April 2012

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On Friday nights, square dancing locals gather amidst vintage union posters and shelves of Socialist literature. This unusual dance hall is the Niebyl-Proctor Marxist library, which plays host to the bi-monthly North Oakland Square Dance. Its well scuffed dance floor comes alive with old-time music by the Squirrelly String Band, playing “scratchy old mountain music” on fiddle, guitar, banjo, and wash-tub bass.

Fiddle player David Murray says the square dance started as a way for the band to play more old-time music together. It has since become wildly successful, with numbers swelling to 80 or more in recent months. For this lively, all-ages crowd, the dress code leans toward plaid shirts and cowboy boots but is by no means de rigueur. On a recent Friday evening, I found myself swinging skinny jean-wearing hipsters, a beer-bellied man in a Hawaiian shirt, and a girl in a black tutu. A handful of mohawked punks even burst in and enthusiastically square-moshpitted for half a tune.

Even if you don’t know do-re-mi from do-si-do, square dancing is first-timer friendly. The first dances of the night begin with the basics. For example, caller Jordan Ruyle breaks down the Allemande into two steps: first join left hands in “arm wrestling” position and then walk around in a tight circle with your partner. As the evening progresses, Jordan adds new moves to get you dancing in elegant patterns — or giggling tangles, depending on how many left feet you own.

The Squirrelly String Band thumps and fiddles with square dance caller Jordan Ruyle.

Another common square dance call is the promenade — crossing hands and traveling side-by-side with your partner. While you can promenade within your square, the fun comes when you break away to “promenade all around the room.” You then join up to form a new square, dancing the pattern you just learned with new couples. The genius of course is if you are partnered with a cute boy or girl, you take them with you to the next square — whereupon you meet other cute boys and girls to dance with in the next tune.

The band ends the evening with a waltz. As charming couples glide around the room, the rest of us pair up to execute the side-to-side slow dance shuffle fondly remembered from middle school. Afterwards, everyone stays to chat, pick up empty cans of Tecate, and take down Christmas lights. As the little Marxist library shuts its doors for the night, the squaredancers put on their coats and get back to being students, architects, teachers, gardeners and, well, old-time musicians. Still, you can hear a faint a whoop and a holler as they walk or bike home down Telegraph Avenue. We’re all looking forward to the next dance, just two weeks away.

North Oakland Squaredance
$5-10 Donation
8-10pm First and Third Fridays
Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library
6501 Telegraph Avenue

SQUIRRELLY STRINGBAND | scratchy old mountain music
More information at: http://www.squirrellystringband.com/

Guest blogger Ginger Jui is a graduate student in Integrative Biology. She also blogs at www.flamingbike.wordpress.com.

(Article by Liz Boatman in The Berkeley Science Review, abridged by TBG. For the full article click here)

This past Saturday, I rose early donned my best work clothes and boots to join eight of my fellow graduate students and two rangers in a morning event that could best be described as “trashy.”

The rangers, from the East Bay Regional Parks District, spent three long hours in the warm morning sunshine recovering trash from the Emervyille Crescent Shoreline, which is a part of the Eastshore State Park network.

This special shoreline cleanup event was organized by the new Community Outdoor Cleanup and Outreach (COCO) project, funded and sponsored by the Graduate Assembly (GA) of UC Berkeley.

The new COCO project is the culmination of a year’s worth of effort on the part of concerned graduate student Dillon Niederhut, the GA delegate from Anthropology, and the GA Community Outreach Workgroup that he was pivotal in founding. This cleanup was COCO’s first event, largely organized by Christopher Klein, the GA delegate from Astronomy.

We cautiously invaded the marshy tidal wetland site under park ranger supervision. We only covered a fraction of the full shoreline — but we also extracted an entire truckload of trash in the process. The majority of the trash was plastic and styrofoam fragments, which are sufficiently low-density to float in the bay water. When tides recede, these fragments become caught in the shore area plants, and over time, massive amounts of trash accumulate. The L-shape of the Emeryville Crescent Shoreline compounds the effect, making the spot particularly adept at catching both bay and storm sewer runoff trash.

Plastic materials are relatively resistant to degradation, and when they wash up on a shoreline, they can remain there for years, often becoming incorporated into the local ecosystem. Many of the items we recovered, however, exhibited some indications of environmental degradation,
such as bleaching or embrittlement. Other items, like aluminized Capri Sun drink pouches or chip bags, had scarcely broken down despite years of exposure.

The Emeryville Crescent Shoreline is home to a variety of animal and plant species, some native and some invasive. Ice plant, in particular, has disastrously invaded not only this shoreline but many California parks to the detriment of local flora. As we worked, geese, gulls, and other shoreline birds happily fed in the low-tide muds, seemingly oblivious to the expanse of anthropogenic pollution that has invaded their home.

Interested in volunteering with the East Bay Regional Parks District? More information can be found here. The East Bay Regional Parks District takes part in the annual Shoreline Cleanup, which is scheduled for September 15 this year. Thousands of Bay Area residents participate in this annual event to help protect our bay shores. Volunteers can also participate in Berkeley’s Adopt-A-Shoreline program in which they devote time to shoreline cleanup on two or more days per year. Alternatively, groups interested in volunteering can do what COCO did and schedule a special shoreline cleanup date with the District. Special cleanup dates are escorted by rangers, who participate side-by-side and make sure the collected waste is removed at the end of the day.

Interested students can subscribe to the project’s listserv here. Keep an eye out for more COCO events next academic year.

 

If you’re a Bollywood cinephile new to Berkeley, there is some good news and some bad news. The bad news is that there are only about a dozen theatres in California that screen Indian movies. The good news is that two of them are just a short stop from Berkeley.

The first is Regal United Artists Emery Bay 10 in Emeryville, reachable by AC Transit’s 51B bus line, which is free to Cal students. The other theatre, which sometimes has more Bollywood offerings, is Big Cinemas Fremont 7, just a couple blocks from the Fremont BART station. Formerly known as the Naz 8, this theatre is known for its $5 Tuesdays. (For an unofficial listing of its Hindi movie showings visit http://mycity.sulekha.com/movies_in-and-near_berkeley-ca).

If you’ve never been to a Bollywood movie, there are three things you should know: First, Bollywood movies are long, not your typical 72-minute fare. They tend to run along the lines of three hours, so be conscious of that when you make plans.

Second, at the risk of stating the obvious, most Bollywood movies are not in English. The original Hindi, Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada, Bengali or Marathi will be subtitled in these theatres, though, so you won’t have to do much mime interpretation.

Third, Bollywood movies tend to boast (melo)dramatic storylines, beautifully vivid costumes, dashing heroes and heroines, and unforgettable musical numbers. It’s why they’re so well loved and why they’re fun to watch on the big screen.

So the next time you hear about a Bollywood movie that’s taken Mumbai by storm, gather your friends and come out to a theatre near you.

UA Emery Bay Stadium 10
6330 Christie Avenue
Emeryville, CA 94608
(510) 420-0107

Big Cinemas Fremont 7
39160 Paseo Padre Pkwy
(between Capitol Ave & Walnut Ave)
Fremont, CA 94538
(510) 795-1096

 

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