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Healdsburg
May 15, 2025

Who’s the baby?

My wife Bonnie and I recently went to the de Young Museum to see the Vermeer (1632 - 1675) exhibit on loan from the Mauritshuis in The Hague. The Exhibit is called “The Girl with the Pearl Earring” after what is perhaps Vermeer’s best known work. The girl turns to look at us over her left shoulder and as she turns our gaze is drawn to the single pearl on the lobe of her lovely ear. A text describes the painting as the Dutch “Mona Lisa.” The exhibit reveals a world of mostly prosperous looking men and women. Self assured, Protestant, one might even say secular. They are a class of people absent from earlier times, the early Renaissance and the Middle Ages. They are neither prelates (there is one painting of a preacher in the exhibit), nor princes, and they are certainly not peasants. They are burghers and their families, men of commerce, trade and industry; and they read and write. There is a charming, domestic scene of a woman, seated comfortably at a desk in her own home. She is writing, maybe a personal letter, maybe household accounts, but the point is she is writing, something that a few hundred years earlier few other than clergy were able to do.

Home garden certificate is now accessible online

Local gardeners will be able to sell or donate eligible produce

Popular Barn Dance to benefit Future Farmers Fair

‘Blue Jeans & Country Dreams’ event Saturday

Local auto dealers getting facelift

McConnell, Silveira to make upgrades to Healdsburg dealerships

Geyserville holds 30th annual town meeting

The 30th annual Geyserville Town Meeting was held last week, and more than 60 attendees heard from local officials on topics ranging from crime to toilets.

Little League celebrates Opening Day

There’s something about the smell of hot dogs and freshly cut grass, and the crack of a baseball hitting a bat that can trigger memories which last a lifetime.

The state of California prisons

For the last 15 years, I have been a volunteer in prisons, teaching convicted felons in the field of sociology and running self-help groups. Most of my students are “lifers,” men who have been convicted of serious crimes like murder, rape, or burglary for which they have received sentences of 15 years to life and much more. None of them are on death row, and most are now eligible for parole, having served their minimum sentences. Often, they have served far longer.

Local students compete for Chefs of Tomorrow culinary title

High schoolers paired with Sonoma County chefs

Kiwanis Club takes on tetanus in Third World

Healdsburg service organization celebrates 90 years with fight of deadly  disease

City approves jobs study

Classification and compensation analysis to compare public, private sector
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