Claremont Insider: Movies
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Weekend in Pomona

The Daily Bulletin tells us that the Pomona PD will conduct a DUI checkpoint from 9pm tonight to 3pm Sunday morning, as well as a "city-wide saturation patrol." So watch your drinking and driving if you're passing through Pomona tonight.

Besides making for safer streets, these checkpoints must be a money maker for cities. They're underwritten by federal grants, and they generate revenue from the citations the police hand out.

* * * * *

If you're looking for a family activity this weekend, John Clifford at M-M-M-My Pomona writes that there will be a screening of the original "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" (the one with Gene Wilder) at the Fox Theatre in downtown Pomona tomorrow at 2pm. Tickets are $5 for adults and $3 for kids under 12. Doors open at 1pm.

Also, Clifford says that they'll be a whole lotta shakin' going on at the Fox on September 25 when Jerry Lee Lewis comes to the Fox for a concert. Tickets start at $30, and you get all the info here.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Getting Schooled

CUSD MAIL

When the Claremont Unified School District first raised the idea of floating a $95 million school bond, a reader wrote in with a few questions about the district:

DATE: Wed, July 21, 2010 7:29:46 AM
SUBJECT: CUSD
TO
: Claremont Buzz

Isn’t the enrollment decreasing? I think school districts, including colleges, do whatever they can to keep expanding even when enrollment is falling. How many students attending school in Claremont are from out of the area? How many of Claremont ’s star athletes and scholastic award winners are actually not Claremont residents?


In answer to the reader's first question, enrollment hasn't fallen in recent years, at least the last time we checked. It seems to have stayed mostly flat, but the number of interdistrict transfers, students from outside of the district's enrollment area, has increased greatly.

Back in February, CUSD said that the district's enrollment had increased from 6,625 in the 2000-01 school year to 7,044 in 2009-10. The district also said interdistrict transfers increased from 787 to 1200 in the same period. So almost all of the increase, 413 out of 419, came from kids who don't live in CUSD's area. In other words, in 10 years interdistrict transfers increased by 52.5% while the number of Claremont kids increased by a total of 6 students, or about 1/10 of one-percent.

Now, if you listen to CUSD and the Claremont 400, these interdistrict transfers generate net income. However, they never give any numbers to support those statements, and no study has ever been done comparing the cost of this artificial increase in the student population with the savings that would be generated by having a slimmed-down district.

The other thing CUSD ignores is the fact that those interdistrict transfers get the benefit of any bond measures the district floats without having to pay for them since only properties within the district's boundaries get assessed to pay for the bond. So there is a fairness factor involved, too.

We think this business of interdistrict transfers is just another numbers game CUSD plays without proper consideration of any alternatives or any sense of how their games play out in the real world.


CARTELS

Another reader wrote to say that we should see a documentary film called "The Cartel," which debuted at the end of May. The film examines the workings of the state of public education in New Jersey. It seemed to get good audience reviews, but the mainstream media reviews were mixed at best, as in this NY Times blurb:
A mind-numbing barrage of random television clips and trash-talking heads, “The Cartel” purports to be a documentary about the American public school system. In reality, however, it’s a bludgeoning rant against a single state — New Jersey — which it presents as a closed loop of Mercedes-owning administrators, obstructive teachers’ unions and corrupt school boards.

The NYT reviewer and some of the others were were able to find seemed to agree that the outrages (such as a missing $1 billion in school construction money) mentioned in "The Cartel" by filmmaker and journalist Bob Bowdon were substantive but didn't like the film's tone.

The NYT piece pointed out that any such examination is a complex matter, and perhaps it is asking too much of the documentary format to examine all of the nuances involved. As with the city of Bell, we suspect that what happened to schools in New Jersey is at the far end of the school scandal spectrum, but we also think that even in a district as small as Claremont's such waste occurs, not necessarily out of maliciousness or criminality so much as because of a sort of institutional arrogance and false sense of infallibility.

Here, our ruling cartel just has a larger margin of error than New Jersey, though they seem to be doing their best to run through that.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Claremont Events

Despite cutbacks in Claremont's city services, summer brings the fun for kids of all ages.

Tonight, the Claremont Police Department brings back summer movies for the kiddies in Blaisdell Park. There's no food available for purchase this year. You'll have to bring your own food.

Also back is the City's Monday night Summer Concert Series, co-sponsored by the City and the Claremont Kiwanis Club. Food is available there, and the proceeds from concessions help pay for the entertainment.

The City's website has all the info:

Movies In the Park Start At Blaisdell Park

The Claremont Police Department is hosting Family Movies in the Park beginning Tuesday, July 13 at 7 p.m. This movie will be held at Blaisdell Park. Bring a picnic, chairs, and a blanket. The movie will start at dusk. (Please bring your own refreshements. Food will not be served)

Movie Schedule
July 13 Monsters vs Aliens
July 20 Hotel for Dogs
July 21 Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs
July 22 The Goonies
July 27 Planet 51

And:
2010 Summer Concert Series

Monday Nights 7:30pm - 9:00pm in Memorial Park
Concerts will begin on Monday, July 5th and will conclude on Monday, September 6th.
For information call (909) 399-5490.

The Claremont Monday Night Concert Series continues to be a stunning success, drawing 3,000-5,000 people each night. This 10-week series is sponsored by both the City of Claremont and the Claremont Kiwanis Club and features some of the best entertainment in the area. In an effort to appeal to a wide audience, the series features a diverse type of music while including a few traditional groups.

Although the concert officially runs from 7:30-9:00pm, the concertgoers begin arriving as early as 6:00pm to select a space and enjoy dinner in the park. The Kiwanis Club offers a variety of concessions, from burgers, dogs and quesadillas to ice cream, popcorn, nachos, candy and drinks. Proceeds from the concessions fund the bands. This Monday Night Concert Series runs from July 5 - September 6, and is free and open to the public.
  • Remember: Bring a picnic dinner, blankets and a low chairs.
  • Dogs are not allowed in City Parks other than Claremont Pooch Park.
  • Alcoholic beverages are not allowed in any City Park.

2010 Concert Schedule
  • July 19 - Sgt. Peppers Beatles Tribute Band (Rock)
  • July 26 - Brian Lynn Jones & The Misfit Cowboys (Country)
  • August 2 - Kulayd (Doo-Wop/Mowtown [sic])
  • August 9 - Suave (Latin/R&B)
  • August 16 - Calypso Pirates (Reggae)
  • August 23 - Neon Nation (80's)
  • August 30 - Night Blooming Jazzmen (Dixieland Jazz)
  • September 6 - The Answer (Classic Rock)

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

A Window on Our World

But this is what we do: we dream on, and our dreams escape us almost as vividly as we can imagine them. This is what happens, like it or not....

Coach Bob knew it all along: you've got to get obsessed and stay obsessed.

John Irving,
The Hotel New Hampshire

We were watching the 2008 documentary Man on Wire the other day and could not help but be struck by the enormous distance between 1974, when the events depicted in the film occurred, and the post-9/11 now.

The movie, if you haven't seen it, chronicles the story of Philippe Petit, the French aerialist, performance artist, street entertainer, and/or con man (take your pick) who, in August, 1974, managed to string 450 pounds of steel cable between the two World Trade Center towers in Lower Manhattan and then proceeded to spend nearly 45 minutes walking the high wire a quarter-mile in the air.

At first glance, one is tempted to view Petit's story as a mere attention-getting stunt. However, as with any real art, behind the apparent effortlessness of the event lay months, years of meticulous planning and practice entailing several trans-Atlantic trips to surveil the target, all of which eerily presaged today's terrorists.

And that is precisely where the reality of 1974 diverges from 2010 because rather than trying to destroy the towers, Petit succeeded in celebrating both them and New York. He was, of course, arrested and charged with criminal trespass and disorderly conduct. The charges were dropped in exchange for Petit conducting a performance for children in Central Park. The Port Authority also awarded Petit a lifetime pass to South Tower's observation deck.

Obsession of the sort underpinning such artistry can prove as constructive as the other unhealthy sort of obsessiveness can be destructive. That we get. Not that we Insiders make any claims to art, high or otherwise, but we have discovered that as long as we inhabit this community, we cannot help but be drawn back into the occasional silliness, melodrama, conflict, etc., of our little town. We don't know much, but we know that much.

Have some patience, and keep checking in.


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Saturday, January 23, 2010

Smogdance 2010


If you're looking for something to do today, head on over to the Laemmle's Claremont 5 Theatre for this year's edition of the Smogdance Film Festival. Smogdance started yesterday and continues today and tomorrow.

The festival features short films from around the world, and there will also be question-and-answer sessions with filmmakers, as well as an awards party tomorrow at the Claremont Forum in the Packing House. Smogdance was started in 1998 by the dA Center for the Arts in Pomona and has changed venues this year, leaving the Pomona Fox and moving the City of Trees.

The change in venues was not without some controversy. The Daily Bulletin's David Allen tells us about a feud behind the move:

[Festival director Charlotte] Cousins quietly seized the festival's reins last year from the dA, a Pomona nonprofit, renewing Smogdance's Web site in her name and filing fictitious-name statements for the festival as if it were hers.

She told me there had been differences of opinion with dA officials on film selection and poster art, as well as personality conflicts with some dA directors.

She said she was being squeezed out of the organization - this after winning a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for the festival, drawing attention from the New York Times and doubling attendance.

According to David Allen's column, the folks at dA say this was more of a hostile takeover.

_______________________


SMOGDANCE ’10--The 12th Annual Pomona Valley Film Festival
The Claremont 5 Laemmle Theatre
450 W 2nd Street, Claremont, 91711

Saturday, January 23 at 3:00 p.m and 7:00 p.m.
Sunday, January 24 at 1:00 p.m and 5:00 p.m.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

City News

Claremont's website has a couple items of interest:

DUI CHECKPOINT


Party animals beware! The Claremont PD is holding another sobriety checkpoint tonight from 6pm to 2am at an undisclosed location.


FREE MOVIES

The Claremont PD will once again host free movies this summer at various parks throughout town. More City info:

2009 Movies in the Park

Summer is the perfect time to take advantage of outdoor movies and the Claremont Police Department invites everyone to its 4th Annual Movies in the Park event. This is a great community event for families, neighbors, and friends of all ages.

We will be serving hot dogs, chips, and drinks prior to the show. The Human Services Department will be on site with games and crafts for kids to enjoy. Pre-movie activities will start at approximately 6:30 PM, with the movies starting at dusk.

We will cap the season off with a special National Night Out event on Tuesday, August 4th. National Night Out is a night that citizens across America can send a powerful message about neighborhood unity, awareness, safety and police-community partnerships. Free In-N-Out hamburgers will be served to the first 750 guests that evening.

Here is our 2009 schedule:


Thursday, July 16th - Wheeler Park: Kung Fu Panda
Tuesday, July 21st - Lewis Park: Madagascar 2
Thursday, July 23rd - Blaisdell Park: Firehouse Dog
Tuesday, July 28th - Larkin Park: Sandlot
Thursday, July 30th - June Vail Park: Open Season 2
Tuesday , August 4th - Memorial Park: Night at the Museum 2

All of the events are FREE, so bring your family, friends, and a blanket to enjoy the show.

**Please remember that dogs, alcoholic beverages, and smoking are not allowed in the park.

CHANGE OUT YOUR BULBS

If you're looking to phase out your old incandescent light bulbs, you can get some new, energy efficient ones for free next weekend at Montclair Plaza. Here's the info from the City:

Operation Light Exchange

Operation Light Exchange is an energy efficiency program that allows residential customers of Southern California Edison to exchange inefficient halogen and incandescent light fixtures for new, Energy Star labeled lamps. SCE customers may bring up to 10 lamps for exchange. To participate, please make sure you have your California drivers license showing a residential ZIP code in SCE's service territory or a residential SCE bill. Operation Light Exchange also accepts used CFL bulbs for recycling (no fluorescent tubes). The event will take place on July 18 and 19 between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. at Montclair Plaza. For more information, please visit www.scelampexchange.com.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Pomona Lives

Pomona Public Library Image
We were in downtown Pomona last night, grabbing a bite to eat at El Merendero #2 and picking up some panes dulces for breakfast, and we noticed the Fox Theatre sign up and running in blue and red revolving neon. The marquee, too, was lit up and announced that the theater was having its sneak preview fundraiser tonight. It looked like the work wasn't quite complete, but, with all the shiny new neon, you couldn't help but feel transported back 60 or 70 years.

The non-profit Friends of the Fox Theater website
tells the event is sold out, but the public will have plenty of opportunities to check out the new old Fox, beginning with the Smogdance Film Festival, which runs April 24-26.

The Daily Bulletin has plenty of coverage, including an an article by David Allen, who details the restoration work, including the job done by Pasadena-based ForSight Creations:

A crane with a 90-foot boom was used last August to haul down the sign, which was taken by the contractor to Pasadena for refurbishment.

ForSight Creations stripped, sandblasted and repainted the red sign. Workers also replaced all the neon, returning its original colors: red on one side, blue on the other.

They also rebuilt the motor that spins the sign, then used a crane to reinstall the sign in November.

ForSight, which in 2001 replicated historic signs at Grauman's Chinese Theater in Hollywood, also restored the Fox marquee, which dates to 1947.

"It has over 1,100 pieces of new neon in it," ForSight president Rob Jobson said. "It's definitely the old-school theater marquee brought back to life."

John Clifford has more information over at M-M-M-My Pomona, and a comment from Meg says us that Gogol Bordello will be playing at the Fox come May.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Scripps Film Series

If you missed "Persepolis" at Pomona College last week, it will be playing again April 2nd at the Garrison Theater on the campus of Scripps College. The film is part of the Humanities Institute's Spring 2009 program, "Muslim Women: Contemporary Realities."

The program also features a number of lectures. The next one is 7:30pm on March 25th at Scripps' Boone Recital Hall. Dr. Amina Wadud, a visiting scholar at the Starr King School of the ministry in Berkeley will give a lecture titled "Islam Beyond Patriarchy."

On April 9th, one week after "Persepolis" is shown, you can hear Marjane Satrapi herself speak, 7:30pm at Garrison Theater. (Why they didn't have the film and the author/illustrator on the same night?)

Here are the films remaining in the Humanities Institute Spring 2009 program:

Humanities Institute Spring 2009 FILM SERIES

Contact: Claire Bridge
Location: Boone Recital Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Event Date: February 27, 2009
Description:

THIS EVENT IS FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. For more information please call the Scripps College Humanities Institute (909) 621-8326, or visit our website for the entire schedule of events

Thursday, March 26 ~ 7:30 p.m. ~ Boone Recital Hall - Shahida - Brides of Allah, Natalie Assouline, Director, 2008, Israel, 76 min

Thursday, April 2 ~ 7:30 p.m. ~ Garrison Theater - Persepolis, Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi, Directors, 2007, France/USA, 96 min

Thursday, April 16 ~ 7:30 p.m. ~ Boone Recital Hall, 7 Filmsaze Zan-E Nabina (Seven Blind Female Filmmakers), Directed by Sara Parto, Shokoofe Davarnejad, Narges Haghighat, Banafshe Ahmadi, Mahdis Elahi, Naghmeh Afiat, and Neda Haghighat, Mohammad Shirvani, Producer, 2008, Iran, 116 min

Thursday, April 23 ~ 7:30 p.m. ~ Boone Recital Hall - Inside Ou, Zohreh Shayesteh and Ishai Setton, Directors, 2006, Iran, 52 (39) min. and A Jihad for Love, Parvez Sharma, Director, 2007, 81 min

Garrison Theater at
Scripps College

241 E. 10th St.
Claremont, CA 91711

Boone Recital Hall
231 E. 10th St.
Claremont, CA 91711

Call (909) 621-8326 for info.

Friday, March 6, 2009

5Cs Calendar

PERSEPOLIS

The Tournees Film Festival '09 at Pomona College concludes tonight with a screening of the film "Persepolis," based on Marjane Satrapi's graphic novel. "Persepolis" is a young girl's coming-of-age story played out against the backdrop of the Iranian Revolution.

The film was nominated for a 2008 best animated feature Oscar and is in French with subtitles. Admission is free.



Tournees Film Festival '09
Persepolis - 6:30pm


Rose Hills Theater
Smith Campus Center, Pomona College
170 E. 6th St.
Claremont, CA 91711

For information, call (909) 267-4001


SANDRA TSING LOH AT THE ATH


Sandra Tsing Loh
Website Image

Performance artist, author, and public radio commentator Sandra Tsing Loh will be at Claremont McKenna College's Marion Miner Cook Athenaeum next Wednesday, March 11, at 6:45pm.

Tsing Loh's website has her bio. You can hear her regularly on KPCC 89.3FM with weekly commentaries (The Loh Life) and daily with short bits about science (The Loh Down on Science).
M.M.C. Athenaeum
385 E. 8th St.
Claremont, CA 91711-6420
(909) 621-8244

Friday, February 6, 2009

Claremont Tidbits

The City of Claremont is holding a hazardous materials drop-off tomorrow from 9am to 3pm at the Claremont Corporate Yard, located at 1616 N. Monte Vista Ave.

The drop-off is open to all Los Angeles County residents.

* * *

The City is also warning of possible power outages between 9pm Sunday, February 8th and 7am Monday, February 9th due to work by Edison crews:

Power Outage Notification

A planned outage by SCE will affect service in the southwest area of the Village between 9:00 p.m. Sunday, February 8 and 7:00 a.m. Monday, February 9, 2009.

SCE will be performing maintenance to change out 2 ram switches, and will impact the following:

  • City parking structure on First Street.
  • Traffic signals at Arrow Hwy. and Indian Hill Blvd.
  • Local businesses in southwest section of the Village.
  • Even numbered addresses (100-400 blocks) on south side of W. First Street.
  • 100 and 200 blocks S. Indian Hill Blvd.
  • Peppertree Square on the southeast corner of W. Arrow Hwy. and Indian Hill Blvd.

Power may be off for the whole period or may be turned off more than once. This planned outage may not begin exactly at the stated start time. Some conditions may cause this planned outage to be postponed.

For outage status, please visit www.sce.com/outage or call 1-888-759-6056 and reference the planned outage number 331677 and/or 361666.



The Inland Valley Humane Society will be holding a series of pet vaccination clinics and low-cost spay/neuter clinics throughout the year, the City's website says:

Humane Society Hosts Low-Cost Vaccination and Spay/Neuter Clinics

The Inland Valley Humane Society is hosting a series of low cost clinics on a first come, first serve basis. The clinics are very well attended and the lines can be very long.

For information about the vaccination clinic call the Humane Society at (909) 623-9777 or for the spay/neuter clinics, call the Humane Society's Spay/Neuter Hotline at (909) 623-9777 x 696.

You can view of schedule of the clinics here.

* * *

Poetry fans will be interested to learn that the Claremont Graduate University has named this year's winners of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Awards. The Los Angeles Times carried a small blurb about this:
Matthea Harvey, a Brooklyn, N.Y., resident who teaches at Sarah Lawrence College, has won the $100,000 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award from Claremont Graduate University.

The prize, established in 1992 to honor work by a mid-career poet, was given for her book "Modern Life."

Matthew Dickman, a Portland, Ore., writer, was selected by the Claremont judges to receive the $10,000 Kate Tufts Discovery Award for his book "All-American Poem."

* * *

Also, Pomona College's Tournées Festival begins tonight at 6:30pm. We got this information from Claremont City Manager Jeff Parker's weekly newsletter last Friday:

POMONA COLLEGE FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL 2009

Pomona College will host a film series with the Tournées Festival, a French language
film festival every Friday evening at 6:30 p.m., beginning February 6 in the Pomona College Rose Hills Theatre, in the Smith Campus Center, 170 E. Sixth St. (College Avenue & Sixth Street). The films are free to the public. The schedule includes:

February 6 - Heading South (35 mm format)
February 13 - Flight of the Red Balloon (35 mm format)
February 20 - Before I Forget (DVD)
February 27 - Her Name Is Sabine (DVD)
March 6 - Persepolis (35 mm format)

Sunday, January 25, 2009

But Will It Play in Peoria?

Claremont High alum Elliot Graham has been nominated for an Oscar by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.

Wes Woods II over at the Daily Bulletin had an article about Graham's nomination and gave the film editor's background:

Graham, 32, attended Sycamore Elementary School, El Roble Intermediate School and graduated from Claremont High School in 1994. He had "a stopover at Webb" before he attended New York University and graduated in 1999.

He has lived in Los Angeles, Seattle and London since leaving Claremont....

Graham said Claremont is a special place for him.

"I think growing up in old town Claremont, on-and-off college campuses, is a unique and special experience. With its Ivy League-ish, New England setting and tree-covered campuses, it affects the area around it. You meet all sorts of people and cultures who are interested in learning and knowledge."

The Claremont Courier's Tony Krickl also wrote about Graham's nomination on his COURIER City Beat blog:
He has also been nominated for an Eddie Award by the American Cinema Editors.

Graham will be in Claremont this weekend for a friend's engagement party. We'll be sure to catch up with him for a full story to appear in the Wednesday, January 28 edition of the COURIER.

We finally got around to seeing "Milk" a few weeks ago and liked it. As a genre, bio pics tend towards weakness, perhaps because the audience knows the outcome, but "Milk" has much to recommend it. For one thing, Sean Penn's lead performance is remarkable in the way he captures the title character's essence, showing Harvey Milk's transformation and growth from a slightly awkward, closeted gay New York attorney to a leader of a political movement. Penn, who was nominated for a Best Actor award for his work, also manages to convey both the need to be loved and the charisma that so many successful politicians seem to possess.

Liberal or conservative, Democrat or Republican, the film has some important lessons to offer to anyone seeking change through politics. Persistence is one of these. Harvey Milk ran for office and was defeated three times before he was finally elected to office as a San Francisco City Supervisor.

More importantly, while being a change agent may get you elected, it won't necessarily make you a good elected official. You have to actually stand for something and offer positive alternatives; and, once in office, you have to govern, which means compromising at times and dealing with your former opponents fairly - something guaranteed to rile up your base supporters. The lesson is that, while it's great fun to lob Molotov cocktails over the Establishment walls, at some point the outsider becomes the legislator and has to lead from within the constraints of a new Establishment.

As if to underscore this, one of the film's key scenes is an exchange between Milk and Art Agnos (played by Jeff Koons). The two are both candidates in the Democratic primary for a State Assembly seat and have just finished a debate. As Agnos walks over to his car, he offers a tip to Milk: “In this town, you gotta give them a reason for optimism, or you’re cooked.”

So true, but it's not just Frisco, Art. It's Anytown, Anywhere. Claremont is no different. A few years ago, enough people wanted change to vote against incumbency. Councilmembers Al Leiga and Karen Rosenthal lost their re-election bids, and Paul Held and Sandy Baldonado likely would have been defeated if they had not stepped down rather than run again.

Llewellyn Miller, Jackie McHenry, Peter Yao, and current councilmember Corey Calaycay all ran as outsiders looking to change the council's direction. Of the first three, only Yao was re-elected, and we'll have to wait until March 3rd to see if people will re-elect Calaycay.

Miller and McHenry lost their second elections, but for different reasons. Miller, who was the first African-American elected to Claremont's City Council, was elected in the wake of the Irvin Landrum shooting, but quickly seemed to be co-opted by the very forces he was elected to change. McHenry, on the other hand, never seemed to learn the Art Agnos lesson about offering optimism, and that cooked her goose. McHenry the Revolutionary didn't quite manage the transition to governance, though to be fair, she also had then-City Manager Glenn Southard and his staff working to undermine her legitimacy.

The trick, as in some many things in life, seems to be balance, and it does seem possible that our City Hall is coming a little closer to finding that sort of moderation. As we've written recently, this election feels different from any in the past eight years, and the current council, even with the often disagreeable Mayor Ellen Taylor running things, has managed to work together in a more open, cooperative way than anytime in recent memory.

There are still times when things become knockdown, drag-out fights, but whereas in the past the Council and its commissions would have railroaded their plans through the decision-making processes, opposition voices have found just a bit more representation with this council than with previous ones. We'll have to see what the voters, who have the final say, think about all this.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Summer Family Events

Summertime, and the living is easy....

MONDAY NIGHT CONCERTS

Claremont's Monday night concert series kick off on Monday, July 7th, at 7:30pm. The Ravelers start off this year's series on July 7th, and the concerts will run all summer through September 1st. All concerts are in Memorial Park, and all you need is a blanket or low (emphasis on low) lawn chair. Bring a picnic dinner or feast on concessions provided by the Claremont Kiwanis Club.

July 7 - The Ravelers - Classic Rock
July 14 - Claremont Symphony Orchestra
July 21 - Reno Jones - Blues Rock
July 28 - Silverados - Country
August 4 - The Answer - Classic Rock
August 11 - Yolanda Creole Woman - New Orleans Soul and R & B
August 18 - Up Stream - Reggae
August 25 - Night Blooming Jazz Men - Dixieland Jazz
September 1 - The Dogs - Alternative Classic Rock


There will also be a series of Wednesday night children concerts starting July 9th. All the Wednesday night shows will be at the Memorial Park bandstand:

July 9 - Penelope 1 - World Music & Puppets
July 16 - Paul Cash - Environmental Magic Show
July 23 - The Happy Crowd - Musical Petting Zoo
July 30 - Slouch in the Couch Band


MOVIES IN THE PARK

The summer movies-in-the-park series hosted by the Claremont Police Department will be making its way through Claremont's municipal parks starting July 17th. All shows start at 7pm. CPD will sell food and drinks, and there will be an In & Out trailer at the final show in August:

Thursday, July 17 - Wheeler Park
Tuesday, July 22 - Lewis Park
Thursday, July 24 - Blaisdell Park
Tuesday, July 29 - June Vail Park
Thursday, July 31 - Larkin Park
Tuesday, August 5 - Memorial Park

The final night will also be a National Night Out celebration.