruise in 1981-1982. His site says he is now a realtor in Woodside. All close enough for the Palo Alto Rock and Roll Archive that exists only 1) in my head 2) in Plastic Alto and 3) maybe or maybe not in Steve Staiger’s desk, or at the archive of Palo Alto Historical Association, at Cubberley, three doors down from where “The Wave” took place.

One of the possible positive outcomes of the 2014 Palo Alto City Council elections would be the actual enactment of the Palo Alto Rock and Roll Archive, and maybe an exhibit and series of events at Palo Alto History Museum, at old Palo Alto Clinic Park, near Heritage Park (which itself needs to be re-named). Karen Holman, probably running for re-election despite her failure to clearly separate from the corruption at 250 Hamilton (Grand Jury Report, 6/6/14), is or was in leadership with the effort to develop the old clinic as a cultural historical site.

Here is Pablo Cruise on Kirshner 1977 circa:

And here is Angelo Rossi pka AJ Crawdaddy at Club Fox recently:

Not to be a hater but I wonder if these types of bands are “buy-ons” meaning they pay to play at the Rinconada Park or do we the taxpayers pay them to perform for us? In the case of Moonalice, the band fronted by big-time VC and music nut — of not unnoteworthy chops — Roger McNamee if we paid them rather than the other way around we are suckers. And I just checked to find that Moonalice as part of the annual Twilight Series may have only been a two-year run, in 2011 and 2012 — both post-dating Suzanne Warren’s long-time curation of the series. I do recall stopping McNamee in 2011 post-hit  to ask him to get involved with the Save the Varsity Part 2 campaign — he is part of ownership of the group that runs Slims and GAMH or was.

I would much rather give the gig to someone between the ages of 18 and 30 and not over 60. But I also, if I am not painting myself into a corner, believe in paying union wages or a modified version to all performers at City Sponsored or city-produced or co-sponsored events, $75 per service (90 minutes) for individuals and $150 for a group. My understanding or lasts I checked the Sunday farmers market on Cali Ave pays their performers a flat $35. Maybe I am like the Indian guy crying in the old pollution ads but when I go to these events it is more to contemplate what could be and not to groove or rock out.

Meanwhile, and as a type of add-on, when Terry and I got back from our week in LA-LA, Nielson Buchanan we saw at Sally Rudd’s moving sale and he was holding the local newspaper that said that former Planning and Transportation Commissioner Eduardo Martinez had died, of cancer, at 67. I did not know him well but will remember that when I applied for PATC he sent a note to me (and I presume the other candidates) thanking us and offering to follow up with us with other concerns. I would say that reaching out and even acknowledging fledgling activists and candidates is a rarity here; mostly leadership and the Establishment circle the wagons and fold their arms. (The other exception: Gary Fazzino).

The title would overstate my respect for Martinez or condolensce to his family and friends but I did see Carlos Santana play an acoustic version of this, at Bill Graham’s public memorial, at SF’s Sherith Israel or Emmanuel, and he said it was based on a Yiddish melody, taught by Graham to him:

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Lonnie is the tops in Cleveland

 

O Lord Lonnie, we bow down
To a man we once called Clown
So so bad he was last year
A demotion seemed quite clear

Somehow he stayed with the team
Filling in, he kept his dream
Quietly, his average rose
Less at-bats the trick, I s’pose

Playing more, his high marks stuck
Soon seemed like ’twas more than luck
“Chisenhall,” his name called oft
Batting average stayed aloft

Monday was his night of nights
His output could power lights
T.J. House, the rookie, faltered
While the record books were altered

Our Lord Lonnie, starting mellow
Singled to bring in one fellow
Then the hits kept coming strong
Three of them were hit quite long

In the end, he plated nine
One their pitchers, he would dine
Others would add to the rout
None, though, could get near his clout.

 That’s by Eric Hanson, the Cleveland Indian bard, (Tribelines) and here it is translated to mere sports-writerish:

Third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall had nine runs batted in and three home runs in a five-hit game, Michael Brantley scored five times and the visitingCleveland Indians beat the Texas Rangers, 17-7, on Monday night.

The only other nine-R.B.I. game in Cleveland history was by Chris James in a 20-6 victory for the Indians on May 4, 1991, against Oakland.

Chisenhall had two-run homers in the second and fourth innings before hitting a three-run shot down the right-field line in the eighth to give the Indians a 17-6 lead.

Which do you prefer, the poetry, natch?

Chisenhall meanwhile is poised to become the first Indian since Samsom Occum I mean Bobby Avila in 1954 to lead the loop in batting percentage. He’s at .342 as of 9:33 Sunday

Posted in music, sports, words | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Mahna Mahna break from World Cup semis

World Cup action at NoLa, Palo Alto, but texting D.F.

World Cup action at NoLa, Palo Alto, but texting D.F.

Watching taped versions of France-Germany and Brazil-Colombia made me want to post as an interstice Cake “Mahna Mahna” which I took as a tropicalia cover.

Its actually an Italian song about a Swedish soft core porn movie.

Many people think it started with the Muppets.

It had runs with Red Skelton and Benny Hill.

I was crossing it with “Bat Makumba>Batman” — which is definitely Brazilian.

But maybe in some weird player to be named later logic, with White Stripes “7 Nations” being a big football soccer chant, the Philiadelphia Union of MLS and their Sons of Ben fans do a version of Mahna Mahna.

This has 48 Million views:

I’m wondering about my ears can we segue to Os Mutantes?

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Plastic Alto and Ran-Ham Bowl, St. Paul

ranhambowlThe masthead of Plastic Alto, a blog comprising 750 posts since 2010, pictures Mark Weiss bowling at Ran Ham Bowl in St. Paul. The photo is by Terry Acebo Davis. Mark’s cousin, Isaac Blumfield, had a gig in the adjoining room, The Souldiers — a band Mark wanted to manage on condition of the name being changed to the Mouldiers, in honor of Bob Mould. This was fall, 2009, an era that Mark recalls as during the first run of “A Serious Man” which he took in earlier that day; he also recalls wandering thru a Ted Leo / Dessa Doomtree show at Macalester College commons, about 1.4 miles away.

Mark says he doesn’t remember his score, but is fairly sure he did not sprain an ankle, aggravate a left inguinal pre-hernia, irritate L-4 to L-6 lumbar and discs, especially not on the right side, nor strain his tricep. He does recall, in 1981, squaring off against Jerry (brother of Danny) Scher in league action at Fiesta Lanes — and this was years before certainly Souldiers but also The Big Lebowski — rolling a 217 and “high handicap 279” to win a trophy in league action. Not a perfect game, but close enough for horse shoes.

midway

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My grand slam (Plastic Alto v. Palo Alto Weekly)

I spoke below about scooping the Palo Alto Weekly four times recently:

1. Karen Holman “company-town”scoop

2. Happy Donuts maguffinduck

3. Gunn graffiti hate crime as prayer “Thank God…”frank

4. More office space proposed for The Varsity

racoonart by Russ Keith Kawaii (Cute N Kawaii)

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Palo Alto graffiti artist in dubious battle

Note: I started this post as a note-pad on the mid-May incident at Gunn High, a 17-year-old charged for possible “hate crime graffiti”. The student newspaper, The Oracle, (of which I was editor in chief, or co-editor-in-chief, my junior and senior years) reported that one message said “thank god lobos is leaving” referring to re-assigned Principal Villalobos, Katya. Note the term “thank god”.

I wrote to Police Chief Dennis Burns two weeks later and two weeks ago asking to learn the content of the messages. No response yet, although I did run into Burns that same day around town and he said he got my message.

I do not condone graffiti or the idea of attacking an ethnic group with words. But I question the very notion of “graffiti hate crime” and am assuming the young person innocent until proven guilty.

The following are my notes preliminary to writing Burns and publishing previous post in Plastic Alto. Excuse the disorganization of ideas. It’s more like a list of topics than a flowing paragraph and essay.

I hope to hear back from Zach Perron or to continue to research this topic. I also visited the school on the first day of summer and have reason to believe I sighted the person in question and his parents. I think they were leaving the Administration Office right before I went in, so we passed each other — they were not known to me, other than I am guessing who they are but not their names.

 

 

I am curious about the continuum from dissent to vandalism. When a 17-year-old boy writes, among other statements, “Thank God…” and ends up in the justice system, for possible hate crimes and felony vandalism, makes me wonder. I am not condoning hurtful words to members of historically subject groups — or individuals — but I also am putting the May 17, 2014 incident at Gunn High School, my alma mater, into recent context.

In 2008, the Palo Alto Police Chief Lynne Johnson resigned after admitting the instructed her officers to profile blacks.

As reported in the Chronicle, by Demien Bulwa.

I sat thru some of the public hearings on the matter and found the mothers’ pleading for better treatment for their children, and the end to profiling, to be pretty compelling and believable.

I have two sources for my understanding of the most recent case: 1) the Palo Alto Weekly article by Chris Kenrick, and 2) the Gunn student newspaper Oracle coverage. The Weekly relies pretty heavily on the Gunn story, and in my opinion did a shoddy and unprofessional job, and maybe should have held back until they got their facts straight.

That a police officer calls the graffiti “racist” does not mean the accused has done anything wrong. His views (Lt. Zach Perron) probably should not have been made public.

I walked the Gunn campus Tuesday to get some sense of what might have gone down. I think I see one place, on the new math building, where patches are painted over.

According to the student newspaper, one of the messages thanked God that the principal was resigning or being relocated.

Aren’t these messages, to an extent, expressions of political belief, and thereby afforded Constitutional protection?

If it starts “Thank God…” could everything after be considered a type of prayer?

If the person who created these messages is, as I suspect, or as my intuition and not-uneducated guess, tells me, turns out to be a member of either a lower socio-economic class or a minority himself, or herself, does that mitigate or contextualize the charges that he or she is “racist” or “sexist”?

I don’t think being black, for example, gives one the right to denigrate, for example Jews, but it is, to my mind, a different matter than the historic situation of blacks in America as a minority being subject, in some instances, to intimidation and hate messages but sub-groups comprised mainly of majority whites.

Also, there is the matter of when should a minor be treated as an adult, in the justice system.

According to research at places like Southern Poverty Law Center, in Dallas, and Equal Justice Initiative in Birmingham, Alabama our justice system seems to have flaws that incorporate difference in class. Further, even 50 years later we have not fully administered Gideon v. Wainright (rights of the accused, to fair trial, to competent defense). See Stevenson.

I wonder to what extent the Gunn graffiti incident is like Allen Ginsberg “Howl” which has it rough spots, the 1957 poem, but over all has redeeming social value.

Is the Gunn Vandal entitled to some fair comment?

Is he commenting on the relative value of the new math building (called, by the way The N Building, as in The N word)?

Is he saying that he thinks athletics is over-emphasized, even at Gunn (famous for losing to Paly, and losing blue chip athletes to cross-town transfers)?

Is he friends with the anonymous artist whose work in a political art show I likened to Enrique Chagoya?

I will be disappointed if, when I get a chance to see the actual evidence, to learn the content of these utterances, I have to retract my provisional support, this plea for leniency.

But at this point, based on what is generally known, I am disappointed in Chris Kenrick and her editors (Bill Johnson, Joceyln Dong) for their coverage, and in Officer Zach Perron. Did they fan the flames of class warfare, or engage in sensationalism.

Officer Perron, in effect, speaks for me, for We The People, so in my opinion has much higher scrutiny. His ignorance and bias, should that turn out to be the case — let’s call it “potential bias” — under the color of authority is arguably much worse than what a poorly educated (if that is fair) 17-year-old can do or has done, with pen, paint or marker.

From the top floor balcony of Gunn’s N Building, by the way, I spied 70 yards away a fairly high level piece of graffiti/art on the water byway. It’s not legal but it’s arguably of some value, aesthetic-wise.

And keep in mind that to confuse the issue you have reformed graffiti artists, or vandals like Shepherd Fairey, David Choe and Banksy earning huge fees and commissions and impacting national issues. Is there any way we can give our local child, our student, the benefit of the doubt: maybe he is a future artistic and provocative genius that we haven’t learned to interpret yet, beyond wanting to criminalize him (or her)?

To the extent that school, in due process felt compelled to censor his message and restore the walls or roofs to a uniform and message-less hue, I think in this case the young man or men and their parents should reimburse We The People for maintenance costs, or be forced to do the repairs for us, as community service.

But I don’t think he should be further penalized because of the content of his message.

(And I’m not sure what to think of the cultural vigilantism that went on: math teacher encouraging their students to leave class to erase or alter or hide the message, accepting as out of bounds without due consideration?)

(And I am aware that the Courts have consistently ruled that, in fact, the First Amendment does not apply whole-cloth to the school environment, or to minors).

Would it be appropriate for a school to clarify, when graffiti appears, that the school does not condone the message and will endeavor to hold the creator responsible, or compel same to defend his or her work, (and leave it intact until such time)?

Certainly I would not agree to have public funds put toward a message that says “Thank God…..” — it might violate the no establishment clause.

Lynn Stegner and others have commented that dissent is more often met with official violent reaction (in the case of pepper spray to the eyes of Occupy student protest at UC Berkeley).

Noam Chomsky and Ben Bagdikian chronicle the demise of the Fourth Estate, and the tendency for the press to either enforce status quo or forward corporate and industrial and power interests. In Palo Alto, I think I see a bias for the powerful and a lack of coverage of interest to the poor, or their neighborhoods, or these types of issues.

I’ve tried to challenge the Weekly and Daily News several times to re-visit or revise their coverage of the poor, at Lytton Plaza, or in certain other cases.

In the James Franco movie “Palo Alto” there is a scene about youth cutting down a tree as a prank or statement. In 1982, vandals (and probably not artists or political activists) cut down the tree in the amphitheater, supposedly as part of a feud between rival cliques. In 1979, students named (and who could forget) Kramer, Kincheloe and Keplinger put their initials in 50 foot white lettering on the side of the  Gunn theatre.

 

See also: Nell Bernstein books on justice system, on NPR this week.

A year or two ago, the Daily Post  STET

I bought a copy of this two years ago at the Steinbeck center in Salinas:

I have this taped on my girlfriend’s TV-VCR; about five minutes in, I ran to my computer to post on this topic — this is David Choe, who I met one night when he was commissioned famously to paint an office space for an eventual start-up IPO company:

I bought this book at SFMOMA; I have not read it, just flipped thru it. I am not a graffiti artist although I have once or twice written in comments on a notice posted on Cali Avenue kiosk.

edit to add, 8 days later: While in Los Angeles, I heard a news report of a graffiti hate crime conviction in which Amos Hason, 49, was given three years in L.A. County jail for writing “Adolph was right” and “Ki__ Je___” on a fence behind a plumbing business.  I doubt the Palo Alto case the message was as targeted or as provocative and direct, inciting an action (it was ordering the reader to harm the famously subjected sub-group). Meanwhile I am still waiting for a response from Palo Alto P.D. about the Gunn case.

Posted in Plato's Republic, words | Leave a comment

How big is your hose?

$50 fire truck from Pottery Barn

$50 fire truck from Pottery Barn

Palo Alto recently spent $1.2 million on a really nice, really big fire truck. If it were up to me, and I do sometimes think of  myself as the future Mayor of Palo Alto, I would have gone with, for the same money, 24,000 small fire trucks, from Pottery Barn, the “fast, cheap and out of control theory” of MIT robotics whiz Rodney Brooks.

You can put the hoses together and put out the sun. (Wait until after dark to try this).

 

  • Removable hoses can be fitted together.

 

 

Does it come with an option on a $250,000 Dalmatian?

But seriously is this to compensate for fact that since passing Measure D to throw out the public safety collective bargaining agreement we are getting out-bid on the best and brightest fire-fighters?

How much do you want to bet that our chief can recite the features of this new toy better than he can recite his own pledge of honor? At Council the other night, in response to Mark Berman softball question about his swearing in oath, the chief said “um,,,honor and integrity or something…that was a while ago” (regarding College Terrace housing proposal and our decision to lax the fire code to build three extra houses there)

If you see smoke coming from north end of Oak Creek Apartments, that’s just me trying to figure out why, as the son and grandson of car salesman, I am NOT in the business of selling $1.2 million fire trucks.

Wouldn’t 1.2 million toy fire trucks do just as well, ala the film “Fast Cheap and Out of Control”?

edita:

The real estate ad, with a model kitchen, underneath the picture of our new “Tiller’ for a second there I mistook for the cushy interior of this land-yacht.

I do seriously respect and thank our public safety personnel but am continually mystified by the simultaneous attack on workers and hyper-investment in capital expenditures.

There is also a short story, from 2002, in Harper’s by Stanford Pulitzer Prize fiction writer Adam Johnson “Teen Sniper” imagining a fictional version of our public safety headquarters, or more specifically a SWAT team and sniper squadron and their cushy digs.

I’m the kind of guy who would rather see the $1.2 million in subsidized local housing for public safety workers, as a way to get better and better human factors here.

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Save The Varsity Act III, scene ii

Posted by Mark Weiss, a resident of Downtown North
0 minutes ago i.e. July 2, 2014 although I should really repost this on the section about “steve turner dropped a bombshell”
Mark Weiss is a registered user.
I want to know what kind of secret meetings were going on between Staff and Keenan or between Council and Keenan such that City dropped the ball or did not in earnest pursue a list of leads on finding a national-reputation concert promoter — like at Yoshis, Fillmore, Warfield, Fox Oakland, Great American / Slims, — despite Jim Keane saying “look into it”. To what extent did Chop say “don’t look into it” such that staff report says “no theatre viable in downtown”. (number #1979 in August, 2011 by Steve Emslie)

The Grand Jury report, of June 6, 2014 says that at the exact same time, fall 2011, staff and Council were meeting with John Arrillaga regarding 27 University (and a…theatre project….) and this was deemed corrupt.

Is the dealing between Keenan and leadership as corrupt as the dealing between Arrillaga and leadership?

Will it take a Grand Jury to figure this out?

Meanwhile Berkeley now has two non-profit music venues, both precedent for what, with a little more effort and a little less Junkie XL, could work at The Varsity: Freight and Salvage and The University Theatre.

And on this specific plan, WHICH SHOULD BE REJECTED, saying that a large corporation’s lunch room is the same thing as a public cafe is like saying that “building envelope” at 261 Hamilton is the same thing as moving the basement to a new upper wing (although, I am switching to a third developer). Look at the spooky surveillance hobbits or whoever they are using as lunch room on High what was Jungle Copy and TalentHaint — nothing in it for us.

What is Chop Keenan’s magic hold and sway over leadership? Is he Saruman the Great?

If it is not corrupt per se it is certainly of a quality that people here will no longer tolerate.

How corrupt is 250 Hamilton? Is the Grand Jury report an isolated event or part of a pattern?

Hilary Gittelman, new planning director, I spoke to on this exact topic this morning and assures me that I am over-reacting and everything is honky-dory. I said there is opportunity to show more definitively going forward that this is so.

edit to add, July 29:

I’ve watched local leadership fail the rank-and-file at least twice on this issue, in 1995, when 5,000 citizens signed a petition and held numerous meetings to try to Save the Varsity, and council voted (including by the way, Liz Kniss) to let Chop Keenan have a variance to convert the theatre to retail, and then in 2011 when council and staff half-heartedly sniffed around for something other than what may be inevitable: more office space.

Saying that the large software maker’s lunchroom idea fits the spirit of the law is like what we saw recently staff trying hard to define “building envelope” so as to let another of their favorite developers upzone at 261 Hamilton: it took a lot of pushback to prevent that.

I am not sure the value of fighting here — I think the values at stake at Buena Vista mobile park are more significant – people losing their homes, to support landlord greed, with our consent — but it is agendized for ARB and HRB if people want to tune in and have their say.

I spoke to one of the landlord’s consulting architects and he confirmed that the structure of the building itself has been preserved if We the People can work with the landlord to find a cultural use. I also have two white-papers written by Gary Meyer, the founder of Landmark Cinema chain, and Chops’ former tenant at 456, on converting theatre to cultural centers, as enacted in Berkeley (The University Theatre) and Vallejo (The Empress), that I am forwarding to staff.

I hold hope, albeit slim, that 456 University the historic and beloved Varsity Theatre, will come on line again. It’s an interesting litmus test on governance and our varying ideas of “property” and “community”.

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Corner Laughers ‘Midsommar’ numbar one on Plastic Alto

Corner Laughers “Midsommar’ numbar one on Plastic Alto: Or, Karla Through the Looking Glass I mean Stained Glass Window.

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