Pinotfile Vol 8 Issue 5
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Diocese of San Jose 2020 Directory
Diocese of San Jose 2020 Directory 1150 North First Street, Suite 100 San Jose, California 95112 Phone (408) 983-0100 www.dsj.org updated 10/8/2020 1 2 Table of Contents Diocese Page 5 Chancery Office Page 15 Deaneries Page 29 Churches Page 43 Schools Page 163 Clergy & Religious Page 169 Organizations Page 205 Appendix 1 Page A-1 Appendix 2 Page A-15 3 4 Pope Francis Bishop of Rome Jorge Mario Bergoglio was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina's capital city, on December 17, 1936. He studied and received a master's degree in chemistry at the University of Buenos Aires, but later decided to become a Jesuit priest and studied at the Jesuit seminary of Villa Devoto. He studied liberal arts in Santiago, Chile, and in 1960 earned a degree in philosophy from the Catholic University of Buenos Aires. Between 1964 and 1965 he was a teacher of literature and psychology at Inmaculada High School in the province of Santa Fe, and in 1966 he taught the same courses at the prestigious Colegio del Salvador in Buenos Aires. In 1967, he returned to his theological studies and was ordained a priest on December 13, 1969. After his perpetual profession as a Jesuit in 1973, he became master of novices at the Seminary of Villa Barilari in San Miguel. Later that same year, he was elected superior of the Jesuit province of Argentina and Uruguay. In 1980, he returned to San Miguel as a teacher at the Jesuit school, a job rarely taken by a former provincial superior. -
Antioxidant Superiority Award
Antioxidant Superiority Award Version 2: September 2019 Clean Label Project Code of Practice: Antioxidant Superiority September 2019 The Clean Label Project is a national non-profit with the mission to bring truth and transparency to consumer product labeling. Using actual retail sampling and testing, we establish evidence-based benchmarks to identify the America’s best products using data and science as opposed to marketing. Together, we are changing the definition of food and consumer product safety in America. 1 | Page Copyright © 2019 by Clean Label Project All rights reserved. Clean Label Project Code of Practice: Antioxidant Superiority September 2019 This Code of Practice: Antioxidant Superiority Award is subject to revision. Go to www.cleanlabelproject.org to confirm the current version. Questions, clarification, interpretations, and suggested revisions regarding this Code of Practice: Antioxidant Superiority Award may be provided in writing to: Clean Label Project 280 E. 1st Ave. #873 Broomfield, CO 80038-0873 E-mail: [email protected] 2 | Page Copyright © 2019 by Clean Label Project All rights reserved. Clean Label Project Code of Practice: Antioxidant Superiority September 2019 Date of Publication: September 2019 Published by: Clean Label Project 280 E. 1st Ave. #873 Broomfield, CO 80038-0873 Copyright © 2019 by Clean Label Project All rights reserved. 3 | Page Copyright © 2019 by Clean Label Project All rights reserved. Clean Label Project Code of Practice: Antioxidant Superiority September 2019 Objectives and Disclaimers This Code of Practice provides criteria for the evaluation and marketing of manufacturers seeking compliance and certification for their products to the Clean Label Project Code of Practice- Antioxidant Superiority. -
J!J:__ ~Ichael K
THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON September 7, 1983 Dear Mr. Blosser: Thank for your recent letter with the attached information on Sokol Blosser Winery. I will keep your award winning wines in mind when there is a need to select more fine wines to serve at the White House. With best wishes, TtfJ!J:__ ~ICHAEL K. DEAVER Assistant to the President Deputy Chief of Staff Mr. Bill Blosser President Sokol Blosser Winery Post Off ice Box 199 Blanchard Lane Dundee, Oregon 97115 Mr. Michael K. Deaver Deputy White House Chief of Staff White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Washington D.C. Dear- Mr. Deaver: It has been brought to my attention that the selection of the White House wines rests with you and that your selection is limited to U.S. wines. May I suggest that you consider the Northwestern wines when making your selection? Sokol Blosser is the largest winery in Oregon and our wines have made impressive showings at wine tastings both here and abroad. Additionally, it has been selected as the house wine at the prestigeous Benson Hotel in Portland. Enclosed you will find a list of the medals Sokol Blosser wines have won. It is also my understanding that the Presidential favorites are full-bodied, red wines and that our First Lady prefers light, white wines. Therefore, I am sending you for your evaluation a bottle of our Pinet Noir and one of our Chardonnay. A$ you may well be aware, the laws governing wine labeling are much stricter in Oregon that elsewhere in the U.S., and our climate is much like the grape producing regions of France. -
National Register of Historic Places I ] §Gp Registration Form I
(Oct. 1990) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places I ] §gp Registration Form i • _ _„_....—•- This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. ?See instructions in Hovy to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete eaihJtem by marking"x" in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested. If an item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicaole." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NFS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items. 1. Name of Property________________________________________RELt^Fn/r''!^ historic name Alviso, Jose Maria, Adob°—————————————— other names/site number CA-SC1 -15? ___________________ 2. Location street & number Q? P-jprfmnnt- Pnari ___________________________ G not for publication city or town Mi Ip-it-ac;_____________________________________ D vicinity state ______rj=n -ifn-rnia code CA county fianivi ria-ra_____ code ngc; zip code 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, 1 hereby certify that this^Q nomination Q request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property S3 meetdlO does not meet the National Register criteria 1 recommend that this property be considered significant d nationally £H stat§wid^ Q/tocally. -
2014 Estate Pinot Noir San Ta C R U Z Mounta Ins
Few wine regions on earth can match Santa Cruz Mountains’ climates, soils and vertigo inspiring views. Set high in the mountains overlooking California’s Silicon Valley, the Thomas Fogarty Winery has been making single-vineyard Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Merlot and Cabernet from the SCM appellation since 1981. Fogarty’s two estates are divided into micro-vineyards, ranging from .25 to 5.25 acres, based on soil and topography. All are maritime (10-18 miles to Pacific), cool-climate (Regions I and II), high-elevation (1600-2300 feet), low yielding (1-3 tons per acre) and mountainous. The winery was founded by Dr. Thomas Fogarty, a Stanford cardiovascular surgeon and world-renowned inventor. 2014 ESTATE PINOT NOIR SAN TA C R U Z MOUNTA INS VINEYARD TECHNICAL DATA Our Santa Cruz Mountains Pinot Noir is sourced from vineyards from APPELLATION four distinct regions within the Santa Cruz Mountains AVA: the fractured 100% Santa Cruz Mountains shales of our Estate Vineyards high upon Skyline Blvd, coastal W INEGRO WER Corralitos, the cool coastal La Honda region and the Summit Rd area, Nathan Kandler which has the highest elevations in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Each vineyard is vinified to highlight it's own signature identity; this blend VINE YARD S harmonizes and intensifies the regional Santa Cruz Mountain character. 26% La Vida Bella (Corralitos), 24% Mindego Ridge (La Honda), 15% Muns (Summit), VINTAGE 13% Will's Cabin (Skyline), 8% Roberta's Vineyard (Summit), 2014 was the second consecutive drought vintage and featured the 4% Kent Berry (Summit) earliest harvesting in our 30+ year history. -
MODEST REVOLUTIONARIES Experimental Winemakers Duncan Meyers and Nathan Roberts Have Been Friends Since Childhood
ARNOT-ROBERTS MODEST REVOLUTIONARIES Experimental winemakers Duncan Meyers and Nathan Roberts have been friends since childhood. Adam Lechmere went to California to find out why they’re rapidly garnering a reputation as two of the state’s most exciting winemakers onversations with winemakers often turn to the conundrum of intervention and non-intervention. The American philosopher-turned-winemaker Abe Schoener of the Scholium Project has some interesting things to say on the subject. His basic C premise (he was a teacher and knows how to put ideas across) is that deciding to do nothing is just as much a decision as deciding to do something. When he leaves a barrel of Chardonnay fermenting in the sun for two years, then that is a form of intervention. The wine is always under his control. The same goes for vineyards. Any good modern winemaker will spend many hours, at all seasons, kicking dirt, talking trellising and cover crops with the vineyard manager. “To make good wine, you need good soils, a good grower, and good weather,” Nathan Roberts told me on a fine spring morning in Sonoma. Roberts and Duncan Meyers have been friends ever since fifth grade, ten or eleven years old, and have been making wine together for the best part of 15 years. Arnot-Roberts has had a slow gestation:“We had seven years with no pay,” Meyers says. They kept their day jobs for those years: Meyers—whose grandfather was an RAF man from Fife in Scotland—working for John Kongsgaard and then at Pax Wine Cellars; and Roberts—a grandson of Robert Mondavi’s widow Margrit— following his father into the family cooperage. -
Students by Zip Code of Residence As of Jan 20, 2006 (Job Corps Excluded)
De Anza College Winter 2006 Students By Zip Code of Residence As of Jan 20, 2006 (Job Corps Excluded) ZIP City Neighborhood HC % 95014 Cupertino 2,269 11.6% 94087 Sunnyvale Sunnyvale Bordering Cupertino 1,339 6.8% 95129 San Jose West West San Jose 990 5.0% 95051 Santa Clara 863 4.4% 94086 Sunnyvale Sunnyvale Middle 788 4.0% 95123 San Jose East of 880 Blossom Hill 659 3.4% 95035 Milpitas 557 2.8% unknown unknown unknown 498 2.5% 95008 Campbell 474 2.4% 95136 San Jose East of 880 Capitol Expwy 447 2.3% 95132 San Jose East of 880 Berryessa 436 2.2% 95117 San Jose West Winchester 414 2.1% 95111 San Jose East of 880 San Jose East of 880 408 2.1% 95124 San Jose East of 880 North of Los Gatos 406 2.1% 95050 Santa Clara 397 2.0% 95148 San Jose East of 880 Quimby 386 2.0% 95112 San Jose East of 880 San Jose East of 880 346 1.8% 95118 San Jose East of 880 San Jose East of 880 329 1.7% 95070 Saratoga West Valley College Area 327 1.7% 95127 San Jose East of 880 Alum Rock 327 1.7% 95120 San Jose East of 880 Almaden 326 1.7% 95122 San Jose East of 880 Tully 308 1.6% 95128 San Jose West Fruitdale/Valley Fair 305 1.6% 95121 San Jose East of 880 Yerba Buena 296 1.5% 95125 San Jose East of 880 Willow Glen 293 1.5% 95131 San Jose East of 880 Oakland 286 1.5% 95133 San Jose East of 880 McKee 277 1.4% 94085 Sunnyvale 271 1.4% 94040 Mountain View 262 1.3% 94089 Sunnyvale Sunnyvale North 255 1.3% 94043 Mountain View 236 1.2% 95116 San Jose East of 880 San Jose East of 880 235 1.2% 95126 San Jose East of 880 W San Carlos 223 1.1% 95130 San Jose West West San -
Wine-Book-210709.Pdf
02 04 08 09 21 52 53 54 02 04 08 09 21 52 53 54 2 SPARKLING Brut, Naveran — Cava (Penedès), 2018 .............................................................................................................. 8 Brut Rosé, Michel Briday – Bourgogne, NV......................................................................................................... 12 Brut, Taittinger — Champagne, NV.................................................................................................................... 18 ROSÉ Grenache, Cinsault, Syrah Peyrassol — Mediterranee 2020 ............................................................................ 10 Touriga Nacional, Maçanita - Douro 2019 ......................................................................................................... 14 WHITE Melon de Bourgogne, Eric Chevalier — Muscadet Côtes de Grand Lieu 2018 ................................................... 10 Sauvignon Blanc, Vincent Delaporte — Sancerre 2019 ..................................................................................... 16 Sauvignon Blanc, Spy Valley — Marlborough 2020............................................................................................ 11 Pinot Grigio, Jermann — Fruili-Venezia Giulia 2019 ........................................................................................... 14 Albariño, Fillaboa — Rias Baixas 2018 ................................................................................................................ 11 Grüner Veltliner, “Crazy Creatures,” Malat — -
The Bond Between Boba and Asian American Youth in San José, Califor
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles “Wanna Get Boba?”: The Bond Between Boba and Asian American Youth in San José, California A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in Asian American Studies by Talitha Angelica Acaylar Trazo 2020 © Copyright by Talitha Angelica Acaylar Trazo 2020 ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS “Wanna Get Boba?”: The Bond Between Boba and Asian American Youth in San José, California by Talitha Angelica Acaylar Trazo Master of Arts in Asian American Studies University of California, Los Angeles 2020 Professor Victor Bascara, Chair The tenth largest city in the United States with a population of over 1 million, San José, California resides on the southernmost edge of the Silicon Valley. Though high-tech narratives often subsume this region, a closer examination of San José’s (sub)urban landscape reveals the presence of over 100 boba shops and their multiethnic community of local patrons. Boba, a milk tea beverage which originated in Taiwan in the 1980s, made its U.S. debut in the late 1990s when Taiwanese American entrepreneurs aimed to emulate Taiwan’s unique boba shop experience in their American hometowns. Over the past 20 years, boba within the United States has morphed into a distinctly Asian American cultural phenomenon, which I argue makes boba a unique lens by which to examine Asian American youth culture. For this ethnographic study, I conducted and analyzed 17 interviews and 156 survey responses from Bay Area-based young adults (between the ages of 18 and 40) with varying degrees of familiarity with San José boba ii shops: from the occasional boba drinker to what some may call the “boba addict.” I opened the survey to all racial groups but focused my data analysis on those who self-identified as Asian American. -
Wine List Table of Contents
Wine List Table of Contents Wines, by the Glass 2 Rare & Premium Glass Pours by Coravin® 3 Specialty Cocktails 4 Beer 5 What We’re Drinking (Favorite Picks of NINE-TEN Staff) 6 Sommelier Suggestions 7 Half Bottles (375mls) 8 Sparkling Wines 9 Sauvignon Blanc / Chenin Blanc / Pinot Grigio 10 Riesling / Gruner Veltliner / Intriguing Whites 11 “Rhone” Whites / “Italian” Whites 12 “Spanish” Whites / Rosé 13 Chardonnay - USA 14 Chardonnay - International 15 Pinot Noir - USA 16 Pinot Noir - International 17 Syrah & Shiraz / Zinfandel 18 Grenache & Grenache Blends / Spanish Reds 19 “Italian” Reds 20 Intriguing Reds 21 “Bordeaux Styled” Blends 22 Bordeaux 23 Merlot / Malbec / Cabernet Franc 24 Cabernet Sauvignon 25 Glossary of Wine Terms 26 & 27 Wines by the Glass Sparkling Prosecco, Tasi, Extra Dry Prosecco DOC, Veneto, Italy NV 14 Rosé of Cabernet Franc, Bouvet, “Rosé Excellence,” Brut Loire Valley, France NV 15 Champagne, Taittinger, “La Française,” Brut Champagne AOP, France NV 21 White Lighter Bodied Sauvignon Blanc, Lucien Crochet Sancerre AOP, Loire Valley, France 2019 16 Sauvignon Blanc, Noria, Bevill Family Vnyd Russian River AVA, Sonoma County, CA 2018 15 Gruner Veltliner, Weingut Frank Wienvertal DAC, Neiderosterreich, Austria 2018 14 Riesling, Schloss Lieser, Kabinett {off-dry} Mosel, Germany 2015 15 Medium Bodied Pinot Grigio, Ronco delle Betulle Friuli Colli’ Orientali DOC, Italy 2018 14 Viognier, Christophe Pichon Colline Rhodaniennes IGP, Rhone Vly, FR 2018 15 Albariño, Hill Family Estate, Stewart Ranch Vynd Carneros AVA, Napa -
Vineyard Partners
Testarossa Partner Vineyards th San Francisco 1993 2018 Located approximately 60 miles North of San Francisco Anniversary Russian River AVA San Jose Graham Family Vineyard Testarossa Winery Los Gatos Santa Cruz Mountains AVA Black Ridge Vineyard Santa Cruz Santa Lucia Highlands AVA Monterey Fogstone Vineyard Rosella’s Vineyard Lone Oak Vineyard Testarossa’s limited production Garys’ Vineyard Chardonnays and Pinot Noirs Soberanes Vineyard are a result of our long-term Tondre Grapefield partnerships with California’s Cortada Alta Vineyard most passionate winegrowers. Doctor’s Vineyard Sierra Mar Vineyard Pisoni Vineyard All vineyards have strong marine influenced cool, breezy locations with consistently warm days and cool Chalone AVA nights. Perfect for cool climate Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. Brosseau Vineyard Central Coast of California Arroyo Grande Valley AVA San Luis Obispo Rincon Vineyard Rosemary’s Vineyard Santa Maria Valley AVA Santa Maria Sierra Madre Vineyard Santa Rita Hills AVA La Encantada Vineyard La Rinconada Vineyard Santa Barbara Sanford & Benedict Vineyard Passion in every glass Vineyards listed North to South Testarossa Partner Vineyards BLACK RIDGE FOGSTONE PISONI SIERRA MADRE Owners: Bret & Carol Sisney and Gary Owners: Jim Landes and Fred Faltersack Owners: Pisoni Family Owners: Circle Family Filizetti Appellation: Santa Cruz Mountains Appellation: Santa Lucia Highlands Appellation: Santa Maria Valley Appellation:Santa Lucia Highlands Soil: Sandy loam with sandstone and Soil: Decomposed granite and clay Soil: Sandy, -
WE FOUND OUR WAY to SAN JOSE CA NV Chapter Symposium 2006 JOHN MARSH HISTORIC TRUST TOUR
WE FOUND OUR WAY TO SAN JOSE JOHN MARSH HISTORIC CA NV Chapter Symposium 2006 TRUST TOUR By Carol March The John Marsh Trust will host a limited number of May 6 and 7, 2006 provided perfect weather visitors (less than 100) for a tour and walk about the John and San Jose, California provided many interesting Marsh House on Saturday, June 3, 2006. Time: 11:00 am. historic sites as members and friends of the Califor- Sharp. A box lunch will be provided after the one hour tour. nia-Nevada Chapter of OCTA gathered for the annual Members of the John Marsh Historic Trust will be Spring Symposium. Early on Saturday morning we on hand to provide information on the latest efforts to met at the Holiday Inn Silicon Valley in South San save the historic house. California Parks and Jose for Registration, continental breakfast and time to Recreation Site Manager/Ranger, Craig Mattson, will get acquainted before the day's programs began. Mary provide the access and comments. RSVP to Kathleen Mueller, chairman of the Symposium, welcomed us Mero, Treasurer, John Marsh Historic Trust, at email: and filled us in on the day's activities, then off we [email protected]. went to the first event. This is a thank you to the many "Friends" of John Awaiting us in the White Oak Room was a Marsh. No charge for the tour or for lunch. Limited ac- wonderful group of musicians directed by Lance Bee- cess. You must RSVP and have your name on the admis son and narrated by Greg P.