Pack your patience. OK, maybe you’ve heard that advice. But have you? Most of the holiday travel advice I’ve read allows you to conclude that by following a simple laundry list of suggestions, you won’t need to be patient. But you will. Oh, you will. “Expect that everyone believes their trip is more important than yours,” says Marcie Boyle, a travel agent with Travel Leaders in Chesterfield, Missouri. “Expect the airports and planes to be crowded. Expect security, restroom and restaurant lines to be extra-long. Expect to encounter less experienced travelers who may not know the tricks for getting through an airport quickly.”.
Learn and play poker Friday and Saturday nights, Joe 359-3525 for details, Contact John Galpin, 355-6787, or www.atcc.us, Meet with Camincha Thursday, 7:30 p.m., to discuss fiction / non-fiction, Serious writers with published work or interested in publishing, Email: camincha@comcast.net or 359-0890, Thursday, 11:30 a.m, to 1 p.m., Sharp Park Golf Course restaurant, Christine Stahl ballet art, ballerina art, original canvas art, girls room aqua, dance art, pointe shoes, dance studio art, girls rooms, ballet 868-0461, Second Thursday of month 7:30 p.m, Membership information, call membership chair Rose Graham 355-3085 or Linda Hughes 355-5586..
As children, Robson and Safechuck initially believed the relationships were more affectionate than abusive. And Jackson, they say, repeatedly impressed upon them that they had to keep their sexual contact a secret from other “ignorant” people who wouldn’t understand their “love.” Robson even recalls feeling frightened when Jackson told him that they would “both go to jail for the rest of our lives” if anyone found out. Michael Jackson’s most ardent defenders surely won’t be swayed by “Leaving Neverland,” if they even see it. The Jackson estate recently filed a lawsuit against HBO, calling the film a “public lynching.” They also point out that both Robson and Safechuck submitted sworn statements when Jackson was alive that the singer didn’t molest them. (Robson’s testimony in Jackson’s 2005 child molestation trial helped the pop star win a not-guilty verdict.).
“I’m on a cane now,” his dad said, “The muscles are about gone, I still have the use of my hands and I travel with an instrument on every trip, I’m afraid that if I stop playing, I’ll lose the ability.”, Weston said that even if his dad stops strumming the guitar, their conversations about the similarities of dancing and playing baseball will roll along like a pas de deux, a dance for two — or like the dance between a pitcher and a catcher, “There’s wonderful teamwork when a pitcher and ballet art, ballerina art, original canvas art, girls room aqua, dance art, pointe shoes, dance studio art, girls rooms, ballet a catcher are trying to outsmart a batter, That’s a physical feat that’s just like two dancers working together, Fielding rhythm and the stretch of a baseball player, the anticipation of where a ball might go — it’s ballet, That’s what people come to see.”..
Bay Area Spotlight: Kurt’s Farewell Tour Part Two: 7:30 p.m. March 3, The Hillside Club, 2286 Cedar St., Berkeley and 7:30 p.m. March 4, San Francisco Conservatory of Music, 50 Oak St., San Francisco. A concert of commissioned works for viola and electronics presented by the Left Coast Chamber Ensemble. $18-$35. www.leftcoastensemble.org. Hello Dolly: 8 p.m. March 3, Brava Theater, 2781 24th St., San Francisco. An evening of Broadway and more with emcee and drag personality Countess Katya Smirnoff-Skyy. $35-$75. http://bit.ly/2GzTqxR.