Difference between revisions of "Event Calendar"
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+ | {{Event|Chat with Gasland creator |6/22| | ||
+ | Groundbreaking filmmaker Josh Fox takes a closer look at natural gas drilling and fracking and their effects on communities in his award-winning documentary Gasland. After Fox was offered $100,000 to lease his land to a drilling company, he set off on a cross-country journey to investigate the environmental risks of fracking. During his 24-state trek, he uncovers alarming facts about the natural gas industry, health problems as a result from this contamination and (not surprisingly) loopholes in federal environmental regulation. HBO [http://action.ewg.org/salsa/track.jsp?v=2c=JJ%2FlqPYlhwTt1Jiyo%2FvyIu%2Bv81mcs1Wp trailer] On Tuesday, June 22 at 2 PM join us on EWG's Enviroblog for a live chat with Gasland's filmmaker, Josh Fox, and EWG natural resources staff. You won't want to miss this opportunity to discuss the award-winning documentary and the terrifying effects of drilling on our water.[http://action.ewg.org/salsa/track.jsp?v=2&c=RNeEWFABgXzR%2FOC0577lEe%2Bv81mcs1Wp chat]}} | ||
Revision as of 14:13, 19 June 2010
See also Volunteer page for upcoming events
UCSC Searchable Calender | |
ongoing | Various kinds of activities |
EcoCruz searchable calendar | |
ongoing | Various kinds of activities with local green organizations. Ecocruz.org |
On-Going
(see below for one time date specific events)
Organic Produce and Flowers for Sale | |
Tues and Fri | Campus produce noon to six p.m. corner of Bay and High Street. June 8 to Oct. 29th. Proceeds support apprenticeships at The Farm |
Education for Sustainable Living Program | |
Mondays |
Education for Sustainable Living Program Student-run course, great guest lecturers. offers an amazing Monday night lecture series. Mondays 7pm-10pm at Classroom Unit 2
Sheila Davis: Renewable Energy & Clean Technology Over the past 10 years, Sheila Davis has played a valuable role at SVTC and in shaping environmental policy in the high-tech industry. She is one of the co-founders of the Computer TakeBack Campaign and sits on its steering committee. In 1996 she researched and developed the first electronic recycling legislation to reach the California Governor’s desk and in 1999 spearheaded the first pilot programs in the country to collect and recycle electronic waste from the residential curbside. Before becoming SVTC’s executive director, she served as program director of SVTC's Sustainable Technologies Program (formerly the Clean Computer Campaign). Sheila's research, advocacy and policy development led to a successful ban on hazardous electronic waste from the California municipal landfills and the subsequent passage of the first electronic recycling legislation in the nation. Sheila holds a Bachelor's Degree from the University of California and served as a journalist, state legislative aide and community development specialist before joining the staff of SVTC.
May 3rd: Brock Dolman & Melissa Nelson – Watersheds & Water Consciousness. UCSC alum and director of Occidental Arts & Ecology Center's (OAEC) Water Institute provides a new perspective on water. Also, UCSC alum from the Cultural Conservancy on the inclusion of water consciousness into modern sustainability. www.oaec.org. www.nativeland.org May 10th: Fair Trade: Going Deeper UCSC's student group, Friends of Community Agroecology Network (FoCAN) present Leigia Del Carmen from an organic fair trade coffee community in Nicaragua on current and future issues of Fair Trade. www.canunite.org May 17th: Sasha Rabin – Building from the Earth A perspective on alternative building techniques and permaculture from a member of Seventh Generation Natural Builders. www.sgnb.com May 24th: Wendolyn Bird & Robbie Jaffe – Storytelling and Environmental Education. A storyteller on the inclusion of environmental education in modern sustainability. Also, Co-Director of CAN, co-founder of the Life Lab Science Program and UCSC lecturer on outdoor education. www.tendertracks.com. link |
Displacement: We Have Come to Ruin Your Surfing | |
4/7-5/8 |
SITE-SPECIFIC INSTALLATION BY ALEX KOPPS 04/07/2010 through 05/08/2010 Tu W Th F Sa 12:00 PM to 5:00 PM Opening Reception: Wednesday, April 7, 5:00-7:00PM Conversation with: Alex Kopps and Jonathan Steinberg, 6:30PM. UCSC Sesnon Gallery presents Displacement: We have Come to Ruin Your Surfing by Bay Area artist, filmmaker, and surfer Alex Kopps. Kopps will create a site-specific installation, combining aspects of his visual practice with artifacts, video clips, and elements of his upcoming film, Displacement. Kopps describes his mixed media installations as “a garage sale of texture and emotion.” Displacement: We have Come to Ruin Your Surfing runs April 7 through May 8, 2010 with a public reception on Wednesday, April 7 from 5-7pm, featuring a conversation with Alex Kopps and Jonathan Steinberg at 6:30pm. The exhibition is in conjunction with the Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History’s presentation of Surf City Santa Cruz: A Wave of Inspiration running March 27–July 25, 2010 showcasing surf-related work of local artists and technical innovators (http://www.santacruzmah.org/). Support for the Sesnon Gallery exhibition was made possible by the Charles Griffin Farr Fund. Location: Porter College - West part of campus Sesnon Gallery Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free
|
Innovate Santa Cruz weekly speaker series | |
Fridays |
The PIE Speaker series brings in local companies, executives, non-profits and entreprenuers to talk about their experience in starting and scaling a business or about their particular area of expertise. Each week has a different topic that benefit students from a wide range of interests. Past topics have included IP law and Tech Transfer, raising money for nonprofits and running a retail business. The speaker series occurs every Friday at 9:30 am during the school term at the PIE at 605 Front Street. Link |
What’s Next Lecture Series | |
Thurs 2/18 |
The kicks off its five-part innovation program with a look at “Sustainability and Social Innovation: Doing Well by Doing Good,” on February 18. Presented by NextSpace Coworking + Innovation, the City of Santa Cruz Redevelopment Agency, and UC Santa Cruz, the year-long series will explore current thinking, best practices, and trends in sustainability; discuss social innovation; and examine how brands and the media are framing this business shift. The What’s Next Lecture Series continues with the second of its five-part Innovation program, “Innovations in Energy: New Sources, Crucial Savings, and How We’ll Finance It” on April 28, 2010 from 7:00 – 9:00 pm at the Kuumbwa Jazz Center. The panel will feature Dr. James L. Sweeney, Director of the Precourt Institute for Energy Efficiency at Stanford University, Daniel Shugar, CEO of Solaria Corporation, and JoeBen Bevirt, Founder and CEO of Joby Energy. Paul Rogers, managing editor of Quest on KQED and the Natural Resources & Environment Writer at the San Jose Mercury News, will moderate the panel as they explore current trends and recent innovations in renewable energy production, business and residential efficiency devices and programs, and the investment opportunities and trends driving opportunity and adoption . “With this series, we’re excited to offer an in-depth look at the critical role innovation plays in addressing some of the most pressing challenges and amazing opportunities facing the world today,” said Jeremy Neuner, CEO of NextSpace. “We believe that the Santa Cruz region can be ground-zero for worldchanging innovation by leveraging our strong local community, our world-class university and our local entrepreneurial ecosystem.” Tickets for the February 18 lecture at Kuumbwa, located at 320 Cedar Street, cost $15; students may attend for free, but must register in advance. For more information or to purchase tickets, see Link. Future topics in the series include Energy (April), the New Workplace (June), Research & Development (October), and Gaming & Social Media (December). |
Environmental Studies Seminar Series | |
Mondays | Winter/Spring 2010 Mondays 12:30-1:40 followed by an informal discussion 1:40-2pm.
221 Interdisciplinary Sciences Building. Snacks and coffee provided at 12:15! Schedule |
Sustainable Food Systems Lecture Series | |
Tues On-going |
Feb 4 Fixing School Food in America 6-7:30 pm Oakes 105. Race , Class, Gender and Food Inequality, 4-5:30 Namaste Lounge Coll 9/10 Sponsored by Kresge College/CASFS |
Elephant Seal Guided Hikes | |
On-going | Signups begin Oct. 20. Año Nuevo State Reserve is fascinating in every season. Elephant seal pups are born between December and February during the “Breeding Season.” During the spring and summer months, elephant seals come ashore to shed their fur during the “Molting Season.” Each fall, yearling seals “hang out” on the beaches during the “Fall Haul Out Season.” |
The National Parks | |
On-going | Ken Burns' excellent PBS series that contains much info on pioneering environmentalists such as Muir.
All online for free link |
Commonwealth Club | |
On-going | Various Bay Area Locations
The Commonwealth Club routinely brings some of the smartest people anywhere to speak, often on green topics. Many of these talks are broadcast on NPR and podcast. See also Climate One series of talks. video highlights Carbon - Cap and Charade? Would capping and trading carbon pollution create a prosperous clean energy economy? Or would it be a boondoggle for Wall Street and scammers in developing countries? While touted as a market-based way to put a price on carbon, cap and trade is increasingly questioned by environmentalists and regulators. Yet the state of California and many companies have a lot invested in a cap and trade system. Will it die a slow death? Should it? Panelists weighing in on these issues include Michael Shellenberger of The Breakthrough Institute; Kristin Eberhard, legal director for Western Energy and Climate, NRDC; and Larry Goulder, chair of the Department of Economics at Stanford University. KQED Public Radio -- Thu, Apr 29, 2010 watch online With climate change, misuse and pollution already threatening the water supply, California is additionally facing a water shortage this season. Join experts and insiders in discussion of rationing, privatization and how to protect our state's most precious resource. UCSC student Givens 5/4. 6/24. Hot, Wet, and Uncertain 07/09/10 |
Agroecology Events at The Farm | |
on-going | The Farm sponsors lots of activities, including how to make your own holiday gifts and how to grow your own fruits and vegetables. See their calendar |
OPERS Recreation | |
ongoing | Outdoor activities, such as hiking, kayaking, rock climbing etc, some related to nature at OPERS.
Samples of upcoming: Herb Walk June 5 Kayak Elkhorn Slough and Ocean, Kayak Whale Watching, Animal Tracking , and Food Systems |
Save Our Shores | |
ongoing | Dockwalker Santa Cruz Program.
Come join Save Our Shores and help get the the word out about oil spill prevention, recycling used oil and clean and green boating. After a brief training session, volunteers will tour the harbor with SOS representatives speaking to boaters and distributing free supplies for oil spill prevention. Together we can help keep our harbors clean. Contact Lauren at Save Our Shores for more information: lauren@saveourshores.org or call (831) 462-5660. River cleanups also. Phone: 462-5660 ext.6# Email: lauren@saveourshores.org Link to register |
Save the Bay (South Bay Events) | |
on-going | Example: Winter Planting Project along San Francisquito Creek (Palo Alto)
Saturday, January 10 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Free In partnership with City of Palo Alto Baylands Nature Preserve Let's take advantage of the winter rains and restore wetlands at the Palo Alto Baylands. This unique wetland habitat that was saved from development in the 1950s by concerned citizens and is now home to many native species, including shorebirds and fish such as steelhead trout. Planting native seedlings like alkali heath and sea lavender will make way for a healthy Bay. Help us celebrate World Wetlands Day and we'll celebrate you! Plant native species like California poppy and bee plant to restore this critical wetland habitat and we'll reward you with food, refreshments, and giveaways immediately following the project. Volunteer support is critical in reaching our restoration goals and we want you to know we appreciate your hard work! |
Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab | |
ongoing |
Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab Event Calendar First Tuesdays Free See also Docent Training Begins 01/14/2009 Wednesday 6:00 PM to 8:30 PM Marine mammal Research tours: 01/14/2010 Thursday 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM Sunday, 01/24/2010 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM Contact information for this listing: Seymour Center Phone: (831)-459-3799 |
ARBORETUM Events | |
monthly | Tours and Training Classes for Arboretum Volunteers link |
Date Specific
2010 San Francisco Bay Area Environmental and Energy-Saving Fair featuring Ecology Action | |
6/19 | {{{3}}} |
The Garden, a 2009 Academy Award nominee | |
3/25 | The Garden, a 2009 Academy Award nominee for best documentary feature, will be shown Thursday, March 25, 7 p.m. at the Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz. Proceeds will benefit the California Food and Justice Coalition.
The Garden (website} documents the rise of a lush 14-acre community garden in South Central Los Angeles from the ashes of the 1992 riots. It grew to become the largest of its kind in the United States only to be threatened with destruction when the property was sold under questionable circumstances. The ensuing controversy attracted worldwide attention, including such notable politicians and celebrities as Antonio Villaraigosa, Maxine Waters, Dennis Kucinich, John Quigley, Daryl Hannah, Danny Glover, Joan Baez, Zak de la Rocha, and Willie Nelson, who fought to save the garden. A panel discussion will follow the screening |
Work in Haiti with Doctors Without Borders | |
3/25 |
Work in the Field Information Sessions Teleconference & Webinar, Thursday, March 25, 2010 8:00 PM 8:00 PM Eastern time 7:00 PM Central time 6:00 PM Mountain time 5:00 PM Pacific time 4:00 PM Alaska time 3:00 PM Hawaii time All prospective medical and nonmedical aid workers: join us for a live teleconference and webinar to learn more about how you can become part of Doctors Without Borders' field work. Human Resources Officers will discuss requirements, and participants will be able to ask questions about the recruitment process and life in the field. |
Student Film Screening: Senior Documentary Workshop | |
3/15 |
03/15/2010 Monday 7:30 PM to 11:00 PM Please join Professor Sam Green and the students of Film & Digital Media's Senior Documentary Workshop for a screening of student films. This event is free to students and the public; all are welcome. We hope to see you there! Location: Oakes College - West part of campus Room: 105 Admission: Free Sponsored by: Film & Digital Media Name: Film & Digital Media Department Phone: (831) 459-3204 Email: film@ucsc.edu Link |
Forum Planned to Explore Local Desalination Plant & Alternatives | |
3/18 |
The public is invited to attend a community forum co-sponsored by Ecology Action and numerous other community groups entitled Äesalination and the Alternatives: It's Up to the Community, on Thursday, March 18, at 6:15p.m., at Live Oak Elementary School, 1916 Capitola Rd in Santa Cruz. Attendees will learn about the desalination plant planned by the Santa Cruz Water Department and Soquel Creek Water District to serve Santa Cruz and Live Oak residents in dry years, and Soquel District customers in all other years. Moderated by former Assemblymember John Laird, panelists will include Debbie Cook, former Mayor of Huntington Beach and Board President of Post Carbon Institute; Bill Kocher, Director, of Santa Cruz Water Dept.; Heather Cooley of Pacific Institute and author of Desalination, With a Grain of Salt; and Rick Longinotti, author of Alternatives to Desalination. Attendees will be polled on their opinions regarding water supply options. For more information, contact Rick Longinotti of Transitions Santa Cruz at longinotti@baymoon.com or (831) 425-0341. Or visit Link |
Activism and labor films | |
various |
Film Screening-SLEEP DEALER with director Alex Rivera Screening followed by Q&A with the director 02/04/2010 Thursday 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM Media Theater - West part of campus Room: M110 Building on the director’s past experiments with digital animation, this feature-length sci fi narrative takes us into the not-so-distant Mexican future, in which the world is divided by closed borders, yet linked together by a digital network that connects people around the world. Protagonist Memo (Luis Fernando) is fascinated with home-grown communications, which leads him to migrate to the U.S.-Mexico border in search of work in a hi-tech maquiladora. There, he meets Luz (Leonor Varela), a beautiful aspiring journalist who collects stories and helps Memo to “plug in” to the Tijuana labor market. A series of life-changing realizations ensue.
"American Dream" - Feb 2 Juxtaposed against the demolition of the nation's airtraffic controllers' union, the Hormel strikers found themselves picketing during the worst climate for organized labor since the 19th century. The film premiered at the New York Film Festival on October 6, 1990. In January 1991 it was screened at the Sundance Film Festival. On March 18, 2002, it opened in New York City. Roger Ebert liked the documentary and its message, and he wrote, "This is the kind of movie you watch with horrified fascination, as families lose their incomes and homes, management plays macho hardball, and rights and wrongs grow hopelessly tangled...The people in this film are so real they make most movie characters look like inhabitants of the funny page." Tuesday - Feb. 2, 2010 - 8 p.m. - 10 p.m. The film will feature a short introduction and then space at the end for discussion. Made in LA 2/23 The Kresge Town Hall has historically been a place for forward thinking and social experimentation. It has recently been used by students organized against the increasing privatization of the UC and for the imagination of a new UC in Santa Cruz. |
26th Annual MLK Convocation featuring Anna Deavere Smith | |
2/11 |
26th Annual MLK Convocation featuring Anna Deavere Smith 02/11/2010 Thursday 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM Our featured speaker and honored guest this year is Anna Deavere Smith, award-winning actress, playwright, and professor, who will speak on “Race in America: Crossroads of Ambiguity”. Her career covers mainstream culture as well as academia, Smith's work in the theater explores the diversity of her American character and our multifaceted national identity. She is said to have created a new form of theater, combining the journalistic technique of interviewing her subjects with the art of interpreting their words through performance. She has won numerous awards, among them two Obies, two Tony nominations and a MacArthur fellowship. She was runner-up for a Pulitzer Prize for her play Fires in the Mirror. Location: Off Campus Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium - 307 Church Street Santa Cruz, CA 95060 Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free More info |
Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour | |
2/26-7 |
Ignite your passion for adventure, action, and travel! The Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour will exhilarate you with amazing big-screen stories when it comes to the Rio Theatre at 7 pm on February 26 & 27. Journey to exotic locations, paddle the wildest waters, and climb the highest peaks. Get your tickets today and be taken away to the most captivating places on earth. The 2009/2010 Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour brings films from the 34th annual Banff Mountain Film Festival to about 285 communities around the world. From an exploration of remote landscapes and mountain cultures to adrenaline-fueled action sports, films in this year’s world tour are sure to captivate and amaze the explorer within you. Be moved. Be inspired. Don’t miss out. Reserve your tickets today. For more information visit ucscrecreation.com or call (831)459-2806. This stop on the world tour is hosted by UCSC Recreation and locally sponsored by Pacific Edge, Bugaboo, Seahorse Swim School, Sprockets, Kayak Connection. Solar Technologies, Whole Foods Market, Adventure Sports Journal and SC Weekly Benefits UCSC Wilderness Orientation Scholarship Fund & the UCSC Recreation Program Dates: 02/26/2010 Friday 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM 02/27/2010 Saturday 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM Location: Off Campus Room: Rio Theatre 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz Category: Announcement - Film/Video - Recreation/Health/Fitness Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: $12 Students and Seniors $15 General all tickets $2 more at the door Sponsored by: OPERS/Recreation Contact information for this event: Name: Kathy O'Hara Ferraro Phone: (831) 459-1693 Email: kferraro@ucsc.edu http://ucscrecreation.com Link] |
The Future of Capitalism | |
2/26-8 |
February 26, 27, 28 2010 02/26/2010 Friday 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM Details coming soon! Stay tuned! Location: Other Campus Location Friday, 2/26/2010: Dream Inn, 175 West Cliff Dr. Santa Cruz California Saturday, 2/27/2010 and Sunday, 2/28/2010: UCSC Humanities Lecture Hall Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free Sponsored by: Institute for Humanities Research UCSC, Humanities Division UCSC, Division of Social Sciences UCSC Contact information for this event: Name: Shann Ritchie Phone: (831) 459-5655 Email: sritchie@ucsc.edu Link |
Solo Canada to Mexico Hike | |
Sat 1/23 | Clegg-Haman will talk about her 2500 mile trip. 7-9pm Namaste Lounge (College 9/10). Sponsored by OPERS. |
SUSTAINABILITY & GREEN TECH EMPLOYER PANEL | |
1/20 |
Wednesday, January 20th 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Earth & Marine Sciences, Room A340 Meet employers speaking about career opportunities in sustainable and green technologies. There will be time to ask questions and network. Companies attending include: Arenson Solar, Driscoll Strawberry, Ecology Design Lab, Global Exchange and GreenSpace. |
Long Marine Lab 2010 Docent Training begins | |
1/13 |
01/13/2010 Wednesday 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM (Classes continue every Wednesday evening and most Saturday mornings through March.) Make a difference in the world, have fun, and get involved while you spread the importance of ocean science and conservation. This intensive marine science interpretation course will give you the knowledge and skills you need to inspire curiosity in visitors from across California and around the world. To join the docent team, you must be at least 18 years old by the day training begins, and willing to commit to one four-hour shift, one day every other week, for a minimum of one year. Applicants will be interviewed prior to the training start date. This class is offered only once a year––don’t miss out! Visit our website for more information and an application. Location: Other Campus Location Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab Category: Announcement - Class/Workshop Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free Estimated Attendance: 20 Contact information for this event: Name: Abby Borsgard Phone: (831) 459-3799 Email: aborsgar@ucsc.edu Link |
CalPIRG Global Warming Campaign kickoff | |
1/19 |
7:30 pm. Think we have some mighty big problems in the world? Want to help be the solution? Come find out how you can help solve global warming, make our oceans cleaner, make higher education more affordable, provide food for the hungry, and pass health care reform. We'll be working to get over 1,000 lbs of food donated to local food banks, increase grant aid for students by $40 billion, pass a national cap on global warming, ban plastic bags from Santa Cruz to save the sea otters, and much, much more. Get course credit for doing an internship, or volunteer to make a difference in your community. There are tons of opportunities to get involved, so make sure you come find out what we have in store for this quarter! Contact by e-mail/phone, or drop by our office: 3rd Floor Student Union 831-459-4649 Campus Organizer: Carolina Van Horn mailto:carolina@calpirgstudents.org Link |
Broom Bash | |
1/30 |
Saturday, January 30 2010, 10:00am - 1:00pm by Quail Hollow Ranch Park Help remove invasive French Broom from beautiful Quail Hollow Ranch Park. French Broom is an invasive, exotic plant that takes over natural habitats. join the CNPS habitat Restoration Program and park volunteers for a broom bash, removing many of these unwanted plants from the park trails. Your help with this project will improve the natural system of the park as well as its beauty. Tools will be provided. Bring work gloves, water and lunch. Tool will be provided. Contact : Lee Summers, 454-7926 Wed-Fri, 335-9348 Sat-Sun |
Non Profit, Social Services & Sustainability Business Career Fair | |
1/26 |
01/26/2010 Tuesday 11:00 AM to 3:00 PM Students can meet recruiters from non profit organizations, social services, government and sustainability businesses to discuss opportunities for full-time jobs and internships. Location: Merrill College - East part of campus Merrill Cultural Center Invited Audience: Open to UCSC Staff, Students, and Faculty only Admission: Free Contact information for this event: Name: Jan Carmichael Phone: (831) 459-2185 Email: jmcarmic@ucsc.edu Link |
Frans Lanting at the Rio Theatre—Desert Journey into Wild Namibia | |
1/30 |
Join Frans Lanting (UCSC alum) and Christine Eckstrom on a wild desert journey through a faraway corner of southwest Africa—Namibia, a little-known country that is making a big statement to the rest of the world. The first nation to incorporate protection of the environment into its constitution, Namibia recently proclaimed its entire coastline as a national park, yet another first. This year’s show at the Rio features new images and video from the towering red dunes of the Namib Desert to the lashing South Atlantic seas that batter the “Skeleton Coast.” It will introduce you to unusual animals from the fabled desert elephant to the seldom-glimpsed brown hyena, and it will bring you eye-to-eye with eland, kudu, and the rare black rhino. A benefit presentation for the Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab Tickets and information: Seymour Center (831) 459-3800 Frans Lanting Studio (831) 429-1331 Logos Books & Records downtown Santa Cruz Dates: 01/30/2010 Saturday 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM 01/30/2010 Saturday 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM Location: Off Campus The Rio Theatre, Santa Cruz Contact information for this event: Name: Abby Borsgard Phone: (831) 459-3799 Email: aborsgar@ucsc.edu Link |
PARC CleanTech Series | |
Th. Weekly |
Further information and previous Forum talks are available online at Forums PARC Forum at 4:00 p.m. on Thursdays Location: George E. Pake Auditorium at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) 3333 Coyote Hill Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304 cleantech forum series ABOUT THE PARC FORUM: Link ONLINE ARCHIVE: video + audio of past Forums |
Upcoming PARC Forums in the CleanTech Forum}}
Film Screening: Invisible Children
Discover the Unseen | |
1/20 |
01/20/2010 Wednesday 7:00 PM to 8:15 PM Motivated by the unseen war in Northern Uganda, Invisible Children was created by three young filmmakers with a singular mission: To use the power of stories to change lives around the world. Come check out this enlightening documentary and meet an organization at UCSC that can help you get involved and make a difference. Location: Stevenson College - East part of campus Room: Stevenson Event Center Category: Film/Video Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free Contact information for this event: Name: Roopa Krishna Phone: (925) 858-4775 Email: rkrishna@ucsc.edu |
Biodiversity Collective Memory (Kitchen Gardens) | |
1/11 |
12:30 - 2, College Eight Room 301 Prof. Jennifer Jordan, UCSC alum |
The Value of Nothing - Raj Patel | |
1/07 |
NOTE: i attended this talk, and it was great. Presumably it will be posted online soon.
To show just how the free market and corporations distort price and value, Patel suggest that the true price of a hamburger is $200 if we factor the hidden environment and health costs. He offers a timely critique of our present political system and argues that, in order to understand our current economic crisis, we need to rethink our very meaning of democracy by rebalancing society and limiting markets.Commonwealth Club Link |
Speaking of Food | |
ongoing |
Dr. Constanza Ocampo-Raeder, University of Maine, will discuss her work, "Cultivating and Feeding Cultural Identity: Indigenous Home Gardens of the Peruvian Amazon." Time: 4 - 5:30 pm Venue: Kresge Town Hall Dr. Ocampo-Raeder is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Maine - Orono campus. Her primary research focuses on uncovering human signatures in the forest through the analysis of indigenous resource management strategies (swidden-fallow agriculture, hunting, gathering, and fishing). Her work in the Peruvian Amazon shows how the indigenous Ese eja people have influenced their traditional territory (an area of about 1.5 million hectares) by creating a series of anthropogenic habitats that influence vegetation structure and wildlife resources.
Dr. Roberts manages the Toronto Food Policy Council (TFPC), a citizen body of 30 food activists and experts recognized for its innovative approach to food security. In April 2009, under Roberts' leadership, the TFPC received the Bob Hunter Environmental Achievement Award, given to a City of Toronto agency with a record of outstanding leadership, for its efforts to make food an action item on the environmental agenda. Dr. Roberts has written seven books, including The No-Nonsense Guide to World Food (2008) and Real Food For A Change (1999), which promotes a food system based on the four ingredients of health, joy, justice and nature. |
Copenhagen Action | |
12/16-7 |
350.org says: "...all is well in Copenhagen. We're not going to get the agreement that we need (current negotiations put us on track to hit a devastating 770ppm by century's end) and this movement will need to fight on in the years ahead. But right now, while the Copenhagen climate talks are still unfolding, we need one final push. So, the two unusual requests: 1) Make a phone call. We don't usually ask you to make calls, but today we're going to. At this link you'll find a list of every head of state and his or her phone number. You'll note that the countries are listed in either green or red type. If your nation is in green, it means they're fighting the good fight for 350. We need you to leave them a message that either expresses your pride and gratitude for their commitment to keeping 350 in the treaty text, or your earnest wish that they'll listen to the science and consider standing with the bloc of more than 100 nations standing for bold scientific targets. Please click here to make the call--you'll find everything you need: the appropriate phone numbers, a short script of what to say, and a sense of how your country's leadership is standing on this issue.
A hunger strike is not one of our usual tools either, but somehow it feels appropriate at what's a very solemn moment. Some of our allies around the world have been going without food for more than a month, and they've asked others to join this fast for 24 hours--starting any time on Thursday. We know it's late notice, especially for those of you in the eastern parts of the world--but everything just came together to pull it off. Many here in Copenhagen are doing so--including thousands of youth, members of the 350.org team, Vandana Shiva, and many more--and we wanted you to have the opportunity too. As global warming kicks in, more and more people will starve--earlier this week, at the conference's main religious service, there were shriveled ears of corn from drought-stricken parts of Africa on the altar. Most of us can't know the true terror of hunger, because we know we'll eat again soon, but we can join in what organizers are calling a Hunger Strike for Survival. If you're interested in joining in, please sign-up . It's true that we can't promise fasting will have any practical effect, but it feels right to us right now. Please consider joining us:www.350.org/fast It's true: we won't get the treaty we need in Copenhagen, but thanks to you we've made the real consequences of climate change a priority for the very first time inside this process. Onwards, Bill McKibben for 350.org PS - Can you help spread the demand for a Science-Based Treaty on Facebook? Just visit this post on Facebook, scroll down, and click "Share" to let your friends know your thoughts on the current negotiations and how you're taking action. Many thanks. You should join us on Facebook by becoming a fan of our page at facebook.com/350org and follow us on twitter by visiting twitter.com/350 To join our list (maybe a friend forwarded you this e-mail) visit http:www.350.org/signup www.350.org/signup] |
Christmas Bird Count | |
12/26 |
This is a national annual event. here's a local request: Can you help Baykeeper with a Christmas Bird Count on December 26th? The annual Audubon Society's count provides data to assess the stability of bird populations and to guide conservation actions. We need at least two experienced birders familiar with pelagic bird species to join us on the Baykeeper boat for the day. Also, if you have a boat and would like to join the effort, you can help us monitor Richardson Bay and near China Camp. Audubon will host a dinner in Mill Valley for participants. If you would like to sign up, please contact Rosalind Becker, Baykeeper Program Fellow, at rosalind@baykeeper.org. weblink |
Surfrider Monthly Cleanup | |
12/5 |
December 5, 2009, 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. Seacliff State Beach Register now at: Link |
Save Our Shores Open House | |
12/05 |
Saturday, December 05 2009, 5:00pm - 8:00pm Save Our Shores invites all community members to a holiday gathering and volunteer social on Saturday, December 5th from 5:00-8:00pm. Come learn more about how to volunteer for ocean health, meet our team and enjoy the Lighted Boat Parade! Location : 345 Lake Ave. Suite A at the Santa Cruz Harbor Contact : (831)-462-5660x3, [1] Link |
No Impact Man screening | |
12/9 |
Location: Del Mar Theater Santa Cruz Nubius Organics Presents Sundance Award Nominated Full-Length Feature Film: NO IMPACT MAN On Weds, Dec. 9th, please join the Santa Cruz green community for an exclusive screening of Sundance Film Festival nominated No Impact Man at the historic Del Mar Theater in downtown Santa Cruz. Pre-event reception begins at 6:40 pm and the No Impact Man film begins at 7:15 pm. Followed by a community discussion on Reducing Your Impact by Dr. J. Wallace Nichols. No Impact Man is the story of a guilty, New York liberal who decides to practice what he preaches for ONE YEAR (turns off the electricity, stops making garbage, gives up TV, taxis and take out & becomes a walking, bicycling, composting, tree hugging, polar bear saving, local food-eating citizen), all while taking his baby daughter & caffeine loving, retail-obessed, television-addicted wife along with him. Local non-profit partners Save Our Shores, People Power, Transition Santa Cruz & Ecology Action will be on-site with information on how to reduce your impact. Valet bike parking provided by People Power! Tickets $5 advance/ $7 at the door. Purchase tickets at: Link |
Greg Mortenson, Co-author, Three Cups of Tea; | |
12/11 |
Greg Mortenson, Co-founder, Central Asia Institute; Co-author, Three Cups of Tea; Author, Stones in Schools: Promoting Peace with Books, Not Bombs, in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Foothill College. Local radio interview |
Green Architecture & Bio-regional Design | |
11/24 | Guest lecture by Thomas Rettenwender. UCSC Baskin Auditorium 101, Tue. Nov 24, 12:00 noon |
ARCTIC EXPEDITION CANOEING | |
11/19 Th | ARCTIC EXPEDITION CANOEING: A Narrative Reflection of a Novice
11/19/2009 Thursday 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM Find out what it might be like to be dropped off in the middle of one of the largest protected natural region on earth where the words “vast” and “wild” and “remote” take on a whole new meaning. Journey with Skye Leone, Senior UCSC Recreation Supervisor, on America’s longest Wild and Scenic river from it’s headwaters to an Eskimo Village sixty miles from the Arctic Ocean. Slides and reflective narration on landscape, nuts and bolts of expedition canoeing, encounters with Inupiat people, and basking in the midnight sun. Location: Classroom Unit I - East part of campus Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free Sponsored by: UCSC Recreation Estimated Attendance: 175 Contact information for this event: Name: Skye Leone Phone: (831) 459-2800 Email: sleone@ucsc.edu Link |
Lester Brown | |
11/10 | Saving Civilization Is Not a Spectator Sport
President, Earth Policy Institute, Brown sees concern in the merging of world food and energy economies. Putting corn ethanol in gas tanks and grain-intensive food (beef) into more human bellies will drive up commodity prices and exacerbate fresh water scarcity. Though he believes the Earth is under stress, Brown is hopeful, in part because for the first time since the Industrial Revolution we have begun investing in energy sources that can last forever. Brown also will comment on how the melting glaciers of Tibet could affect the price of a bagel in California. Location: SF Club Office Time: 11:30 a.m. check-in, noon program Cost: $8 members, $15 non-members, students free (with valid ID) |
CSSC's 7th Annual Statewide Fall Convergence | |
11/6-8 |
The California Student Sustainability Coalition invites you to join students and young leaders from across California as we come together to build community and organizing capacity amongst individuals, campuses, and campaigns in the student sustainability movement. Share skills and resources, learn about what your peers are doing, network with other schools, and have fun! |
Full Disclosure | |
10/7 Wed |
Sesnon Gallery, UCSC October 7 – November 21 2009 Opening Reception: Wed.,October 7, 4:30-6:30p.m. followed by a panel discussion with faculty artists and scientists. Full Disclosure is an inside look at the trial and error of scientists and artists through an intimate survey of their processes. An exhibition of art and artifacts, Full Disclosure views the practice and products of science—theoretical models, computational data, molecular structures—through the perceptual matrices of the arts revealing parallels and divergences between the two disciplines. Experimentation, creativity and failure, become the ultimate subjects in this unexpected juxtaposition of media, motives and forms. Related events Oct. 23, 2009: THE ART OF COLLABORATION symposium @ the new UCSC Digital Arts Research Center Oct. 23, 2009: Panel II noon-1:30pm: Authorship, Technologies and Frames with E.G. Crichton and others 3:00-4:00p.m. UCSC Foundation Forum on creativity Keynote Speaker: Ed Catmull: President, Pixar Animation Studios @ UCSC Music Recital Hall Panel III 4:30-6:00pm: Modes of Production with Melissa Gwyn and others @ the new UCSC Digital Arts Research Center |
7th Annual Practical Activism Conference! | |
10/24 Sat |
The Practical Activism Conference is a daylong, student led conference which features a keynote speaker, ten workshops, various on and off campus organizations, performances, and a variety of hands-on activism activities. This year's conference will take place on Saturday, October 24, 2009 in the College Nine & College Ten Multipurpose Room. KEYNOTE SPEAKER Bettina Aptheker |
Day of Action for Climate Change | |
10/24 | This is an invitation from Bill McKibben to help build a movement--to take one day day and use it to stop the climate crisis.
UCSC : at Practical Activism draw a blue line where the ocean will be downtown one downtown on diet and global warming link one down the road in Davenport link You can download a presentation to give at UCSC; i will help you arrange a room and video equipment, contact pmmckerc@ucsc.edu On October 24, we will stand together as one planet and call for a fair global climate treaty. United by a common call to action, we'll make it clear: the world needs an international plan that meets the latest science and gets us back to safety. This movement has just begun, and it needs your help. Here's the plan: we're asking you, and people in every country on earth, to organize an action in your community on October 24. There are no limits here--imagine bike rides, rallies, concerts, hikes, festivals, tree-plantings, protests, and more. Imagine your action linking up with thousands of others around the globe. Imagine the world waking up. If we can pull it off, we'll send a powerful message on October 24: the world needs the climate solutions that science and justice demand. It's often said that the only thing preventing us from tackling the climate crisis quickly and equitably is a lack of political will. Well, the only thing that can create that political will is a unified global movement--and no one is going to build that movement for us. It's up to regular people all over the world. That's you. So register an event in your community for October 24, and then enlist the help of your friends. Get together with your co-workers or your local environmental group or human rights campaign, your church or synagogue or mosque or temple; enlist bike riders and local farmers and young people. All over the planet we'll start to organize ourselves. With your help, there will be an event at every iconic place on the planet on October 24-from America's Great Lakes to Australia's Great Barrier Reef--and also in all the places that matter to you in your daily lives: a beach or park or village green or town hall. If there was ever a time for you to get involved, it's right now. |
Botany of Desire | |
10/28 | Michael Pollan's bestselling book will be on PBS. weblink |
Marine Mammal Research Tour | |
10/29 |
10/25/2009 Sunday 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM Go behind the scenes at Long Marine Lab. Learn about the work of scientists and their studies of dolphins, seals, sea lions, and whales. Tour is best suited for adults and children over 10 years of age. Space limited, free with admission. Reservations required: (831) 459-3800. Location: Other Campus Location Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab Category: Announcement - Tour Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: $6 Adults; $4 Youth (4-16) and Seniors (64+); Members, Children (3 & under), and UCSC undergrads are free. Contact information for this event: Name: Abby Borsgard Phone: (831) 459-3799 Email: aborsgar@ucsc.edu Web |
STEWART BRAND
Whole Earth Discipline: An Ecopragmatist Manifesto | |
10/9 and 16 Fri |
Longnow Friday October 9, 02009 Stewart Brand Rethinking Green Doors open 7:00pm, talk at 7:30pm lasting ~1.5 hours Cowell Theatre in Fort Mason Center San Francisco, California Palo Alto Oct 15 link discount tickets Friday, October 16, 7:30 PM Berkeley Arts & Letters @ FCCB in the sanctuary at 2345 Channing Way at Dana, Berkeley wheelchair access, except for upper balcony $40 (includes autographed copy of book) ($10 companion ticket available with purchase of regular ticket) at Brown Paper Tickets or 800-838-3006 Stewart Brand believes that it’s time we reset the debate about the environment and global warming. While the Green Movement has become more mainstream, Brand, a galvanizing figure whose Whole Earth Catalog can be seen as one of its cornerstone manifestos, has continued to explore the matrix of life on earth and how our place in it can be better organized to protect its future and ours. Though honored as a writer -- with the National Book Award for the Whole Earth Catalog, Eliot Montroll Award for The Media Lab, and Golden Gadfly Award for his years as editor of CoEvolution Quarterly -- Steward Brand is primarily an inventor/designer. Trained as a biologist and army officer, he was an early multimedia artist. He has created a number of lasting institutions, including New Games Tournaments, the Hackers Conference, and The WELL, a bellwether computer conference system. He is co-founder of Global Business Network, a futurist research organization fostering "the art of the long view" and is the co-chairman of the board of The Long Now Foundation. |
An Unnatural History of UCSC | |
10/11 Sun |
10/11/2009 Sunday 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM Join us for a day of discovery as we visit some of the sites featured in An Unnatural History of UC SC, a book that records over 50 remarkable creations, some, like Elfland and the Labyrinth, long gone. We will visit several of the more intriguing sites located in UCSC's upper campus. Bring a lunch, good walking shoes, a camera if you like, and appropriate clothing for this time of year. Location: East Field Center - East part of campus Depart Recreation Office Porch Category: Announcement - Class/Workshop - Recreation/Health/Fitness Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: $20.00 Sponsored by: OPERS/Recreation Contact information for this event: Name: Kathy O'Hara Ferraro Phone: (831) 459-1693 Email: kferraro@ucsc.edu WWW |
Ralph Nader | |
10/16 Fri |
Activist; Former Presidential Candidate; Author, Only the Super-rich Can Save Us! What if some of America's most powerful individuals decided it was time to fix our government and return the power to the people? Nader ponders what would happen if a cadre of "superrich" individuals focused on unionizing Wal-Mart, advancing clean elections and improving the environment with alternative forms of energy. Nader reminds us that imagination is at the heart of every social movement and change in American politics. Location: Cubberley Theatre, 4000 Middlefield Rd., Palo Alto Time: 6:30 p.m. check-in, 7 p.m. program, 8 p.m. book signing Cost: $12 members, $20 non-members |
Research Review Day 2009 Baskin School of Engineering | |
10/22 Th |
10/22/2009 Thursday 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM All day review of current research being done at the Baskin School of Engineering. Day also includes a poster session of research by our graduate students. Presumbly some green efforts will be on display. Location: Baskin Engineering - North part of campus Room: E2-180, E2-506, E2-599 Keynote Talk in Simularium All other presentations in Engineering 2 building Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free Sponsored by: Baskin School of Engineering Estimated Attendance: 80 Contact information for this event: Name: Heidi Mc Gough Phone: (831) 459-4877 Email: heids@ucsc.edu Web |
Transition Santa Cruz Reskilling Expo | |
10/17 |
Location: United Methodist Church, 250 California St.,Santa Cruz Transition SC is presenting its first Reskilling Expo on October 17 from 10-4 at the United Methodist Church, 250 California Street, Santa Cruz. Choose from a multitude of demos on how to reduce food costs and conserve water. There will be presentations on: Beekeeping, fruit trees, propagation of culinary and medicinal herbs, backyard berries, chickens and ducks, canning, and foraging, edible green spaces/huertos concretos, roots, rhizomes and tubers, traditional compost, vermicompost, compost tea, anerobic compost, jam-making, bread-making, seed saving, year-round edible garden, fermenting, solar cooking, incubation and non-toxic control of invasive plants. Learn to conserve water at our demos on: `Graywater, earthworks (swales, berms and basins), rainwater catchment, composting toilet and the propagation of native plants. Explore the transition concepts of peak oil, climate chaos, and economics. Reflect on where your money works at a talk about local banking. Speak your mind and heart to one of our Keynote Listeners. Consider integrating sustainable living with activism to transform the structures driving environmental and social harm. There will be good food and live music as well. Please join us! Admission by donation : $0- $25 Contact: Bonnie Linden bonnielinden@sbcglobal.net |
Sea Otters ~ Barometers of Ocean Health | |
10/22 Th |
Blooms & Bugs Ken Norris Memorial Lectures Series 2009: 10/22/2009 Thursday 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM Dr. Raphael Kudela (UCSC): Marine Animals as Ocean Sentinels of Harmful Algae: Early Warning or Ignored Problem? AND Dr. Melissa Miller (USGS and UC Davis): tba Since being protected by the Endangered Species Act, the sea otter population has recovered from less than 50 animals near Big Sur to more than 2400 animals along the California coast today. Despite this good news, recent data indicates a declining population—WHY? We don’t hunt them for fur. We don’t trap them in nets. They are a protected species. What is happening to the sea otter and what does it mean to us? Six of the most prominent marine scientists and world otter experts will take us on a journey of discovery and understanding as to why sea otters are a barometer of ocean health. “Unlike previous decades where overhunting and fishing were the key causes, at least 50 percent of otter deaths are now due to a variety of infectious diseases, parasites, and pollution” says Dr. David Jessup, Wildlife Veterinarian at the Marine Wildlife Veterinary Care and Research Center, California Department of Fish and Game. The first of three distinct lecture evenings will cover the many obstacles facing sea otters today, what their declining population tells us about the health of our oceans, and what we are doing to prevent further decline of this charismatic and important “keystone” species. Location: La Feliz Room Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab, 100 Shaffer Road, Santa Cruz, near Natural Bridges State Beach Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free Contact information for this event: Name: Abby Borsgard Phone: (831) 459-3799 Email: aborsgar@ucsc.edu Web |
Annual Fall Harvest Festival | |
9/26 | Saturday, September 26, 11 am - 5 pm, UCSC Farm. Come celebrate the fall harvest at our biggest "open farm house" of the year! Apple pie baking contest, great live music, farm tours, cooking and gardening workshops, kids' activities, and much more!
Note: We still need a few volunteers during the 12:30-3 pm and 3 pm - 5:30 pm time slots at the Harvest Festival. If you can help, contact us at 459-3240, or by email to casfs@ucsc.edu. Also coming up ... Choosing, Growing and Enjoying Peppers Saturday, October 3, 10 am - 12 pm, UCSC Farm Garden manager Christof Bernau shares his love of peppers at this workshop, which will include a tasting session. Learn how to select, plant, grow and enjoy this wonderfully versatile vegetable. $10 for Friends of the Farm and Garden members; $15 general public, payable at the workshop. Questions? Call 459-3240 or send email. |
Banff Mountain Film Festival
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9/26 | 09/26/2009 Saturday 7:00 PM to 9:15 PM
Faster, steeper, higher, deeper! The most outrageous mountain sport films from the 33rd annual Banff Mountain Film Festival will thrill and inspire you with big-screen adventures when RADICAL REELS comes to UCSC Media Theatre at 7 pm on September 26. Bike tough trails, paddle wild waters, and ski steep slopes. The Radical Reels Tour runs every spring & winter and spans North America bringing a variety of mountain sport films to a wide range of viewers from hard-core outdoor adventurers to weekend warriors. Grab your tickets and hang on to your seats as we present the world's best action films on skiing, boarding, climbing, biking, kayaking and more - all brought to life on the big screen. This stop on the RADICAL REELS tour is hosted by UC Santa Cruz Recreation Dept and sponsored by BayTree Bookstore, Sprockets, Pacific Edge Climbing Gym and Adventure Sports Journal. Benefit for UCSC Mens and Womens Soccer and UCSC Recreation Tickets onsale online at www.ucscrecreation.com, Pacific Edge Climbing Gym and Sprockets Bicycle Shop Location: Media Theater - West part of campus located in the Performing Arts Complex Category: Announcement - Film/Video - Recreation/Health/Fitness Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: $10 Students/Seniors in advance $12 General $2 more at the door Sponsored by: OPERS/Recreation |
Marine Mammal Research Tour | |
9/27 |
9/27/2009 Sunday 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM Go behind the scenes at Long Marine Lab. Learn about the work of scientists and their studies of dolphins, seals, sea lions, and whales. Tour is best suited for adults and children over 10 years of age. Space limited, free with admission. Reservations required: (831) 459-3800. Location: Other Campus Location Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab Category: Announcement - Tour Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: $6 Adults; $4 Youth (10-16), Students, Seniors (64+); Members, and UCSC undergrads are free.
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Sea Otters : Barometers of Ocean Health | |
10/01 Th |
10/01/2009 Thursday 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM Dr. Tim Tinker (USGS): Big Sur vs. Monterey: Understanding Human Impacts on Sea Otter Population Health AND Dr. Keith Miles (USGS and UC Davis): The Doctor is In: Using Human Medicine to Diagnose What Ails the Sea Otter. Since being protected by the Endangered Species Act, the sea otter population has recovered from less than 50 animals near Big Sur to more than 2400 animals along the California coast today. Despite this good news, recent data indicates a declining population—WHY? We don’t hunt them for fur. We don’t trap them in nets. They are a protected species. What is happening to the sea otter and what does it mean to us? Six of the most prominent marine scientists and world otter experts will take us on a journey of discovery and understanding as to why sea otters are a barometer of ocean health. “Unlike previous decades where overhunting and fishing were the key causes, at least 50 percent of otter deaths are now due to a variety of infectious diseases, parasites, and pollution” says Dr. David Jessup, Wildlife Veterinarian at the Marine Wildlife Veterinary Care and Research Center, California Department of Fish and Game. The first of three distinct lecture evenings will cover the many obstacles facing sea otters today, what their declining population tells us about the health of our oceans, and what we are doing to prevent further decline of this charismatic and important “keystone” species. Location: Other Campus Location Room: La Feliz Room Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab, 100 Shaffer Road, Santa Cruz, near Natural Bridges State Beach Invited Audience: Open to Public Admission: Free Sponsored by: Luckenbach Trustee Council Estimated Attendance: 98 Contact information for this event: Name: Abby Borsgard Phone: (831) 459-3799 Email: aborsgar@ucsc.edu Web |
Online Event: Energy Literacy | |
8/26 /on-going | Attendance is limited, so register now. We'll send you a reminder before the webcast. And please feel free to share this invitation with others.
Date: Wednesday, August 26th at 10 am PT Price: Free Duration: Approximately 60 minutes To register Questions? Please send email to webcast@oreilly.com Dr. Saul Griffith has multiple degrees in materials science and mechanical engineering and completed his PhD in Programmable Assembly and Self Replicating machines at MIT. He is the co-founder of numerous companies including: Low Cost Eyeglasses, Squid Labs, Potenco, Instructables.com, HowToons, Makani Power, and WattzOn, a free online tool to quantify, track, compare and understand the total amount of energy needed to support all of the facets of your lifestyle. Saul has been awarded numerous awards for invention including the National Inventors Hall of Fame, Collegiate Inventor's award, and the Lemelson-MIT Student prize. In 2007 he received a MacArthur Foundation "Genius Grant." A large focus of Saul's research efforts are in minimum and constrained energy surfaces for novel manufacturing techniques and other applications. Saul holds multiple patents and patents pending in textiles, optics, nanotechnology, and energy production You may also want to register for the second webcast in this series, taking place Sept. 3 at 10am PT. Professor Per F. Pederson, Chair of the Department of Nuclear Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, presents Nuclear Energy: Future Directions. Weblink |
David Mas Masumoto - The Wisdom of the Last Farmer | |
9/5 Sat. 10 am | David Mas Masumoto - The Wisdom of the Last Farmer: Harvesting Legacies from the Land
radio interview listen live Hailed by The New York Times as "a poet of farming" and the Los Angeles Times as the "Rockstar Farmer" who "uses his farm as Thoreau did his Walden Pond," David Mas Masumoto weaves together stories of family and farming, life and death to reveal age-old wisdom that is fast disappearing—and urgently needed. When Slow Food activist David Mas Masumoto’s father has a stroke in the sprawling fields of their farm, the reality of his father’s mortality drives Masumoto to reevaluate the significance and meaning of farming in an information-driven, modern world. As Masumoto nurses his father back to health, and becomes a teacher to the master who had once schooled him, he reclaims the practical and emotional wisdom that they and their ancestors had learned from working the land. Realizing that he himself needs to pass on a wealth of knowledge to the next generation, he writes this impassioned narrative—part memoir, part life instruction—about re-connecting to the land. Masumoto is the award-winning author of Epitaph for a Peach and other books, popular columnist, spokesperson for organic farming, and a fellow at The Kellogg Foundation. A third-generation farmer, he grows certified organic peaches, nectarines, and grapes on his family’s eighty-acre California farm.The following Saturday, you ca hear an interview with Novella Carpenter, author of Farm City: the Education of an Urban Farmer |
earlier book, Epigraph for a Peach
Trashed, The Movie | |
7/09 | Quite a good documentary on solid waste, includes Freegans ;) on PBS |
UCSC Summer Sustainability Institute Seminar Series | |
Tuesday evenings, 7-9 PM |
At the Program in Community and Ecology, in The Village (Lower Quarry) This is a series of evening seminars offering talks by faculty and other experts on topics related to sustainability. It is open to students, staff, faculty & the public. The location is the meeting room at the Program in Community and Ecology (PICA), in The Village (Lower Quarry). Sponsored by the Center for Global, International & Regional Studies, PICA, the Sustainability Engineering & Design Working Group, and others. June 23: Defining & practicing sustainability (Ronnie Lipschutz, Politics, UCSC) For more information, contact: Ronnie Lipschutz, 459-3275; rlipsch@ucsc.edu |
Archive of Past Events