Thomas Gase posted: "The Solano Soccer team pulled off a 1-0 win in the closing moments of injury time when Giovanna Edwards knocked in a corner kick to defeat Marin College on Friday. Kate-Lynn Jimenez was goal keeper for the first half, while Julia Villareal was in net f" Times Herald Online
The Solano Soccer team pulled off a 1-0 win in the closing moments of injury time when Giovanna Edwards knocked in a corner kick to defeat Marin College on Friday.
Kate-Lynn Jimenez was goal keeper for the first half, while Julia Villareal was in net for the second half.
Solano improved to 6-7-3 overall and 6-1-2 in the Bay Valley Conference.
Auto Racing
New partnership coming to Sonoma
Speedway Motorsports and THOR Industries have announced a new partnership designating the global recreational vehicle company as the "Official RV Partner of Speedway Motorsports."
THOR's partnership activation and marketing will take place in 2024 at Sonoma Raceway along with Atlanta Motor Speedway, Bristol Motor Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Circuit of The Americas, Dover Motor Speedway, Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Nashville Superspeedway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, North Wilkesboro Speedway and Texas Motor Speedway.
The agreement aims to elevate brand recognition for the THOR family of companies and their dealer partners with avid race fans across the United States. Through the extensive new partnership, THOR is hoping to deliver exceptional camping experiences to RVers at 15 Speedway Motorsports NASCAR Cup race weekends in 2024, ensuring that NASCAR fans actively enjoy the RV lifestyle. Fan engagement will include camper appreciation event activities, promotions, sweepstakes and RV support.
"NASCAR race fans are extremely loyal, energetic and engaged RVers and are a key part of our customer base across the THOR family of companies," shared Matt Zimmerman, THOR's North America RV Group Manager. "We are excited to partner with Speedway Motorsports to provide best-in-class camping experiences at their preeminent venues across the country."
Jack Bungart posted: "Nov. 2: Storytime at Children's Wonderland, 11 a.m., Children's Wonderland, 360 Glenn Street, Vallejo. Oct. 27: The Makery: Open Use Hours, 2 p.m., John F. Kennedy Library 505 Santa Clara St., Vallejo. Oct. 27: Spooky Fest, 6 p.m., Vallejo Veterans" Times Herald Online
Nov. 3: Reflection Goth Night, 9 p.m., ,IntegriTea Art + Event Space 717 Marin St,, Vallejo,
Nov. 4: Holiday Bazaar by American Legion Post 550 Auxiliary, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 420 Admiral Callaghan Lane, Vallejo. St. More info: Paula (707) 280-7522 or Cincy 707 (315-8103)
Nov 4: Huge Garage Sale, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., St. Catherine Church, 3450 Tennessee St., Vallejo. Proceeds for homeless care kits. www.stcatherinevallejo.org
Nov. 4, 11, 18 at 7 p.m.: "Luisa Miller 'star-crossed love & passion' Opera by Giuseppe Verdi," Bay Terrace Theater, 51 Daniels Ave., Vallejo. For tickets, http://www.VerismoOpera.org or call (707) 552-0400.
Nov. 5, 12, 19 at 2 p.m.: "Luisa Miller 'star-crossed love & passion' Opera by Giuseppe Verdi," Bay Terrace Theater, 51 Daniels Ave., Vallejo. For tickets, http://www.VerismoOpera.org or call (707) 552-0400.
Nov 9: Veterans Business Resource Fair, 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., Solano-Napa SBDC, 490 Chadbourne Road, Fairfield. www.solanonapasbdc.org
gqlshare posted: "Each fall, Maruca Salazar[cq comment="cq" ] prepares her home for visitors from another realm.The 71-year-old scatters the walkway to her house on Denver's Northside with the rich, orange petals of the cempasúchil[cq comment="cq" ] — marigold — flow" The Willits News
Each fall, Maruca Salazar prepares her home for visitors from another realm.
The 71-year-old scatters the walkway to her house on Denver's Northside with the rich, orange petals of the cempasúchil — marigold — flowers. The blossoms, grown by Salazar, are synonymous with the traditional Mexican holiday of Día de los Muertos as they are thought to be fragrant enough to attract the spirits of deceased loved ones to their family's homes and altars.
On Thursday, Day of the Dead, Salazar's family will pack the matriarch's home and gather around a sacred altar overflowing with photos of the dead and ofrendas — offerings — made up of the departed's favorite earthly delights. The day serves as a reunion between the living and the dead when the veil between realms is considered thinnest.
"It is really peaceful," Salazar said. "I am happy to know that when you're gone, there is a beyond, and that beyond is powerful. It is a nostalgic day to remember where you came from and who you came from."
Lit candles guide the path to Salazar's front door. Garlands of marigolds and papel picado — colorful, decorative paper cutouts — line Salazar's porch, letting passersby in this realm and the next know that a celebration of life, death and remembrance is brewing inside.
Salazar — a storied artist and former director of Santa Fe Art District's Latin American art museum Museo de las Americas — helped popularize Day of the Dead in Denver during the burgeoning Chicano movement in the 1970s. Even though the celebration is more widely recognized today, Salazar still enjoys teaching new celebrants the ancient ways of Día de los Muertos — the rites and rituals her grandmother passed to her that she passed to her daughter who now teaches her granddaughter.
While Día de los Muertos iconography like sugar skulls can often be found alongside witch hats and fun-sized candy bars at the grocery store, Day of the Dead is not simply a Mexican version of Halloween, Salazar said. The holiday, a blend of Indigenous and Latino cultural traditions dating back thousands of years, focuses on honoring ancestry and commemorating death as a part of life by building altars that serve as shrines to memorialize lost loved ones.
"I want people to remember me when I am gone, so I remember those I have lost," she said.
Loss is universal
The leaders of the Latino Cultural Arts Center know the value of passing traditions on to youth, which is why the center brought Día de los Muertos programming to three Denver schools this year.
The art classroom at Denver's Valverde Elementary School hummed on Tuesday with an excitement only attainable by a group of children given craft supplies at 9:30 a.m. As the arts center's Mandy Medrano and Valverde art teacher Kristina Barboza passed out light-up butterfly replicas, faux marigolds and miniature clay pan de muerto — a type of Mexican bread baked for Day of the Dead — the fourth-graders squealed with delight.
Barboza has been teaching Día de los Muertos for six years at Valverde, where a majority of the student body is Hispanic.
"It started off small," Barboza said. "We'd put an altar together, but post-COVID, it turned into a bigger family celebration because of the needs of our community. Because there was so much loss. Our parents asked for this, and it's brought our whole community together."
The students make art to display at a big altar honoring the school community's lost loved ones. With the help of Latino Cultural Arts Center funding, families will be welcomed on Thursday for food, drinks and mental health resources.
Melissa Roybal, a Denver Public Schools social worker and trauma-informed therapist, volunteers with the arts center to provide mental health services at its Day of the Dead programming.
"We're trying to destigmatize talking about mental health in the Latino community," Roybal said. "That's why it's so important to have practitioners who look like the communities they're serving."
Normalizing mental health can be as simple as word reframing, Roybal said. Instead of using words like "therapy," Roybal tells people she's there to help talk things out.
"Everyone has loss," Medrano said. "It's universal. I'm never afraid to talk to kids about loss. It's better to not sugarcoat things and be real about it. It's a part of who we are as a people."
Yulissa Robles, 9, was happy to share as she glued pink ribbon to her altar, which she was making to honor her uncle and aunt who passed away.
"My favorite part has been making something that represents my family," Yulissa said. "At home, we make our altar, too, because we like to represent our culture."
"A beautiful tapestry"
On Thursday, Salazar prepped her altar-making supplies in her santos — saints — room, a striking part of her home with walls the color of butter and covered from top to bottom in artwork spanning various religions, from crosses to New Mexican saints to tapestries and her own woodwork.
She blessed the offerings before placing them on the altar, bathing them in incense from burning palo santo.
Her fingers brushed the frames and delicate edges of generations-old photographs awaiting their time on the altar. As the day gets closer and Salazar's preparations head into overdrive, she said she begins dreaming of her deceased family members and knows they are close. She awaits their reunion at the altar with a soft smile.
"Life and death is with you constantly," Salazar said. "If you ignore that, you only live but half your life."
Renee Fajardo, coordinator of the Journey Through Our Heritage program at Metropolitan State University of Denver, described typical altar components as elements of the earth: fire in the form of candlelight, water and air represented by feathers or the paper cutouts. Altars often offer salt to protect the body from breaking down as it travels from the world of the dead to the world of the living, Fajardo said. The marigold flowers, pictures of the deceased and sugar skulls are key components, as well.
"It's a beautiful tapestry — a weaving of people and communities and a particular area coming together to say, 'This is the way we are going to love and honor our departed loved ones,'" Fajardo said. "It's really about our humanity as a people that live on the same planet with each other, that we all have families we love and communities, and we all have departed loved ones."
Family members also add personal touches to the altars reflecting the visitors' personalities.
Salazar, for example, would like her family to leave her favorite molé at her altar when she dies.
Fajardo, a Denver native with Chicana and Native American roots, said when she thinks about Día de los Muertos, she imagines a future where the sacred remembrance of one's ancestors lasts longer than the holiday.
"Once you have these pictures and stories of people and ancestors who built the community, we want to encourage people to begin a repository, a history telling," Fajardo said. "We want it to be more than just looking at the parade and building of altars. How do we collect these stories and make sure the people who come after us recognize who we are in Colorado is a big, historic tradition of people weaving in and out of each other for hundreds of years."