Providing kids security through blankets: Project Linus

Project LinusProject Linus LogoIn a classroom filled with first graders stood the principal, teachers, and Petaluman Jenny Giacomini, a volunteer with Project Linus. Recently a family, both parents and two young children, had been killed instantly in a needless car accident by a driver who ran a red light. These were the classmates of one of the kids, and the students were trying to come to terms with the fact that their friend was gone, and that a whole family could disappear without warning. Project Linus, a nonprofit group that provides blankets to children suffering from illness or trauma, was on hand to help in its unique way.

The principal addressed the children, asking who had heard of Charlie Brown and his friend Linus. Many hands shot up. “And what does Linus always have with him?” she asked the students, and they all chorused, “A blanket!”

Project Linus 1She said, “This lady is here to give a blanket to each of you, because a blanket makes you feel safe and warm and loved.” The kids were so excited – one boy said, “I don’t have a blanket!!” As the blankets were handed out, the teachers looking on got tears in their eyes. Upon leaving the class, a boy was seen tucking his blanket in around his neck and using it as a cape. “Good use for a blanket,” someone noted. The principal said that that boy was autistic, and she didn’t think he would accept a blanket, but he did and he was loving it.

Project Linus 6Bringing blankets to kids in need of comfort has been Jenny Giacomini’s focus for the past decade. She is the coordinator of the local chapter of Project Linus, which is a national nonprofit organization. Her chapter has handed out over 10,000 blankets since she started it in 2004.The majority of her blankets are distributed locally, throughout Sonoma County and into Marin, and occasionally farther afield when the need arises. In the event of a nationwide or worldwide catastrophe, PL headquarters will put out a call for blankets, and each chapter sends what it can; thousands of blankets can be gathered in a matter of days.

“I was looking through a woman’s magazine and saw an article on making blankets for Project Linus  and thought, ‘I can do that.’  When I went to the PL website, I saw there wasn’t a chapter around here, so I decided to try to start one,” explained Jenny. She went on to say that starting a chapter was completely outside of her comfort zone, but having recently lost her father, she was at a point in her life where she wanted to find something fulfilling and meaningful to do.

Project Linus 2Those who contribute blankets to Project Linus are dubbed “blanketeers,” and they donate their time and materials to making blankets. In Jenny’s chapter, members work on their own and drop off finished blankets at various spots around the county. Some members quilt, some knit or crochet, and some make no-sew fleece blankets, which are a popular project for youth groups learning about community service. Members of the local chapter have taken to meeting monthly at Beverly’s in Rohnert Park for blanket show-and-tell and to plan for fundraising events for the chapter, which include an annual holiday craft bazaar selling homemade crafted items and a summer yard sale of craft supplies where members can lighten their stashes and people can feed their creativity.

Project Linus is always happy to answer questions for people who would like to make blankets, and would especially like to hear from people who know of places that might like to receive blankets.

Project Linus 5“Our biggest challenge is making contact with people who know where the need is for our blankets,” said Jenny. When Jenny sees an article in the paper about a family suffering from tragedy, she tries to make contact to get blankets to the children affected. The chapter routinely gives blankets to hospitals, health centers, agencies that work with low-income families, and practices that provide support for children. The Petaluma police department also carries blankets that can be given to children with whom the officers come into contact.  Such entities, however, tend to see frequent personnel changes, and when Project Linus loses a contact person, it often loses an outlet for blankets.

“I know these people have more important things to do than let us know they need blankets, but it can be disheartening to be unable to make contact to make deliveries,” Jenny explained. She welcomes input from the public about any particular needs for blankets, whether on an ongoing or individual basis.

Project Linus 4Jenny also welcomes anyone who has any craft-related items they might want to donate to the yard sale this summer. The proceeds benefit the local chapter only and cover such expenses as postage and laundry soap. Donations of yarn and fabric are always received enthusiastically by the blanketeers as well.

For more information about Project Linus and to get ahold of Jenny, visit http://nbprojectlinus.weebly.com/contactdrop-off.html

Did You Know That #Petaluma Had A College?

As I continue to wade through the historic “golden nuggets” (documents, photographs, files) stored in the Research Library on the second floor of the Petaluma Historical Museum & Library, our local “Treasure Chest,” I discovered that there was a college located in Petaluma for four years. (No photograph available.)

On August 15th, 1866, Preparatory Department of the Petaluma College opened. Professor Mark Bailey was placed in charge. The school was open to all regardless of religious preferences, although it was under the supervision of the Baptist denomination. The program of instruction included Science, Literature, and the Arts; the same as best colleges of the United States. Students who wanted to become lawyers, doctors, or ministers, found introductory courses to those professions available at Petaluma College.

philip-sweed-school-1927-owl-dscf1981rawcroppedawebPupils were allowed to enter at any time, and each term ended with examinations. Tuition fees ranged from $3-$4/month for academic courses, and $6/month for classical and scientific classes.  Vocal music was free. A $30/month fee was charged for tuition, board, and washing, and was payable in advance; except for those students who were boarding in the Institution. They were quarterly. Women seeking a  residence were allowed to board in the College building, while men could find accommodations with private families at reasonable prices. Books and stationary was purchased in Petaluma at San Francisco prices.

The following information about Petaluma, copied from the First Annual Catalog of the Petaluma College, 1867 (p.16), states: “Petaluma is located in one of the most beautiful, picturesque, and healthful regions of the state, fifty miles by water from San Francisco. The fare by steamboat is only one dollar from San Francisco. It is accessible by steamboat and stage from all parts of the state. The city is thrifty, and rapidly growing; churches of all denominations are prosperous; and few places afford equal attractions to parents who desire to settle where they have good social, religious, and educational advantages for their children; and there are none where their children will be under better influences while pursuing their studies away from home.”

P.S. CUAS, or the California University for Advanced Studies, was established in 1984 and authorized to offer grant management degrees up to the doctorate level. It was originally located in Novato, but moved to Petaluma in 1987, where is was housed in the old Philip Sweed Elementary School on Keller Street. (Photo above.) It was reported to have an enrollment of 600 students and a faculty of 70 members. Tuition fees for the various degrees ranged from 2,400 to $3,000.

Unfortunately, after two and one-half years as a correspondence school, it was forced to shut down operation, leaving unpaid bills and tuition reimbursements. According to CUAS business manager, George S. Ryan, “the state forced the school’s closure on May 1, when officials at the Private Post-Secondary Education Division (PPSED) pulled his license to operate. The Department of Education bankrupted the school.”

This blog was originally posted on Petaluma360 on June 3, 2015.

Congrats to Petaluma High School grad Anthony Sequeira drafted to MLB Phillies

Anthony Sequeira Oral Roberts BaseballRound 23, #684 overall – Anthony Sequeira, RHP

Sequeira was the 2015 Summit League Player of the Year, hitting .341/.423/.583 for Oral Roberts, but the Phillies have drafted him as a pitcher, because he’s apparently pretty great at that, too. There’s a nice little recap here of Sequeira’s season below written by the Summit League, ORUs Sequeira named Gregg Olson Award Semifinalist:

TULSA, Okla. (oruathletics.com) – Oral Roberts baseball player Anthony Sequeira has been named a semifinalist for the Gregg Olson Award, an honor to be presented to college baseball’s breakout player of the year. The annual award is given to a top amateur baseball player who elevates his game to an elite level throughout the season.

Sequiera Oral Roberts Golden EaglesA native of Petaluma, Calif., Sequeira improved his batting average nearly 90 points from his junior year, when he batted .258. This season, Sequeira turned in a breakout season while being one of the Golden Eagles best hitters with a .341 batting average while leading the team in several offensive categories.

Sequeira was named The Summit League Player of the Year and a First-Team player at the utility position as well as a relief pitcher after leading the conference in home runs, RBI as well as saves.

The Gregg Olson Award is named after Olson, a former Auburn pitching great and two-time All American who had breakout sophomore junior seasons for the Tigers. The award was developed to honor college baseball’s success stories and showcase players like Olson who have raised the level of their game through hard work, strength of mind and determination.

Eligible players will be those who are omitted from major publication’s preseason All American prognostications; however by the end of the season their on the field performance will demonstrate that they are among the top amateur baseball players in the nation.

Ball State sophomore pitcher Scott Baker won the inaugural Greg Olson Award in 2013.

The winner of the 2014 Gregg Olson Award will be named in Omaha, Nebraska during the College World Series which is to be held this season at TD Ameritrade Park from June 15-June 25/26.

Also check out this good news: #Petaluma is Two for Two! Crosstown Grads Both Drafted To Arizona Diamond Backs in MLB Draft

Anthony SequeiraUPDATE: June 11, 2015 Oklahoma News On 6 – ORU’s Sequeira Named Finalist For Olerud Award

UPDATE: June 11, 2015 The Daily Progress: BASEBALL: ORU’s Sequeira, Whatley earn Midwest All-Region honors

VIDEO: Do You Know What The California Water Conservation Laws Mean To You?

The California drought continues.  In the video below the City of Petaluma Public Works and Utilities Department director Dan St. John and Petaluma Mayor David Glass discuss water conservation.  As many know as a result of the California drought Governor Brown implemented mandatory water cuts and conservation.  What do those laws mean to Petalumans?  This video does a good job of breaking down the new ordinances into something you can understand (what you can and can’t do).  They also talk about what City of Petaluma has done and is now ldoing to meet with  usage restrictions.

This video is about 30 minutes long, but well worth watching to the end.

Please share this with other Petalumans.

Introducing A New #Petaluma Company: YourBizFootprint.com

SmallSmallSmallLogoIn our fast growing information age it is becoming harder and harder for businesses to keep up and compete on the digital landscape. Many business owners don’t know the first thing to do – – let alone have the time – – to better enable customers to find their store or business on a PC or smart phone.

Map Pin YBFPMore and more consumers are looking for your services using their smartphones.  Most people will google your name or your business name before even meeting with you. If they can find you, they will want to check out your website and get fast and easy directions to your location.  If they can’t find you, it’s possible your competitor who as a strong local listing presence will get the business. As editor of this website, we have noticed a tremendous number of Petaluma businesses that do not have Google directory listings. Consequently, their business doesn’t show up on Google Maps (see photo to the left and you will notice blocks of business that do not show up).  This is why we started YourBizFootprint.com, a new affordable service to help business owners to get their footprint on the MAP.  We will assist your business with listings on the major directories (Google, Yahoo, Bing, etc…) and it will probably be well within your budget.

qZYnepb7_400x400In order to dominate your business presence on the internet, you also should have a good social media footprint.   Adding social is important for dominating browser searches helping your company to show up on top.  75% of people select the first hit, 20% select the 2nd hit, and 5% click on the third hit – after that it is very unlikely someone will find your store our company.  We also  have noticed a lot of companies do not have Facebook Pages or even Twitter accounts.   The more your footprint is out there, the more your brand is going to show up and be front of mind for new and existing customers.  However, again, many small business owners don’t have the time or bandwidth to even manage it.  We have created a Social Media machine that businesses can plug into.  If you don’t have the content to share, we can create it and post if for you at very affordable rates.

Google just released a warning to web developers that if your website is not responsive to work well on pads or smart devices your website will be downgraded.  Yourbizfootprint.com can also help you to create clean and simple websites that are fully responsive in design and mobile friendly.  You can test your website for yourself by going to the Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test.  These are what the result should look like for your business website.Google Bot Passes YourBizFootprint Website

 

Google Penguins and PandasIt is also very important to be actively engaged with your community and have that face-to-face interaction with potential customers. If planned properly, when you meet people in your store or business hand them your business card and ask them to follow you on Facebook or Twitter to keep up on any specials or promotions that might benefit them.

Oh yeah, and let’s not forget the pesky Google Panda and Penguin who are way out of scope to even get into a discussion here.  Just know that they are out there, and if you don’t pay attention to them they can affect your web presence without you even know it.

Give YourBiz Footprint call today at (707) 773-6002 or to learn more visit their website YourBizFootprint.com.

 

 

 

Clover Stornetta – A Petaluma Staple

Clover Logo (PRNewsFoto/Clover Stornetta Farms)
Clover Logo (PRNewsFoto/Clover Stornetta Farms)

Located in Sonoma County, California is the historic Downtown Petaluma with its citizen’s actively contributing to Petaluma’s rich culture and unique community. One of the pioneers in the agricultural industry is positively Clover as a leading and sustainable dairy farm. At the head of Clover Stornetta Farms is the original founder, Gene Benedetti, who is after decades was actively involved in the dairy industry until passing in 2006. Now his two sons and two grandsons are involved at the Clover Stornetta plant in Petaluma.

After Mr. Benedetti started, his career in the dairy industry in 1946, the Clover Stornetta farms was founded in 1977 with Benedetti enthusiastically at the head. The rich natural resources of Sonoma County are the ideal for dairy farming is something he discovered early in his dairy career. With magnificent pastureland for cows to graze and terrific climate, the Clover Stornetta Farms received the county’s first dairy award, the Free Farmed Label for their humane production of animal products.

Clo Cow At Marathon WebBorn in 1919, few realize that Gene M. Benedetti was born in Sonoma County, after his parents left Italy in 1913. At age eight, his parents bought a house in Cotati and he still lives there with his wife. A native from Petaluma, the boy completed his education at Petaluma High School, went to St. Joseph’s Church in Cotati and continue to have his first communion there, got married in the same church. A man with strong roots and christian values, his first job at a Creamery was as a field man, going out to dairy farms to get new business. He continued on to the plant where he learned to make butter, cottage cheese, pasteurization, and bottled milk.

The injection of the advertising legend of Clover Stornetta was to create CLO Cow in 1969, which became the official mascot. The idea of putting together a comical cow came from an advertising company in Santa Rosa when Benedetti wanted to put up a billboard. Although the initial reaction was to change the first cow, it remained with the company which today is the company’s brand.

CLICK PAGE 2 BELOW AND LEARN ABOUT THE HISTORY OF CLO COW BILLBOARDS, THE RECENT RELEASE OF THEIR NEW LINE OF ICE CREAM AND A ‘MOO-TUBE’ VIDEO

Kenilworth Teacher Laura Bradley Wins National Award

Laura BradleyThe Henry Ford and Litton Entertainment recently announced winners for The Henry Ford’s Innovation Nation Teacher Innovator Awards.  A Kenilworth Junior High School teacher, Laura Bradley, was selected for first place.  The award recognizes educators who are using the classroom to inspire innovation, creativity, problem solving and critical thinking among their students.

Bradley decided to apply for the Henry Ford when another teacher sent her the application and suggested she apply.  She tells us the process included making a video, plus a written application that included a description of her program and how it incorporates STEM, creativity, innovation, etc.; plus the standards that are addressed in the class; plus a reference letter.  As part of this, she was very happy a former student Sam Baeza, a 9th grader at Casa Grande, wrote a letter for her to support her application. Also she submitted her application with her Digital Media curriculum and standards. Included in her application was the Digital Media project website she had created so that her students could work independently in her class.

Dr Jessica Parker Sonoma State University
Dr. Jessica Parker, SSU

Bradley gives credit to Sonoma State University’s MA program in Education (emphasis on Ed Tech with Dr. Jessica Parker) for starting her on this path: when she started that program in 2009, she was not tech-savvy at all and her classroom had very little tech. She wrote grants for laptops and pioneered the 1:1 laptop classroom in Petaluma. Then she went to Google Teacher Academy and things developed from there.

Here’s the video she made as part of her application:

CLICK PAGE 2 TO SEE EXCERPTS FROM HER APPLICATION AND PHOTOS OF SOME OF HER 3D PROJECTS

VIDEO CBS KPIX 5: Petaluma Man Sets World Speed Record In Self-Built Car

CBS KPIX channel 5 released this video broadcast this last week on Steve Nelson of #Petaluma who has a passion for going fast. He set a land speed record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in a car he built. Wow, what a garage!

Allow a second for the video player to load

Also see this article in Petaluma’s Argus Courier September 15, 2011 “World record speed”

#Petaluma Author David Dodd chronicles Grateful Dead lyrics

You may have recently seen an article in the Argus Courier, Petaluma’s chronicler of lyrics of the Grateful Dead about David Dodd’s new book called The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics (click the link to purchase book).  In the past he also authored a book called the The Grateful Dead and the Deadheads: An Annotated Bibliography (Music Reference Collection).

Here is a complete description of this book according as provided on the internet.

When the Grateful Dead’s in-house publishing company, Ice Nine, decided that the band’s fortieth anniversary was a good time to publish their entire lyric catalog, a wave of excitement swept across the world of Deadheads, or would have had they known. What was that unclear word in “Uncle John’s Band”? Would “Revolutionary Hamstrung Blues” be included? Which Cassidy is John Barlow writing about? Would Robert Hunter reveal the meaning of anything at all? These questions are finally answered with the publication of this book, but in true Grateful Dead fashion you’ll have to dig around to find the answers and have fun doing it.

The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics is an authoritative text, providing standard versions of all the original songs so that you can win an occasional bar bet. Or not. There are songs you’ve never heard and others you’ve never heard right and still others you didn’t know existed, and some, indeed, that may not exist at all. To provide a context for this formidable body of work, of which his part is primary, Robert Hunter has written a foreword that goes to the heart of the matter.

These are some of the best-loved songs in the modern American songbook. You will hear them hummed and spoken among tens of thousands as counterculture code and recorded by musicians of all stripes for their inimitable singability, mysterious presence, and obscure accessibility. How do they do all this? The annotations on sources provide a gloss on the lyrics, which goes to the roots of Western culture as they are incorporated into them. Be it fairy tale or folksong that the lyricists have drawn on, ancient verse, biblical narrative, or T. S. Eliot, the references are here. This has never been done before. There are things here that would not have otherwise been known or imagined, which also goes for what was in the minds of the lyricists themselves. They would be the first to admit that the incursion of imagery into their creative memory banks was a chancy business.

Annotation is a venerable literary tradition. It’s been done for the works of Dante and Shakespeare, and for Finnegans Wake annotations may be essential. Mother Goose and Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland have been annotated. All genres of writing can be illuminated by it, and that fundamental revelation that comes from reading books—“Oh, I always wondered about that”—becomes especially meaningful. David Dodd is well suited to the task of annotation. An avid Grateful Dead concertgoer for two decades, he is a librarian who brings to the work a detective’s love of following a clue as far as it will take him. He first began the annotation as a research project in 1995, in the early days of the Web, through the medium of a website. As in all things virtual, it grew, and with input from interested correspondents from around the world, the website evolved continually. With their publication in book form, the Grateful Dead’s lyrics can be newly savored, couched in the cultural traditions that spawned them.

With the addition of artist Jim Carpenter’s illustrations, whimsical elements in the lyrics, aspects cognitively unreferenceable, and imagery often repeated are brought to light. What he has seen to illustrate itself illustrates the American legend that is present in The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics. You won’t think of the cultural icon that is the Grateful Dead the same way again.

Schedule: Get Ready For #Petaluma’s American Graffiti Cruisin’ On The Boulevard

An annual Salute to American Graffiti honors George Lucas’ timeless, coming-of-age film, American Graffitimost of which was filmed in Petaluma in the early summer of 1972. Grab your favorite squeeze, jump into your hot rod, candy-colored screamin’ machine or the family car for that matter, and cruise on back to the “happy days” of the ‘50s and ‘60s.

Here is our video playlist from last year’s event:

Here is the 2015 Schedule:

American Graffiti-2Friday, May 15, 2015

  • 11–4:30 pm: 4th Annual Customer Appreciation Day – with giveaways, free hot dogs and sodas
    Larson Racing Products 345 Lakeview St Petaluma
  • 4 – 8 pm: Cruise-in Social with music from XERB Radio Broadcasting on FM 88.1. There will be reserved parking for 1975 and older American vehicles. American Graffiti collectibles will be available
  • 4 – 8 pm: Come meet the folks from the American Graffiti Tribute Team as they bring back the memories of the movie
  • 4 – 7 pm: Come visit with the movie stars. This year, Candy Clark, Bo Hopkins, and Lynne Stewart will be joining us.
  • 6:30 pm: Presentation of the Henry Travers & Rich Poremba Scholarships to local students

 

Candy Clark Start In American GraffitiSaturday, May 16, 2015

  • 8:30 am: XERB – Tune your radio to XERB – 88.1FM – DiscJockey and Petaluma Mayor, David Glass, will be hitting the microphone with some great old tunes.
  • 8:30 am – 8 pm: Cruiser Retail opens – Get all your American Graffiti merchandise
  • 10 am to 1 pm: Cub Scouts Pinewood Derby, Theater Square, C & 2nd Sts
    New in 2015, The Cub Scouts have opened their track pinewood derby car and race it against other cars for trophies.
  • 10 am to 7 pm: Visit with the movie stars from American Graffiti. Candy Clark, Bo Hopkins, and Lynne Stewart will be glad to see you and sign some pictures for you
  • American Graffiti Panning Photo10 am to 4 pm: Stop by the American Graffiti Display on the corner of Western Ave and Kentucky St. There you will see and meet cars. You will also see a few of the cars and their owners that were featured in the movie.
  • 2 – 5 pm: Opening day for the Petaluma’s Farmers Market, Walnut Park, 4th & D St. Enjoy farm fresh produce from some of Petaluma’s local farms
  • 2:30 – 4:30 pm: Meet the famous local Clo the Cow and have your pictures taken with her, she’s simply MOOvelous.
  • American Graffiti-924-8 pm: Cruise Starts – They’re bringing back the good times you remember from your high school days when the roar of 400 plus classic cars start their engines and take to the streets to do what they were made to do, Cruise the Boulevard.Where to Watch the Cruise: Perhaps the best place to watch the cruise will be along Petaluma Blvd, south of B Street all the way down to the turn-around circle right before the river bridge. Grab you chair, a picnic basket, something to drink, your portable radio (tuned to 88.1fm) and if necessary, jackets and a blanket. Find a spot to watch the action. Be sure to wave and give the thumbs up to all the cruisers.

CLICK PAGE 2 BELOW TO SEE A MAP AND VIDEO OF THE AMERICAN GRAFFITI FILMING LOCATIONS IN PETALUMA