may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENt
1
GemFaire.com
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2014 Raymond James & Associates, Inc., member New York Stock Exchange/SIPC. Raymond James is a registered trademark of Raymond James Financial, Inc.
2
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
May 23, 24, 25 Earl Warren Showgrounds { 3400 Calle Real, Santa Barbara }
FRI 12-6 | SAT 10-6 | SUN 10-5 Admission $7 weekend pass
Discover all the items you need to make your own jewelr y.
GEMS
BEADS JEWELRY
MINERALS
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Buy direct from Wholesalers, Importers & Manufacturers!
*Bring this ad
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FREE admission
- OR Find your own style from loads of latest designs and merchandise from around the world!
503.252.8300 info@gemfaire.com *One per person. Not valid with other offer. Property of Gem Faire, Inc., can be revoked without notice, non-transferrable.
- SATURDAY SILVER SHADE THURSDAY MAY 1 - 3, 2014 10am - 6pm SUMMER TOUR SAMY'S SANTA BARBARA
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MAIL ORDERS:
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NO INTEREST
if paid in full within
6 or 12 Months*
6 Months* on purchases of $199 or more. 12 Months* on purchases of $499 or more with your Samy’s Camera credit card made between May 1, 2014 to May 7, 2014. Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if the promotional purchase is not paid in full within 6 or 12 Months or if you make a late payment. Minimum Monthly Payments Required.
PRICES GOOD MAY 1 - MAY 7, 2014 EXCEPT WHERE INDICATED. Not responsible for typographical errors. Quantities limited to stock on hand. First come, first served. No rainchecks and no holds. Prices subject to change without notice. See store for details. Special offers available on in stock items only. Colors vary by location.
*Valid on any purchase of $199 or more for the 6-month offer and on any purchase of $499 or more for the 12-month offer made on your Samy’s account. On promo purchase balance, monthly payments required, but no finance charges will be assessed if (1) promo purchase balance paid in full in 6 or 12 months, and (2) all minimum monthly payments on account paid when due. Otherwise, promo may be terminated and treated as a non-promo balance. Finance Charges accrued at the Purchase APR will be assessed from the purchase date. Regular rates apply to non-promo balances, including optional charges. Promo purchases on existing accounts may not receive full benefit of promo terms, including reduced APR if applicable, if account is subject to Penalty APR. Payments over the minimum will be applied as required by applicable law. As of 1/1/10, APR: 28.99% & on all accounts in default, Penalty APR 29.99%. Minimum finance charge $2.00. Subject to approval by GE Money Bank.
may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENt
3
SANTA BARBARA
Also on view: HEAVENLY�BODIES� Through May 25 Special event: Thursday, May 8, 6:30 pm WALKING�WHILE�TALKING�� DAUMIER�AND�THE�SALON Former SBMA exhibition intern Elizabeth Saari Browne provides an introduction to Honoré Daumier’s series of entertaining lithographs. Museum Ridley-Tree Gallery Free
EBERR BLUGrown with care atIES Restoration Oaks Ranch Santa Ynez Valley
ORDER FIELD FRESH TO YOUR DOORSTEP!
www.sbblueberries.com
Experience UPick Paradise GRAND OPENING Saturday, May 3rd Our premium quality blueberries are grown naturally, without sprays or pesticides, so you can pick ‘em and eat ‘em right off the bush! Come pick some delicious, locally grown super food… and instantly be smarter. Bring the kids and enjoy some time in the blueberry fields of pristine Restoration Oaks Ranch, located right off Highway 101 in beautiful Santa Ynez Valley, just five minutes north of the Gaviota tunnel.
OPEN EVERY DAY 10-6 Can’t make the drive? Order Online sbblueberries.com
Phone: 805.686.5718 Email: info@sbblueberries.com
1130 State Street Santa Barbara, CA
January 26 — May 4, 2014
805.963.4364 www.sbma.net
Final Weekend! Michelle Stuart, Roman Seed Calendar I (detail), 1995. Seeds from Rome, silver, watercolor, pencil on china and rice paper. © Michelle Stuart. Courtesy of the artist and Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects.
Your ONE STOP Shop! Parts . Service . Spas 534 E. Haley (at Salsipuedes)
(805) 963-4747
Village Pool Supply THE ULTIMATE IN POOL & SPA SALES, SERVICE AND REPAIR PARTS • MAINTENANCE • REPAIRS • RESURFACING For all your pool and spa needs since 1972 lic.# 342321
4
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
Life Transition? Need Help? I can support you!
Iungian Psychology • Buddhist Psychology
Couples • Individuals “Dr. KD not only described my experience but also presented me with a context in which to harness the gifts of my journey and to reassemble a functioning and happy life for myself.” ~ V. Kooper, Author
310.578.6163 • KDFARRIS.COM
Best-selling Author of Bel Canto and State of Wonder
Acclaimed Author, Radio Personality and Comic
Popular Host of NPR’s Science Friday
TUE, MAY 6 / 8 PM / UcSb cAMPbELL HALL $20 / FREE for UcSb students (limited availability)
The Madwoman in the Volvo: My Year of Raging Hormones
Science is The New Sexy
Ann Patchett
“Expect miracles when you read Ann Patchett’s fiction.” The New York Times
Sandra Tsing Loh
THU, MAY 8 / 8 PM / UcSb cAMPbELL HALL $15 / $8 UcSb students
MoN, MAY 12 / 8 PM / UcSb cAMPbELL HALL $20 / $8 UcSb students
Principal Sponsors: Marcia & John Mike Cohen Presented in collaboration with the SB Museum of Natural History
Pulitzer Prize-winning Author of Acclaimed Liberation Trilogy on World War II
Poet, Author and Inspirational Speaker
David Whyte
Solace: The Art of Asking the Beautiful Question
Rick Atkinson
WEd, MAY 14 / 8 PM UcSb cAMPbELL HALL $20 / $8 UcSb students
Using the insights of poetry, he explores the art of finding and asking the beautiful question – the line of inquiry that helps us reimagine ourselves, our world and our part in it.
Ira Flatow
FREE
SUN, MAY 18 / 3 PM UcSb cAMPbELL HALL Join Atkinson, a former Washington Post journalist, as he discusses the historic events covered in his stirring pageturners, including An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942-1943; The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944; The Guns at Last Light: The War in Eastern Europe, 1944-1945.
Stand Up Straight and Sing!
Jessye Norman
in Conversation with Jim Svejda of KUSC Radio FRI, MAY 16 / 7:30 PM / HAHN HALL, MUSIc AcAdEMY oF THE WEST Tickets start at $45 / $15 UcSb students (limited availability)
America’s most beloved classical singer shares her life story: Growing up amid the challenges of Jim Crow racism, Norman sang spirituals. Decades later, after a meteoric rise at the Berlin Opera and a debut at the Met Opera, she has become one of America’s cultural treasures. Books will be available for purchase and signing at each event Community Partner:
(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UcSb.edu may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENT
5
TREK IN STYLE.
RegisteR today WalkToEndMS.org or 805.682.8783
150 different styles of tread to choose from
Presented by
BACKPACKING
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Southern California & Nevada 2014
Walk ms: santa barbara saturday, may 3, 2014 leadbetter beach TRAIL RUNNING
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Share your travel stories and photos with us! @mountainairsports
14 State Street • 962-0049 Mon - Sat 10 - 6, Sun 10 - 5 At the Beach • Free Parking
Editor in Chief Marianne Partridge
MOUNTAINAIRSPORTS.COM Locally owned and operated for over 35 years
© Photo courtesy of Teva 2014
Executive Editor Nick Welsh; Senior Editors Michelle Drown, Matt Kettmann; Feature Writer Ethan Stewart; Photography Editor Paul Wellman News Editor Tyler Hayden; News Reporters Kelsey Brugger, Brandon Fastman, Lyz Hoffman; Columnist Barney Brantingham; State Political Columnist Jerry Roberts; Opinions Editor Jean Yamamura Executive Arts Editor Charles Donelan; Arts Editor Aly Comingore; Arts Writers Tom Jacobs, Joe Miller, D.J. Palladino, Elizabeth Schwyzer; Calendar Editor Terry Ortega; Calendar Assistant Ginny Chung Copy Chief Amy Smith; Copy Editors Jackson Friedman, Diane Mooshoolzadeh
Take Care of YOU This Mother's Day! Mom, bring in this ad and receive 10% off. Must present this ad in order to receive special. Offer valid through Friday, May 9th.
HURRY!
NEXT KUT STARTS: MAY 10th!
"We have been kickboxing together for the past two years and we love it! It's a great way to get fit together." – Hannah & Melissa 6
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
KUT is a 9-week fitness program that combines kickboxing, nutrition, flexibility and resistance Voted BEST training with a team of coaches, instructors and fellow teammates that will help you Fitness Program achieve the body that you've always wanted! in SB!
Martial Arts Family Fitness 122 E Gutierrez St. SB • 963-6233
www.kickboxers.com
Art Director Ben Ciccati; Assistant Art Director Chelsea Lyon; Editorial Designer Caitlin Fitch; Webmaster Robert LeBlanc; Web Producer/Social Media Michael S. Gahagan Sports Editor John Zant; Outdoors Editor Ray Ford; Food Writer George Yatchisin; Contributors Jake Blair, Rob Brezsny, Cynthia Carbone Ward, Victor Cox, Roger Durling, Marilyn Gillard, Virginia Hayes, Rachel Hommel, Eric Hvolboll, Shannon Kelley, Bill Kienzel, Cat Neushel, Michael Redmon, Starshine Roshell, Tom Tomorrow, Silvia Uribe; Editorial Interns Molly Christison, Lauren Haines; Founding Staff Emeriti Audrey Berman, George Delmerico, Richard Evans; Honorary Consigliere Gary J. Hill Copy Kids Jack Poett Campbell, Chloë Bee Ciccati, Miles Joseph Cole, Asher Salek Fastman, Delaney Cimini Fruin, Madeline Rose Kettmann, Mason Carrington Kettmann, Izzy and Maeve McKinley, Miranda and Gabriel Ortega Office Manager/Legal Advertising Tanya Spears Guiliacci; Distribution Scott Kaufman; Media Sales/Classifieds Manager Robby Robbins; Advertising Representatives Camille Cimini Fruin, Suzanne Cloutier, Remzi Gokmen, Mark Hermann, Laszlo Hodosy, Tonea Songer Production Manager Megan Packard Hillegas; Associate Production Manager Marianne Kuga; Advertising Designers Gabrielle Dimaranan, Rachel Gantz Business Manager Brandi Rivera; Director of Advertising Sarah Sinclair Publisher Joseph L. Cole The Independent is available, free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Back issues cost $ and may be purchased at the office. The Independent may be distributed only by authorized circulation staff or authorized distributors. No person may, without the permission of publisher, take more than one copy of each Independent issue. Subscriptions are available, paid in advance, for $ per year. The contents of The Independent are copyrighted by The Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. No part may be reproduced without permission from the publisher. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. A stamped, self-addressed envelope must accompany all submissions expected to be returned. The Independent is published every Thursday at W. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA . Advertising rates on request: () -. Classified ads: () -. The Independent is available on the Internet at independent.com. Press run of The Independent is , copies. Audited certification of circulation is available on request. The Independent is a legal adjudicated newspaper — court decree no. .
Contact information: 122 W. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101 PHONE (805) 965-5205; FAX (805) 965-5518; CLASSIFIED (805) 965-5208 EMAIL news@independent.com, letters@independent.com Staff email addresses can be found at independent.com/info
COVER | 23 STORY
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Food & Drink . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
With Friends like These… A&E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Wolf and Aceves Duke It Out for 2nd District
Arts Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
ON THE COVER: Illustration by Ben Ciccati.
Classical . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
NEWS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Arts & Entertainment Listings . . . . . . . . 52
(Lyz Hoffman)
Dance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Theater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Pop, Rock & Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
BOOK SENSE
ONLINE NOW AT
INDEPENDENT.COM
OPINIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 FILM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Voices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Barney Brantingham’s On the Beat . . . . 17
Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 This Modern World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
THE WEEK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
LIVING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Living Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
PAUL WELLMAN
When he’s not toiling at his day job with the school district, Santa Barbara native Brian Tanguay writes a blog, “Shouts from the Balcony,” which he describes as “the harmless ravings of an unarmed American.” A voracious reader, Tanguay also reviews books for The Indy, tackling myriad subjects — from theoretical physics to the civil war in the Congo to literati Henry Miller to humorist Gary Shteyngart. Of reviewing books, Tanguay said, “The hardest thing is condensing hundreds of pages into 500 words or fewer.” Fortunately for us, he does that with aplomb.
PAUL WELLMAN
volume 28, number 433, May 1-8, 2014 PAUL WELLMAN
CONTENTS
Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Movie Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
ODDS & ENDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology . . . . . 58
Dining Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Restaurant Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
CLASSIFIEDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Supervisor
HIKING
Dan McCaslin walks Manzana Creek to new Ray Ford camp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . independent.com/hiking
DANCE QUESTIONNAIRE
Roger Durling queries Horny Toad’s Gordon Seabury . . . . . . . . independent.com/sbq
MEET YOUR FARMER
Rachel Hommel interviews Underwood Family Farms . . . . . . . independent.com/farmer
Elizabeth Schwyzer reviews Abraham.In.Motion at Campbell Hall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . independent.com/reviews
OPINIONS
Everyone against Measure M; plus Andrew Rice on Montecito’s Hosmer Adobe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . independent.com/opinions
Janet Wolf
Janet Wolf is a hardworking Supervisor who gets things done:
Re-Elect
Janet
Wolf 2nd District County Supervisor
• Member, Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors, 7 years • Goleta School Board Member, 11 years • Small Business Owner, 20 years • Former Teacher
County Supervisor
Vote by Mail begins May 5th
Election Day June 3
• • • • •
Improved fiscal accountability and transparency. Strengthened services for children, families and veterans. Improved public safety and disaster preparedness. Protected our neighborhoods and the environment. Improved our roads and parks, protected open spaces, and saved Goleta Beach Park.
Janet Wolf is endorsed by: Santa Barbara County Auditor-Controller Robert Geis Santa Barbara County Supervisor Salud Carbajal Goleta Mayor Michael Bennett Goleta Councilmember Ed Easton Goleta Councilmember Paula Perotte Former Goleta Mayor & Councilmember Margaret Connell Former Goleta Mayor & Councilmember Cynthia Brock Goleta Planning Commissioner Terry Dressler Goleta Planning Commissioner Meg West Goleta School Board Member Yvonne DeGraw Goleta School Board Member Susan Epstein Goleta School Board Member Richard Mayer Goleta School Board Member Luz Reyes-Martin Goleta Water Board Member Lauren Hansen Goleta Water Board Member Rick Merrifield Goleta Water Board Member Bill Rosen Sierra Club For a complete list of endorsements or for more information:
Santa Barbara County Treasurer Harry Hagen Santa Barbara County Supervisor Doreen Farr Santa Barbara Mayor Helene Schneider Santa Barbara Councilmember Gregg Hart Santa Barbara Councilmember Cathy Murillo Santa Barbara Councilmember Bendy White SBCC Trustee & Former SB Mayor Marty Blum SBCC Trustee Peter Haslund SB School Board Member Gayle Eidelson SB School Board Member Ed Heron SB School Board Member Monique Limon SB School Board Member Kate Parker SB School Board Member Pedro Paz Former Supervisor, Susan Rose, 2nd District Former Santa Barbara Mayor Hal Conklin Former Santa Barbara Mayor Sheila Lodge Santa Barbara County & City Firefighters Associations (partial list)
www.JanetWolf2014.com
Paid for by Re-elect Supervisor Janet Wolf 2014, PO Box 90610, Santa Barbara, CA 93190 FPPC ID # 1281935 may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENT
7
GET INSPIRED!
May is Santa Barbara Public Gardens Appreciation Month
CELEBRATE WITH US. Sampling of Actvities for May 1 – 9: Seed Sowing for the Summer Garden: Casa del Herrero Introduction to California’s Plant Families: Santa Barbara Botanic Garden Butterflies in Your Garden: UCCE Master Gardeners Tour and Food Tasting: Santa Barbara Mission – La Huerta Historic Gardens
For a complete listing of activities: www.sbpublicgardens.org Generously Sponsored By:
SANTA BARBARA
Partners Include: Casa Del Herrero • Ganna Walska Lotusland • Santa Barbara Botanic Garden • City of Santa Barbara Parks & Recreation • City of Santa Barbara Water Conservation Program • Simpson House Inn • Rancho La Patera & Stow House • CASA Magazine • MTD Santa Barbara • parentclick.com • Santa Barbara News Press Garden Club of Santa Barbara • UCCE Master Gardeners of Santa Barbara County • Santa Barbara Zoological Gardens • Santa Barbara Cactus & Succulent Society • PIP Printing • Noozhawk • EdHat •Old Mission Santa Barbara • Santa Barbara Chamber and Visitors Center
KNOW A YOUNG CHILD
Funding for Cultural Arts and Events & Festivals!
WITH AUTISM?
The City of Santa Barbara in partnership with the Santa Barbara County Arts Commission will be accepting 2014-15 grant proposals from nonprofit organizations to support arts and cultural programming in the City.
FUNDING IS AVAILABLE IN 3 CATEGORIES: Community Events and Festivals Grants
Support events that help attract cultural tourists and participants to Santa Barbara during the non-peak travel season from September to May 15.
Community Arts Grants
Help support short term projects and link artists to communities and increase engagement.
DEADLINE: All grants must be submitted electronically by Monday, June 9 by 11:59pm. Late submittals will not be considered. Attendance at a Technical Support workshop is strongly recommended and is required for first-time applicants. Grant Applications available online Wednesday, April 30, 2014 at http://www.sbartscommission.org/grants/index.html Technical support workshops are scheduled for:
Fri., May 2, 5:30-6:30pm at the Arts & Culture Center, 2nd floor at 1330 State St. Tues., May 6th 4:00-5:00 at the David Gebhard Pulbic Meeting Room, 630 Garden St. Wed., May 14 Noon-1pm; Arts & Culture Center at 1330 State St.
For additional grant application information contact the Arts Commission at 805 568-3990 or Lyn Semenza online at lyn@sbartscommission.org.
Rusty’s Offers ONLY @
Organizational Development Grants
Assist established arts organizations in presenting professional quality programs that expand and engage audiences and participation.
UCSB’S KOEGEL AUTISM CENTER is offering early social intervention services to qualifying research participants (Children with ASD ages 18 months – 6 years)
VISIT education.ucsb.edu/autism EMAIL autism@education.ucsb.edu OR CALL 805.893.2049 FOR MORE INFORMATION
This grant is funded by Au2sm Speaks, grant number 8819. For more informa2on about this grant, visit h?p://science.grants.au2smspeaks.org/search
8
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
First Thursday K
ick-Off Event! May 1st
Velo Vogue Fashio n
Show
Paseo Nuevo Ma ll 5-7:30 PM
Bike Challenge • Classes Fashion • Music • Rides Bike to Work Week • Kid’s Activities • Movies 5/1 - 5/31 • Bike Challenge • 5-member teams compete for fame, fitness & to raise money for local charities • www. TrafficSolutions.info (r)
5/10 • Mountain Bike Clinics • Hosted by SBMTV with beginner, intermediate & women specific clinics • Rocky Nook Park, SB • 8:45-11AM (r)(s)
5/15 • Velo Wings Awards • Honoring three local women cyclists • Amgen Tour of California finish line, Cabrillo Blvd., SB • 4PM
5/1 • Velo Vogue Bicycle Fashion Show • 1st Thursday event - Live show, music & beer garden • Paseo Nuevo Mall at De la Guerra St., SB • 5-7:30PM
5/10 • Bike Handling Skills & Group Ride • Learn to become safe & confident on your bike by SB Bike • Bici Centro, 506 E. Haley St. • 9AM-12PM (r)
5/17 • Beach to Bluffs • Carpinteria bike ride & brunch. Scenic road ride & family friendly options • Rincon Cycles, 5100 Carpinteria Ave. • 9AM-12PM (r)($)
5/1 • Bike Moves • “Bike Prom” themed ride down State St. • Meets at De la Guerra Plaza, SB • 7:30PM
5/11 • Mother’s Day Family Ride & Tea Party • All-ages leisurely ride & refreshments • Sponsored by REI • Tierra de Fortuna Park to Coal Oil Point, Isla Vista • 10-11:30AM (r)
5/18 • Solvang Bike & Wine Ride • Social ride, wineries & BBQ. Hosted by SB Ski Club • Hans Christian Andersen Park, 633 Chalk Hill Rd., Solvang • 9AM-3PM (r)($)
5/1 • Bike Moves After Party • The revelry continues with this SB Bike fundraiser • Bici Centro, 506 E. Haley St., SB • 9PM-12AM ($) 5/3-5/4 • Tour de Tent • 2-day, 90 mile bike tour connecting our community along The Coastal Route, leisurely paced • Guadalupe, Santa Rita Hills, Refugio & Santa Barbara • 9AM12PM (r)(s)($) 5/6 • Get Your Bike Ready to Ride • Learn basic fixes & tips by SB Bike • Bici Centro, 506 E. Haley St., SB • 7-9PM (r) 5/7 • Bike to School Day • Prize & treats, including 4 free bikes! Led by COAST Safe Routes to School, w/support from Yardi • participating South Coast schools 5/7 • Women on Wheels (WOW) Ride • No-drop intro to group riding, hosted by B4T9 • Whole Foods, 3761 State St., SB • 5:30-7PM (r) 5/7 • Hands-On Bike Maintenance • Drive train class by REI • 321 Anacapa St. • 6:30-8:30PM (r)($)(s) 5/8 • Tweed Ride & Bike-in-Movie • “Tweed” themed ride followed by a vintage bike display, food, drinks & The Triplets of Belleville. Hosted by the SB Historical Museum • 136 E. De La Guerra St., SB • 6-10PM 5/8 • Become a Confident Rider • Bike skills & rules of the road class, hosted by SB Bike • Bici Centro, 506 E. Haley St., SB • 7-8:30PM (r) 5/9 • Fat Tire Fest • Rides, demos, food, drinks & raffle by SBMTV • Elings Park, SB • time TBA 5/9 - 5/11 • 805 Criterium Weekend • Pro races, free kids races & SCNCA Elite Criterium Championships. • Friday - 805 Hancock Twilight Crit. • Saturday - 3rd Annual 805 Buellton Avenue of Flags Crit. • Sunday - 2nd Annual 805 Lompoc Valley of Flowers Crit.
A program of:
5/11 • MTB Trail Maintenance Day • Hosted by SBMTV to maintain & enhance local trails • Trail TBA • 9AM-2PM
5/22 • Educators Happy Hour • Appetizers, drinks & inspiration for prospective bike & pedestrian advocates in schools. Hosted by COAST • Bici Centro, 506 E. Haley St., SB • 5:30-7PM
5/12 - 5/16 • Bike to Work Week • The following public celebrations will be hosted throughout the week, offering food, prizes and merriment for bike commuters:
5/29 • Adams Elementary Family Bike Night • Bike skills, education & fun for students & families • 2701 Las Positas Rd. • 5:30-8PM
5/13 • Deckers Bike to Work Breakfast • 6601 Hollister Ave., Goleta • 7:30-9AM 5/13 • Sonos Bike to Work Breakfast • 223 E. De La Guerra St., SB • 7:30-9AM 5/14 • City of Goleta Bike to Work Breakfast • Goleta City Hall, 130 Cremona Dr. • 7-9AM 5/14 • City of Santa Barbara After-Work Bike-Stop • Bikestation, 1219 Anacapa St. • 4-6:30PM 5/15 • UCSB Bike Breakfast Celebration • Hosted by UCSB TAP • Campus bluffs above Goleta Beach • 7-9AM 5/16 • Yardi Bike to Work Breakfast • 430 S. Fairview Ave., Goleta • 7:30-9AM 5/16 • Lynda.com Bike to Work Breakfast • 6410 Via Real, Carpinteria • 7:30-9AM
5/31 • Connecting Our Community Elected Officials Tandem Bike Ride • Ride with elected officials in 3-4 mi. stages from Goleta to the Ventura County line • 10AM-4PM • Press conference, Chromatic Gate on Cabrillo Blvd. • 1:30-2PM 6/5 • Bike Challenge BBQ & Awards Ceremony • Celebration and recognition of winning teams & businesses by Traffic Solutions • Goleta City Hall, 130 Cremona Dr. • 11:30AM-1:30PM (r) = Registration required ($) = Participation fee (s) = Space is limited
5/16 • Bicycle Bob’s After-Work Pit-Stop • 320 S. Kellogg Ave, Goleta • 4-6PM 5/14 • Amgen Tour of CA Pre-Party • Celebrate the eve of Stage 5 in SB. Refreshments, auction & race footage • Bici Centro, 506 E. Haley St., SB • 7-10PM ($) 5/15 • Amgen Tour of California • Stage 5 finish Thursday afternoon • Cabrillo Blvd., SB
o o G
n . u f n a e l c d
963-SAVE www.CycleMAYnia.org may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENT
9
News of the Week
APRIL 24 – MAY 1, 2014
news briefs LAW & DISORDER
SBSO
elections
PAU L WELLM AN
by KELSEY BRUGGER, TYLER HAYDEN, LYZ HOFFMAN, and MATT KETTMANN, with INDEPENDENT STAFF
Is the Council Too White? City Considers New District Election System
POINTED WORDS: Attorney A. Barry Cappello told the council he plans on challenging the city’s at-large election system in court, saying a system based on districts would make room for more minority candidates.
W
BY LY Z H O F F M A N
ith a discussion of district elections came two disparate messages: Don’t rush a decision, but get ready to get sued. Such was the scene at the Santa Barbara City Council meeting on Tuesday, when the councilmembers heard from a handful of public speakers and talked among themselves about examining the idea of asking voters in November to potentially change the city’s current at-large election system, meaning officials represent the entire city, to one based on districts, meaning they would only represent a designated area. But at the same time, the council was urged to take the process slowly — councilmembers voted 7-0 to hold a public workshop in May to hear what type of change residents might want — they were warned by lawyer Barry Cappello that the pro-districts lawsuit he has been planning for months should still be expected. In their request to have the hearing, Mayor Helene Schneider and Councilmember Bendy White suggested asking voters to implement a compromise system, under which four members would be elected based on districts, and two members and the mayor would be elected citywide. But Cappello wasn’t buying it. “Probably the only good hybrid I can think of is Prius,” he said.“To do it right, you need to have district elections.” Cappello’s pending lawsuit — he said his team is still preparing it — would argue that Santa Barbara’s at-large system makes for underrepresentation on the council, particularly among Latinos, and consequently violates the Califor10
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
nia Voting Rights Act. If a judge found that to be true, the city’s at-large system could be forced to switch to districts. Similar scenarios have played out in cities across the state, including Palmdale, which is the first city in California to have its system undergo court-ordered change. Spending time discussing a hybrid plan would therefore be a “waste of time,” Cappello argued, as the court would view that as akin to an at-large system. He cited what he said were residents’ unheard requests for streetlights, bridge repairs, and anti-crime measures in advocating for the switch. Cappello — who served as City Attorney during the 1970s when the city’s system flipped, as it has before, from district elections to at-large — said repeatedly that his comments were “not a threat.” Current City Attorney Ariel Calonne disagreed. “Mr. Cappello didn’t threaten a lawsuit. He promised one,” he said. Calonne — who recently came to the city after working for Ventura, which has put an even-year proposal on the November ballot — cautioned the council about a hybrid system. He said that if the city’s system were to be found in violation of the law, anything “less than pure district elections” could still be subject to a lawsuit. “The deck is truly stacked against at-large voting in California,” he said. But the reaction from public speakers and councilmembers wasn’t decidedly behind districts, either. Many said more time for public input was needed at the very least — most balked at the idea of trying to get ballot language finalized by July, the deadline for the November ballot — and many also noted the myriad other ways to widen the candidate pool. Ideas
included instituting even-year elections, playing around with different hybrid scenarios, and using cumulative voting where voters can select multiple people. Councilmember Cathy Murillo, who attended a forum on district elections in February and is the only Latina to ever hold a council seat, called the lawsuit a “shortcut” to effective change and said that along with campaign finance reform, cultivation of candidates is key. “I worked and I walked and I got elected, and that’s what it takes in this town,” she said. Councilmember Frank Hotchkiss took issue with the need for a change in the first place. “From the get-go, I’ve felt that the responsibility of everybody up here is to the whole city and not to one part or the other,” he said, voicing concerns about the “Balkanization” of the city. Councilmember Randy Rowse questioned the motive behind the hearing, asking,“Are we talking about doing the right thing, or are we talking about covering our rear ends collectively?” A representative from Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy (CAUSE) cautioned the council against moving too quickly. CAUSE helped gather more than 5,000 signatures in support of district elections in Santa Maria, but that city attorney found their petition invalid; the decision to accept the signatures will now be up to a judge. White, one of the two on the dais to suggest the discussion, seemed pleased that the discussion would be continuing: “I have my antenna up and my ears open, and that’s the most important ingredient right now — to hear what the community has to say.” ■
David Prenatt (pictured), sentenced in December to more than four years in prison on federal fraud charges, now faces another 45 years behind bars for allegedly bilking 17 investors out of $13 million in a high-profile Ponzi scheme. Prosecutors allege he charmed a number of residents into real-estate investments from 20072009 but used much of the funds to support “an extravagant lifestyle.” Prenatt claims he was a victim of the recession and was unable to pay back private loans. He pleaded not guilty. County crime rate statistics for 2013, released 4/29 by the Sheriff’s Office, show that crime remained low compared to 2012. Part 1 crimes, which are violent and property crimes — the most serious types of crime — decreased 6 percent, though Solvang saw a 13 percent spike in burglaries. Part 2 crimes (fraud, forgery, embezzlement, drug/alcohol incidents, curfew violations, loitering) rose 2 percent. Fraud comprised the largest increase in county crime, up 28 percent from 98 reported cases in 2012 to 125 in 2013. While Isla Vista’s Part 1 crimes decreased 9 percent, total Part 2 crimes went up 14 percent, mainly due to liquor law (up 43 percent) and public drunkenness violations (up 18 percent).
A “Party Patrol” busted several house parties in Isla Vista when three undercover deputies entered homes dressed as partygoers and carrying an empty box of beer on 4/18. First reported in the Daily Nexus, the operation worked Sabado Tarde and Del Playa and handed dozens of citations to minors in possession of alcohol and to hosts for serving alcohol to minors, said the Foot Patrol’s Lt. Rob Plastino. The patrol targets parties “where people can come and go from the streets” unchallenged and has been ongoing since fall. He added that deputies dressed in civilian clothes do not need to reveal their affiliation when asked.
CITY The City Council heard an update Tuesday on the long-standing plans to build a second Fess Parker hotel across the street from the DoubleTree on East Cabrillo Boulevard. The late actor and winemaker received a development agreement for the second hotel in 1995; as part of the deal, the Parker family agreed to donate and
Montecito Country Club Makeover
PAU L WE LL M A N
The ritzy Montecito Country Club (pictured) is getting a major facelift. Owned by Ty Warner’s luxury hotel chain — which also includes The Biltmore Four Seasons, Sandpiper golf course, San Ysidro Ranch, and more — the club will close for approximately 16 months later this year to complete the $30 million job. The project is pending final authorization from the Historic Landmarks Commission — the Spanish-style clubhouse and its surroundings have historic merit — which will review the plans again next week. Despite considerable changes, the remodel is a 7,200-square-foot downsize from an initial proposal that was approved in 2009 but delayed to cope with the economic slump. Much of the country club’s 118-acre property is made up of its 18-hole golf course, which will undergo landscape and irrigation-system improvements. The makeover will also include redoing the clubhouse façade, relocating the pool, planting 725 new trees (and removing or relocating 300 trees), and adding a pool pavilion, snack shop, splash pool, whirlpool, equipment room, and volleyball and bocce ball courts. Project manager Bill Medel said all the member areas will be renovated with the goal to make the location more of a “family-oriented club.” Currently, the club has 415 family memberships that cost a onetime amount of $150,000. Medel said the membership price tag after the remodel is still to be determined. Santa Barbara’s Planning Commission — the club is located within city limits — and the design and review board have already approved the project, and construction must begin by September to keep its city permits alive. Medel said the quality of construction and amenities for the new club are expected to match the 100-room makeover recently — Kelsey Brugger completed at The Biltmore.
FAMILY AFFAIR: Eli Parker, son of late DoubleTree owner Fess Parker, spoke to the council about the family’s plans for a second hotel.
help fund what is now Chase Palm Park and build a 100-bed hostel, slated to open this summer. Under the new 10-year agreement, the family would have four years to build the 150-room hotel; if a project involving other than 150 rooms — such as the concept for a 50-65–room hotel the family discussed in December — is wanted, the plans would be reviewed, and leftover rooms could possibly be transferred to another site. Two strategies for fixing the jumble of car, bike, and pedestrian lanes of the Mission Canyon corridor were presented at the Santa Barbara Woman’s Club on 4/22, when planners identified a series of changes that could be done in the short-term and others that would require more patience to implement. The long-term goal is to create a safe path for walkers and bikers from Laguna and Los Olivos streets, past the Santa Barbara Mission, and onto Foothill Road,
while also making a more streamlined route for vehicles. The quicker fixes included new paths on the mission side of the corridor and a new pedestrian bridge next to the historic sandstone bridge, which would be slightly altered. More challenging to implement, the presenting planners explained, would be a walking/biking path on the Riviera side of Mission Canyon Road, undergrounding utilities, replacing the existing pedestrian bridge, removing the sewer line over the creek, and fixing the intersection at Alameda Padre Serra and Mountain Drive.
COUNTY Environmentalists and the City of Goleta celebrated a victory on 4/23 when State Lands commissioners agreed that restarting a Venoco well on a pier off Ellwood required additional review. State Lands staff will now look into whether the oil could be processed at Las Flores Canyon instead, whether pressure is indeed building in the PRC 421 well or not, and the impact that processing oil at Ellwood — which is nonconforming to surrounding recreational uses — has on Goleta’s policies for the facility. The review and comment period should occur by the end of the year. The Chumash pulled their four-year sponsorship of the Los Angeles Clippers basketball team this week in the wake of racist remarks allegedly made by the team’s owner, Donald Sterling. Tribal chairman Vincent cont’d page 12
PAU L WELLM AN F I LE PHOTO
F I LE PHOTO
FIND US ONLINE AT INDEPENDENT.COM, FACEBOOK, AND TWITTER
county
NOW BANISHED: Grady Williams (left) speaks with Office of Emergency Management chief Michael Harris at a County Board of Supervisors meeting in January 2010.
Fired for Cancer or Just Cause? 11-Year Jail Manager Suing for Millions
T
BY T Y L E R H AY D E N he longtime manager of Santa Barbara’s new jail project is suing the county and fighting to regain his job after he was fired last summer amid accusations of misconduct. Grady Williams, however, claims he was dismissed because he asked for a lighter work load to treat his advanced cancer and that the move was both politically motivated and shortsighted, leaving the biggest project in Santa Barbara history without a leader and with the possibility of unnecessarily costing taxpayers lots of money. He’s seeking upward of $5 million in lost wages and compensatory damages, and a decision on one of his two cases is due this Friday. Williams was ostensibly fired last June by General Services Department director Matthew Pontes (who’d been hired two months earlier) for misleading staff and the public by using the acronym “PE” (professional engineer) in his title. Williams is licensed as a professional engineer in Washington state, but not California, and has served in the 11 prior years as the county’s Capital Projects Manager, overseeing the construction of the Emergency Operations Center, Santa Maria’s new court facilities, and the Family Resource Center and Library in Cuyama. He partnered with Sheriff Bill Brown to secure an $80 million state grant for the new jail and was in charge of selecting and hiring architects, engineers, and other consultants to design and construct the massive building. When terminated during a long-awaited vacation, Williams appealed to the county’s Civil Service Commission, a five-member, quasijudicial body appointed by the Board of Supervisors that oversees employment matters. In November, the commission ruled that Williams should be reinstated “with full back pay, benefits, and interest, and should otherwise be made whole.” Among other findings, the commission determined that Williams “held a mistaken but good faith belief” that it was permissible to use PE in his title in California, that he never meant to misinform his department about his creden-
tials, that he never held a position or performed duties that required a California license, that he was cleared of any wrongdoing by the Board of Professional Engineers, and that he was never previously admonished to drop the PE from his title. (Williams asserts a prior boss actually told him to use them.) The commission also criticized Pontes’s motivation for the firing, finding that his concerns about liability and negative media attention “were unwarranted and unjustified.” Instead of complying, County Counsel is, in a very rare move, suing the Civil Service Commission for overstepping its authority and failing to offer proper reasons why Williams should be given his job back. Attorneys argue that even if Williams didn’t act in bad faith by using the acronym, he still committed a misdemeanor and a fireable offense. The February 14 filing asks the court to overturn the commission’s order and argues that if Williams is reinstated, the county will “have to move personnel around in the department and potentially initiate a layoff to create funding and a vacancy.” Judge Donna Geck denied County Counsel’s request in a preliminary ruling on April 18, noting that layoffs would not be necessary because the General Service Department is still advertising to fill Williams’s former jail-manager position. Geck will deliver her final decision this Friday, after months of delay-inducing motions filed by the county. County Counsel Mike Ghizzoni and Pontes said they couldn’t comment on pending litigation. At the time of his termination, Williams was both managing the jail plan and heading the Capital Projects division within the General Service Department. Those duties have since been split, and the Capital Projects job has been filled. Though Williams has been told to stay out of the office, the county continues to accrue the cost of his salary and benefits, which totals around $300,000 a year. The department had an operating budget last year of $41.3 million and employed the equivalent of 113 full-time positions. cont’d page 15 may 1, 2014
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La Cumbre Junior High School Foundation
Presents the 4th Annual
O C N I C
de M
AYO
CELEBRATION DINNER & AUCTION to benefit the Westside Performing Arts Center “Gateway Project” and honoring
News of theWeek
Capps Dominates Campaign Cash
The nine candidates vying for the 24th District congressional seat are scattered across the fundraising spectrum, with three of them reporting no money and the remaining six raising between $4,000-$1.3 million. They will face off in the June 3 primary election, and the top two vote-getters will head to the November ballot. According to figures released by the Federal Election Commission (FEC), incumbent Rep. Lois Capps is easily in the fundraising lead, with more than $1.3 million dollars amassed and more than $1.1 million on hand. Unlike some of her challengers, Capps hasn’t accrued any debt. The bulk of her money is split almost evenly between individual donors and political action committees (PACs). Capps’s individual donors include actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus and her husband, Brad Hall, who wrote her a combined $5,200 check. Philanthropist Sara Miller-McCune donated $5,100. First District Supervisor Salud Carbajal, via his campaign account, donated $1,000. Jamal Hamdani, the chair of the Islamic Society of Santa Barbara, gave $2,600. Capps’s PAC donations include $10,000 from the political wing of the American Nurses Association, $10,000 from the International Association of Fire Fighters, $8,750 from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and $5,000 from the Human Rights Campaign. Capps’s support from media behemoths’ PACs was also strong, with donations from Comcast Corporation ($3,000), Cox Enterprises ($5,000), DirecTV Group Inc. ($2,500), and Time Warner Cable ($2,000). The Santa Barbara Women’s Political Committee and the Raytheon Company gave Capps $1,500 and $3,000, respectively. Coming in second place in fundraising is Republican Justin Fareed, who reported $224,897 in donations, with $167,022 available. He loaned himself $100,000 and reported debts of $110,710. Various family members contributed a total of $6,701 to Fareed’s campaign. Santa Barbara City Councilmember Dale Francisco, also a Republican, has the third-best campaign coffer, with $107,875 amassed and $66,472 on hand. Francisco — whose donations included $2,600 from Gayle Pratt, wife of Santa Maria Energy president David Pratt — reported $31,232 worth of debt. Second-time Republican candidate Chris Mitchum has netted $78,582, with $72,991 available. He loaned himself $62,000, and his campaign is $126,982 in debt. Conservative Democrat Paul Coyne Jr. received $64,629 but is in debt for the $53,830 he loaned himself; he has $917 on hand. Republican Dr. Bradley Allen has scored $4,041 and has $3,881 on hand. Candidates Steve Isakson, Sandra Marshall, and Cynthia Alexis Stuart — Lyz Hoffman haven’t reported any money.
news briefs cont’d
Harvey Bottelsen Alumnus of the Year
Josephine Moore Teacher of the Year
Saturday, May 3, 2014 5:00-9:00pm
Santa Barbara Carriage & Western Museum
$75.00/person (Corporate & Group Table Sponsorships Available)
Contact: Cliff Lambert at 805.921.3005 or clifflambert@comcast.net
Our Fabulous Fiesta will Feature: Dinner catered by Fresco Santa Barbara, a Margarita Bar, Live Mariachi Band, Silent & Live Auctions and Much More! Ticket price includes entry into a special raffle drawing for a great Wine Tasting Adventure for up to 6 guests in a chauffer driven limousine! 12
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
CONT’D
Armenta released a statement on the tribe’s decision: “As a people who have long been marginalized, the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians and the Chumash Casino Resort are especially sensitive to maintaining the dignity of all people. We cannot ignore any statement that causes harm or hurts any group.” On Tuesday, the National Basketball Association (NBA) instituted a lifetime ban against Sterling, ordered him to pay a $2.5 million fine, and will force him to sell the Clippers. Harvard University is investing in the future of Santa Barbara County grapevines, as last month its endowment managers spent $10.1 million for a 7,622-acre cattle ranch in the Cuyama Valley. The property is located at the corner of Highway 166 and Cottonwood Canyon Road, extending east toward New Cuyama until School House Canyon. The purchase was made through Brodiaea Inc., according to a report by the Farmland Investor Center, and follows $61 million being spent by Brodiaea for another 10,176 acres in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. The purchases are being managed by a group called Grapevine Capital Partners, a 2012 company owned by James Ontiveros and Matt Turrentine.
Santa Ynez High School’s MechaPirates made it to the final match of the FIRST Robotics World Championships in Missouri on 4/26, an unheard-of achievement for a first-time team. Only formed this past October, the MechaPirates took their robot to St. Louis, where it had to throw balls over a truss, catch them, and put as many balls in goals as possible, defeating all comers until losing to a group composed of
schools from California, Michigan, and Texas. Also at FIRST was Dos Pueblos Engineering Academy, which reached the quarterfinals of the competition and won the General Motors Industrial Design Award for its robot, which will be on view at DP on May 17, 3-5 p.m.
UCSB Nearly 5 percent more high school graduates were offered UC admission — 86,865 in all — for fall 2014 over last year. Also record-setting, Latino students were offered admission at a higher rate than white students for the first time in UC’s history, with Latino admissions at 28.8 percent and white admissions at 26.8 percent. Students from low-income families comprised 37.4 percent of admission offers, and 20.9 percent attended low-performing high schools. At UCSB, the admission offer rate dropped to 36 percent this year compared to 44 percent last year. The issue of divesting American companies involved in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict kept UCSB’s Associated Students Senate voting until 4 a.m. on 4/24 as debate continued for nine hours among senators and students. Student Sen. Scott O’Halloran sponsored the resolution, arguing that student funds should not be invested by the University of California in war-profiteering in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza. Second-year student Guy Singer argued against it, saying, “When dealing with the Palestinian-Israeli conflict … how can one stack up the safety and rights of one nation against those of the other?” ■
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THE FIGHT CONTINUES: Adventure Pass critics worry that Los Padres officials won’t follow the new court order.
Adventure Pass Foes Claim Victory
National forests can no longer charge people who simply park and explore undeveloped areas, according to a federal court ruling reached on Monday. The decision comes after years of legal wrangling by activists who believe programs like the Adventure Pass amount to double taxation. It does not do away with the fees charged to use developed areas of the forest, those with picnic tables, campgrounds, and bathrooms. Los Padres National Forest officials are awaiting direction from Washington, D.C., on how to interpret and abide by the decision, and whether that will require some policing to see if people are, for instance, using picnic tables or not. The news was a major victory for people like Alasdair Coyne of Keep the Sespe Wild, who has been fighting the program since it was first tested in 1996. “These national forests are maintained by our tax dollars,” he explained, “so why should we be paying double to use them?” He doesn’t have “high hopes” that Los Padres officials will adhere to the order, and so he plans to maintain a public awareness campaign to ensure people aren’t paying unnecessary fees. What remains unclear is whether fees can be charged on areas controlled by concessionaires, even for people who do not use the amenities. For instance, Rocky Mountain Recreation, which runs the popular Paradise Road area just over the Santa Ynez Mountains from Santa Barbara, has no plan to change its policies, according to an unidentified woman who answered the phone there on Tuesday. Anti-fee attorney Matt Kenna believes those areas may be exempt, explaining, “This ruling probably won’t affect concessionaires charging for their areas.” That’s okay for Coyne, so long as people are using the developed areas. “The fee foes have always been focused on opposing a fee to access the undeveloped backcountry,” he said. “Nobody disagrees that there shouldn’t be reasonable fees at developed sites, where people have to clean up the trash and toilets and fire pits.” — Matt Kettmann
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BEST HAPPY HOUR
BEST SEAFOOD & BEST CLAM CHOWDER
Water Rules on the Way?
It seemed fitting that on a scorching Santa Barbara day, the City Council’s Ordinance Committee amended its code for unlawful water use and regulations during a water shortage. Tuesday’s action was primarily procedural — it cleaned up legal language — but foreshadowed a resolution that will likely be implemented by the council in upcoming weeks. Nearly three months ago, City Hall declared a Stage One drought. Such little rain has fallen since that staff will propose that councilmembers up the ante to Stage Two on May 20. Among a host of regulations, the resolution would mandate hoses and faucets to have self-closing valves and forbid washing pavements (except by pressure washers). Sprinklers would only be allowed between the hours of 6 p.m.-8 a.m., and residents could only manually water their lawns between 4 p.m.-10:30 a.m. Use of ornamental water fountains — except ones with fish or wildlife — would be forbidden. (The dolphin fountain at Stearns Warf has been shut off.) Pools — which use much more water than needed to irrigate lawns — would need to be covered when not in use, and owners would need to limit draining and refilling. Restaurants and hotels would be required to post drought notices and refrain from serving water unless requested by customers. The Water Resources division will issue a written notice for first violations and up to a $250 fine for the second and third offenses. Four-time violators could have flow restrictions installed on their property or have their water shut off. In other water news, the City Council approved an $8.5 million contract with Schock Contracting Corporation to upgrade the Tertiary Filtration Plant, a recycledwater plant that was first constructed in 1989 to reduce the need for potable water. — Kelsey Brugger The renovation should be finished by next summer.
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News of theWeek
CONT’D
Gang Injunction Drops 16 Defendants
J
PAU L WELLM AN F I LE PHOTO
BY K E L S E Y B R U G G E R
ust over a week before the gang injunction goes to trial on May 5, the City Attorney’s office formally dismissed 16 more defendants, which now leaves only 11 names in the filing. This week, the City Attorney’s office filed its trial briefs, which clarify some of the lingering questions about the specifics of the proposed injunction. The order would prohibit named persons from associating in the city’s two “safety zones” (and in a special event zone near Cabrillo Boulevard during Fiesta and the th of July). But defendants would not be prohibited from entering schools grounds if for “valid school business” SHRINKING NUMBER: City Attorney Ariel Calonne believes concerning a child or grandchild there is still a strong case for the gang injunction, though 19 or if the defendant is a student out of 30 people have now been removed from the list. attending class. Also, the filing describes the “opt-out” provision for former als who have been removed from the filing. gang members who can demonstrate they have On one end are those like Ruben Mize, who “renounced the gang life”— avoided arrest, not already have lengthy prison sentences. On the obtained any new gang-related tattoos, or been other are those who have cleaned themselves employed for a year, among other stipulations. up and now have families and jobs. “I think Last week, city councilmembers heard from what they did was appropriate,” she said of the dozens of frustrated opponents of the gang dismissal, but “when you’re looking at the trial injunction. Councilmember Gregg Hart — itself, it puts them in a worse position when only he and Councilmember Cathy Murillo they have multiple defendants who were not voted to throw out the case — said that the properly named.” Of those dismissed — identinumber of people who would be affected by fied as “Mini,” “Psycho Mike,” “Gangster Loko,” the gang injunction had “dropped significantly” and “Lonely Boy,” among others in the court and was approximately a dozen, but he said he documents — none are currently in custody could not get into specifics. About half of the in County Jail. City Attorney Ariel Calonne said there were initial 30 defendants — identified as the “worst of the worst”— were represented by attorneys, a “variety of reasons” that the 16 individuals were dropped. “They no longer present the some of whom have been working pro bono. Criminal defense attorney Tara Haaland- same kind of nuisance concerns that we origiFord said her clients have been dismissed, nally had,” Calonne said. “We still believe that explaining that there is a spectrum of individu- we have a strong case.” ■
Grady Williams cont’d On March 26, Williams also filed a wrongful-termination lawsuit against the county, alleging discrimination and retaliation, and the case remains in its preliminary stages. The suit explains that Williams was diagnosed with Stage cancer in May 2010 that required surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, but that he kept the news quiet for fear of losing out on possible promotions. When he presented the county’s Human Resources Department with a letter from his oncologist in April 2013 requesting a regular eight-hour day instead of the 50-60 hours per week he was working, no changes were made to his schedule. Pontes was also reportedly informed of the cancer at that time. Not long after, Pontes allegedly asked Williams if he “had the strength” to continue with the jail project, which is expected to take another five years to complete. Pontes brought up the PE issue at the next meeting and fired Williams three weeks later. Williams speculates that he may have been fired so that Pontes could further his own career and also believes the appeal of County Counsel Mike Ghizzoni
(who has regularly butted heads with Williams on the jail project) may be more personal than professional. Married with three children, Williams — whose cancer was detected again in January, requiring another regime of appointments — remains ready and able to work on the North County jail. In the meantime, he’s consulted on Contra Costa County’s new jail and other projects, but he says he can’t afford the ups and downs of a consulting business with a family to feed and a mortgage to worry about. More importantly, Williams needs access to quality health insurance after issues with the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) left his medical care in serious financial limbo. He suspects his career will remain relatively stagnant if he is reinstated, but he wants to stay in Santa Barbara for a variety of personal and practical reasons. Of his long-running battle with the county and its attorneys, Williams said simply,“I put in 11 good years. I think they can treat me a little ■ better.” may 1, 2014
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Opinions
Vote No on
Measure M
voices
Unfunded Mandate Will Take Millions from County Departments
BY BILL BROWN, SALUD C A R B A JA L , J O YC E D U D L E Y, L A N N Y E B E N S T E I N , J O N I G R AY, AND JA N E T W O L F
A
s individuals from diverse perspectives who care deeply about
Santa Barbara County, we strongly urge a “No” vote on Measure M. Measure M is an $18 million-$36 million-per-year unfunded mandate that will deteriorate our way of life in many possible ways, including more taxes, higher fees, and fewer services for the people of Santa Barbara County. The county has a general fund budget of roughly $220 million; Measure M could consume as much as 16 percent of the county general fund budget — nearly one dollar in every six dollars the county spends. The proposed measure is to maintain roads and buildings. Though these improvements may be desired, Measure M would spend county money without providing funding. The lack of new funding means the remaining county budget will be devastated and our quality of life will get worse. Significant cuts will have to be made across the board in county services to make up the difference. The results will be all or some of the following:
Higher taxes and more county fees
Reductions in services in every county department
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Fewer law enforcement personnel and more criminals on the streets Reductions in the number of firefighters
These are only some of the cuts the county could experience. Cuts to law enforcement and public safety would include cuts in the Sheriff ’s Office, Fire Department, emergency medical services, and 9-1-1. Vital services would be cut, including those that support working families, seniors, children, students, those most in need, and those most vulnerable. Library services could be cut out entirely. County parks and other facilities could be closed. Though these cuts would be experienced by everyone in the county, Measure M would not provide additional funding for the more than two-thirds of county residents who live in cities. More than 500 positions have already been eliminated from county government in recent years, and more than $70 million in cuts have already been made in almost every department, service, and program. Simply put, Measure M would be very bad news for Santa Barbara County. We continue to ask,“Where would the money come from?” The measure’s author has said that the county “may have a bake sale, or liquidate property, or put a tax on the ballot.” We believe this approach is unrealistic and leads to more questions than answers. About 60 percent of county spending is for public safety — should expenditures on public safety be slashed to pay for Measure M? What about other county spending? Law and justice are about 14 percent of total county spending — there are not many opportunities for cuts in those areas. Health and public assistance are about 9 percent of county spending — that’s already down from 13 percent in 2002-03. Public health services are vital and have already been cut too much. Similarly, other areas of spending by the county are relatively modest as a proportion of the county budget and have been substantially reduced in recent years. Measure M would cause further wide-scale elimination of positions, programs, and services. Looking to the future, it is essential to begin setting aside more than $15 million per year for operating the new county jail in northern Santa Barbara County. How would the county fund the new jail, pay for Measure M, and address its other fiscal challenges? Many onetime sources of revenue and reserves have been used in recent years. Now is not the time for an uncertain and unfunded mandate to spend $18 million-$36 million more per year — funds the county does not have to spare. And what if there is another economic downturn or funds are required to alleviate water shortages throughout the county? Measure M is as fiscally irresponsible as a measure can be. Opposing Measure M should unite residents of Santa Barbara County across the political spectrum and in northern and southern Santa Barbara County. This proposal would be very detrimental to the county’s finances, our quality of life, our future. Please join us in voting “No” on Measure M. Bill Brown is sheriff of Santa Barbara County; Salud Carbajal is 1st District supervisor; Joyce Dudley is district attorney of Santa Barbara County; Lanny Ebenstein is past president of the Santa Barbara Board of Education; Joni Gray is former 4th District supervisor; and Janet Wolf is 2nd District supervisor.
Opinions
CONT’D
on the beat
Run for the Wall
On May 12, LeRoy “Snuffy” Robles plans to climb aboard his gleaming, candy-orange 2013 Road Glide Harley and roar off for the annual Vietnam veterans’ Run for the Wall rally in Washington, D.C. Snuffy, 73, a Mesa resident and eighth-generation Santa Barbaran, says he’ll be covering more than 3,000 miles, riding with other Vietnam-era vets before taking part in the May 25 rally. He figures there’ll be a half-million vets, families, and supporters in the Rolling Thunder ride, cycling from the Pentagon to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall. It’ll be Snuffy’s 10th Run for the Wall, and, he figures, “It’s going to be my last year.” Run for the Wall leaders say it “recognizes the sacrifice and contributions made by all veterans who have served our nation” and promotes healing.
HOODS IN THE HOOD: At the rate the
city’s dropping suspects from its proposed gang injunction, there may not be any supposed gangbangers left on the list when the issue goes to court May 5. The hotly debated injunction started life in 2011 with 30 dire threats to life and limb, but three were cut recently — apparently no longer dangerous — and now the city attorney’s office has lopped off 16 more. This leaves just 11 for Superior Court Judge Colleen Sterne to consider. But to fevered injunction backers, the safety for good citizens to walk the streets and
no longer cower in their homes depends on keeping the mighty 11 harmless. Although the City Council voted 5-2 recently to uphold the proposed injunction, that was just politics. Judge Sterne will make the real decision. The council was split, with Frank Hotchkiss, the cheerleader el supremo, in favor and Cathy Murillo and Gregg Hart outspokenly against. Also voting in favor were Mayor Helene Schneider (up for reelection and not wanting to alienate voters) and Dale Francisco, also vote hunting in his quest to unseat Rep. Lois Capps. Cost of the injunction effort has been estimated at $160,000 in city administrative and other costs so far, and a ballpark figure of total estimated police costs are about $700,000. Then there are the costs of the trial, expected to take several weeks. What else would we be doing with the dough?
MYSTERY BUT NO CRIME: After copper
heiress Huguette Clark died in 2011 at 104, it seemed to many that too many hands had been dipping millions from her estate. Suspicion fell on her attorney and accountant. Was the aged recluse really of sound-enough mind to be giving millions to her nurse and costly gifts to those around her? New York officials opened an investigation. Meanwhile, her distant relatives, many of whom had not seen her in decades, if at all, sued
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to put the kibosh on her last will, claiming that age might have robbed Clark of clear thinking. But on the eve of the New York trial over the will and $300 million estate, a settlement was reached. And now the Manhattan DA has ruled that the attorney and accountant were just carrying out Clark’s wishes, not controlling her, according to NBC News investigative reporter Bill Dedman. Never mind.
PAUL WELLMAN
Barney Brantingham can be reached at barney@independent.com or 965-5205 x230. He writes online columns and a print column for Thursdays.
CASA KIDS: Kate Burris’s 6th-grade students
at Marymount have spent the school year raising money for Casa Esperanza homeless shelter, racking up $4,836 at lemonade stands, a chili cook-off, and the like. Now they plan to top it off with a May 20 benefit concert at SOhO headlined by Diamond Dave Somerville. Who he? Just lead singer of the 1950s group The Diamonds, with hits like “Little Darlin,” “Why Do Fools Fall in Love,” and “Stroll.” He’s also grandfather of proud 6th grader Chae Somerville.
LES MISÉRABLES: San Marcos High’s veteran (30 years) theater arts director, David Holmes, is retiring with a flourish by presenting the world’s longest-running musical May 1-3 and 8-10. After school ends, he’ll be directing a cast-of-80, all-alumni production of The Rocky Horror Picture Show June 12-13. HOT STRINGS: It takes courage for an
unaccompanied violinist to tackle the J.S. Bach
ROAD GLIDE: Among the thousands of Vietnam-era vets rumbling along in the Run for the Wall to the memorial wall in D.C. will be LeRoy “Snuffy” Robles.
sonatas on the Camerata Pacifica menu last Wednesday. They’re mighty difficult for a fiddler. Yet Bach-loving Jennifer Koh carried them off with zest and power. (Her concert was sponsored by UCSB Arts & Lectures.)
ALAN WYNER DIES: Elected to the Goleta
Water Board as part of a hard-fought homeowner reform revolt in the early 1970s, Alan Wyner has died at 73. During 40 years at UCSB, he was a political science professor and dean of undergraduate education in the College of Letters and Science. — Barney Brantingham
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Opinions
CONT’D
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Frack Not
P
eople in Santa Barbara have begun assembling to ban fracking — and it is about time! It doesn’t take a scientist to see how detrimental fracking is for the people and the environment. However, several scientists have, in fact, spoken out on the reprehensible effects caused by the exploitation of fracking by big oil companies. It has been documented in studies and reports that fracking has put poisonous chemicals in the water and caused earthquakes in areas not prone to them. Here in Santa Barbara, a new method of steam injection is being used, which is especially prone to causing earthquakes. We are near the San Andreas Fault and already susceptible to earthquakes; this dangerous practice is downright immoral and irresponsible. In your story “Fracking Freak-Out Justified?” [independent.com/justified], one of our state senators, Hannah-Beth Jackson, speaks out against fracking. I am proud many citizens have begun standing up to oil companies exploiting the people for mere monetary gain. — Aphiah Johnson, S.B.
• • •
H
ave you signed the petition to qualify an initiative to ban fracking in Santa Barbara County for the November 2014 ballot? Please visit waterguardians.org.
— Vivian Stanton, S.B.
For the Dogs
W
hen I became a student at Animal Behavior College, I learned some foods cause severe illness or death in dogs. Foods to avoid are apple seeds, candy and gum containing xylitol, cherry pits, chocolate, large amounts of garlic, macadamia nuts, mushrooms, onions, onion salt, onion powder, peach pits, plum pits, persimmons, raisins, grapes, and walnuts. —Chuck LeCompte, S.B.
Loady Lane
W
hether 1980s surfers or not [independent.com/ marijuana], in the fall of 1977, anybody could score
an ounce of candy sinsemilla for $110 at the senior parking lot of Santa Barbara High School or across campus at Loady Lane. All other smoke was peripheral.
— Matt McLaughlin, S.B.
Whose Gaviota Is It?
I
’ve been reading Walker Tompkins’s 1960 edition of Santa Barbara’s Royal Rancho. In it, Tompkins describes the two Chumash villages at Naples/Dos Pueblos, Mikiw and Kiya’mu, “very large villages with vast numbers of people and a great many houses in each, where they have their towns at the very edge of the sea.” Historians date their presence back as far as 10,000 years. When the Spanish arrived in the 1830s, soldiers murdered some of the Chumash there, and the remaining few moved to the Figueroa Mountain area. Enter Nicholas Den, on December 26, 1842, who threw some dirt in the air and by order of local Judge Joaquin Carrillo was “granted title to Dos Pueblos.” Den took possession, however, under the protest of Padre Duran, who “could not give his assent to the juridical possession of the land,” and under protest of then-Governor Pío Pico. The history of the land continues in handwritten titles, “purchases,”“approvals for development,”and what appears to be the continued shenanigans of the “Planning Commission,” “owners,” and “developers” mentioned in your April 17 article “Gaviota Homes Approved” [independent .com/gaviotahomes]. One burning question really stands out for me; how can anyone “own and develop” land that appears to have been stolen from the people who originally lived there? I’ve been interviewing Paul Pommier, Chumash Elder, who is related to the Chumash woman Rosa Ortega whom Nicholas Den married. And I’m seeing genealogy charts and copies of documents, some that mysteriously have disappeared from county records, indicating Pommier as an heir to the land. It will be interesting to legally research these documents for the first time and see how — James Smallwood, S.B. all of this plays itself out.
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Chester “Chet” Arthur Brown “Bimiche”. It was 35’ long, built of steel, and used to start his first commercial sport fishing business. He built the boat with longitudinal framing and unique design features not seen at that time. He hauled passengers out of Long Beach and Wilmington. In 1954 he built the 40ft. “Reville” also using a new method of construction. He designed the hull to plane and it was one of the first boats to be built that size out of laminated plywood with longitudinal framing and fiberglass. Also a commercial sport fishing boat the new design and technique was stronger, lighter, faster and innovative for the time. He began a trend that other boat builders would soon follow. By 1956 he had tired of hauling passengers and sold his boat. He rented space to start building a 40 ft. Angleman designed ketch the “Destiny”. Again he used a new method in wood construction called the strip planked method. During this time he worked as a marine mechanic for Marine Engine Service. Chet and Billie had a dream of moving to Hawaii and 3 years after starting the “Destiny” they took their 2 older children, a navigator and crew man and sailed to the Hawaiian Islands.
Chester (Chet) Brown passed away March 29th, 2014 at the age of 98. He was born in Fort Dodge, Iowa in 1915 to Earl and Blanche Brown. The family made their way to Burbank, California in 1923. He had an auto mechanics garage in Burbank in 1940 called Chet’s Automotive. He leased out his business to go into the Navy and served from 1942 to 1945 as a Motor Machinist Mate 1st Class where he did overhaul and maintenance on the ship’s engines. He married Billie Archer when he got out of the Navy and started a family. They had 4 children, Mike, Kelly, Stacey and Perry. Below are just some of the highlights of his long and accomplished life. He built 7 boats and owned and worked on many more. In 1951 he launched his lifelong boat building and fishing career with the
1915-2014
Upon reaching Hawaii he sent for his 2 youngest children to join them. Chet and his family lived on their boat in the Ala Wai Yacht Harbor in Honolulu. He sold the “Destiny” in 1960 and relocated his family to Santa Barbara. He soon had a job working for Lindwall Boat Works and in 1962 started working part time on a 52 ft steel commercial fishing boat the “Dawn Star”. It was reportedly the largest steel boat built in Santa Barbara up to that time. It launched in 1964 and he and his family became some of the first liveaboards in the Santa Barbara Harbor. It was also during this time that he started another business named “Service Afloat” that he operated off of the “Dawn Star”. He assisted other boat owners with general and mechanical repairs. In 1968 he took the “Dawn Star” along with his son out for her first albacore fishing season. That same year the Atomic Energy Commission chartered the “Dawn Star” for research in the Johnston Atoll, 800 miles southwest of Hawaii. He took his family and sister and 12 days later delivered the boat to Hawaii where the charter began. The family vacationed in Hawaii until the boat returned from its charter. In 1969 he
The Producing Unit presents
took the “Dawn Star” to work in the Gulf of Alaska. The boat was under contract with General Oceanographics and he outfitted the boat to carry their 15 ft. mini submarine named the “Nekton”. They were making a subsea survey of the gulf ’s geologic features for 4 different oil companies. He sold the “Dawn Star” to General Oceanographics by year’s end. Chet then started building another boat named the “Archer” in 1970 and launched it in 1973. It was 63 ft. long. It was laminated plywood and fiberglass and built at the bottom of Santa Barbara St. He fished albacore with it until 1975 when he decided to sell it. Chet’s son Mike had already begun building his own steel commercial fishing boats when Chet went to work for him. He would help Mike finish his boat the 65 ft. “Wendy”. He fished with Mike on his boat until 1978. He also helped Mike build his next boat the “Mikette” in Oxnard from 1978-1980 and another boat the 124 ft. “Kami M.” in Anacortes, WA from 19891991. Chet spent his later years between Washington State with his son and daughter in law and in Santa Barbara where he could be closer to his daughters.
timestandsstill All’s not fair in love and war
a play by DoNAlD
MARGUliES directed by PETER FRiSCH
may 2-3, 8-10 @ 8pm may 4 & 10 @ 2:30pm
Tickets $23 . Students/groups $15 (plus CST service charge)
CENTER STAGE THEATER 963-0408 or centerstagetheater.org 20
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Chet pursued his passion throughout his life and will always be remembered for his humorous nature, honesty, integrity, ability to teach and mentor and his ability to start a job and stay with it until completion. He will be greatly missed. For pictures and additional information please visit www.McDermottcrockett.com. He is survived by his sister June Francis, his 4 children, Michael Brown (Paulette), Kelly Rangel, Stacey Brown and Perry Adameck (David). His 7 grandchildren, Tracey Cruz (Alex), Billy Rangel (Brandy Sanchez), Wendy Brown, Kami Jennings, Aprile Hill (Bill) and Matthew and Shelby Adameck. His 5 great grandchildren, Marina Jennings, Jordan Hill, Akeila Garcia-Hill, Bella and Lucas Cruz. A Veteran’s Service was held at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills, April 5th, followed by a Celebration of Life at Craig Brooker’s home in Santa Barbara.
In Memoriam
SPRING CLEANING? FREE RECYCLING
Joe Pasinato 1950-2014
BY A N D R E W M A D S E N ver the course of three
PROVIDED BY YOUR RESOURCE RECOVERY & WASTE MANAGEMENT DIVISION OF THE COUNTY PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT COURTESY
O
The Face of the Forest Service
decades, visitors to Los Padres National Forest were often greeted by Joe Pasinato. He knew the forest like the back of his hand and offered advice on camping and hiking spots that enriched many visitors’ experiences. During fire emergencies, Joe answered calls at the U.S. Forest Service information center and worked with television, radio, and print reporters to keep the public apprised of the firefight. Following a 28-year career, Joe retired March 31, 2012. Friends and former coworkers were devastated by the news of Joe’s death February 16 in Santa Barbara. He was 63. Joseph Francis Pasinato Jr. was born and raised on Santa Barbara’s Eastside, the only child of Joseph and Beatrice Pasinato. His father, Joe Sr., was a longtime city TECOLOTE JOE: The Forest Service mourns the loss of Joe employee who worked on the Teco- Pasinato, who is fondly remembered for his dry wit and lote pipeline. When Joe Jr. was 5 dedication. years old, he was given the honor of pushing the button that fired off the last explo- “Jesusita” was sacrilegious. When Joe told me sion that opened the pipeline; everyone called about the call, I asked how he had handled him “Tecolote Joe” after that. Joe attended it. “I sent her over to the county’s call center,” Santa Barbara junior and senior high schools he said. This was a typical Joe story. In reality, and went on to study computer programming after two decades of dealing with the public, he had developed a knack for defusing tensions at Santa Barbara City College. Following school, Joe worked as a grocery and helping people get the answers they were clerk, an auto mechanic, a ranch hand, and a seeking. horse wrangler before going to work for Los Joe took great pride in his work. CoworkPadres National Forest as a radio dispatcher ers fondly remember the dedication and comin 1984. When this temporary job ended, Joe mitment he demonstrated in every one of his transitioned into a permanent position in assignments. He gladly set aside whatever he the Forest Supervisor’s Office. Joe became an was doing to assist a fellow employee or friend integral part of the daily operations: working in need. His reputation throughout the Santa as the front-desk receptionist, assisting with Barbara community earned the respect of the dissemination of fire information to the cooperating agencies that relied on Joe whenpublic and news media, and managing the ever questions or issues arose. mailroom. As part of Joe’s early job descripToward the end of his career, Joe had the tion, he even had responsibility for performing chance to utilize his college computer proroutine maintenance on government vehicles gramming knowledge when he assumed the such as oil changes and ensuring the fleet was duties of Los Padres Forest web manager. Joe embraced this new challenge with his customin working order. Joe volunteered for a variety of challeng- ary enthusiasm and worked to improve the ing assignments above and beyond his daily content of the forest webpages. responsibilities. During the peak visitor seaAn overflowing crowd packed a Buellton son, he enjoyed patrolling the forest, assist- restaurant in April 2012 for Joe’s retirement ing the recreating public, and helping with fire celebration. While the Forest Service preprevention. One of his favorite assignments sented Joe with the traditional farewell gifts, was working at the Santa Barbara Airport’s Air his coworkers and friends bestowed so many Tanker Base during fire season. Veteran fire plaques, hats, and other tokens of appreciation reporter Ray Ford said, “Joe was the best face on him that his truck couldn’t hold them all. of any organization I ever have experienced. It was truly a special moment honoring Joe’s With his very dry sense of humor, it was easy to remarkable career. think he was so serious, but in his own unique A public memorial barbecue service for Joe way, he was always having fun.” Joe’s sense of humor was indeed dry. Dur- Pasinato is scheduled for Saturday, May 3, 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. at Stow Grove Park on La Patera ing the Jesusita Fire, Joe worked Los Padres’ Lane in Goleta. Anyone who knew or worked call center. A woman from back east phoned with Joe is welcome to attend. A main course late one evening to express concern about of barbecued chicken will be served along with the name of the fire. Unaware that the trail drinks, and guests are encouraged to bring a had named the fire, the woman worried that side dish to share.
Household hours: Saturday: 9 am- 3 pm Sunday: 11 am- 3 pm
Community Hazardous Waste Collection Center
Examples of residential household hazardous waste accepted: Paints, stains, paint thinner, solvents, automotive fluids and filters, pesticides, fertilizers, cleaners, batteries, aerosols, glues, corrosives, fluorescent lighting.
UCSB Campus Mesa Road Building 565 Goleta, CA For more information call: (805) 882-3602 or visit us online at www.LessIsMore.org/hazwaste
No needles, controlled substances, electronics, or materials that are radioactive, biological, or explosive in nature. FREE for residents in the cities of Santa Barbara and Goleta, and in the unincorporated areas of Santa Barbara County.
• Up to 15 gallons (net liquid) or 125 pounds per month. • Fee for business waste — call ahead for more info and to schedule an appointment. • Closed for major holidays and rain.
In partnership with:
Visit Santa Barbara County’s Recycling Resource:
www.LessIsMore.org may 1, 2014
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COVER STORY PPLAYING OFFENSE: Roger Aceves has invoked his suppo support for technology companies in Goleta and said the board needs to use “outsidethe-bo the-box thinking” to find ways to save money.
PLAYING DEFENSE: SE: Janet Wolf touts her advocacy vocacy for the county’s emergency operations afe routes center and funding for safe to schools, among otherr issues. “I sor, and am an involved supervisor, rve my I want to continue to serve id. constituents,” she said.
PAUL WELLMAN PHOTOS
THE BATTLE for 2ND DISTRICT B Roger Aceves Tries to Unseat Janet Wolf by Lyz Hoffman
efore March 18, it looked as if the battle for the nd District supervisorial seat would be the battle for Goleta Beach Park. The dispute? Rocks and whether they should stay or go. For years, the citizens of Goleta had been fighting over whether or not to keep a rock wall that protected the park lawns from ocean flooding during a major storm. Environmentalists long argued the rocks were causing sand erosion that would eventually destroy the beach. Seizing this as a popular issue — the most visited county beach — Goleta City Councilmember Roger Aceves, who is challenging Supervisor Janet Wolf for her third term, took a stand in favor of the rocks. He gambled, and it seemed a safe bet that Wolf would ally herself with the environmentalists. The moment of truth arrived on March 1, when a major storm — one of the biggest in years — descended on Goleta Beach. The beach and the park weathered the storm. But before Aceves could gain much momentum from his persistent attacks on Wolf over what he supposed would be her support for the anti-rock crowd, Wolf moved quickly. Taking control of the board meeting on March 18, she convinced the other supervisors to vote in favor of keeping the rocks. Though Aceves charged Wolf with being a flip-flopper, Wolf countered that she had made her decision based on the facts. The battle — at least until the Coastal Commission takes it up many, many months from now —had ended in a draw. That left both candidates facing the truly biggest challenge in the nd District race: voter turnout.
Since this is a non-presidential year, voter interest is typically low. Usually this means that more conservative voters cast ballots, which should favor Aceves, but incumbents usually do well in off years, so that would favor Wolf. Though three important county issues will be decided on June 3 — the nd District, the Sheriff ’s race, and Measure M — most of the ballot concerns primary races, including reelection bids for Governor Jerry Brown and Congressmember Lois Capps. These won’t be finally decided until November. This adds to the worry that voters won’t have been paying attention when the absentee ballots are mailed out on May 5. So Aceves and Wolf will have only a handful of weeks to convince voters in the nd District — which covers most of the City of Goleta, the western part of the City of Santa Barbara, and the unincorporated region in between —that this is an important election and that there are meaningful issues at stake. At first glance, Aceves and Wolf might not seem all that different. Both are Democrats. Both had long careers working in the community. He served as a county deputy sheriff and an officer for the Santa Barbara Police Department; she was a teacher, small-business owner, and Goleta school boardmember. Aceves married his high school sweetheart; Wolf her junior high school sweetheart. They’ve been allies in the past, endorsing each other in previous elections. And they agree on issues beyond Goleta Beach, including opening the North County Jail and preserving More Mesa. But in three highly contested areas — maintenance funding, energy projects, and Chumash development — the
candidates have divergent opinions, opinions that could dramatically change the board’s direction and have major implications not just for the nd District but for the county as a whole.
Candidate in Search of an Issue While Wolf’s campaign has stayed focused on her past record and trying to not make any serious mistakes, Aceves has taken the offensive, calling for managing the budget, spending money on infrastructure, preserving public safety, reforming campaign disclosure rules, and ending the taxsharing deal between the City of Goleta and the county. Wolf charges that Aceves’s proposals are often counterproductive, or unnecessary, and that “he is a candidate in search of an issue.” Like two-time Wolf challenger Dan Secord before him, Aceves claims that the projected $900 million county budget has not been properly handled: “We really didn’t have a good plan going into the recession, and I’m afraid that we don’t really have a good plan coming out of it.” Wolf counters that the county has a strong bond rating and a 17-year plan to pay down its $800 million unfunded pension liability and that going into the next fiscal year, it has an expected slight surplus. Despite his worries about the budget, Aceves has all but endorsed Measure M, an initiative spearCONT’D
may 1, 2014
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REPRESENT: Aceves said that some county residents feel “disenfranchised.” Wolf said nd District residents “want a safe environment and to keep their quality of life.”
Goleta Beach
headed by Supervisor Peter Adam that would require the board to spend anywhere from $17 million-$39 million a year on the upkeep of county-owned roads, parks, and buildings. A wide array of county officials have repeatedly warned that Measure M could mean big trouble for public-safety funding, particularly for the delicate plan to save the millions of dollars needed for jail operations once the new jail opens in 2018. “Can they both coexist? Yes,” Aceves said. “Will it be difficult? Yes.” He has suggested selling some county facilities, such as the Santa Barbara Bowl, to their operators and using that money for maintenance. Where those operators would get that money has not yet been discussed. Wolf joins her three remaining colleagues, Salud Carbajal, Doreen Farr, and Steve Lavagnino, in agreeing with the county’s auditor-controller, Bob Geis (who appears in a television ad endorsing her), and Sheriff Bill Brown, who both oppose the measure.“You cannot be in favor of public safety and support Measure M,” she said. Aceves has also made much ado about what is legally nothing but what he says is ethically something: accepting campaign donations before a vote. He accused Wolf of engaging in a “pay-to-play” system in which she received checks of $20,000 and then $40,000 from the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) days before the board discussed SEIU-related matters. He said she should have mentioned the money, but the California Fair Political Practices Commission clearly doesn’t require that of county supervisors. The candidates do have to file disclosure forms with the county elections office, which are publicly available.“Thankfully, there are rules,” Wolf said, calling for the forms to be posted online. Aceves hasn’t suggested anything specific beyond that, but at a recent Goleta council meeting regarding Venoco, he did mention the $500 the company gave him.
More Mesa
Arroyo Burro Beach
Leadbetter Beach
A County Divided? Ending the tax-sharing deal entered into between Goleta and the county at the time of Goleta’s incorporation in 2002 has been on Aceves’s “bucket list” for a long time. Known as the revenue-neutrality agreement (RNA), it was approved by voters at the time as a way of compensating the county for lost revenue from the new city. In recent years, city officials, led by Councilmember Jim Farr and Mayor Michael Bennett, have been increasingly complaining about the agreement. It’s unfair to make the city forever fork over millions every year — through percentages of property and sales taxes and formerly hotel bed taxes — to the county, Aceves said, as the city could use that money to revitalize Old Town or create a civic center or parks department. Wolf’s response? The RNA’s end would mean more money for Goleta but less money for the county to provide services to many of the 80,000 nd District residents who live outside the city limits in the unincorporated area between Goleta and Santa Barbara. She said she’d be open to negotiations in the future — past attempts have gone nowhere — but is quick to point out that the county forgave $1.5 million it loaned the city when it formed. Still, Aceves frequently draws parallels between the county’s relationship with Goleta and the board’s relationship with North County. He said he plans on being not just a nd District supervisor but a “regional” supervisor, particularly with respect to energy projects and the Chumash tribe — issues that often split 3-2 on the current board. He cited the November vote to approve Santa Maria Energy’s 136 cyclic steam-injection wells that also set a stricter greenhouse-gas-emissions limit than previously mandated. Wolf explained her vote as an effort to “balance” economic and environmental interests. Aceves, who attended that six-hour hearing, said all he saw was “disinterest” from the South
COVER STORY County bloc of Wolf, Carbajal, and Farr. When asked about his views on hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” Aceves pointed out that the controversial practice doesn’t occur in Santa Barbara County and suggested more research be done on it.“They can keep studying it as long as they want,” Wolf argued, adding it is the county’s stringent regulations that discourage companies from fracking here.“We want to hold them accountable,” she said. Wolf feels the same about the Chumash. She has explained her vote against the tribe’s Camp annexation by saying they should go through the same planning process as any other project applicant. Aceves, however, thinks the board mishandled the tribe’s request and should have been more open to a dialogue. Wolf said the reason for Aceves’s “regional” view is simple. “I think maybe he’s using that as a way to explain away why he’s getting so much North County support,” she said. “One has to look at where those donations are coming from. I think that is a reflection of where he stands on issues.”
Follow the Money Wolf has received some North County support, as well, but not as much as Aceves. His contributions include $27,000 from Santa Maria Energy; $20,000 from ERG Operating Company, LLC, which operates oil wells near Santa Maria; $4,000 from Santa Maria–based Pacific Petroleum, Inc.; and $1,500 from PetroRock, LLC, which just successfully applied for new cyclic steaminjection wells outside of Santa Maria. The Santa Barbara Association of Realtors endorsed Aceves, and real estate and development interests have bolstered his campaign. Donations have poured in from — among others — Kinyon Construction in Santa Maria ($10,000), the Towbes Group ($5,300), and Westar Management ($2,500), whose in-construction mixed-use project was approved by the Goleta City Council in 2012. The Santa Barbara County Deputy Sheriff ’s Association — which has also endorsed him — contributed $10,000, and the Chumash have committed $19,000. A sizable slice of Wolf’s money has come from employee unions. She has received $90,000 from SEIU and $20,000 from the Santa Barbara County Firefighters Government Committee, both of which have endorsed her. Both candidates have the support of many individual donors. Santa Maria Energy officials said the company will be pumping more money to Aceves to “level the playing field” between his donations and Wolf’s SEIU donations. Fundraising totals for both candidates will likely spike leading up to Election Day; the most recent documents show that Wolf has amassed about $257,000 and Aceves has scored about $240,000.
SATUrDAY!
Leadership and Values In the endorsements game, Wolf has Aceves beat. She has dozens of former and current elected officials behind her, including three of Aceves’s council colleagues, as well as her colleagues Carbajal and Farr and many groups, including the Sierra Club, the Santa Barbara Women’s Political Committee, and the Democratic Party of Santa Barbara County. Daraka Larimore-Hall, the area party chair, said that he warned Aceves against challenging Wolf. Aceves said that the party’s decision not to support him provided “a lot of motivation.” In addition to the support of the Deputy Sheriff ’s Association and the Santa Barbara Association of Realtors, he has scooped up Secord’s endorsement and said more are forthcoming. Both Aceves and Wolf (as well as dozens of people interviewed) have framed this election as one that comes down to leadership and values. Aceves pointed to his record on the council, which includes votes to clean up Haskell’s Beach, preserve Bishop Ranch, and approve development projects with mitigations. Wolf cited her pushes for earlier county budget workshops and her votes to award modest employee contracts after years of cuts and to prevent parking fees at county beaches. Aceves’s supporters said the board would benefit from the balance he could provide and the skills he could contribute from his law-enforcement career. “I’m really up to the task of providing balanced leadership,” he said, describing himself as a “roll-up-the-sleeves, get-the-job-done kind of guy.” Aceves, who speaks in a guttural voice with an easygoing manner and talks confidently of his chances, said he visits about 100 homes every day and has learned something talking to nd District residents. “One thing is clear: Voters are looking for a change.” When asked why they support Wolf, people repeatedly said,“She does her homework.” Wolf, who speaks calmly and deliberately like a teacher, said she has some “unfinished business” on the board — including work on the Eastern Goleta Valley Community Plan — and that her constituents “know that they can trust me.” But first, she has to win the battle to keep her spot, a battle that she said years of playing sports has helped ready her for.“I like to win,” she said.“And I really do want to win this election.”
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Confronting Climate Change: A POLITICAL REALITY CHECK
MAY 06,2014 5:00 PM Pollock Theater
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Free Admission - Reservation required to guarantee seat 26
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Please join NextGen Climate Founder and President Tom Steyer for a discussion about the urgency and complexity of mitigating climate change. As a national leader in this space, Steyer will address the intersection of technology and renewable energy, policy, and politics in ef effecting change on this critical issue.
INDEPENDENT CALENDAR
the
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by Terry Ortega and Ginny Chung
WEEK 1
@SBIndpndnt
MAY
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mixed media with more than framed paintings, sculptures, and ceramics. Shows through May. :-:pm. Faulkner Gallery, E. Anapamu St. Free. Call -. /-/: 15th Annual Ojai Storytelling Festival The town of Ojai will welcome nationally known storytellers who will offer captivating performances for all ages. Thu.: -:pm; Fri.: ampm; Sat.: am-:pm; Sun.: am-:pm. Libbey Bowl, S. Signal St., Ojai, or Ojai Art Ctr., S. Montgomery St., Ojai. $-$. Call - or visit ojaistoryfest.org.
/: Beware of Darkness Weaned on The Beatles and Led Zeppelin, this band will surely play songs from its debut full-length album, due out this May, filled with squealing guitars, barbed hooks, and timeless glam posturing. pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, State St. $. Ages +. Call -. Read more on p. .
THURSDAY 5/1 /-/: Les Misérables Do you hear the people sing? Say, do you hear the distant drums? You will, when San Marcos High School’s Performing Arts Department will present the full production of the musical about a man who spends years in prison for stealing a loaf of bread and is tormented by a police inspector. Shows through May . pm. San Marcos High School, Hollister Ave. $-$. Call - or visit shopsmroyals .org. Read more on p. . /-/: Community Democracy: Beyond Capitalism Join Gar Alperovitz, historian, political economist, activist, and writer, in this important discussion of how to create an economy here in S.B. that offers everyone meaningful participation in power at work and in the community. Registration is required. Thu.: Keynote Address: noon. MultiCultural Ctr. Theater, UCSB; Seminar Discussion: pm. Register for location; Reception: :pm. Sama Sama Kitchen, State St. Fri.: Roundtable on Organizing for Community:
:am. Free. Call - or visit www.democracysb.org. /: Pinch Pot Workshop Learn to create pottery that can be ornamental or functional formed and shaped by hand using a methodical pinching process. This event is a three-part series with remaining classes on May and . RSVP at zee@zeezedzed.com. -pm. Municipal Winemakers, Anacapa St. $. Call -. /: College on the Hill: A Century of Dreams Join in the th anniversary celebration of the first higher-education degrees awarded in S.B. by Normal School, which eventually became UCSB, with former city historian Mary Louise Days and UCSB history professor Randy Bergstrom. A wineand-cheese reception will follow the talk. :pm. El Presidio de Santa Bárbara State Historic Park. E. Canon Perdido St. $-$. Call -. /: Annual Art Walk for Kids/ Adults Exhibition Come enjoy and support the work of more than artists with disabilities. The exhibition will feature impressive
/: May Day Celebration The Santa Barbara Revels will host its th annual celebration of spring with special songs and dances ‘round the May Pole. You can weave ribbons and make floral garlands and nosegays! ::pm. Marshalls Patio, State St. Free. Call -. /, /-/: Homework Help S.B. students, did you know you can still get help with homework on a drop-in, first-come, firstserved basis for a -minute session? Bring your homework or a book to read with a buddy and get some help. Thu., Mon.-Tue.: ::pm; Wed.: :-:pm. S.B. Central Library, E. Anapamu St. Free. Grades K-. Call -.
PATTI McGUIRE
KATE WEYBRET
As always, find the complete listings online at independent.com/events. And if you have an event coming up, submit it at independent.com/eventsubmit.
/: Roger Guenveur Smith’s Rodney King Obie Award–winning actor, writer, and director Roger Guenveur Smith (pictured) shares his newest work, inspired by the late Rodney King, whose question “Can we all get along?” continues to resonate years after he posed it to a riot-torn Los Angeles. pm. MultiCultural Ctr., UCSB. Free. Call -.
/: Powdercoat The Cambridge Drive Concert Series is excited to present stellar singer/ songwriters Kristin Mooney and Claire Holley, who sing songs from their critically acclaimed self-titled EP with bits of acoustic, alternative, Americana, country-folk sounds. The special guest will be Steve Key. :pm. Cambridge Drive Community Church, Cambridge Dr. $-$. Call -. /-/: Time Stands Still This powerful and often hilarious play tells the story of photojournalist Sarah Goodwin barely surviving a bomb blast in Iraq, caught in a tug-of-war between her exhilarating career and the contentment of family life. Shows through May . Fri.-Sat.: pm; Sun.: :pm. Center Stage Theater, Paseo Nuevo. $-$. Call - or visit centerstagetheater.org.
/-/: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying This offering from S.B. High School Theatre about a young window cleaner’s very sudden and morally questionable rise from the mailroom to VP of advertising, with its songs like “Been a Long Day” and “Brotherhood of Man,” will make Mad Men seem boring. Also shows May - and at pm on May . pm. S.B. High School, E. Anapamu St. $-$. Call - x or visit sbhstheatre.com.
FRIDAY 5/2 /: Live Music in the Barrel Room with Natalie Wattre Come listen to this passionate and soulful singer with her raspy vocal edge sing originals and cover songs ranging from The Beatles to Gnarls Barkley. -pm. Carr Winery, N. Salsipuedes St. Free. Ages +. Call -.
2-4 /-/: 38th Annual Isla Vista Jugglers Fair Bring the family and participate in open juggling and free workshops, or just watch the many jugglers, unicyclists, clowns, and magicians at UCSB. There is a public show benefiting the S.B. Rape Crisis Center. Fri.: -pm; Sat.: am-pm; Sun.: am-pm. Visit sbjuggle.org for a full schedule.
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may 1, 2014
As always, find the complete listings online at independent.com/events. And if you have an event coming up, submit it at independent.com /eventsubmit.
JOHN ZANT’S GAME OF THE WEEK /-/: College Baseball: San Bernardino Valley at Santa Barbara City College SBCC is making its fourth consecutive appearance in the Southern Cal Regional play-offs. The Vaqueros (-) are seeded No. , and San Bernardino Valley (-) is seeded No. . The winner of their best-of-three series will advance to the second round May -. SBCC finished second in the Western State Conference North. League champion Oxnard is the No. –seeded team in the play-offs. The Vaqueros are - on their home field. Two of their hitters with clout are second baseman Brett Sesma (. average) and outfielder Connor McManigal (.). Fri.: pm; Sat.: am (and, if necessary, pm). Pershing Park, Castillo St. $-$. Call -.
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/: Joe Rogan A standup comedian for more than years, Joe Rogan (pictured) — who is also an actor, writer, color commentator, entrepreneur, trained martial artist, and host of his own podcast called The Joe Rogan Experience — will have you laughing with his inquisitive and intense comedic style. pm. Lobero Theatre, E. Canon Perdido. $.. Call - or visit lobero.com.
/: Meet Our Endorsed Candidates Please join the Democratic Women of S.B. County to learn more about Congressmember Lois Capps, Assemblymember Das Williams, and Supervisor Janet Wolf. The suggested donation includes a drink ticket and appetizers. :-:pm. Butler Event Ctr., State St. $-$. Call or visit democraticwomen sb.org.
SATURDAY 5/3 No reservations needed for walk-through tours. Tour hours: 5/12 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM, 5/13 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, 5/14 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM. Call to reserve flight
INDEPENDENT CALENDAR
/: Women’s Literary Festival This festival celebrates women authors and the diverse life experiences that
have shaped their writings. Admission will include morning coffee, full salad luncheon, all presentations, and book-signing opportunities. This is a nonprofit event promoting literacy and diversity. :am-:pm. Fess Parker’s DoubleTree Resort, E. Cabrillo Blvd. $. Call - or visit womensliteraryfestival.com. Read more on p. . /: Kermes Cinco de Mayo Festival and Fundraiser This Fifth of May Festival will have music, entertainment, and an auction. You must come hungry for the tacos, tamales, enchiladas, posole, horchata (a rice beverage, yum!), and more. This benefit for the scholars of Monroe will be hosted by the Parent Teacher Association. -pm. Monroe Ele-
mentary School, Flora Vista Dr. Free. Call -. /: Cookbook Launch Party The nonprofit S.B. Culinary Arts invites you to a fundraising cookbook launch to taste elegant wines and delicious appetizers prepared by the esteemed faculty, students of the School for Culinary Arts, and selected chefs featured in the cookbook. pm. Gourmet Dining Rm., SBCC, Cliff Dr. $. Call - or visit santabarbara culinaryarts.com. Read more on p. . /: Wild Horses and Wildflowers Join Return to Freedom as wild horse herds are released from winter pastures into summer pastures. There will be organic gourmet food, wine tastings, a silent auction, live music, a Native American blessing, and hay rides for the kids. All proceeds will go toward the sanctuary. -pm. Return to Freedom American Wild Horse Preservation & Sanctuary, Jalama Rd., Lompoc. $-$. Call - or visit returnto freedom.org. /: Chocolate de Vine Guests will enjoy sampling delicious desserts and wines and witness a judged competition of chocolate creations. There will be silent and live auctions. Proceeds will support the Rape Crisis Center. VIP reception: pm; -:pm. Saint Barbara Greek Orthodox Church Event Ctr., San Antonio Creek Rd. $-$. Call - or visit
3 /: Anjelah Johnson This comedian’s tales of being raised as a female of Mexican and Native-American descent will bring a refreshing comedic brilliance to racial stereotypes. pm. Granada Theatre, State St. $-$. Call - or visit granadasb.org.
Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.
the
WEEK
sbrapecrisiscenter.org. Read more on p. .
/-/: Don Quixote The Goleta School of Ballet and Goleta Ballet Theatre invite you to this ballet classic about the adventurer and his impassioned and dramatic quest to prove the importance of chivalry. Sat: pm; Sun: pm. Marjorie Luke Theatre, E. Cota St. $. Call - or visit goleta schoolofballet.com.
/: California Bookstore Day Did you know that independent bookstores are not just stores but community centers run by passionate readers, a place to meet your favorite author, and a quiet place to peruse aimlessly? There will be exclusive California Bookstore Day books and prints available on a first-come, first-served basis. am-pm. Chaucer’s Books, State St. Free. Visit chaucers books.com or call -. /: Danny Click This Sings Like Hell series show promises to lift you up with guitar playing and songs from Click’s newest album, Life Is A Good Place, which has been on the country, pop and Americana radio charts for consecutive months. pm. Lobero Theatre, E. Canon Perdido. $. Call - or visit lobero.com.
SUNDAY 5/4 /: Jewish Festival 2014 Be a part of this important part of S.B.’s rich history of ethnic celebrations that will include Israeli dancing, children’s activities, artisans, food, and speakers and area dignitaries who will honor Israel’s th Independence Day and Day of Remembrance. Proceeds from the silent auction will benefit future festivals. am-pm. Oak Park, W. Junipero St. Call - or visit jewishsantabarbara.org. /: Hats & Horses: TV Santa Barbara’s Charity Polo Event & Taste Wear your best hat to this
event that includes two polo matches, food and wine, and silent and live auctions. Proceeds help to support the mission and programs of TV Santa Barbara, including Youth Media Programs and media production services for nonprofit organizations. Noon-:pm. S.B. Polo & Racquet Club, Foothill Rd., Carpinteria. $. Call () - or visit event brite.com.
/: Los Angeles Philharmonic The Los Angeles Philharmonic will reinvent the concept of a st-century orchestra under the vibrant leadership of Gustavo Dudamel as they present works from Johannes Brahms and Andrew Norman. pm. Granada Theatre, State St. $-$. Call - or visit granadasb.org. /: Arianna String Quartet Chamber On The Mountain, Ojai’s newest performing arts organization, presents this quartet that has established itself as one of America’s finest chamber ensembles, praised for “tonal warmth, fastidious balance … expressive vitality” (Chicago Tribune). pm. Logan House, Ojai-Santa Paula Rd., Ojai. $-$. Ages +. Call - or visit chamberonthe mountain.com.
THURSDAY
MAY
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MARIACHI VARGAS THURSDAY
MAY
ZIGGY MARLEY
22
THURSDAY
MAY
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BRUCE IN THE USA THURSDAY
MONDAY 5/5 /: Cuba, Permaculture, and Hope for the Future Hannah Apricot Eckberg, one of the delegates who recently visited Cuba for the International Permaculture Convergence, will share her experience and thought-provoking ideas for Cuba and the rest of the world in this salonstyle setting. pm. Hill-Carrillo Adobe, E. Carrillo St. $. Ages +. Call -. /: Building a College List Are you still trying to figure out the college thing? Two expert college consultants will help students and parents find out how to identify colleges that offer the strongest programs for interests and passions and introduce tools to create and refine a college list that is right for you. pm. Goleta Library,
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THE INDEPENDENt
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P O H S
A spectacular sale of donated treasures — a Santa Barbara tradition!
2014
The Women’s Auxiliary of the Music Academy of the West presents
Tickets can be purchased at the door or online at www.smpcw.org
SAT, MAY 3 • 9 AM – 3 PM • MUSIC ACADEMY OF THE WEST, 1070 FAIRWAY RD.
Furniture • Rugs • Small Appliances • Kitchenware • Garden Accessories • Fine Linens • Antiques • Silver • Crystal • China • Art • Collectibles • Books • Board Games • Music & Movies • Electronics • Jewelry • Men’s & Women’s Clothing • Luggage • Sports Equipment
MORE INFO:
Generously supported by
695.7950
OR
www.maymadness2014.org Park in Academy lots. Overflow parking and shuttle service at Las Aves, across from the Bird Refuge on Los Patos Way. Proceeds benefit the Music Academy’s full-scholarship fund.
santa barbara®
Winner
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THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
Purchase $200 Gift Certificate (FREE! $50 Gift Basket) $ 100 Gift Certificate (FREE! $25 Gift Basket)
the
WEEK TUESDAY 5/6
/: B2B Breakfast This Business--Business breakfast will show you how to achieve career goals with an innovative curriculum, scholarship support, small classes, and faculty committed to personal attention at Antioch. There will be an opportunity to introduce yourself and your business. :am-:am. Earl Warren Showgrounds, Calle Real. $-$. Call - or visit antiochsb.edu. /: Ann Patchett This New York Times best-selling author, who opened an independent bookstore in her hometown to fight corporate giants, will reflect on her life and her book, a blend of literature and memoir, This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage. pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. Free-$. Call - or visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu. Read more on p. . /: Baauer + Danny Brown In a music world of interchangeable hashtag raps and million-hit videos, aren’t you finding it hard to find a true original? Come see Danny Brown, and remember why you love this music. pm. La Casa de la Raza, E. Montecito St. $-$. Call - or visit zvents.com.
WEDNESDAY 5/7 /: Looking for a Franchise?: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly Join Jim Smith and Bob Vitamante, SCORE counselors with extensive backgrounds as both franchisees and franchisors, as they explore the pros and cons of buying a franchise. -am. Faulkner Gallery, E. Anapamu St. Free. Visit sbscore .org. /: HabiTour Habitat for Humanity of Southern S.B. County opens up the Canon Perdido Affordable Homes construction site for free tours so guests can learn how future Habitat homeowners are selected and ways that the community can be involved. pm. E. Canon Perdido St. Free. Call -.
Sandra Day O’Connor Educating for Democracy in a Digital Age
/: Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn Don’t miss two of the world’s most highly regarded banjo players on the same stage. During their first S.B. appearance, the husbandand-wife team will perform a mix of traditional and original songs. A free meet-the-artist conversation with Abigail Washburn and professors Michael Berry (UCSB) and Jeffrey Wasserstrom (UC Irvine) will take place at pm at UCSB’s MultiCultural Center. pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. $$. Call -.
Saturday, May 10 / 3:00 p.m. / Free UCSB Campbell Hall Sandra Day O’Connor (Retired), Associate Justice, was the first woman to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court. Born in El Paso, Texas in 1930 and spent her early childhood on her family’s large Lazy-B-Cattle Ranch in southeastern Arizona. She received her B.A. and LL.B. from Stanford University. President Reagan nominated her as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, and she took her seat September 25, 1981. Justice O’Connor retired from the Supreme Court on January 31, 2006. In 2009, President Obama awarded Justice O’Connor America’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Since stepping down from the bench, Justice O’Connor has dedicated her time and energy to civics education in the U.S. She serves as Chairperson of the iCivics Board of Directors.
/: An Evening with Branford Marsalis This New Orleans native will offer up an impressive collection of original compositions and modern and classic jazz standards with his tightly knit quartet of musicians. VIP tickets include a preshow reception and premier seating. pm. Lobero Theatre, E. Canon Perdido. $-$. Call - or visit lobero.com.
She is the author of Out of Order: Stories from the History of the Supreme Court, The Majesty of the Law: Reflections of a Supreme Court Justice, and Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest.
FARMERS MARKET SCHEDULE
Credit: Collection of the U.S. Supreme Court
Presented by the Walter H. Capps Center for the Study of Ethics, Religion, and Public Life at UCSB.
Thursday Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, -:pm Carpinteria: block of Linden Ave., -:pm
For further information or assistance in accommodating a disability, please call 893-2317. www.cappscenter.ucsb.edu www.facebook.com/CappsCenter
Friday
25% off
Montecito: and blocks of Coast Village Rd., -:am
all Pureology Products This week only 5/1-5/10
Saturday Downtown S.B.: Corner of Santa Barbara and Cota sts., :am-pm Local Artisans & Farmers Market: Calle Real Shopping Ctr., Calle Real, Goleta, am-pm
Sunday Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, am-pm
Tuesday Old Town S.B.: - blocks of State St., -:pm
Wednesday Solvang: Copenhagen Dr. and st St., :-:pm
Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.
JIM KILBERG
N. Fairview Ave., Goleta. Free. Ages +. Call -.
Walter H. Capps Center for the Study of Ethics, Religion, and Public Life at UCSB
LARRRY’S* CD RELEASE PARTY
featuring the “Ocean All Stars Band”
Let’s Go! Saturday, May 3 3-6 PM Paradise Store & Grill
1 Paradise Road (off Hwy 154)
Admission is FREE 805.967.3254 *Note: The first “R” is silent.
Mon-Sat 11-6 Sun 11-2 Uptown
26 S. La Cumbre Rd. 805.967.2807 may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENT
31
MONTESSORI
CENTER
SCHOOL
Serving children 18 months through 6th Grade
Health Education+ Classes MAY 2014
Join us for an OPEN HOUSE! Wednesday, May 7 Event begins at 9am until 11am
MAY IS STROKE AND SKIN CANCER AWARENESS MONTh Awareness is key. Learn about lifestyle changes that can improve your overall health, lower blood pressure and reduce your risk of stroke.
Learn more at www.SansumClinic.org/stroke-awareness Sun exposure is the leading cause of skin cancer. To stay safe and enjoy your time outside, use sun screen, wear protective clothing & avoid extreme sun exposure.
Learn more at www.SansumClinic.org/skin-cancer
Diabetes Basics Santa Barbara ($15) Wed 5/14 & 5/21 5:15–6:45 pm This is a 2-part program.
BARIATRIC SURGERY ORIENTATION
Santa Barbara (Free) Mon 5/12 • 6:00–7:30 pm Lompoc (Free) Wed 5/21 • 6:00–7:30 pm
CAREGIVERS FOR LOVED ONES WITH DEMENTIA EDUCATION AND SUPPORT GROUP
Santa Barbara (Free) Thu 5/15 • 4:30–6:00 pm
Diabetes Basics in Spanish Santa Barbara ($15) Tue 5/13 & 5/20 5:00–6:45 pm
NUTRITION NAVIGATOR
Santa Barbara (Free) Wed 5/7 • 5:15–6:45 pm Solvang (Free) Mon 5/19 • 5:15–6:45 pm
FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP
Diabetes Blood Sugar Control Santa Barbara ($10) Wed 5/28 • 5:15–6:45pm
WOMENHEART SUPPORT GROUP
HIP/KNEE REPLACEMENT
Pre-Diabetes Santa Barbara (Free) Wed 5/28 • 5:15–6:45pm
LYMPHEDEMA EDUCATION
INSULIN USERS PEER GROUP
Santa Barbara (Free) Thu 5/15 • 6:00–7:30 pm
Santa Barbara (Free) Mon 5/12 • 4:30–6:00 pm
Santa Barbara (Free) Fri 5/2 • 11:30-12:30 pm LYMPHEDEMA SCREENING
Santa Barbara (Free) Fri 5/23, by appointment only. Call (805) 682-7300
Santa Barbara ($10) Tue 5/20 • 5:30–7:30 pm BACK WELLNESS
Santa Barbara ($10) Tues 5/6 • 5:30–7:30 pm
Register Online!
www.SansumClinic.org/Classes
Or call for registration, locations and more information.
Toll-free (866) 829-0909 HEALTH RESOURCE CENTER
Visit or call for answers to your health questions. Free of charge and open to the community. 215 Pesetas Lane, Santa Barbara (805) 681-7672 Sansum Clinic’s unified, patient-first approach to healthcare is built around you. We provide the full spectrum of healthcare services ranging from primary care to more than 30 specialties.
may 1, 2014
License #426205239. MCS does not discriminate on the basis of ethnicity, religion or national origin.
NECK & POSTURE WELLNESS
For a complete schedule and detailed descriptions of all our Heath Education Programs and Events or to register online visit
THE INDEPENDENT
(805) 683-9383 | www.MCSSB.org
Santa Barbara (Free) Fri 5/30 • 1:00–2:30 pm
CANCER CENTER ONCOLOGY PATIENT SUPPORT PROGRAMS
32
401 N. Fairview Ave #1 Goleta
Santa Barbara (Free) Mon 5/5 • Noon–1:30 pm
For more information visit www.ccsb.org or call (805) 682-7300
Learn more at www.SansumClinic.org
RSVP to a.morris@mcssb.org
Rusty’s Offers ONLY @
DIABETES EDUCATION
living
Scene in S.B.
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Books
Text and photos by Caitlin Fitch
Ann Patchett Comes to S.B.
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above: Justin Cutter picks kale sprouts at the Earth Day Festival in his mobile educational gardening truck, which is part of a program called Compass Green Project. Cutter has converted a typical work truck into a mobile greenhouse, complete with a compost pile and prolific garden, which is driven all over the West Coast to educate at-risk youth and elementary-aged kids about sustainability. In Santa Barbara, Compass Green has teamed up with Urban Garden Community to work with area children. “This is a great way to engage people who wouldn’t actually give a hoot about sustainability otherwise,” said Cutter. right: “I had a conventional lawn and landscaping business in Austin, Texas, for 15 years before moving to Santa Barbara. I took the Green Gardener class and learned different techniques. I had a complete paradigm shift,” said Dave Hunsaker, owner of Dave’s Organic Gardening. Hunsaker utilizes organic, permaculture, and other sustainable techniques to install edible gardens as well as traditional yard maintenance. “Sometimes it feels like I enjoy people’s lawns more than they do! People actually pay me to be outside in their gardens, and I love it,” he said.
During the month of May, owners of Chihuahuas and Chihuahua mixes can get their pets spayed or neutered for free as part of “Chihuahuas de Mayo.” The program is intended to educate the public regarding the startling number of chi-chis and chi-chi mixes living in shelters — as many as 30 percent of all shelter dogs are of wee stature. Pet owners must reside in Santa Barbara County to qualify; surgeries will be provided for the first 400 dogs signed up. To make an appointment, contact one of the following participating facilities: the County Humane Societies in Santa Maria (349-3435), Santa Ynez (688-8224), and Santa Barbara (964-4777 x20), as well as CARE4Paws (968-2273) and S.B. County Animal Services, Santa Maria (934-6968). For more information, visit projectpetsafe .org. — Michelle Drown
Event
Jiddu Krishnamurti (pictured) was an influential thinker of the 20th century whose spiritual and philosophical teachings are alive and well today around the world and just up the road in Ojai. Born in British India in 1895, Krishnamurti relocated to Ojai in 1922, where he lived until his death in 1986. Each May, the Krishnamurti Foundation of America holds two days of free workshops, programs, music, and art for both adults and teens at Krishnamurti’s former house, which is now a center for his ideas. This year’s May Gathering, as it is called, focuses on the notion of “unconditioning,” a term he coined to explain the predicament of modern humanity. “[For a] mind that has been so heavily conditioned for so many centuries … [is] it possible to uncondition itself … and therefore be free, capable, intensely alive, anew, fresh so that it can meet any problem?” Krishnamurti asked. The May Gathering takes place Saturday-Sunday, May 10-11, at the Krishnamurti Educational Center, 1070 McAndrew Road, Ojai. For more information, call 646-2726 or visit kfa.org. — MD
Trivia KFA.ORG
Sage Teachings
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What is the most popular Pinterest category? ❏ DIY & Crafts ❏ Food & Drink ❏ Home Decor What was the approximate percentage of female Pinterest users as of 2012? ❏ 60 ❏ 70 ❏ 80 Where did CEO Ben Silbermann work prior to founding Pinterest? ❏ Amazon ❏ Google ❏ Facebook
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answers: . Food & Drink; . ; . Google.
Animals
COURTESY UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
ward-winning author Ann Patchett (pictured) wouldn’t divulge too many secrets about her upcoming Arts & Lectures talk at UCSB but said she hopes attendees leave understanding the importance of “good deeds.” Pachett’s own good deeds to the literary world are many. Her Santa Barbara visit comes on the heels of her recently released third nonfiction book — she has also written six novels — titled This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage. And in 2011, she opened Parnassus Books, an independent bookstore in Nashville, Tennessee. Although many have forecasted a grim future for books, Patchett disagreed. “People in general are finally starting to understand that you have to support the things that you want to see live.” The importance of commitment runs rampant in Happy Marriage, which assembles 22 nonfiction pieces Patchett has written over the years. In the titular story, she explores her long-term relationship with her now-husband, Karl, and how a health scare put their relationship on paper. In “This Dog’s Life” and “Dog without End”— surely to be the most affecting stories for the dog lovers out there — Patchett delves into the all-consuming love she felt for her dog Rose. Those two stories are familiar ones — human meets dog, dog warms human’s heart, young dog becomes old dog, and sadness ensues — but are touching all the same. “It’s so mundane in a way,” Patchett said. “If you’ve got dogs, you’ve had that experience.” Patchett said that her next novel is brewing in her head, but that in the meantime she will be sticking to writing shorter nonfiction pieces and overseeing her bookstore. She will be speaking at UCSB’s Campbell Hall on Tuesday, May 6, at 8 p.m. For more information, — Lyz Hoffman call 893-3535 or visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu.
million
The number of Pinterest users worldwide as of October 2013.
pa c i f i c a g r a d u at e i N S t i t u t e preSeNtS a puBlic coNfereNce
Soul in Body and Nature
May 16–18, 2014 Presentations by Stephen Aizenstat
Michael Kearney
Joseph Cambray
Alan Kilpatrick
Cheri Clampett and Avahara
Ruth Lanius
Lionel Corbett
Betsy Perluss
David Cumes
Elizabeth Nelson Tina Stromsted
Pamela Grant
Bernard Unterman
John Hickey
Willow Young
Caylin Huttar The latest in an ongoing series of conferences, Imagination and Medicine IV will allow participants to deeply explore the emerging connections between medicine, neuroscience, ecology, and depth psychology. Through engaging presentations and discussions, we will examine: How neuroscientific studies on brain networks are delineating the impact of trauma on mind and psyche
Practices such as yoga, qigong, meditation, dreamwork, and walking in nature
Applications of complexity science to environmental & eco-psychologies
New ways to look at death and living with illness
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Psychology Assessment Center at UC Santa Barbara The best first step for your emotional and psychological well-being...
The role of ancestral wisdom in healing body and mind Contributions of Marion Woodman and the embodiment of soul
pacifica.edu | 805.969.3626, ext. 103
CoNfereNCe INforMATIoN ANd regIsTrATIoN
www.pacifica.edu/publicprograms or 805.969.3626, ext. 103
Montessori MontessoriCenter Center School thanks Denise School thanks Denise Mabardi Mabardifor for3838years years ofofexemplary exemplaryservice service asasSilver Door’s Silver Door’sHead Head Teacher! Teacher!
We provide comprehensive testing for: Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder Learning Disabilities including dyslexia Depression and anxiety Nonverbal learning disabilities Neuropsychological impairment Other psychological disorders & concerns Contact us or see our website for more information: 805 776 3722 pacucsb@gmail.com www.education.ucsb.edu/pac Director: Erik Lande, Ph.D. (PSY19202)
MCS MCSwill willbebehosting hostinga aretirement retirementparty partyininDenise’s Denise’shonor. honor. For more information, call (805) 683-9383 For more information, call (805) 683-9383 34
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
A service of the Dept. of Counseling, Clinical, and School Psychology
living Finding a Voice
Event
Women’s
Derek Young, the Poet Laureate of Los Prietos Boys Camp
Have you attended the festival before, and what’s your role this year? I actually just
attended for the first time last year. I was so impressed by the quality of speakers and the quality of the audience — it’s like a who’s who of women in Santa Barbara. I’m excited to be part of it this year and honored to be invited. I’ll be doing one of the breakout sessions, where I plan to read some of my own poetry and talk about the role of poet laureates in general. Maybe I’ll even talk a little bit about the craft of writing.
What do you see as the benefits of a literary event that features exclusively female writers? I think it’s nice to have a space where there’s
a voice for women. Women do tend to be underrepresented in terms of visible presentations, invitations to read in prestigious settings, and number of books that get published. A festival like this also introduces a wonderful sisterhood element and allows people to connect to more feminine themes. It’s just nice to have a space where it’s not so much about the relationship between men and women; it’s more about women’s perspectives.
What would you say to readers who find poetry difficult? A lot of women poets — other
than Gertrude Stein, who is perhaps the least accessible poet of all time — are witty, observant, compassionate, and wonderfully playful with language. Emily Dickinson, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Elizabeth Bishop, Wendy Cope, Kay Ryan — I’m influenced both by past voices and newer ones. I love Dickinson’s voice of the little, quiet woman in the attic and also the wild, passionate love of St. Vincent Millay. I see that passion informing contemporary female poets, like Patricia Smith, who’s out there just rocking it. It’s also great that our new U.S. poet laureate, Natasha Tretheway, is a woman and is among the youngest poet laureates ever named. It’s an exciting time to be a female poet writing in the English — ES language.
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The Women’s Literary Festival takes place Saturday, May 3, 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. at Fess Parker’s DoubleTree Resort. For more information and reservations, call 968-2881 or visit womens literaryfestival.com.
H
is peers at Cabrillo High School may not know it, but Derek Young is a poet laureate. It’s a distinction not many 17-year-olds can claim, and to Young it represents far more than his talent with words. Last summer, Young was incarcerated at Los Prietos Boys Camp, the juvenile detention center located in the Los Padres National Forest. He was 16 years old, and it was his second time facing time for drug-related offenses. “The first time, I was young, and I didn’t use the experience wisely,” Young said, remembering his prior stay at Los Prietos when he was 14. The second time, though, something in him woke up. “They teach you work ethic and self-discipline and help you stay on track,” he said of the program. “You realize you have to take hold of your own life and become a leader.” For Young, many of these realizations took place in English class at the camp’s Los Robles High School. A bright student with a stylish command of language, Young began to produce original poems that expressed his growing belief in the rehabilitation process and the importance of personal responsibility. His poems were anthologized in Bridges, a collection of student poetry published biannually by instructional aide Colleen Hefley and English teacher Victor Prado. Among Young’s poems from the collection is “Put in the Effort,” an admonishment that might be aimed at his younger self: “If only you believed what the Lord tried to stress to you / Instead of trying to be cool and protect what is said of you / If only you stayed humble and tried not to / Bite the hand that fed you.” In October of last year, Young completed his program at Los Prietos, taking with him a copy of the book. Then in January, he was called back to the camp — this time for a special event honoring the work of former U.S. poet laureate William Stafford, who spent time at Los Prietos Civilian Public Service Camp as a contentious objector during WWII. On what would have been Stafford’s 100th birthday, Young rose before those gathered to read Stafford’s poetry as well as his own. He was then named the first poet laureate of Los Prietos Boys Camp for the quality and qu q anti tity ityy of of writing wrritin writ ingg he h produced during the program. and quantity
Gardening
W
ater is scarce and getting scarcer. Too much of the daily consumption in our watersheds is devoted to landscaping; irrigation of planted spaces is the number one use of residential water. With care, landscapes can be maintained without the waste that sends excess down the drain to the ocean. One good rule to judge a garden’s watering needs is to monitor soil moisture carefully, no matter what is planted and what the soil type may be. Here are some other handy tips: Deep-rooted plants such as trees, drought-tolerant natives, and other Mediterranean varieties need a deep soak once a month through the dry months, although if the weather turns foggy, they can often go much longer. The best way to tell if it’s time to water is to probe the soil and see if it still contains some moisture. Dig down with a shovel or trowel or use a specially designed soil probe to pull up a core to inspect. The soil should never be bone dry and crumble to dust, nor should it be wet enough to squeeze moisture out of. On the dry side, it’s time to water. On the soggy side, wait a few days and try again. Then use soaker hoses, low-flow sprinklers, or drip irrigation systems that
COURTESY
N
ow in its ninth year, the Women’s Literary Festival has established its place as one of the Central Coast’s most beloved celebrations of reading and writing. With an emphasis on diversity and social justice and Chryss Yost a focus on women’s words, the festival draws together some of Santa Barbara’s most engaged thinkers. This year’s lineup includes Anne Cherian, the Indian-American novelist whose books include A Good Indian Wife and The Invitation, and L.A.–based author and historian Nancy L. Cohen, author of Delirium: The Politics of Sex in America. Appearing alongside the out-of-town authors will be Santa Barbara’s own poet laureate, Chryss Yost, whose new volume of poetry, Mouth & Fruit, is just out from Gunpowder Press. Last week, I caught up with Yost to discuss her role in the festival and her passion for poetry.
GEORGE YATCHISIN
Words
cont’d
Profile
Derek Young returned to Los Prietos to be honored for his poetry.
As he nears the end of his junior year at Cabrillo High, Young is thriving: maintaining a high GPA, playing football and baseball, and looking for more creative writing opportunities. These days, he describes his relationship with Los Prietos as “friendly,” adding, “I respect them for turning me around.” And if his poems are anything to go on, Young has figured out where ultimate responsibility for his life lies. His poem “The Answer,” ends with this telling stanza: “So don’t ask me for wisdom / or you will just be disappointed / for only you can get anointed / from yourself to be your own king.” — Elizabeth Schwyzer
4·1·1 To learn more about Los Prietos Boys Camp, visit countyofsb.org/probation/default.aspx?id=1062.
deliver a small amount of water over a longer period covering the area of the drip zone. The idea is to let the water slowly travel down to the deep regions of the soil before it starts to puddle at the surface. Other shrubs and perennials may need water once or twice a week, but applying a thick layer of organic mulch can delay this even more. Again, take a look at what’s happening in the root zone before turning on the water. It may be useful to break up the watering schedule into two or three segments of shorter duration. This will allow the water to soak in gradually instead of running off as soon as the surface is wetted. Annuals grow from seed, germinating, flowering, and fruiting in a short season. Water is crucial to their early success, so start seeds in containers to get their root systems established before transplanting into the garden. Then they will need careful monitoring and watering for at least two weeks until they are established. To really acclimate them, transition to less frequent but slower water delivery over a longer time to help foster deeper root growth. Protect young plants with row covers or shade them with temporary hats of folded newspaper if the weather turns very hot or windy. Automatic irrigation systems can help regulate water use if carefully programmed. But as with all computer systems, they are only as good as their programmers. For more precise control of irrigation water, irrigation controllers can be fitted with sensors that sense the presence of water in the soil as well as atmospheric conditions such as relative humidity and temperature. These are readily available from local water agencies. They may even have rebate programs to offset the cost — Virginia Hayes of such retrofits. may 1, 2014
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E E R F
Skin Cancer Screenings
for ages 20+
Hormones Health & Happiness by Mia Lundin As a farewell to her private practice and to thank her loyal following, Mia Lundin will present a talk at the Marjorie Luke Theatre at 6:30 pm on May 5, 2014 All the net-proceeds for the evening will be directed to Domestic Violence Solutions for Santa Barbara County Open to the public. Please bring family and friends. Fee $25 Please register at www.hormonesandnutrition.com
Celebrating 26 Years Cottage Health System and the Cancer Center of Santa Barbara with Sansum Clinic are teaming up to bring you this community health event. *Skin Cancer Screenings for ages 20+ and Skin Cancer Prevention Information
Wednesday, May 7th
For online registration discount use code "NM14INDY" On site Registration at Leadbetter Beach • Starts 5pm
Swim starts 6:25pm • 5k starts 6:35pm • Kids Sprint 7:35pm
Saturday, May 10
Special Musical Guest: The Debra Farris Band
9:00 a.m. – Noon
Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital (Pueblo Street entrance, first floor)
INFORMATION: Call toll free 1-855-CHS-WELL (1-855-247-9355)
www.runsantabarbara.com
This event is designed primarily for those who do not otherwise have access to medical services.*First come, first served.
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may 1, 2014
Swimwear by eberjey.
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living | Sports
PAUL WELLMAN FILE PHOTOS
Riding the Roads Amgen Tour of California Cyclists Descend on S.B.
F
by John Zant
our hours from Pismo Beach to Santa Barbara is a rather slow time by automotive standards, but what if it were accomplished by human power on the pedals rather than horsepower on the pistons? Then the distance of 108 miles — so we’re talking an average speed better than 25 miles per hour — is impressive. When more than 250 cyclists in Stage 5 of the 2014 Amgen Tour of California (ATOC) reach the city limits on Thursday, May 15, they will be whizzing by at 50 mph on the downhill side of Highway 154. Once they level out, they’ll have to negotiate several sharp turns before stretching out into a fast sprint from Shoreline Drive to the finish line on Cabrillo Boulevard, between Garden Street and Calle César Chávez. It will be the third time that a stage of the ATOC finishes on our waterfront (several others started here). In 2006, the tour’s inaugural year, George Hincapie surged to the front in the final pedal strokes of a race that started in San Luis Obispo. Last year, the fifth stage started in Santa Clarita, and Tyler Farrar of Team Garmin-Sharp topped the podium after edging out a pack that came wheeling around the Bird Refuge. The Amgen Tour, covering more than 700 miles in eight stages, bills itself as “America’s Greatest Race,” and as cycling events go, it holds the title. The 16 teams in this year’s race, each consisting of eight riders, include nine teams that claim elite professional status. Tejay van Garderen of the BMC Racing Team, the overall winner of the 2013 ATOC, will not return to defend his title. As the team’s leader in the Tour de France, he will spend the next two months training in Europe. BMC has designated Peter Stetina, another American rider, to spearhead its forces in California. Sacramento will be the starting point of the ninth Amgen Tour on May 11, and it will finish in Thousand Oaks on May 18. One of the toughest stages will be the sixth, on May 16, from Santa Clarita to Mountain High. Stage 5, beginning at 11:45 a.m. at the Pismo Beach pier, will include a sprint in Arroyo Grande. The riders will wind through the Santa Barbara County wine country on their way to San Marcos Pass. The anticipated time of the finish is 3:45 p.m. If Cannondale Pro Cycling’s Peter Sagan is in the field, he will be flying down Cabrillo Boulevard. The Slovakian sprinter has notched a record total of 10 stage wins in the Amgen Tour. Ken Hanson of UnitedHealthcare Pro Cycling will be motivated to win in Santa Barbara, his onetime hometown, after he lost by mere feet to Farrar last year. And don’t count out Trek Factory Racing’s Jens Voigt, a wily 43-yearold German who is expected to retire after this year. Voigt scored the biggest and most pleasant surprise in 2013 when he won Stage 6 from Santa Barbara to Avila Beach. Susie Willett, the chairperson of the Local Organizing Committee and an avid cyclist herself, suggested some
favorable viewing spots on the course: the top of San Marcos Pass, as the cyclists end their climb; also, the intersections of Modoc and Las Positas roads, Las Positas and Cliff Drive, and Cliff and Meigs Road, where they will be gathering for the final push. The best place to follow the race from start to finish will be the VIP tent at the finish line. It will feature big-screen TVs, food and beverages, and bleachers set up to give ticketed spectators a clear view of the final sprint. Tickets cost $75 until May 12 and $100 thereafter. Proceeds will benefit the Cancer Center of Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara Bike Coalition, and Echelon Junior cycling program. Sign up at santabarbaratour ofcalifornia.com. People interested in serving as race volunteers also can register at that website. Santa Barbara is one of four host cities to stage the Amgen Breakaway Mile, a walk along the racecourse for cancer survivors, caregivers, and advocates. It is limited to the first 150 registrants. Visit amgentourofcalifornia.com/breakawaymile. There will be free entertainment and many products and services on display during a lifestyle festival that starts at 11:30 a.m. on May 15 on Cabrillo Boulevard. Willett, who works for Visit Santa Barbara, invites locals to join cycling enthusiasts from around the world. “Come on down,” she said. “Take a long lunch break.”
BARNEY’S LEGACY: It is doubtful that Santa Barbara would have become a frequent stop on the Amgen Tour without Barney Berglund’s devotion to the sport of cycling. Berglund made his hometown a charter city in 2006 when he chaired the first Local Organizing Committee, and he led the effort to bring the tour back in 2013 after an absence of four years. He was being treated for a deadly form of cancer when the last race came around and brought on Willett and Jack Bianchi as cochairs. Berglund died three months ago. “Barney was a strong rider, and a week after he passed, a hundred of us met at the Mission and cycled up Gibraltar Road,” Willett said. “We called it Barney’s Ride.” She liked the idea of crowning Berglund as Santa Barbara’s Perpetual King of the Mountain. “I watched Barney pursue the Tour of California in 2006, and I saw it gain traction not only among enthusiasts but the whole city,” Willett said. “It’s a tribute to him.”
OFF TO THE RACES: Last May, Ken Hanson (pictured above center, and left in orange-stripped helmet) took second place out of several hundred cyclists who pedaled into Santa Barbara for the Stage 4 finish of the Amgen Tour 2013. Our seaside hamlet will once again be a resting place for the ATOC participants this May 15. Covering more than 700 miles in eight stages, the competition bills itself as “America’s Greatest Race.”
MOVING ON: The sports community has lost a number of
prominent figures this year, most tragically UCSB water polo player Nick Johnson and Maggie Daly, an 18-year-old member of Santa Barbara City College’s state championship women’s golf team. Daly, from Alamo, California, was killed April 9 in a traffic accident near her hometown. Lorenzo Dall’Armi, a former president of SBCC and superintendent of schools, died at 91 on March 8. “Dal” was quite an athlete in his day, winning tennis championships at Santa Barbara High School (SBHS) and UCSB and impressing beachgoers with his volleyball skills more than 50 years ago. Dale Okinaka and Frank Swain, two members of the Santa Barbara Athletic Round Table Hall of Fame, also passed away recently. Okinaka, an early basketball star at San Marcos High School, made a huge impact as a coach of girls softball. Swain began compiling sports statistics when he was a schoolmate of Eddie Mathews at Santa Barbara High and held positions in the Round Table, SBHS Alumni Association, and the Semana Nautica sports festival.
HALL OF FAME: The Round Table will host its 47th
annual Hall of Fame Banquet on Monday, May 19, at Fess Parker’s DoubleTree Resort. It will feature the induction of seven new members: Stefanie Christoferson, San Marcos basketball and softball; Megan Enyeart, Dos Pueblos basketball; Mike Fitzgerald, San Marcos volleyball; Lola Trenwith Georgi, Santa Barbara High tennis; Scott Winnewisser, Bishop Diego football, basketball, and volleyball; Rick Olmstead, volleyball coach at several schools; and Joan Russell Price, community athletic administrator. Reservations to the banquet are recommended at SBART.org. For more sports, including a weekly highlight schedule, see independent.com/sports. may 1, 2014
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Exclusive
SIXTH FREE BI-ANNUAL
E-WASTE
AAA Travel Sale April 21 – May 3, 2014
RECYCLING EVENT
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY MAY 2 & 3, 8:30AM-4PM
Discover what’s new in cruises, tours and more from helpful AAA Travel Agents. Plus, take advantage of limited-time booking savings of up to $2,400 per stateroom on Double Upgrades1 on select cruises. Visit your local AAA branch during the sale and you can:
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Offers are only valid April 21 – May 3, 2014 Call or visit today! PLEASE NO BATTERIE S, TONER CARTRI DGES, LARGE APPLIA NCES OR LIGHT BULB S
Contact a AAA Travel Agent or visit the website below for sale details. CALL: 805-898-2870 - Santa Barbara CLICK: AAA.com/Travelsale VISIT: 3712 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105 Featuring: All rates, savings offers and itineraries are subject to change without notice. Savings offers may be withdrawn at any time. Government taxes & fees are additional. Double Upgrade Promotion: This promotion allows guests book Club Veranda staterooms at Club Interior stateroom prices (category 12). Bookings must be created at standard fares between April 1 and May 3, 2014. This promotional offer must be selected at the time of booking to qualify. Bookings must be made in desired category, which will be priced at the lower fare after the valid promotion is selected. Offer is valid for all sailings starting in 2015 with the exception of Journey’s May 21, June 23, August 6 departures and Quest’s July 4 departure. Call your AAA Travel Agent for full listing of applicable sailings. Offer is applicable to new individual bookings and to staterooms in non-contracted group bookings with staterooms named and fully deposited during the offer period. This promotional offer is combinable with back to back savings, onboard booking savings, and reduced single supplements. The promotion is not combinable with any other program, promotion or discounted rates. Offers are subject to change, and may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain restrictions apply. Azamara Club Cruises is a boutique brand with two jewel box ships focusing on destination immersion. Azamara is an inclusive product offering, select standard spirits, international beers, wines, gratuities, bottled water, soft drink and specialty coffees and teas plus an AzAmazing EveningSM. A customized night tour just for the Azamara guest.© 2014 Azamara Club Cruises®. Ships’ Registry: Malta. 2 Savings valid for AAA members only. Save up to $960 per couple on new General Tours Small Group, Privately Guided or Small Ship journey when paid in full at time of booking from April 21-May 3, 2014. For travel April 21 – April 30, 2015. Not valid on Hosted and Free Style journeys. Other restrictions apply. Offers may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain restrictions apply. Not responsible for errors and omissions. Travel Sale will take place April 21–May 3, 2014 during normal business hours. Your local AAA club acts as an agent for the various travel providers featured at the Sale. CTR #1016202-80. Copyright © 2014 Auto Club Services, LLC. All Rights Reserved. 1
SEARS PARKING LOT IN LA CUMBRE PLAZA This free event is open to all area residents & businesses
City Trash & Recycling
564-5631
SantaBarbaraCA.gov/trash
2014 Santa Barbara County
ECONOMIC SUMMIT ThU, MAy 8 8:30 AM – NooN GrANAdA TheATre
$200 / $25 UCSB students
Includes admission to the entire half-day Summit, a copy of the 2014 Santa Barbara County Economic Outlook report, plus a Continental Breakfast from 7:30-8:30 AM
A Granada facility fee is included in each ticket price / Limited availability of student tickets
Plus a special panel on THE FUTURE OF WORK
Is America becoming a nation of billionaires and the masses who serve them? Our panel experts will tackle this topic and more. The Santa Barbara County Economic Forecast will be delivered by Peter Rupert, director of the UCSB Economic Forecast Project and chair of the Department of Economics at UCSB. PANEL SPEAKERS: Megan McArdle, Andrew McAfee, Lee Ohanian and Russell Roberts (moderator) Peter Rupert Economic Forecast Project Founding Sponsor:
Arts & Lectures Community Partner:
38
Economic Forecast Project Platinum Sponsor:
Economic Forecast Project Gold Sponsor:
A&L: (805) 893-3535 Granada: (805) 899-2222 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
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lliving | Food & Drink + + + + + + + food@independent.com
Our Finest Chefs’
/sbindyfood
@sbindyfood CHOCOLATES
COOKBOOKS
FAVORITE RECIPES
Santa Barbara Culinary Arts Releases New Cookbook Featuring 62 Dishes
W
hile enjoying the last few years of her life as a resident of Casa Dorinda in Montecito, Julia Child joined Santa Barbara Culinary Arts (SBCA), a nonprofit dedicated to developing and supporting a community of passionate food makers and lovers. When she died in 2004, SBCA named a scholarship in her honor, specifically earmarked for students of Santa Barbara City College’s School of Culinary Arts and Hotel Management. This week, with SBCA publishing a cookbook featuring 62 recipes from the region’s most beloved chefs, Mrs. Child is certainly applauding from her kitchen in heaven, as the 144-page, $25 book — whose sales will fund this scholarship’s growth — perfectly blends her dual focus on foodie education and enthusiasm. The book’s editor and designer is Tama Takahashi, a former Hollywood camera assistant who entered the SBCC program after hurting her back and needing a midlife career change. She is now food editor at Touring & Tasting magazine, cofounder of the popular tasting group Inside Wine S.B., and a member of the SBCA board. “Why I spent so much time working on this book was in gratitude to the education I received there and the doors that it opened for me,” said Takahashi, who’s been putting it together for a year-and-a-half.“It was really like a godsend for me to find the school. The faculty there are all people at the very top of their profession, and they’re giving 200 percent of themselves.” Nearly two-thirds of the 62 recipes — which are beautifully photographed by Linda Blue — focus on seafood, but there is an overarching motif, as well. “The theme that runs through the recipes is the use of really fresh things,” said Takahashi. “The undercurrent is sustainable
4·1·1
LINDA BLUE PHOTOS
by Matt Kettmann
< TASTE TICKER
produce and seafood and conscientiously raised beef.” The recipes, which are organized alphabetically and easy to follow, include such delicacies as lobster terrine (by the school’s own Stephanie Rapp) and sous-vide loin of venison (by Bacara’s Johan Denizot) to more rustic fare like David Cecchini’s bolognese sauce and Brophy Bros.’ garlic baked clams to sweets such as Sage & Onion’s sticky toffee and Renaud’s raspberry tart. The cumulative effect is rabidly mouth-watering and should go a long way in alerting more Santa Barbarans to the magic coming out of SBCC’s program. “It’s really a cultural asset for the city and a bit unrecognized,” said Takahashi.“Hopefully this book will bring some awareness to the school and to our little nonprofit.”
Cantwell’s Roasted Vegetable Tart
The first 1,000 Santa Barbara Culinary Arts cookbooks are now available at independent bookstores all over town and will be celebrated with a special release party this Saturday, May 3, 1-3 p.m., at SBCC’s gourmet dining room, with culinary program teachers and students preparing food to go along with wines from Refugio Ranch and Westerly. Ten of the featured chefs will also be on hand to sign copies. See santabarbaraculinaryarts.com.
• Speaking of books, there’s a new resource for touring the region’s many wineries: Publisher Tom Silberkleit’s The California Directory of Fine Wineries recently released its Central Coast e-book, written by K. Reka Badger, Cheryl Crabtree, and Marty Olmstead, with photography by Robert Holmes. The up-to-date, informationladen collection displays beautifully on your tablet devices, but also works well on your smartphones, too. See CaliforniaFineWineries.com. • Certified Cicerone Zachary Rosen is hosting an innovative beer-music pairing event called Spring Storm on Sunday, May 4, 5-8 p.m., in the Bourbon Room (4444 Hollister Ave.; 265-3788). Two 45-minute sets will be played by Jim Connolly on banjo and then the three-piece acoustic band Waters Rising, and there will be a beer and flatbread-pizza break in between. There are six beers total, and tickets are $60. • The Santa Barbara Independent’s fifth annual Sizzling Summer BBQ Contest is now taking submissions. See independent.com/bbq for info on how to enter! • Elizabeth Reed’s Food & Wine Safari embarks again on May 7 at The Biltmore with a showdown between Larry Schaffer’s Tercero Wines from the Santa Ynez Valley and Kevin Riley’s Proulx Wines from Paso Robles, all paired with expertly crafted food. See foodandwinesafari.com.
Sweet Support for
Rape Crisis Center
T
his Saturday, May 3, the Santa Barbara Rape Crisis Center (SBRCC) hosts its annual Chocolate de Vine fundraiser at the Greek Orthodox Church, where guests will dress up, enjoy a cornucopia of confections made by pastry chefs and chocolatiers, and go home without feeling guilty about an evening of indulgence, since it all goes to prevent sexual assault. To purchase tickets, which range from $65-$100, see sbrapecrisiscenter.org. Here’s just a sliver of the chocolate that will be flowing:
Piece of Mind: Chocolatier Ashleigh Johnston-Barton was diagnosed with celiac disease 12 years ago, but she didn’t let that prevent her from creating delicious treats. Instead, she established her own gluten-free bakery, specializing in cakes and chocolates, explaining, “I used it as a way to create what I wanted to eat.” Barton’s trademark item is a dark-chocolatetruffle passion-fruit buttercream, but she’s concocting a figand-honey caramel truffle especially for this year’s Chocolate de Vine. She’s been affiliated with the SBRCC since 1997 and looks forward to contributing to the event every year. Mama Ganache: Not long after Tom Neuhaus visited his first fair-trade cocoa cooperative in 2003, he started his own business to help cacao farmers in developing countries. “As a result, I’ve been traveling to Africa ever since,” said Neuhaus of that pivotal trip to Ghana. Neuhaus founded Project Hope and Fairness in 2004 with the intention of exposing people who practice unfair cocoa trading, but his organization has accomplished much more since then. Neuhaus also sells the Native Power Bar, which comes complete with fudge, chewy caramel, toasted almonds, and a rich coating of dark or milk chocolate. Half of the proceeds from Mama Ganache sales at Chocolate de Vine will go toward Project Hope and Fairness. See mama-ganache.com. Stafford’s Famous Chocolates: This is Stafford’s first Chocolate de Vine, and co-owner Benjamin Taylor is delighted about the opportunity to show off their sweets. “This is very exciting,” he said, “and it’s for a good cause!” Larry Stafford founded the company in Porterville, California, in 1987, but Taylor and his father bought the business in 2010 and opened a second store in Los Olivos soon after. Customers at each store prefer different items, said Taylor, explaining that Los Olivos wine country clientele go for the dark chocolates while Porterville patrons reach for milk-chocolate varieties. But the Ooey Gooey Bar, one of Larry Stafford’s original recipes, is a unanimous customer favorite that will definitely be showcased at the fundraiser. The bar comes on a stick, consists of fluffy homemade marshmallow, natural peanut butter, and caramel that’s covered in a creamy layer of dark or milk chocolate and is topped with crunchy California almonds. See staffordsfamouschocolates.com. —Kailey Erlich >>>
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MONDAY MAY 5
Visit us on the Urban Wine Trail
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24428
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H H 4-7 M-F BEER PINT $3.25 • PREMIUM $4.50 • WINE BY THE GLASS $4.50 DINNER SPECIALS 4-CLOSE
M' D B M MAY 11 • 9AM-2PM
JOIN US FOR A ONE-DAY INTRODUCTION to Pacifica’s Masters and Doctoral Programs in Clinical and Counseling Psychology, Somatic Studies, the Humanities, and Mytholocial Studies THE COMPREHENSIVE DAY-LONG PROGRAM ON MAY 5 includes classroom presentations, meetings on the individual degree programs, information on admissions and financial aid, campus tours, and time to interact with faculty, students, and staff. The $60 registration includes breakfast, lunch, and a $25 gift certificate at the Pacifica Bookstore. The May 5 Introduction will be your last chance to view
The Art of C.G. Jung’s Red Book This incredible collection of 23 fine art prints from the pages of C.G. Jung’s masterwork, The Red Book, was originally shown at the Venice Biennale in Italy. This has been its first showing in the United States, and the exhibit will close after the Pacifica Experience on May 5.
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR FALL 2014
Register for the May 5 Pacifica Experience at 805.969.3626, ext. 103 or www.pacifica.edu
PRIME RIB BACON, HAM, SAUSAGE SCRAMBLED EGGS COUNTRY POTATOES & BEANS BISCUIT & GRAVY CHILI VERDE CHEESE ENCHILADAS MENUDO
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ADULTS $20.99 UNLIMITED MIMOSAS $26.99 KIDS 10 & UNDER $12.99 REGULAR MENU 6 - 9AM & AFTER 3PM
Reservations Recommended
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mulliganscafesb.com 805-682-3228 • 3500 McCaw Ave (located on the community Golf Course)
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May Special
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Elegant Eyebrow Procedure $325 Reg. $400
Victoria Moore Certified Permanent Makeup Technician Before
After
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may 1, 2014
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Pacifica is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC). For Dept. of Education Gainful Employment Information, visit pacifica.edu/GainfulEmployment.
249 Lambert Road, Carpinteria, CA 93013 www.pacifica.edu
B
living | Food & Drink CONT’D ALTERNATIVES
MORE FOOD
SEE P. 61
VEGGIE DELIGHTS AT MEAT-MINDED RESTAURANTS
A
Text and photos by Joanne Howard
s a vegetarian, I often find it difficult to agree on a restaurant with my nonvegetarian friends and family. Brasseries, breweries, and burger joints rarely have any vegetarian options. And steakhouses? Forget about it. So I’m happy to report that vegetarian diners who are hungry for more than just the bread basket can now check out Ca’ Dario, Arlington Tavern, and The Palace Grill. Italian, classic American, and Cajun cuisines might seem like they have little in common, but rest assured that these restaurants are pleased to accommodate vegetarians and nonvegetarians alike. Ca’ Dario: Ca’ Dario ( E. Victoria St.;
884-9419; cadario.net) opened in 1997 to overwhelming success — so much so that head chef Dario Furlati eventually opened a pizzeria next door to accommodate all his customers.“Our food is fresh and prepared in the moment,” said Furlati when asked what made his place such a hit. “We don’t cut corners.” The native Italian upholds his homeland’s tradition of keeping dishes fresh and light, which is all too important when it comes to vegetarian food.“In Italian cooking, anything can be made vegetarian,” he said of the cuisine’s adaptability. For his vegetarian clientele, he recommends a fusilli pasta alla puttanesca. With organic produce — Kalamata olives, red and yellow tomatoes, capers, and parsley — and a light dusting of grated pecorino cheese, a simple pasta dish comes to life. When it comes to pasta, it is all too important to add a range of colors in order to make it not only healthy but also exciting. The dish is effortless and inviting, as if meant to be enjoyed on a sun-drenched Riviera terrace. Guests can also customize their order by requesting wholewheat or gluten-free pasta.
Arlington Tavern: “Some res-
taurants tend to shy away from vegetarian dishes, but we are in the hospitality business,” said Ron True, head chef and owner at Arlington Tavern ( W. Victoria St.; 770-2626; arlingtontavern.com), and that’s what makes his restaurant so unique. The menu’s grilled tofu main course is a welcomed change for vegetarian diners who are tired of house salads being their only option at nonvegetarian restaurants. The dish contains hearty strips of tender grilled tofu on a bed of locally grown market vegetables, rice pilaf, and a ponzu sauce. “I have friends who are vegetarian,” True said,“so I want this place to be available for them to come in and get a dish like that.” Serving tofu at a tavern is a brave move, but with flavors that pop and a perfect combination of comfort and originality, the dish is gaining popularity.“We sell quite a bit of tofu,” True said, “and people come in specifically for it.” The Palace Grill: The Palace Grill ( E. Cota St.; 963-5000; palacegrill.com) opened 29 years ago and was quickly adopted as a hometown favorite. “It was unique because we were bringing regional Cajun cuisine to Santa Barbara,” said Errol Williams, who, as the restaurant’s general manager, is also proud of winning the award for best service in Santa Barbara 26 times since opening in May 1985. What diners might not know is that The Palace Grill offers more than old-style jambalaya, shrimp gumbo, and the other meat- and seafood-heavy dishes that typify Cajun cuisine. Williams recommended the fusilli al fumo, a pasta dish with roasted eggplant and red peppers, smoked mozzarella, and a sweet tomato basil cream sauce. It maintains the spicy flavors of Cajun cuisine, and the dish gives off a zesty Southern flair that is not often found in vegetarian cooking. Not your traditional Italian pasta, the fusilli al fumo is one of the restaurant’s dishes that give vegetarians a genuine taste of the South. ■
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may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENt
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SANTA BARBARA’S CULTURAL NIGHT DOWNTOWN
www.SantaBarbaraDowntown.com
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A INDIGO INTERIORS: 1323 State Street, 805-962-6909 Askew to Zorthian: Artist Opening Reception, for new works by two local artists. Anthony Askew’s Mono Type Prints surprise and delight with his masterful compositions and color through the medium of ink on paper. Seyburn Zorthian’s ever-evolving paintings reflect their origins in her early study of Japanese brush work and American abstract expressionism. Pouring wine from Buttonwood Winery.
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1ST THURSDAY PROGRAM is an evening of art and culture in downtown Santa Barbara that takes place on the first Thursday of each month. Participating art venues offer free access to art in a fun and social environment from 5-8pm. 1st Thursday venues also provide additional attractions, such as live music, artist receptions, lectures, wine tastings, and hands-on activities. Additionally, State Street comes alive on 1st Thursday with performances and interactive activities.
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C SANTA BARBARA & VENTURA COLLEGES OF LAW GALLERY: 20 East Victoria Street, 805-979-9860
GALLERIES, MUSEUMS & VENUES 1528 State Street, 805-962-6444 New watercolor paintings by Mike Rider, who has recently returned from travels abroad, in addition to works inspired by our beautiful scenery here. Come have a glass of wine while enjoying Mike’s colorful and happy realistic renditions.
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SANTA BARBARA FRAME SHOP & GALLERY
1324 State Street, 805-963-2332 A two-person exhibition of acrylics by Michael Ferguson and Marcia Burtt. Ferguson lives in Washington State; his large-scale paintings of the north coast vibrate with fractured color, creating an illusion of three dimensions but always bowing to the flatness of paint on board. Burtt presents new paintings created from the South Coast to southern France.
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1213 State Street, Suite F, 805-770-2862 Intimate Portraits of Nature: an exhibition by Gary Robinson. With a passion for nature and a focus on views no larger than 6 x 8 inches, Robinson presents a collection of close-up photographs that provide an intimate view of Santa Barbara. His work invites us to look deeper into the landscape and discover the beauty of nature’s fascinating patterns and textures. Meet the artist and celebrate his first exhibition. (Located in “La Plazuela,” the paseo directly across the street from the Granada Theatre, at McDonald’s.)
The New Vic
7 & 11 East Anapamu Street, 805-730-1460 Sullivan Goss celebrates the opening reception for the latest exhibition of work by famed contemporary Tonalist painter Jon Francis. Also on view: De Forest’s Santa Barbara, Magical Realism, Richard Haines: Midcentury Master, and Spacks Street 108.
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OLIVER & ESPIG: 1108 State Street, 805-962-8111
We are honored to exhibit the unique style and amazing spirit of Russian abstract expressionist painter, Sergey Fedotov. Experience the strong emotion and passion of his work. Also, ongoing plein air paintings by Thomas Van Stein.
13 BELLA ROSA GALLERIES: 1103-A State Street, 805-966-1707 May Showers - Erin Williams Watercolors: Showcasing vibrant, large scale paintings of seascapes and flowers. Erin’s distinct watercolors capture the divinity and beauty of nature and are filled with a joy that is contagious. Also: “Heart of Glass” featuring the work of Santa Barbara glass artist Tim Lindemann, showcasing his lighting & sculpture. Enjoy wine tasting to benefit the Breast Cancer Resource Center of Santa Barbara. 14 SANTA BARBARA HISTORICAL MUSEUM 136 East De La Guerra Street, 805-966-1601 Enjoy a sneak peek of Lutah: A Passion For Architecture, A Life In Design, which was launched into the headlines during the Film Festival. The film, presented by the Lutah Maria Riggs Society and directed by award-winning Kum-Kum Bhavnani, explores the life of a little known architect during the early 20th century in Santa Barbara. Wine-tasting provided by Lieff Wines. Always family-friendly. 42
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
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CANON PERDIDO
THE FUND OF SANTA BARBARA
E BRASIL ARTS CAFÉ: 1230 State Street, 805-845-7656 Introducing Brazilian culture to Santa Barbara with an EDrink-Move vibe. Eat and Drink in the restaurant, Eat-DrinkMove vibe. Eat and Drink in the restaurant, Move inside the 1400 square foot studio where you can learn Capoeira (Brazilian martial arts) or take exciting Samba classes or learn Afro Brazilian dance. Experience an authentic Capoeira experience and admire art from local artists. Junte-se a nós – Come join us! F ENCANTO: 1114 State Street #22, 805-722-4338 MOTHERS DAY TRUNK SHOW: showcasing BELLA NOTTE DUE: one-of-a-kind camisoles + blouses, made of vintage linens by a local seamstress. Also some great bags, jewelry, sandals + espadrilles — lots + lots of goodies to choose from for your special gal. G GARDEN COURT: 1116 De La Vina Street, 805-884-0095 This vibrant senior community center is excited to hold its second annual Art for the Ages celebration! Showcasing the creative spirit and original art from a diverse group of residents, family members, local students, and including drawings, paintings, photography, sculpture and lifetime accomplishment displays. Enjoy live music by Ron Paris, formerly of the Platters, refreshments and wine tasting from Ballard Lane Winery. POWELL-PERALTA SKATE SHOP
918 Chapala Street, 805-845-7580 Skate boarding has roots in Santa Barbara longer than most people know. We will have a presentation of art and the art of skateboards that date back more than twenty years, representing skate and art culture in Santa Barbara. Also: a live skateboarding demo!
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23 East Canon Perdido Street, 805-965-6448 The Santa Barbara Sculptors Guild will present a members exhibition of two and three dimensional works juried by Delphine Sims and Sydney Hengst, Assistant Curators of Photography and Asian Art at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art. Light refreshments, live music, and more.
G COMINICHI’S ANTIQUES COLLECTIVE, ESTATES AND CONSIGNMENT: 19 East Haley Street, 805-962-1413 DE LA GUERRA ST
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1114 State Street, La Arcada Court #8, 805-965-6611 Artist of the Month is Mieko Doerksen, a native of Tokyo, captures the natural beauty of florals and local architecture and landscapes. She pays careful attention to detail, broad value range, and color vibrancy. Her Asian touch of calligraphic detail is characteristic of her work. Featured artists are Liz Tallakson, Lori Lenz, Rebecca Stebbins, Iben Vestergaard, Soosan Marshall, and Kristy Vantrease.
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The Gallery is in going on its 30th year and 23 years in La Arcada. It features artwork from some of today’s finest nationally-known painters. Southwest Art Magazine recognized Diane & Ralph Waterhouse among “10 Prominent People” in the Fine Art Business. Ralph Waterhouse will give a painting demonstration at 6pm.
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26 West Anapamu Street, 805-962-9164 Art for Change: Make a bid and get extraordinary bargains on art, photography and jewelry donated by our supporters. Enjoy wine & refreshments while you build your art collection and learn about the Fund for Santa Barbara, an organization that has been at the forefront of community based, progressive philanthropy, distributing over $5-million to more than 900 grassroots projects within Santa Barbara County. Artists include Brecia Kralovic-Logan and Jana Zimmer. Bidding closes at 7:30 P.M.
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Born and raised in Santa Barbara, Genie Thomsen was introduced to clay early in life by her mom who brought home projects that Genie would embellish. After earning her MFA degree, Genie returned home to produce and sell her artwork. She was offered a teaching position at the Adult Education Program in Santa Barbara, where she continues to teach. Clay has been Genie’s passion for over forty years.
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Art Walk for Kids/Adults: Annual Art Show (sponsored by Union Bank) We are thrilled to be collaborating with artists from Hillside House, Chagall House, Devereux of Santa Barbara, Phoenix of Santa Barbara, PathPoint and Tri-Counties Regional Centers. Author Debbie Hosseini will sign her new book, The Art of Autism; her son Kevin is a featured artist, along with many other independent artists with disabilities.
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1130 State Street, 805-963-4364 Family 1st Thursday: Bring the whole family to enjoy 1st Thursday together in SBMA’s Family Resource Center, located across from the Museum Café on the Lower Level. Sand Mandala Symbols: Select a symbol from the Tibetan Kalachakra (“Wheel of Time”) Sand Mandala installed in the Family Resource Center, and draw your version of it with thin lines of glue and vibrant shades of colored sand. Time: 5:30 – 7:30 pm; Location: SBMA’s Family Resource Center; Free Heavenly Bodies: One of the strengths of SBMA’s permanent collection is the work that addresses the unshakable connection of science and photography. This exhibition will draw upon this strength and focus on images of astronomy. Ranging from the 19th century until today, the photographs in Heavenly Bodies address the miraculous universe, seen through the ever-changing lens of photography.
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6 ARTAMO GALLERY: 11 West Anapamu Street, 805-568-1400 Presenting artist Gordon Huether with an exhibit focusing entirely on works of 12” x 12”. On this intimate scale, Huether explores a variety of themes, materials and techniques. Materials include wood, paper, metal, found objects, resin and glass; themes span from historical stories over nature to family, reflecting different aspects of humanity.
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105 East Anapamu Street, 805-568-3990 1st floor of the County Administration Building Inside/Outside: Santa Barbara Art Association This exhibition, juried by Randy Sommer, co-owner of Acme Gallery, LA, celebrates the deep artistic diversity legacy of the SBAA. Artist workshops feature Loree Gold’s beautiful photo montages using prints of her own creation; Karen Luckett, a weaver and creator of unique assemblages; and Larry Iwerks, working in watercolor and oils. Inside/Outside celebrates SBAA’s 60+ years of arts influence in the community.
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Art feeds the soul of students in pursuit of the study of law. View works by Peter Max, Charles Bragg, Yaacov Agam, Itzchak Tarkay, Csaba Markus, Jerry Martin, Jean Claude Picot, Fanch Ledan, Romero Britto, Anatole Krasnyansky, Alexander Chen, Igor Medvedev, David Najar, Steve Bloom, J. Thomas, Nanikhe, Eleanore Moyer, Lankam (elephant painter), folk art and photography. Silent Auction.
DIVINE INSPIRATION GALLERY
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229 East Victoria Street, 805-965-6307 Vishnu and Others: Exhibition by Julie Young, Ph.D. Inspired by natural landscapes, Julie Young’s abstract mixed media paintings convey an approximation of sensations experienced with particular environments. Strong colors and shifting forms engage with traces of meaning that lean into each other, fall away and rise up again.
The entire Estate of Plein Air paintings by Ejnar and Jorgen Hansen, including beautiful portraits, abstracts and fantastic works on paper, are now on permanent display and sale. Ejnar Hansen was a notable figure painter in southern California and received many commissions, notably for his interior work on The Adamson House in Malibu.
PERFORMANCES MTD BUS POETRY: Corner of State & Anapamu Street, 805-963-1032 Join Santa Barbara MTD for “My Haiku on the Bus!” Write your own three-line haiku (5 syllables, 7 syllables, 5 syllables) and your poem just may end up on an MTD bus. It’s easy: We ride the buses/both to and fro every day/ getting to someplace. Now you try!
SANTA BARBARA REVELS 900 State Street, Marshalls Patio, 3:30-4:30pm Join us this afternoon early for the 6th Annual May Day Celebration! Learn Spring songs and dances, make nose gays and garlands and weave ribbons ‘round the May Pole. With Revels Song leader Ken Ryals and featuring the English Country Dancers and the Pacific Sword Company. All ages welcome.
ART BARK: 900 State Street, Marshalls Patio, 5:00-8:00pm Join us for poetry with Maya Shaw Gale, Marilyn Romeo’s “Got Country” country line dance group, harpist Marsha Sherman, the Nicole McKenzie Improv Group (violin and dance), Yvette Johnson (contemporary dance), Meredith Cabaniss (contemporary dance), and Sino Arts (Chinese martial arts and dance). CYCLEMAYNIA: BICYCLE FASHION SHOW
GALLERY 27 AT BROOKS INSTITUTE
27 East Cota Street, 805-690-4913 Portfolio Show - Spring 2014: Each year the graduating students of Brooks Institute select a sample of their work to exhibit in the Portfolio Show. The work is selected by the students with the support of a faculty member and features projects created by graduating students in the Graphic Design, Professional Photography, and Visual Journalism programs. Photo by: Saskia Koerner
16 JADENOW GALLERY: 14 Parker Way, 805-448-2199 Simply sublime, to titillating, to exquisitely exciting — paintings to performance, all here now, at the new JadeNow Gallery, featuring fine contemporary carving and visionary art. From top to bottom, awakening consciousness is our intent! Please join us tonight for a very special evening of art, live music and wine! ART CRAWL The Santa Barbara Arts Collaborative, in partnership with the Downtown Organization, will lead a curated Art Crawl through the 1st Thursday festivities. The Art Crawl starts at 5:30 in de la Guerra Plaza on the back steps of City Hall (735 Anacapa Street, then head around to the back).
1ST THURSDAY SPONSORS: These sponsors continue to make 1st Thursday possible. The downtown community would like to thank these Santa Barbara businesses for their support!
Paseo Nuevo Center Court Velo Vogue: Bicycle Fashion Show showcases cutting edge bicycles and fashion, along with live music by Sidewalk Affair while enjoying beer provided by the Haufman Brat Haus and Telegraph Brewing Company. The fashion show at 6:15 PM will feature local, national, and international fashion designers and retailers, incorporating the latest trends in bicycles, clothing, accessories and gear. Continue the evening with a fun Bike Moves costume ride (“Bike Prom” theme – costumes optional) leaving from De La Guerra Plaza at 7:30 PM along State Street finishing at a Bicycle Coalition fundraiser after party at Bici Centro at 9:15 PM.
WELCOME TO 1ST THURSDAY: AFTER HOURS! Join us for 1st Thursday: After Hours, 7:30pm-9:30pm when the Historic Theatre District venues of The Lobero Theatre, The Granada Theatre and The New Vic extend 1st Thursday culture, art and music offerings to provide the community unique live entertainment and behind the scenes experiences and opportunities to meet other performing arts enthusiasts.
THE GRANADA THEATRE: 1214 State Street, 805-899-2222 Join us tonight from 7:30-9:30pm for 1st Thursday: After Hours at The Granada Theatre. Presenting entertainment by Chris Fossek, local renowned flamenco guitarist, who will play infectious rhythms along with delicious nibbles provided compliments of a local restaurant partner and a “no host” full bar provided by Marquee Events. The Granada Theatre, The Lobero Theatre and The New Vic Theater are teaming up to offer these new 1st Thursday: After Hours events, held at a different theater each month.
UPCOMING 1ST THURSDAY SCHEDULE • June 5 at The New Vic
Run Boy Run
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
EMAIL: ARTS@INDEPENDENT.COM
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bit of “a Renaissance girl,” has recorded with a range of artists, including The Decemberists, Foo Fighters, Bill Frisell, and Paul Motian. She’s also recorded her own solo, multi-dubbed albums, including a complete a cappella recreation of The Who Sell Out. For The Haden Triplets, the sisters set up shop in Tanya’s house right after she and her husband, Jack Black, moved in. Its empty rooms and high ceiling made it a great impromptu studio, Petra asserts. While the album is primarily oldies, Haden Triplets the sisters do offer up one contemporary piece — Nick Lowe’s still fitting lament “Raining Raining,” a suggestion from Cooder.“You’re always supposed to have one song that’s a little different,” Petra says. “I’m just glad it wasn’t a heavy metal song in threepart harmony: ‘I am Iron Man,’” she goofily sings. The Santa Barbara show will feature most of the album and maybe an Everly Brothers tune the trio has taken to performing live. And their backing band’s nothing to scoff at either: John Konesky (known for his work with Tenacious D) is on guitar, J.P. Maramba plays bass, and Santa Barbaran Austin Beede mans the drums.“That’s cool,” Petra says.“We’ll hang out with him, and he’ll show us around.” Jackie Greene Catch the heavenly harmonizing of the Haden Triplets as part of the Americana Music Jam at SOhO Restaurant & Music Club ( State St.) on Saturday, May 3, at 7 p.m. Run Boy Run plays at 5 p.m., and Jackie Greene plays at 9 p.m. Visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu for tickets and — George Yatchisin info. JAY BLAKESBERG
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
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he Haden Triplets’ — yes, that’s jazz legend Charlie Haden’s daughters — take on the old-time Americana songbook on their eponymous new CD, mining every ounce of pretty/purty out of songs whose core ore is just sad, sad, sad. God might seem far, but one’s love tends to be even farther in chestnuts like “Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone?” and “Tiny Broken Heart.” One might wonder how Rachel, Tanya, and Petra Haden ended up singing the songs of the Carter Family and the Louvin Brothers, but they have numerous reasons to, not the least being that biology makes for a fine three-part harmony. “We grew up listening to country music,” Petra explained during a recent phone interview.“When we were kids, we’d sing ‘You Are My Sunshine’ and ‘Single Girl, Married Girl.’” Santa Barbara will get a chance to hear the Triplets sing these songs on Saturday evening, when UCSB Arts & Lectures presents a nightlong Americana Music Jam on at SOhO. Alas, the man instrumental to getting the record made, Ry Cooder (the family seems to traffic in legends of all sorts), won’t be at the gig. The Triplets met Ry through his son, Joachim, who drummed for them at a KPFK benefit and convinced his father to sit in. Ry was so impressed that, according to Petra, “he called saying he wanted to produce an album for us. We were jumping up and down with excitement. We had recorded some songs years ago, but then everyone got busy.” That’s easy to believe; the trio’s résumés are jam-packed. Tanya has worked as a cellist and animator. Petra and Rachel both played in poppunk bands, and Petra, who considers herself a
FRENCH CONNECTION: Fantine (Rebekah Mann) and Jean Valjean (Geoffrey Lambeth) star in Les Misérables.
MAC DEMARCO SALAD DAYS
Catch Mac DeMarco in concert, and you’ll bear witness to a balancing act of unrivaled peculiarity. Scraggly dressed and cigarette in hand, DeMarco will swig, cuss, and wax nonsensical. And just before you chalk him up to a being a complete moron, he’ll bust out a shimmery oddity of a guitar-pop jam, and all the foolishness will be forgotten. Following one particularly rambunctious (and X-rated) showing at last year’s South By Southwest, I likened DeMarco to Jack Johnson — if Jack Johnson drank an entire sixpack and took some Quaaludes before he hopped onstage. On Salad Days, the follow-up to 2012’s breakthrough album , the Canadian slacker king gets a bit more refined — and least in the production department. Cleared of the lo-fi fuzz and clutter, DeMarco’s quirky surf guitars are pushed to the forefront; on “Brother,” a schmaltzy hook smartly undercuts the lyrics; for “Let My Baby Stay,” we get tropicália à la Jonathan Richman that shines right down to the caterwauling fade-out. Later, “Passing Out Pieces” features a woozy synth so prominent that its hook nearly knocks the whole song over. All together, these eccentricities act as the perfect foil to DeMarco’s half-lidded speak-sing. They’re also only part of the bizarre mix of sinister, strange, and familiar that makes up DeMarco’s curious genius. — Aly Comingore
WHAT GOES AROUND Affter more th After than han 16 years on BBroadway, roadway and aan even longer run in London’s West End, there’s no doubting the popular appeal of Les Misérables. When a three-hour musical based on an even more dauntingly long 19th-century French novel captures the hearts of so many theatergoers, something special must be going on. David Holmes, the San Marcos teacher who is directing the school’s upcoming production of the show, knows just what that something is: “I didn’t completely appreciate the quality of the writing in the musical until I read the book,” he said last week during rehearsal. “It’s my favorite novel, but it has passages that you slog through because you know if the effort will pay off in the end, whereas the musical achieves a spectacular condensation of the action.” This enthusiasm for the way song can tell a complex story is just one of the things that Holmes has shared over his three decades of OPENS AT leadership in the theater department at San Marcos HIGH High. Another of his most cherished principles, student ownership of the show, can be seen in the enthusiasm with which current Royals are embracing their roles in front of and behind the curtain; there will be no adults backstage during these complex and expensive shows, just high schoolers. There’s also an additional element that’s sure to get everyone’s attention: the new revolving stage. Veteran craftsman Dave Johnson created the carousel that’s so crucial to the Les Mis experience, and Holmes would like nothing better than to see it revolving all year round. “At 18 feet across, it will fit on every stage in Santa Barbara,” Holmes said, “and it’s not for rent because I won’t charge for it. It can only be borrowed, and I like to think that it will become a community asset. It would make me feel really good if it did.” Les Misérables opens at San Marcos High School Theater ( Hollister Ave.) on Thursday, May 1, and runs through Saturday, May 10. Call 967-4581 or visit shopsmroyals .org for tickets and info. — Charles Donelan
LES MIS SAN MARCOS
M O R E A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T > > >
DAVID BAZEMORE PHOTOS
a&e | DANCE REVIEW
SQUARE PEG CONCERTS PRESENTS:
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MAY 3 7PM
ANJELAH JOHNSON CAMA PRESENTS:
LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC
LIM AVA ITED ILAB ILITY
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MAY 4 4PM
PLASTIC-WRAPPED: Brandon Washington pushed through the detritus of consumer culture in Dystopian Distractions!
Dancing on a Soapbox UCSB ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS:
THU
MAY 8 8:30AM
SANTA BARBARA ECONOMIC FORECAST PROJECT 2014 THE GRANADA THEATRE CONCERT SERIES PRESENTS:
BELLA GAIA An inspiring multimedia performance with stunning NASA imagery, live world music and dance onstage SPONSORED BY MONTECITO BANK & TRUST
WHAT’S NEXT? SCAN OUR QR CODE TO SEE THE REST OF OUR CALENDAR!
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Dystopian Distractions!, presented by Mark Dendy Projects as part of DANCEworks. At the Lobero Theatre, Saturday, April 26. Reviewed by Elizabeth Schwyzer
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he house lights are still up when Mark Dendy, dressed in a military suit, clambers onto a stationary bicycle and begins to pedal, going nowhere. Downstage, a block of ice drips steadily into a fish tank: an oblique reference to the melting polar caps. Welcome to Dystopian Distractions!, an evening of scenes that range from raucously enter- GOOD SOLDIERS: Mark taining to violent and macabre. Dendy Projects dancers A variety show mash-up of dance, saluted the audience. spoken word, physical theater, music, and stage design, Dystopian Distractions! is Dendy’s dazzling and courageous commentary on America. It’s a wild, satirical romp through the wasteland of popular culture and modern warfare — subjects that could easily lead to a heavy-handed slog. Instead, Dendy achieves a rare and heady blend of high entertainment and smart social criticism. Among the many outstanding “distractions” of this production is Dendy’s solo. Seated downstage of the curtain, a gas mask pulled over his head, he animates an audio recording of Donald Rumsfeld; with his shoulders shuddering with every chuckle and his hands stirring and stabbing the air, he transforms a vapid interview into a riveting work of performance art. Many ghosts visited the stage over the course of this evening: Jimi Hendrix in his fringed jacket, Elvis Presley and his gilded toilet. For a few golden minutes, Pablo Picasso’s “Guernica” comes to life. Then we’re thrown back into the rushing stream of the 24-hour news cycle, reality TV, and infomercials starring “Ducky Doo Doo,” the oversexed toddler who prances about in kitten heels and flashes us with the American flag under her miniskirt. Throughout the hysteria moves a young woman dressed all in white. Whether encouraging children to set aside their toy soldiers or subjecting a man to a session of water boarding, she moves slowly and intentionally. Like the ice that will drip until the environment cools, she is the symbol of the American spirit, responding, as she must, to our actions and inactions. ■
DAVID BAZEMORE
a&e | THEATER REVIEWS
Death by Document The Consul, presented by Opera Santa Barbara. At the Granada Theatre, Sunday, April 27. Ground, presented by The Theatre Group at Santa Barbara City College. At the Jurkowitz Theatre, Saturday, April 26. Shows through May 10.
Share a rare evening with one of America’s greatest songwriters presented by the Lobero Ghostlight Society
Reviewed by Joseph Miller
Showstoppers High School Musical Theater Awards. At the New Victoria Theatre, Monday, April 28.
COMPLETING THE PAPERWORK: Magda Sorel (Alexandra LoBianco) throws a consulate tantrum in Opera Santa Barbara’s The Consul. You need to listen to the heart-wrenching and humanaffirming arias like “Shall We Ever See?” sung magnificently by Mother (Buffy Baggott) or “To This We’ve Come” sung by Magda Sorel (Alexandra LoBianco). And you have to feel Menotti’s musical genius for symphonic writing, played by a crack orchestra under the direction of Brent Wilson. The overall experience was mesmerizing and thoroughly satisfying. In Ground, the issue is immigration, not emigration, and while documentation is still the all-important gateway, there is no exaggerated parody of bureaucracy. Here the problems wear the relativities and complexities of real life. The plot depicts a tragic ripping of seams among a few families in a rural town that has for generations lived a harmonious and humane, if not quite equal, life among citizen and noncitizen immigrants. Director R. Michael Gros has assembled a cast of six capable of truly memorable characterizations. Peter T. Rojas turns in a pivotal performance as the venerable farmhand Chuy Gallegos. Jennifer Marco appears as Zelda Preston, a young woman who fled the small town as a teenager, only to now return with the occasion of her father’s death. Adrian Marquez gives a phenomenal stage debut as Carl Zelaya, a Mexican American who takes a job with border patrol but, in turn, suffers estrangement from Mexican relatives and a kind of ever-present traitor’s guilt. Robert Demetriou is wonderful as the overzealous leader of the voluntary border patrol Citizen Alliance (think Minuteman Project). Marisol Miller-Wave and Maria V. Oliveira give excellent support■ ing performances as the Ochoa sisters. PAPAUL WELLMAN
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mmigration and documentation are not common themes in theater. For a city the size of Santa Barbara to open two such pieces in a single weekend is a strange coincidence, to say the least. The Theatre Group at Santa Barbara City College is currently playing Lisa Dillman’s Ground (2010), a beautifully crafted drama that spreads a tangle of race, property, citizenship, and divided loyalties in a small New Mexican border town. Opera Santa Barbara’s one-weekend run of The Consul (1950), by Italian-American writer/composer Gian Carlo Menotti, sings of a drab and dangerous totalitarian bureaucracy and the desperate attempt by the wife of a dissident man to emigrate. None of this, of course, is primarily intended as art for entertainment but theater to unsettle and provoke conscience. While the two productions differ in many respects, both stories pit personal dignity against paperwork and are rife with secrecy, law enforcement, manhunts, and death to the “guilty” who run at cross-purpose with the state and the innocent who fall through the cracks. That these two American works, written 60 years apart, should be so similar is hardly surprising; identity, authority, and the fence will forever preoccupy the Land of Migrations. The Consul is not a “fun” opera. It occupies a gray world that runs from bad to tragic. The real enemy in Menotti’s nameless state is not a dictator or ideology but mindless bureaucracy itself, parodied by an impressive set design showing the consulate interior stacked wall-to-wall and floor to ceiling in file drawers. “Your name is a number, your story’s a case,” sings the rule-bound Secretary (Nina Yoshida Nelsen), who spends her days managing a queue of would-be emigrants, one “Next” at a time, only to pronounce each file incomplete. Admittedly, at face value, none of this sounds promising. In order to understand how this show merited Menotti a Pulitzer Prize, and why this Santa Barbara production should have been a sellout, you need to take into account the elements of fantasy, personified by magician Nika Magadoff (Robert Watson), which pop with Technicolor against a backdrop of despair.
by Aly Comingore
T
hey say youth is wasted on the young. On Monday night, 13 Santa Barbara and Ventura high school students proved that truism wrong. Over the course of an hour and a half, the New Vic played host to 12 wonderfully YOUNG GUNS: Host Jamie Torcellini and 12 area high varied and impressively delivered musical school actors and actresses opened Monday’s competition numbers, performed by some of the ’s with “There’s No Business Like Show Business.” brightest young talents. The occasion: the first-ever Santa Barbara Independent High School Musical Awards, where two of the bill’s 13 perform- Claire Winch, a wonderfully nuanced baker’s wife from ers were chosen to represent Santa Barbara and Ventura at Into the Woods; Miranda Mize, a tear-jerking Nina from the Jerry Herman Awards, which will be held on June 1 at In the Heights; and Zachary Meade, an impressively plucky the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood. The winners of that newsie. Following all the song and dance, Santa Barbara event will then head off to Broadway to compete in the High School freshman Camille Umoff and Pacifica High senior Jennika Nunag were awarded top honors for their 2014 Jimmy Awards. On Monday, host and musical comedy star Jamie Tor- stunning turns as Elphaba from Wicked and Kim from cellini did a splendid job of keeping the competition fun Miss Saigon, respectively. And together with their competiand funny. Songs were pulled from across the musical the- tors, these young ladies taught us that musical theater is not ater canon: Sofia Ross portrayed a spot-on Mary Poppins; only alive but thriving in our own backyard. ■
Alan Bergman
With Special Guest
Tierney Sutton
The songs by Alan & Marilyn Bergman for film, stage and television have earned 16 Academy Award nominations, three Oscars, multiple Emmys, Grammys and Golden Globes. Their classics include “The Windmills of Your Mind,” “The Way We Were,” “What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?,” “Nice ’N’ Easy,” “How Do You Keep the Music Playing?” and the score for “Yentl.”
SAT, MAY 17 at 7:30 / LOBERO Exclusive VIP reception with Mr. Bergman to follow on the Lobero stage.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW 963.0761 / LOBERO.COM
35 years 2 0 13 - 2 0 14
Join us for a Community Celebration at the Lobero Theatre! Give the gift of mu for Mother’s D sic ay.
Treat a Mother in your life to a special SB CO M ay 20 Concert with a 2 for 1 of fer!
May 20, 2014 at 7:30pm at Lobero Theatre
Program of inspirational favorites! Heiichiro Ohyama, Conductor
MOZART Symphony No. 41 (Jupiter) B EETHOVEN Symphony No. 3 (Eroica) Sponsored by Pam Taylor and Jo Beth Van Gelderen
For tickets, call the Lobero Box Office at 963-0761 or visit www.sbco.org Programs, artists and performance dates are subject to change.
may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENT
45
The Art of C.G. Jung’s Red Book
“21 Abstracts”
An Exhibition Sponsored by Pacifica Graduate Institute Free & Open to the Public thru May 4 | 801 Ladera Ln., Santa Barbara
Images from The Red Book by C.G. Jung used by permission of W. W. Norton & Company. Inc.
Closing Ceremonies Saturday, May 3 Join us at Pacifica’s Ladera Lane Campus for this special event and a final opportunity to view the exhibition.
4:00 – 5:00pm Welcome by Stephen Aizenstat, Pacifica’s Founding President and Chancellor Personal Background on The Red Book by Thomas Elsner, Pacifica Professor The Synergy of Technology and The Red Book with Hugh Milstein, President of DigitalFusion
5:00 – 6:30pm Reception and viewing of the exhibition with Pacifica faculty and DigitalFusion staff. This event is free and open to the public. RSVP to 805.969.3626, ext. 103 or publicprograms@pacifica.edu
An Exhibition of Abstract Art by Rick Doehring
FINAL WEEK Exhibit Closes May 4
Opening Reception May 3, 6 pm to 9 pm at Carr Winery 414 N. Salsipuedes Music by David Courtenay Free admission
The collection 23 fine art prints from C.G. Jung’s Red Book on display at Pacifica Graduate Institute was originally shown at the Venice Biennale in Italy. This is its first showing in the United States.
c a r r w ine r y.c om r i c kdoe hr ing.c om
The Red Book is an illuminated volume created between 1914 and 1930 in which Jung developed his theories of the archetypes, the collective unconscious, and the process of individuation. Jung considered The Red Book his most important work. It is an astonishing example of calligraphy and art on a par with The Book of Kells and the illuminated manuscripts of William Blake.
PRESENTS
A challenging new work that takes place along the US/Mexico border
Limited edition fine art prints of drawings from the Red Book are available through the Pacifica Bookstore or online at theredbookprints.com/pacifica
a personal drama about very big issues
This exhibit is open to the public through May 4, 2014, 7 days a week, from 8:00am to 10:00pm at Pacifica’s Ladera Lane Campus, 801 Ladera Lane in Santa Barbara.
www.pacifica.edu
805.969.3626, ext. 103 for additional information
W! E N SANTA BARBARA RAPE CRISIS CENTER presents
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SANTA BARBARA’S NUMBER ONE BIKE SHOP HAS ONE GREAT NEW LOCATION 46
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
—Back Stage
Saturday, May 3, 2014 5–7:30pm
VIP reception at 4pm sharp
Information: 805.963.6832 www.sbrapecrisiscenter.org
WRITTEN BY
Lisa Dillman
DIRECTED BY
R. Michael Gros
APRIL 25-MAY 10, 2014 PREVIEWS APRIL 23 & 24 NO LATE SEATING
JURKOWITZ THEATRE | SBCC WEST CAMPUS www.theatregroupsbcc.com
805.965.5935
LIVE CAPTIONING
Sun. 4/27 @ 2pm
PAUL WELLMAN
a&e | CLASSICAL REVIEW
ENCORE SEASON
Proudly Sponsored By
BIG NAMES. SMALL ROOM. An Evening with
Branford Marsalis MAY 7
New Orleans native offers up an impressive collection of original compositions and modern and classic jazz standards.
Guit
ar M AY-n ia!
Paul Galbraith THIRD TIME’S THE CHARM: Violinist Jennifer Koh premiered the third installment of her Bach and Beyond program at the Music Academy of the West’s Hahn Hall, featuring a diverse mix of contemporary and canonical compositions.
Electric Potential
MAY 8
NEX WEEKT !
NEX WEEKT !
Experience the technical finesse of celebrated classical guitarist Paul Galbraith in the West Coast premiere of an all Bach and Mozart program.
Keb’ Mo’ MAY 13
Three-time GRAMMY® winner and visionary rootsmusic storyteller Keb’ Mo’ returns to the Lobero in support of his new album, BLUESAmericana.
Bill Frisell
Jennifer Koh, presented by UCSB Arts & Lectures. At the Music Academy of the West’s Hahn Hall, Wednesday, April 23.
All we are saying: Explores the Music of John Lennon
Review by Joseph Miller
“It’s hard to find a more fruitful meditation on American music than in the compositions of guitarist Bill Frisell.” - The New York Times
J
ennifer Koh makes no apology for her excursions into the sometimes strange and disjointed sounds of contemporary music. Her three-part Bach and Beyond project has deliberately weighed, and sometimes pitted, works by Eugène Ysaÿe, Kaija Saariaho, Elliott Carter, Phil Kline, and Béla Bartók against the founding documents of the unaccompanied violin repertory — the six sonatas and partitas by J.S. Bach. Part III had its world premiere at Hahn Hall last Wednesday and stretched the thesis for all it was worth, beginning and ending with Sonata No. and Sonata No. by Bach, but otherwise stepping off into the atonal worlds of Luciano Berio and John Zorn. On the surface, these worlds are dissociated, with little middle ground between baroque mechanics and quantum uncertainties — which, undoubtedly, was the point. The stark juxtaposition certainly carried electric potential, as separated poles do, but whether or not the current actually arced depended on the listener. Like a poet, Koh scatters hints but asks you to meet her halfway. One clue was the element of pulse, which arose first in the Andante of Sonata No. , Bach’s “creative heartbeat,” according to Koh. Berio’s Sequenza VIII began with a kin series of regular half-notes, while pulse was again prominent in the opening measures of Sonata No. . Programming aside, Koh’s virtuosity itself is an enthralling spectacle. Her articulations of Bach (always from memory) are spacious and fresh, honed with a fine precision. She is a solid and intelligent performer. The contemporary works were showcases, too, for dazzling technique. The Berio featured a mesmerizing sequence of delicate interval dancing, cut into by explosive double-stops in the lower strings. Zorn’s Passagen walked a tightrope of high harmonics, sliding glissandos, and simultaneous bowing and plucking. Koh has earned her right to expeditions on the violin frontier, and we’re happy to ■ witness new and exotic species. She did promise “beyond,” after all.
MAY 16 LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC
805.963.0761 LOBERO.COM
COMIC RELIEF Santa Barbara
an EVENING to BENEFIT NEW BEGINNINGS COUNSELING CENTER
THURSDAY night MAY 8TH, 2014 6:00PM FIRST SEATING: SHOW WITH DINNER & A DRINK $125/TKT 9:00 PM SECOND SEATING: SHOW WITH TWO DRINKS $45/TKT
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THE INDEPENDENT
47
Camelot in Concert
g:
rin
r Sta
SAT
BELLA GAIA
SAT
MAY 10 8PM
An inspiring multimedia performance with stunning NASA imagery, live world music and dance onstage. SPONSORED BY MONTECITO BANK & TRUST
48
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
JUN 21 RoBERT SEAN LEoNARd Arthur
BRANdI bURkARdT Guenevere
CHEyENNE JACkSoN lAncelot du lAc
barry boStwicK Merlyn
JoSh griSetti Mordred
Staged and directed by the talented producer producerS of laSt Spring’S StarStudded My fair lady in concert, thiS year’S perforManceS again feature the talentS of tony award noMinee Stage director Marcia MilgroM dodge and the MuSical Support of the the Santa barbara SyMphony under the direction of JaM MeS Moore.
8PM SUN
JUN 22 3PM
SPONSORED BY NINA & ERIC PHILLIPS, LINDA BROWN, AND MONTECITO BANK & TRUST
STEPHEN SAT MAY 24 8PM STILLS SPONSORED BY MONTECITO BANK & TRUST
a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ PREVIEW
TOUR DIARY:
Happiness is posing with a Muppet while shooting our video for “Howl.” It was built just for the shoot and then disappeared.
BEWARE OF DARKNESS by Aly Comingore
REBECCA JOELSON
ON SH AW N LO ND
Peoria, Illinois, on the tour we just finished. It’s a miracle when you play a city you’ve never been to and the venue is packed.
MEGHAN SINCLAIR/CONACO
COURTESY BEWARE OF DARKNESS
It’s been a wild year for Santa Barbaran Kyle Nicolaides. At the helm of Beware of Darkness, the 23-year-old frontman spent the bulk of the past 12 months touring the world, sharing stages with rock legends like The Smashing Pumpkins and Jane’s Addiction. This week, the band wraps up its travels with a homecoming concert at SOhO. Here, Nicolaides shares some of his favorite snaps from the road.
COUR TESY JBT V
Talking guitars after our per formance on Conan. (Shout-out to Ernie Ball for their support since the start!)
When you first start writing songs, you never think it’s going to allow you to travel the world. When it happens, you realize how powerful music can be.
ed baby goats.
drove all night We were asked to play JBTV in Chicago and about music te iona pass so he’s nd; to do it. Jerry is a lege one day. and will surely make the Library of Congress
FOR MORE OF TOUR DIARY, ARKNESS’S BEWARE OF PDENDENT.COM/TOURDIARY. VISIT INDE
REBECCA JOELSON
just have to stop to fe
We played some songs on a trolley in San Diego and made people’s commute either really fun or really annoying. DANIEL LOGAN
u Sometimes on tour, yo
4 •1•1
Beware of Darkness plays SOhO Restaurant & Music Club (1221 State St.) on Thursday, May 1, at 9 p.m. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb .com for tickets and info. may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENt
49
the
1ST ANNUAL
MOTHER’S Day COMEDY SHOW
arabIan nIGhts
featuring
HOSTED BY
KING KEDAR
Ladies of comedy
an ACTING UP FRONT production
Thurs 5/1 - 9:00 CLUB MERCY PRESENTS:
by
MarY ZIMMerMan
BEWARE OF DARKNESS
directed by
jeFF MIlls
alt rock
Sponsored by: Coastal Advance, Santa Barbara Bail Bonds, Wallace Marshall M.D. Cannibis Consultant, Lilly’s Flowers
Tickets available at www.eventbrite.com or Make It Wireless • 401 N. Milpas • 805.883.1700
SHOWTIME:
Friday, May 9th • 9pm
THE $4 HAPPY HOUR
MaY 9-18
9:30
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hot 70's funk & dance Sat 5/3
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS:
AMERICANA FEST
photo: Spencer Michaels
10 El Paseo Santa Barbara, CA 93101 800 Block of Anacapa 805.962.6050
Fri 5/2 - 5:00-8:00
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Sun 5/4 - 7:00
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ERIN PEARSON XENIA FLORES THE LOWER 48 Mon 5/5 - 7:30
JAZZ JAM W/JEFF ELLIOTT
www.theaterdance.ucsb.edu 805.893.7221
straight ahead jazz with local musicians sitting in Tues 5/6
CALL CLUB Wed 5/7 - 8:00
DAVE BROGAN, GARRIN BENFIELD, & TOM FREUND a musical jamboree of blues, rock and folk Thurs 5/8 Dinner Show-6:00 Cocktail Show-9:00
COMIC RELIEF
An evening to benefit the New Beginnings Counseling Center
BrownPaperTickets.com
1221 STATE STREET
962-7776
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE FOR SELECT SHOWS
WWW.SOHOSB.COM CALL (877) 548-3237
MEDICAL MARIJUANA EVALUATIONS
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50
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
PAUL WELLMAN
a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ REVIEW
LIT UP: The National’s Matt Berninger looked fittingly somber during Friday night’s rain-soaked show at the Santa Barbara Bowl.
An Icy Blood Buzz The National. At the Santa Barbara Bowl, Friday, April 25. Reviewed by Aly Comingore
A
recent New York Times recap of the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival posited that, in 2014, concertgoing is as much about participation as it is about performance. If that’s the case, we need look no further than Matt Berninger. On Friday night, The National’s frontman helmed a show that felt more like communal performance art than rock ’n’ roll concert and helped orchestrate an evening whose imprint far exceeded its three-hour runtime. Fan or no, I’ve long argued that The National’s live show will make a convert out of almost anyone. Anchored by Berninger’s impassioned baritone, the band remains one of modern rock’s tightest ensembles: Drummer Bryan Devendorf is the subtly nuanced force steering the ship; twin brothers Aaron and Bryce Dessner, the detail-oriented masterminds behind the band’s understated hooks and symphonic melodies. On Friday, the seven-piece bounded out of the gates with “Don’t Swallow the Cap,” a propulsive piano-and-drum-driven number whose sway served as the perfect foil to Berninger’s nervous pacing and jagged speak-sing. From there, the night seemed to charge forward with a forceful balance of newer cuts and older favorites. “Sorrow” was an early highlight as the Dessners’ penchant for sharing guitar melodies created a panning effect that seemed to slide from stage left to stage right with an eerie resonance. Later,“Squalor Victoria” nearly pushed Berninger to his vocal limit and provided the first of many moments when the frontman appeared on the verge of exploding out of his own skin. As the night progressed, fans were greeted with seminal cut after seminal cut, from “I Need My Girl” and “All the Wine” to “Fake Empire.” Halfway through, most folks appeared too enamored to notice the light drizzle that started around the time the band launched into “Abel.” Then Aaron struck the opening chords to “Slow Show” and all hell broke loose. As the skies opened up and 4,000 of us were simultaneously drenched, Berninger gave over a tension-filled rendition of “Bloodbuzz Ohio.”And when the stage lights illuminated the downpour, they cracked open “England,” creating one of those magical concert moments that only fate can orchestrate. As the clouds passed, the band exited, then returned. A song later, Berninger climbed into the crowd for “Terrible Love” and made it about halfway up the venue before his microphone tether hit its breaking point. Upon his return, the band assembled at the edge of the stage to lead an acoustic “Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks.” With a mass of sopped fans belting along with him, Berninger didn’t once approach the mike, and the move, however subtle or orchestrated, left the whole place buzzing. Chalk one up to the power of a shared experience. ■
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THE INDEPENDENt
51
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT LISTINGS C Gallery – Joseph Castle: Healing the Wissahickon, through June 18. 466 Bell St., Los Alamos, 344-3807. Cancer Ctr. of S.B. – Art Heals, a permanent exhibit. 540 Pueblo St., 898-2204. Captured Spirit Photography–Gary Robinson: Intimate Portraits of Nature, through May 30. 1213 State St., Ste. F, 770-2862. Carpinteria Art Center – Artists Studio Tour, through May 12. 855 Linden Ave., Carpinteria, 684-7789. Channing Peake Gallery – Inside/ Outside: Santa Barbara Art Association, through May 23. S.B. County Administration Bldg., 105 E. Anapamu St., 568-3994. Divine Inspiration Gallery of Fine Art – Mike Rider, through May 31. 1528 State St., 962-6444. Elverhoj Museum – Channing Peake’s Santa Ynez Valley, through June 8. 1624 Elverhoy Wy., Solvang. 686-1211. Faulkner Gallery – Art Walk for Kids/Adults Annual Art Show: Impressions: Light, Space, Time, through May 31. 40 E. Anapamu St., 564-5608. THREE WAYS: Photographer Aaron Farley joins with galerie – Paper Route, through Ashley Macomber and Jane Peterson in Paper Route to June 1. 102 W. Matilija St., Ojai, explore three media: photography, pen and ink, and 640-0151. watercolor. The exhibition is on view at galerie in Gallery – Mieko Doerksen, Liz Tallakson, Lori Lenz, Rebecca Ojai through June . Stebbins, Iben Vestergaard, Soosan Marshall, Kristy Vantrease, through May 31. La Arcada, 1114 State St., 965-6611. Gallery Los Olivos – Lauren McFarland: art exhibits Natural Beauty of the Central Coast, through July 7; Linda Mutti and Sheryl Knight: A Place MUSEUMS in Time, through May 31. 2920 Grand Ave., Los Casa Dolores – Tree of Life, through May 31; Olivos, 688-7517. multiple permanent installations featuring Grossman Gallery – Marilyn Dover Benson, Mexican folk art. 1023 Bath St., 963-1032. through May 30. Lompoc Public Library, 501 E. Karpeles Manuscript Library and North Ave., Lompoc, 875-8787. Museum – Multiple permanent installaHarris and Fredda Meisel Gallery of tions. 21 W. Anapamu St., 962-5322. Art – Channel City Camera Club, through May Lompoc Museum – Barbara Curtis: Theatre 16. 2415 De la Vina St., 687-7444. of the Mind, through June 1. 200 S. H St., Jane Deering Gallery– Esther Pullman, Lompoc, 736-3888. Leslie Lewis Sigler: Equipoise, through Rancho La Patera/Stow House – May 17; The Flat File Project, ongoing. Multiple permanent exhibits hosted by the 128 E. Canon Perdido St., 966-3334. Goleta Valley Historical Society. 304 N. Los Marcia Burtt Studio– On Reflection, through Carneros Rd., Goleta, 681-7216. May 11. 517 Laguna St., 962-5588. S.B. Historical Museum – Impressions Palm Loft Gallery – Wild Bunch of Cool Men, in Ink: Etchings from the Collection, through through June 22. 410 Palm Ave., Loft A-1, October; The Story of Santa Barbara, Carpinteria, 684-9700. permanent exhibition. Free admission. 136 E. S.B. City Hall Gallery – Pursuit of Passion: De la Guerra St., 966-1601. Early Santa Barbara Women Artists, through S.B. Maritime Museum – Light at Point Feb. 20, 2015. De la Guerra Plaza, 568-3990. Conception: Prints by Hank Pitcher, through Sullivan Goss, An American Gallery – Sept. 8. 113 Harbor Wy., #190, 962-8404. The Winter Salon, , through May S.B. Museum of Art – Michelle Stuart: 4; For Real? Magical Realism in American Drawn from Nature, through May 4; Heavenly Art and Spacks Street , through Bodies, through May 25; Degas to Chagall: June 1; De Forest’s Santa Barbara; Nell Brooker Important Loans from the Armand Hammer Mayhew: Paintings from the Estate, and Foundation and the Collection of Michael Richard Haines: Midcentury Master, through Armand Hammer and Martin Kersels’s Charm June 29; Jon Francis: Let Icons Be Icons, series, ongoing exhibitions. 1130 State St., through Aug. 31. 7 E. Anapamu St, 730-1460. 963-4364. Viva Oliva – Watercolor by Larry Iwerks, Ty Warner Sea Ctr. – Multiple permanent through May 3. 207 Paseo Nuevo, 705-1692. installations. 211 Stearns Wharf, 962-2526. wall space gallery – A Little Madness in the Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art – Spring: Photographs by Aline Smithson and Amy Westmont Senior Exhibition , through Stevens, through May 11. 116 E. Yanonali St., C-1, May 3. 955 La Paz Rd., 565-6162. 637-3898. Wildling Museum – Everett Ruess: Into the Zookers Café – Plein Air Show, through Wilderness, through July 14. 1511-B Mission June 14. 5404 Carpinteria Ave., Carpinteria. Dr., Solvang, 688-1082. 684-8893.
YOUNG THE GIANT T
B IG DATA • BIRDS OF TOKYO O
JUNE 26TH AT 7PM
GALLERIES Architectural Foundation Gallery – Julie Young: Vishnu and Others, through May 30. 229 E. Victoria St., 965-6307. Artamo Gallery – Gordon Huether: X , through June 22. 11 W. Anapamu St., 568-1400. Art From Scrap Gallery – No Waste Earth, through May 22. 302 E. Cota St., 884-0459. Arts Fund Gallery–Kai Tepper, Marcello Ricci: Drift & Fixation, through May 24. 205-C Santa Barbara St., 965-7321. Bronfman Family Jewish Community Ctr. – S.B. Printmakers Juried Winter Exhibition 2014, through May 21. 524 Chapala St., 957-1115.
FRI, AUG 15TH at 5:30 pm TICKETS AT: SB BOWL BOX OFFICE / ARLINGTON THEATRE / CHARGE BY PHONE 800-745-3000 WALMART / TICKETMASTER.COM / NEDERLANDERCONCERTS.COM / SBBOWL.COM 52
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
LIVE MUSIC CLASSICAL Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts – Arianna String Quartet. 8585 Ojai-Santa Paula Rd., Ojai, 646-3381. SUN: 3pm Faulkner Gallery – Sonos Montecito. 40 E. Anapamu St., 564-5608. SAT: 3pm First Ukrainian Evangelical Baptist Church of S.B.– Westmont Choir and Chamber Singers. 150 Pebble Hill Dr., 708-9810. SUN: 5pm Granada Theatre – Los Angeles Philharmonic. 1214 State St., 899-2222. SUN: 4pm
To be considered for The Independent’s listings, please visit independent.com and click “Submit an event” or email listings@independent.com.
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MAY 1 - 8 Lobero Theatre – Paul Galbraith. 33 E. Canon Perdido St., 963-0761. THU / : 8pm S.B. Museum of Art – Henschel Quartet. 1130 State St., 963-4364. THU /: 7:30pm Severson Theatre – Hancock Faculty Recital. 800 S. College Dr., Santa Maria, 922-8313. SUN: 7:30pm Unity Chapel of Light– Jazz Ensemble Spring Concert. 1165 Stubblefield Rd., Santa Maria, 922-6966. SUN: 7pm
POP, ROCK & JAZZ
FRI, SAT, WED:
2014 Downtown
THE COOT ELIMINATION COMMITTEE written and directed by Bill Waxman MAY 8,9,10,11,15,16,17,18
TICKETS: $17 GEN. ADMISSION $12 SENIORS/STUDENTS
THURSDAY--SATURDAY @ 8PM; SUNDAYS @ 2PM 4916 CARPINTERIA AVE., CARPINTERIA | CA | 93013 805.684.6380 INFO@PLAZATHEATERCARPINTERIA.COM
m)DANCE Marjorie Luke Theatre – Don Quixote. 721 E. Cota St., 884-4087. SAT: 7pm SUN: 3pm
AD
2014 Santa Barbara
Jewish Festival
Theater Elings Park Performing Arts Center– Mary Poppins. 7266 Alameda Ave., Goleta, 569-5611. THU, FRI: 7pm SAT: 2 and 7pm Center Stage Theater – Time Stands Still. 751 Paseo Nuevo, 963-0408. FRI, SAT: 8pm SUN: 2:30pm THU: 8pm Jurkowitz Theatre – Ground. SBCC West Campus, 965-5935. THU, FRI: 7:30pm SAT: 2 and 7:30pm SUN: 2pm WED, THU: 7:30pm Marian Theatre – Noises Off. Allan Hancock College, 800 S. College Dr., Santa Maria, 922-8313. FRI: 7pm SAT: 1:30 and 7pm SUN, WED: 1:30pm Rubicon Theatre – Love, Loss, and What I Wore. 1006 E. Main St., Ventura, 667-2900. THU, FRI: 8pm SAT: 2 and 8pm SUN: 2pm WED: 2 and 7pm THU: 8pm San Marcos High School Auditorium – Les Misérables, 4750 Hollister Ave., 967-4581. THU-SAT: 7pm
THE WEST COAST PREMIERE OF THE NEW COMEDY PLAY
EE ION FRMISS
Adama – 428 Chapala St., 560-1348. THU: Greg Harrison (7pm) Brewhouse – 229 W. Montecito St., 884-4664. THU, WED-SAT: Live Music (9pm) Blue Agave – 20 E. Cota St., 899-4694. TUE : Jazz Chanteuse (7:30-10pm) Cambridge Drive Community Church – 550 Cambridge Dr., Goleta, 964-0436. FRI: Powdercoat, Steve Key (7:30pm) Campbell Hall – 574 Mesa Rd., UCSB, 893-3535. WED : Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn (8pm) Carr Winery – 414 N. Salsipuedes St., 965-7985. FRI : Natalie Wattre (6-8pm) Chumash Casino Resort – 3400 E. Hwy. 246, Santa Ynez, 686-0855. THU /: Mariachi Vargas (8pm) Cold Spring Tavern – 5995 Stagecoach Rd., 967-0066. FRI: SBCC Songwriters (7-10pm) SAT: Edge of Town (2-5pm); St. Anne’s Place, Emily Wryn, Stage 11 (6-9pm) SUN: Tom Ball and Kenny Sultan (1:15-4pm); The Cash Cats (4:30-7:30pm) The Creekside – 4444 Hollister Ave., 964-5118. MON: Karaoke with Dyno (7pm) WED: Country Night (7pm) Dargan’s – 18 E. Ortega St., 568-0702. SAT: Traditional Irish Music (6:30pm) TUE: Karaoke (9pm) THU: David Courtenay & The Castawaves Unplugged (8:30pm) Endless Summer Bar/Café – 113 Harbor Wy., 564-1200. FRI: Acoustic guitar and vocals (6:30pm) EOS Lounge – 500 Anacapa St., 564-2410. THU: Huge Thursday with Mackie and Bix King FRI: Live Music (8-10pm); DNA Presents SAT: DJ Calvin and Kohjay WED: Salsa Night Figueroa Mounthain Brewing Co. – 137 Anacapa St., 694-2255. FRI: Live Music (5pm) SAT: The Caverns (5-8pm) Hoffmann Brat Haus – 801 State St., 962-3131. THU: Live Music Thursdays (7pm) Indochine – 434 State St., 965-3800. TUE: Indie Night (9pm) WED: Karaoke (8:30pm) The James Joyce – 513 State St., 962-2688. THU: Alastair Greene Band (10pm) FRI: Kinsella Brothers Band (10pm) SAT: Ulysses Jasz Band (7:30-10:30pm) SUN, MON: Karaoke (9pm) TUE: Teresa Russell (10pm) WED: Open Mike Night Lobero Theatre – 33 E. Canon Perdido St., 963-0761. SAT: Danny Click (8pm) WED: Branford Marsalis, Joey Calderazzo, Eric Revis, Justin Falkner (8pm) Mel’s Lounge – 209 W. Carrillo St., 963-2211. WED: The Lovebirds (8pm) Moby Dick Restaurant – 220 Stearns Wharf, 965-0549. WED-SAT: Derroy (6pm) SUN: Derroy (10am) Monty’s – 5114 Hollister Ave., Goleta, 683-1003. THU: Karaoke Night (7pm) MultiCultural Ctr. – Channel Islands Rd., UCSB, 893-8411. FRI: Arthur Adams (8pm) O’Malleys and the Study Hall – 523 State St., 564-8904. THU: College Night with DJ Gavin Old Town Tavern – 261 Orange Ave., Goleta, 967-2403.
Karaoke Night (7:30pm) Palapa Restaurant – 4123 State St., 683-3074. FRI: Live Mariachi Music (6:30pm) Reds Tapas & Wine Bar – 211 Helena Ave., 966-5906. THU: Live Music (8pm) Roundin’ Third – 7398 Calle Real, 845-8383. THU, TUE: Locals Night (7pm) S.B. Maritime Museum – 113 Harbor Wy., #190, 962-8404. SAT: Ukulele music and singing (1-3:30pm) Seven Bar & Kitchen – 224 Helena Ave., 636-0913. FRI: The Agreeables (9:30-11:45pm) SAT: The Lower 48 (9:30-11:30pm) SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – 1221 State St., 962-7776. THU: Beware of Darkness (9pm) FRI: Area 51 (9:30pm) SAT: Americana Music Jam: Run Boy Run (5pm); The Haden Triplets (7pm); Jackie Greene (9pm) SUN: Erin Pearson, Xenia Flores, The Lower 48 (7pm) MON: Jeff Elliott (7:30pm) WED: Dave Brogan, Garrin Benfield, Tom Freund (8pm) Standing Sun Winery – 92 Second St., Unit D, Buellton, 904-8072. FRI: The Dustbowl Revival (7-10pm) Statemynt – 519 State St., 689-6968. THU: DJ Akorn WED: Blues Night (10pm) Storke Plaza – UCSB Campus, 962-2098. WED: The Fuxedos (12pm) Tiburon Tavern – 3116 State St., 682-8100. FRI: Karaoke Night (7:30pm) Velvet Jones – 423 State St., 965-8676. THU: The Balladiers (7pm) FRI: Afishnseathemoon, Pleasure, Pacific Haze (8pm) SAT: Illestry and Cathode (8pm) WED: Hemlock (8pm) Whiskey Richard’s – 435 State St., 963-1786. MON: Open Mike Night (8pm) WED: Punk on Vinyl (10pm) Wildcat – 15 W. Ortega St., 962-7970. THU: DJs Hollywood and Patrick B SUN: Red Room with DJ Gavin Roy (10pm) TUE: Local Band Night (10pm) Zodo’s – 5925 Calle Real, Goleta, 967-0128. THU: KjEE Thursday Night Strikes (9:30-11:30pm) MON: Service Industry Night (9pm)
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Art & Wine Tour May 22, 2014 5:30-9:30pm Final party at The Santa Barbara Club Tickets on sale May 1st SantaBarbaraDowntown.com 805-962-2098
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“
Sex and the Kosher Girl
DIEGO PERETTI
MAgnificent
” .
-carlos aguilar, sydneysbuzz
“An Astonishing, PoWerful story... MAkes for first-rAte drAMA.”
Fading Gigolo. John Turturro, Woody Allen, and Vanessa Paradis star in a film written and directed by Turturro.
-Jeffrey lyons, lyons den rAdio
“striking,
Reviewed by D.J. Palladino
Achingly tense And intriguing ”
A
ctors who direct have one distinct advantage over everyone else in the movie biz: They know other actors. John Turturro wrote and directed this preposterously plotted attempt at a Brooklyn version of a French New Wave film, but he employed his real genius summoning up his cast. The obvious coup, of course, is hiring Woody Allen, who seems completely unaware how precious and slight Turturro’s story is, so he acts his stuttering socks off. A lot of minor parts go to people we haven’t seen in a while, like Sharon Stone as a horny professional woman and Liv Schreiber as a forelocked Orthodox Jewish policeman (do such cops exist?), a fool for love but chained to the tradition he’s sworn to protect. He smolders nicely in an ethnic blue-collar manner that’s hard to describe but likely the most original aspect of this film. But the best part was saved for Vanessa Paradis, Johnny Depp’s model ex, who ghosts across the screen as Avigal, a rabbi’s widow stewing in stoic loneliness. And speaking of stew, the strangest performance belongs to Turturro as Fioravante, an enigmatic foreground for this dorky story chronicling the bittersweet sexual escapades of lifelong neighbor friends. Fioravante and Murray (Allen) find themselves short on cash. Minutes after the film opens, Murray convinces Fioravante to become a moody high-class stud for rich, lonely women in the neighborhood. You know, like you do. Turturro seems to be a bit embarrassed by his own conceit, though, and doggedly avoids any acting — and much talking — throughout the rest of the film.
NATALIA OREIRO
...
-mark adams, chief film critic, screen international
“A crAckling
good thriller.” -roger Moore, Mcclatchy tribune news service
A FILM BY LUCÍA PUENZO
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SMALL-TIME PIMP: Costarring Woody Allen, Fading Gigolo is well cast but preposterously plotted. The dreamlike aspect of the movie that seems pure Brooklyn is its offhand examination of cultural crossroads — Allen lives with an African-American woman and her kids, and Fioravante is an Italian lover who passes as a Jew. But the really mysterious aspect of all this is how dumb the clichés fly and yet how long the movie stays with you. It’s a ■ silly film employing a lot of seriously good actors.
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The Other Woman. Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann, and Kate Upton star in a film written by Melissa Stack and directed by Nick Cassavetes. Reviewed by D.J. Palladino
E
LIED-TO BRIDE: Leslie Mann plays the cheated-upon wife of a three-timing husband in The Other Woman. Woman bogs itself down in aimless set pieces; it gives us jokes about getting drunk, or pooping, or dogs pooping, or nattering verbal drunken fights that only make its female victims seem dumb. It goes so bad that when the payback finally arrives, the filmmakers need to resort to slapstick to make the pain feel funny and real. To their credit, Diaz and Mann try to bring some kind of complexity to their characters, and Mann seems to be trance-channeling Gracie Allen. It may be a truism that poop jokes and slapstick really are funny, but this should have been smart, as well. If love is a battlefield, this is a fender bender. ■
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ven halfway through this film, it’s hard to believe that a premise and cast this good could be so dull. You keep rooting for the idea, a contemporary update of Nine to Five, with bad husband Mark (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau from Game of Thrones) in the place of the great Dabney Coleman as a corrupt, sexist boss. Add to that a trio of nicely mismatched protagonists who ought to represent a cross section of contemporary sensibility. There’s Cameron Diaz, the raunchy professional wise gal from Bad Teacher, as a lawyer in love; she’s a tough yet wounded soul who lets herself believe in a too-handsome and thoughtful man (always a wrong in romantic comedies). She actually dresses up sexy and goes to his Connecticut home only to meet, surprise, the scumbag’s wife, a sweet ditz played by Leslie Mann, conjuring all the automatic associations to the Judd Apatow universe. (She not only starred in his best comedies but also married him in real life.) Traumatized, the two cheated upon go after faithless Mark only to discover a third cheatee, appropriately named Amber and played by swimsuit model Kate Upton. Maybe at this point you’re thinking that the setup took too long and seemed a little padded, but you’re also rubbing your hands together, preparing for the gross-out takedown of the misogynist swine. But don’t think, because this film doesn’t employ any brains for you. Instead, The Other
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Edited by Aly Comingore The following ďŹ lms are playing in Santa Barbara FRIDAY, MAY 2, THROUGH THURSDAY, MAY 8. Descriptions followed by initials â&#x20AC;&#x201D; DJP (D.J. Palladino), KS (Kit
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Fading Gigalo (90 mins.; R: some sexual content, language, brief nudity) Reviewed on page 55. Riviera
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The Other Woman (109 mins.; PG-13: some sexual references)
Reviewed on page 55.
The Quiet Ones (98 mins.; PG-13: intense
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sequences of violence and terror, sexual content, thematic material, language, smoking throughout)
Hammer Films, the legendary studio that dripped blood, has been back from the dead for ďŹ ve movies now. Their last ďŹ lm, The Woman in Black, was certainly gruesome and a little scary, but it didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t seem to belong to the ďŹ ne tradition that brought us The Revenge of Frankenstein and inspired Roger Corman and Dario Argento. The Quiet Ones is its latest ghostly tale, self-consciously set and lavishly costumed in 1970s garb (think miniskirts and bell-bottom pants), and it feels much more like it was cut from the Hammer stock of overwrought horror ďŹ lmmaking; itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s more atmospheric than genuinely terrifying. The ďŹ lm opens at Oxford University, where charismatic Professor Coupland (the great slimy Jared Harris) engages a willing, hip coterie of students in an attempt to â&#x20AC;&#x153;cureâ&#x20AC;? a woman haunted by poltergeist activity. Coupland assumes that the supernatural is pishposh and, with electronically aided psychological torture methods, plans to tame his patientâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s psychosis and shoo her ghosts. Right. Of course, they all have to retreat to a scary deserted mansion to do so. And, of course, a lot of unexplained terror and sexiness ensues. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s no real sex and not much fright, however. Instead, the ďŹ lm oďŹ&#x20AC;ers up a few lurches in the dark and a wet squib of a ďŹ nale. Olivia Cooke is the possessed girl, and Sam ClaďŹ&#x201A;in the burly sensitive lug who wants to save her. Both ought to be in a better movie, scary or otherwise. Hammer Films might be back from the dead, but it isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t all the way better yet. (DJP) Fairview/Metro 4
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The Railway Man (116 mins.; R: disturbing prisoner-of-war violence)
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The Railway Man begins with eccentric British railroad enthusiast Eric Lomax (Colin Firth) meeting cute with mildmannered nurse Patti Wallace (Nicole Kidman) in, yes, of course, a train. Their Mad Menâ&#x20AC;&#x201C;era courtship is a gentle aďŹ&#x20AC;air, and the ďŹ rst minutes of this ďŹ lm play like a romantic comedy with the lightest of touches. All that changes when the two marry and it is revealed that Lomax is circling around a psychotic break. As a young man, Lomax served in the British Army during WWII, was captured by the Japanese, transferred to a POW camp, and forced to work on the construction of the Thai-Burma Railway, also known as the Death Railway due to the fatal working conditions. When fellow ex-POW Finlay (Stellan SkarsgĂĽrd) ďŹ nds out the Japanese oďŹ&#x192;cer Takashi Nagase (Hiroyuki Sanada) responsible for Lomaxâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s torture is still alive, Lomax travels back to the camp, now a museum run by Nagase, to confront the man who ruined his life.
The present confrontation is interspersed with lengthy ďŹ&#x201A;ashbacks to life in POW camp. But this ambitious ďŹ lm wants to be too many things: a war story and a postwar story, a husband and wife dealing with the horrors of PTSD, and a broken hero determined to bring vengeance down upon the head of his former captor. At not quite two hours, the ďŹ lm just doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have the time to be all it so desperately wants to be. There are beats noticeably missing in all of the plot lines. It may not be successful on all fronts, but that does not take away from the sheer beauty and raw power of its many carefully crafted moments. This is a ďŹ lm that is ultimately the sum of its parts. That said, those parts are still well worth watching. (KS) Paseo Nuevo
PREMIERES The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (142 mins.; PG-13: sequences of sci-fi action and violence)
Peter Parker goes head-to-head with a new collection of villains who are sent to destroy him by the evil Oscorp Industries. Andrew GarďŹ eld stars. Arlington (2-D and 3-D) Camino Real (2- D and 3-D)/ Metro 4 (2-D and 3-D)
The German Doctor The German Doctor (93 mins.; PG-13: thematic material, brief nudity)
LucĂa Puenzo writes and directs this based-on-a-true-story ďŹ lm about an Argentine family who lived with Dr. Josef Mengele without ever knowing his true identity. Plaza de Oro Neighbors (96 mins.; R: pervasive language, strong crude and sexual content, graphic nudity, drug use throughout)
Two new parents struggle when they are forced to live next door to a frat house. Seth Rogen, Rose Byrne, and Zac Efron star. Camino Real/Metro 4 (Opens Thu., May 8)
SCREENINGS Bicycling with Molière (104 mins.; NR) Two French actors and friends are at odds over nearly everything â&#x20AC;&#x201D; except their love of Molièreâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s The Misanthrope. Screens as part of the Santa Barbara International Film Festivalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Showcase Film Series. Wed., May 7, 7:30pm, Plaza de Oro
Good Hair (96 mins.; PG-13: some language, including sex and drug references, brief partial nudity)
Chris Rock explores the world of AfricanAmerican hairstyles in this 2009 documentary from director JeďŹ&#x20AC; Stilson. Wed., May 7, 6pm, UCSBâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s MultiCultural Center
✯ Gloria (110 mins.; R: sexual content, some graphic nudity, drug use, language)
✯ Draft Day
A spirited middle-aged Chilean woman meets and falls for a former naval officer she meets in a club. Gloria is a disarmingly engrossing, altogether-remarkable piece of cinema, principally thanks to the quiet charismatic force that is actress Paulina García. (JW) Sun., May 4, 4:30pm,
The general manager of the Cleveland Browns (Kevin Costner) tries to acquire the season’s number one draft pick. Ivan Reitman’s football movie opens a little stagy, but once the skin trading begins, the script takes on a nicely burnished complexity. (DJP) Fairview/Fiesta 5
SHOP FOR
(109 mins.; PG-13: brief strong language, sexual references)
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Ojai Playhouse, 145 E. Ojai Ave., Ojai
✯ The Grand Budapest Hotel ✯ The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (178 mins.; PG-13: epic battle sequences, some scary images)
The first of Peter Jackson’s trilogy, based on the books by J.R.R. Tolkien, follows young Frodo (Elijah Wood) as he embarks on his quest to destroy an ancient, powerful ring. Screens as part of Magic Lantern’s all-night-long Lord of the Rings marathon. Fri., May 2, 7pm; Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte
(100 mins.; R: language, some sexual content, violence)
Wes Anderson’s latest chronicles the adventures of Gustave H., a concierge at a famous European hotel, and the lobby boy he forges a lifelong friendship with. Grand Budapest is beautiful in all the right ways, but the whimsical plot is all quirks and turns of comic phrase. You will laugh and maybe cry, but it’s no Rushmore or Moonrise Kingdom. (DJP) Paseo Nuevo Heaven Is for Real (100 mins.; PG:
✯ The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (201 mins.; PG-13: intense epic
thematic material including some medical situations)
battle sequences, frightening images)
A small-town boy makes big waves following a near-death experience. Greg Kinnear and Colton Burpo star.
As Sam (Sean Astin) and Frodo reach Mount Doom to destroy the ring, their former allies enter the final battle for Middle Earth. Screens as part of Magic Lantern’s all-night-long Lord of the Rings marathon. Sat., May 3, 3:30am; Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte
✯ The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (179 mins.; PG-13: epic battle sequences, some scary images)
Frodo and Sam continue their journey to Mordor with the ring, while their friends make new allies and wage a war against Isengard. Screens as part of Magic Lantern’s all-night-long Lord of the Rings marathon. Fri., May 2, 11pm; Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte
✯ Moonrise Kingdom
(94 mins.; PG-13:
sexual content, smoking)
A young boy and girl meet and fall in love in New England during the 1960s. When the pair runs away together, the town mobilizes to find them. Wes Anderson writes and directs. Like all of Anderson’s films, this is a fable of the lonely pains and stray joys of creative people driven to art. There’s a bracing mix of unexpected spectacle, sudden shocks of mortality, and little period details that dazzle. (DJP) Mon., May 5, 7 and 10pm, Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte
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Experience our 6th annual celebration of chocolate & wine
When a lunchbox in Mumbai’s complex delivery system ends up in the wrong hands, a young wife and an older man begin a correspondence with life-changing implications. However dry the story might seem on paper, The Lunchbox is a surprisingly engaging film drawn from an almost-minimalist plot machinery. (JW) Plaza de Oro
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Brick Mansions (90 mins.; PG-13: frenetic gunplay, violence, action throughout, language, sexual menace, drug material)
In Detroit, an undercover cop teams up with an ex-con to bring down a crime lord and his nefarious plan for citywide destruction. Fairview/Metro 4
✯ Captain America: The Winter Soldier (136 mins.; PG-13: intense sequences of violence, gunplay, action throughout)
Chris Evans reprises his role as Captain America and takes on a new threat: Soviet agent Winter Soldier. While The Winter Soldier lacks all that 1940s panache and fedora appeal, it’s beautifully set up and, more importantly, fraught with consequence. (DJP) Camino Real (2- D)/ Fiesta 5 (2-D)
Transcendence (119 mins.; PG-13: sci-fi action and violence, some bloody images, brief strong language, sensuality)
A scientist working toward creating a sentient machine goes head-to-head with a radical anti-tech organization. In this directorial debut by well-known cinematographer Wally Pfister (he shot Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight trilogy), the pretty pictures don’t seem to be helping the story along, much less lending us any pause for thought. (DJP) Fiesta 5 Walking with the Enemy (124 mins.; PG-13: war violence including crimes against humanity)
During World War II, a young man loses his family, then disguises himself as a Nazi SS officer and learns the horrific truth behind the battle lines. Plaza de Oro
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images, brief suggestive content)
Rio 2 (101 mins.; G) A family of macaws from Rio de Janeiro is transported into the wilds of the Amazon, where dad Blu struggles to fit in. Most big-studio animated features come off like epics, broken up from time to time with sing-along numbers as operatic embellishment. But this unremittingly clichéd film has it backward. (DJP) Fairview (2-D)/
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57
a&e | ROB BREZSNY’S FREE WILL ASTROLOGY WEEK OF MAY ARIES
CANCER
LIBRA
CAPRICORN
(Mar. 21 - Apr. 19): Dear Astrologer: We Aries people have an intense fire burning inside us. It’s an honor and a privilege. We’re lucky to be animated with such a generous share of the big energy that gives life to all of nature. But sometimes the fire gets too wild and strong for us. We can’t manage it. It gets out of our control. That’s how I’m feeling lately. These beloved flames that normally move me and excite me are now the very thing that’s making me crazy. What to do? — Aries Dear Aries: Learn from what firefighters do to fight forest fires. They use digging tools to create wide strips of dirt around the fire, removing all the flammable brush and wood debris. When the fire reaches this path, it’s deprived of fuel. Close your eyes and visualize that scene.
(June 21 - July 22): In the Transformers movies, Optimus Prime is a giant, extraterrestrial warrior robot. His body contains an array of weapons that he uses for righteous causes, like protecting Earth’s creatures. His character is voiced by actor Peter Cullen. Cullen has also worked extensively for another entertainment franchise: Winnie the Pooh. He does the vocals for Eeyore, a gloomy donkey who writes poetry and has a pink ribbon tied in a bow on his tail. Let’s make Cullen your role model for now. I’m hoping this will inspire you to get the Eeyore side of your personality to work together with the Optimus Prime part of you. What’s that you say? You don’t have an Optimus Prime part of you? Well, that’s what Eeyore might say, but I say different.
(Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): I’m pretty sure God wants you to be rich. Or at least richer. And I know for a fact that I want you to be richer. What about you? Do you want to be wealthier? Or at least a bit more flush? Or would you rather dodge the spiritual tests you’d have to face if you became a money magnet? Would you prefer to go about your daily affairs without having to deal with the increased responsibilities and obligations that would come with a bigger income? I suspect you will soon receive fresh evidence about these matters. How you respond will determine whether or not you’ll be able to take advantage of new financial opportunities that are becoming available.
(Dec. 22 - Jan. 19): Dear Oracle: I might be hallucinating, but recently I swear my pet iguana has been getting turned on whenever I disrobe in front of it. My naked body seems to incite it to strut around and make guttural hissing sounds and basically act like it’s doing a mating dance. Is it me, or is it the planets? I think my iguana is a Capricorn like me. — Captivating Capricorn Dear Capricorn: Only on rare occasions have I seen you Capricorns exude such high levels of animal magnetism as you are now. Be careful where you point that stuff! I won’t be shocked if a wide variety of creatures finds you extra alluring.
TAURUS
LEO
SCORPIO
(Apr. 20 - May 20): “My personal philosophy is not to undertake a project unless it is manifestly important and nearly impossible.” So said Taurus-born Edwin Land, the man who invented the Polaroid camera. I have a feeling these might be useful words for you to live by between your birthday in 2014 and your birthday in 2015. In the coming 12 months, you will have the potential of homing in on a dream that will fuel your passions for years. It may seem to be nearly impossible, but that’s exactly what will excite you about it so much — and keep you going for as long as it takes to actually accomplish.
(July 23 - Aug. 22): Do you finally understand that you don’t have to imitate the stress-addled workaholics and self-wounding overachievers in order to be as proficient as they are? Are you coming to see that if you want to fix, heal, and change the world around you, you have to fix, heal, and change yourself? Is it becoming clear that if you hope to gain more power to shape the institutions you’re part of, you’ve got to strengthen your power over yourself? Are you ready to see that if you’d like to reach the next level of success, you must dissolve some of your fears of success?
(Oct. 23 - Nov. 21): The U.S. military budget this year is $633 billion. In comparison, the United Nations’ peacekeeping budget is $7.8 billion. So my country will spend 81 times more to wage war than the UN will spend to make peace. I would prefer it if the ratio were reversed, but my opinion carries no weight. It’s possible, though, that I might be able to convince you Scorpios, at least in the short run, to place a greater emphasis on cultivating cooperation and harmony than on being swept up in aggression and conflict. You might be tempted to get riled up over and over again in the coming weeks, but I think that would lead you astray from living the good life.
(Jan. 20 - Feb. 18): “Eat like you love yourself,” advises author Tara Stiles. “Move like you love yourself. Speak like you love yourself. Act like you love yourself.” Those four prescriptions should be top priorities for you, Aquarius. Right now, you can’t afford to treat your beautiful organism with even a hint of carelessness. You need to upgrade the respect and compassion and reverence you give yourself. So please breathe like you love yourself. Sleep and dream like you love yourself. Think like you love yourself. Make love like you love yourself.
GEMINI
VIRGO
SAGITTARIUS
(May 21 - June 20): I wish there was a way you could play around with construction equipment for a few hours. I’d love it if you could get behind the wheel of a bulldozer and flatten a small hill. It would be good for you to use an excavator to destroy a decrepit old shed or clear some land of stumps and dead trees. Metaphorically speaking, that’s the kind of work you need to do in your inner landscape: move around big, heavy stuff; demolish outworn structures; reshape the real estate to make way for new building projects.
(Aug. 23 - Sept. 22): “Beauty is the purgation of superfluities,” said Michelangelo. Do you agree? Could you make your life more marvelous by giving up some of your trivial pursuits? Would you become more attractive if you got rid of one of your unimportant desires? Is it possible you’d experience more lyrical grace if you sloughed off your irrelevant worries? I suggest you meditate on questions like these, Virgo. According to my interpretation of the astrological omens, experiencing beauty is not a luxury right now but rather a necessity. For the sake of your mental, physical, and spiritual health, you need to be in its presence as much as possible.
(Nov. 22 - Dec. 21): Actor Matthew McConaughey prides himself on his willingness to learn from his mistakes and failures. A few years ago, he collected and read all the negative reviews that critics had ever written about his work in films. It was “an interesting kind of experiment,” he told Yahoo News.“There was some really good constructive criticism.” According to my reading of the astrological omens, Sagittarius, now would be an excellent time for you to try an experiment comparable to McConaughey’s. Be brave!
Homework: Think of the last person you cursed, if only with a hateful thought, if not an actual spell. Now send them a free-hearted blessing.
AQUARIUS
PISCES (Feb. 19 - Mar. 20): If blindfolded, most people can’t tell the difference between Pepsi and Coca-Cola. But I bet you could, at least this week. Odds are good that you will also be adept at distinguishing between genuine promises and fakes ones. And you will always know when people are fooling themselves. No one will be able to trick you into believing in hype, lies, or nonsense. Why? Because these days, you are unusually perceptive and sensitive and discerning. This might on occasion be a problem, of course, since you won’t be able to enjoy the comfort and consolation that illusions can offer. But mostly it will be an asset, providing you with a huge tactical advantage and lots of good material for jokes.
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s EXPANDED WEEKLY AUDIO HOROSCOPES and DAILY TEXT MESSAGE HOROSCOPES. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at --- or ---.
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*LUNCH SPECIALS INCLUDE A FREE SODA 626 W. Micheltorena, SB • Daily 6am–10pm • 962-4028 2030 Cliff Dr, Mesa • Daily 7am–10pm • 966-3863 6527 Madrid Rd., IV • Thurs-Sat 24 hrs/Sun-Wed 7am-3am • 770-3806 58
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
WOOD-FIRED PIZZA FRESH LOCAL FISH • SEAFOOD ORGANIC VEGETABLES • SALADS GRILLED STEAKS • CHOPS OSSOBUCO • SAUSAGE PANINI • BURRATA • BRUSCHETTA GELATO • CANNOLI • TIRAMISÚ FULL-BAR • DOG FRIENDLY HALF-PORTIONS ON LUNCH SPECIALS OPEN EVERYDAY 11:30 AM TO CLOSE 436 STATE ST. 805.957.4177
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Californian
The Independent’s Dining Guide is a paid advertisement and is provided as a service to our readers. Restaurants are listed according to type of food served. Bon appétit! AVERAGE PRICE PER MEAL $ Up to $10 $$ $11-$15 $$$ $16-$25 $$$$ $26-Up
To advertise in the Dining Guide, call 965-5208.
American BEACHBREAK CAFE, 324 State St, 962‑2889. $ Open 7a‑2:30p 7 days a week. Covered outdoor patio on State. Great Breakfast & Lunch.
Bistro/Cafe JACK’S BISTRO & “FAMOUS BAGELS” 53 South Milpas (In Trader Joe’s Plaza) 564‑4331; 5050 Carpinteria Ave, Carpinteria 566‑1558. $ Extensive menu, beer & wine, on site catering ‑ Call Justen Alfama 805‑566‑1558 x4 Voted BEST BAGELS 16 years in a row! www.bagelnet.com
Cajun/Creole THE PALACE Grill, 8 E. Cota St., 963‑ 5000. $$$. Open 7 days, Lunch 11:30a‑ 3p, Dinner 5:30p, V MC AE. Contemporary American grill w/ a lively, high‑energy atmosphere & fun, spontaneous events. Featuring fine grilled steaks, fresh seafood, delicious pastas, select American Regional specialties, like Blackened Crawfish‑ stuffed Filet Mignon, Louisiana Bread Pudding Souffle. Cajun Martinis, unique beers & well selected wine list. Lunch starts early enough for a late breakfast & ends late enough for an early supper. Voted “Best Team Service” since 1988. Rave reviews in Gourmet Magazine, Gault‑Millau Travel Guide, Zagat & Sunset Magazine.
French
OPAL RESTAURANT & Bar 1325 PACIFIC CREPES 705 Anacapa St. State St. 966‑9676 $$.Open M‑S 882‑ 1123.OPEN Tues‑Fri 10a‑3p & 11:30a & 7 nights 5p. V MC AE Local’s 5:30p‑ 9p, Sat 9a‑9p, Sun 9a‑3p From Favorite, Eclectic California Cuisine the flags of Bretagne & France to the fuses creative influences from “Au revoir, a bientot”; experience an around the world with American authentic French creperie. Delicious Regional touches: Chile‑Crusted crepes, salads & soups for break‑ Filet Mignon to Pan‑ Seared Fresh fast, lunch & dinner. Tasty Crepe Fish & Seafood, Homemade Pastas, Suzette or crepe flambee desserts. Gourmet Pizzas, Fresh baked Breads, Specials incl. starter, entree & des‑ Deliciously Imaginative Salads & sert. Homemade with the best fresh Homemade Desserts. OPAL radiates products. Relax, enjoy the ambi‑ a friendly, warm atmosphere graced ence, the food & parler francais! Bon by our fun efficient Service, Full bar, Appetit! pacificcrepe.com Martinis, Wine Spectator award‑win‑ ning wine list, private room. Lunches PETIT VALENTIEN, 1114 STATE are affordable and equally delicious. ST. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Open M‑F 11:30‑ 3pm (lunch). M‑Sat 5pm‑Close PIERRE LAFOND Wine Bistro (dinner). Sun $24 four course prefix 516 State Street 962‑1455 $$ dinner. In La Arcada Plaza, Chef Open Every Day M‑F 11a‑9p Sat/ Robert Dixon presents classic French Sun 9a‑ 10p Brunch Sat/Sun 9a‑3p comfort food at affordable cost Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner. A local in this cozy gem of a restaurant. favorite since 1993. California cui‑ Petit Valentien offers a wide array sine showcasing the best local prod‑ of meat and seafood entrees along ucts. Steamed Mussels, Flatbreads, with extensive small plates and a Grilled Duck Breast, Vegetarian wine list specializing in amazing dishes, Sherry Wine cake, Wines quality at arguably the best price from around the world. Happy Hour in town. A warm romantic atmo‑ Mon‑Sat 4:30‑6:30. Sidewalk patio. sphere makes the perfect date spot. www.pierrelafond.com Comfortable locale for dinner parties, or even just a relaxing glass of wine. Reservations are recommended.
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DINING GUIDE
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Chinese
YEN CHING 2840 De La Vina St. 682‑ 7191 7 days/wk M‑Sun 11a‑9p, ALL YOU CAN EAT Buffet: Lunch M‑F 11‑2 Sat & Sun Lunch 11‑2:30, Dinner Buffet 5:10‑8:30 incl all you can eat steak, shrimp & crab legs‑ Discounts for kids. Owner /Chef Joe Tzeng‑ Master Chef 25+yrs serving traditional Mandarin & Szechuan delicacies. All day take out‑ FREE delivery after 5pm
Coffee Houses SB COFFEE Roasting Company 321 Motor Way SB 962‑5213– NOW WITH FREE WI‑FI! Santa Barbara’s premiere coffee roasting company since 1989. Come in for the freshest most delicious cup of coffee ever and watch us roast the best coffee in town at our historic Old Town loca‑ tion ‑ Corner of State & Gutierrez. Gift baskets, mail order & corporate gifts avail. sbcoffee.com.
Ethiopian AUTHENTIC ETHIOPIAN CUISINE Featured at Petit Valentien Restaurant 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Open Sat‑Sun Lunch ONLY 11am‑2:‑ 30pm. Serkaddis Alemu offers in ever changing menu with choices of vegitarian, vegan, and meat options. Catering Avaliable for parties of up to 40 people.
RENAUD’S PATISSERIE & Bistro, 3315 State St. in Loreto Plaza, 569‑2400 & 1324 State St. Ste N 892‑2800 $$ M ‑ Sat 7‑ 5, Sun 7‑3 & M‑Sun 7‑ 3 Wide selection of whole‑ some French pastries. Breakfast & lunch menu is composed of egg dishes, sandwiches & salads rep‑ resenting Renaud’s favorites. Our Brewed coffees & teas are proudly 100% Organic.
Indian FLAVOR OF INDIA 3026 State 682‑ 6561 $$ www.flavorofindiasb.com VOTED BEST 17yrs. Finest, most authentic Indian cuisine is afford‑ able too! All You Can Eat Lunch Buffet $8.95 M‑S dinner combos $9.95+ Specials: Tandoori‑ Mixed or Fish, Chicken Tikka Masala, Shrimp Bhuna. Also: meat, curries & vegetar‑ ian.Wine & Beer. Take out. 20yrs of Excellence! INDIA CLUB/SPICE 5701 Calle Real. 805‑967‑7171. Moved from State Street, brand new location! Authentic Indian Cuisine. Zagat Rated since 2006. A family owned restaurant from London, lunch buffet $9.95 7 days a week, w/ special Dosa menu on Sat. & Sun. Beer & Wine. Open 7 days a week.
WEEKLY SPECIALS Live Blue Point Oysters — $0.99 each Corvina Seabass Fillet — $7.95 lb Wakami Seaweed Salad —$6.95 lb
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THE INDEPENDENt
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INDIA HOUSE, 418 State St. Next to 99 Cent Store 805.962.5070. 7 days 11:30a‑ 3:30p ALL YOU CAN EAT Lunch Buffet $8.95. Dinner 5p‑9p. Tandori & North Indian Muglai spe‑ cialties. World Class Indian Chefs at your service! Traditional floor seating. Indian & Draft Beers, Local Wines. www.indiahouseusa.com
Irish DARGAN’S IRISH Pub & Restaurant, 18 E. Ortega St. (next to lot 10) SB, 568‑0702. $$. Open 7 days 11:30a‑ Close (Food ‘til 10p, 11p on Sat/ Sun). AE MC V Disc. Authentic Irish food & atmosphere in downtown SB. Specialties from Ireland include Seafood & Meat dishes. Informal, relaxed pub‑style atmosphere. Live music Thursday nights. Children wel‑ come. Avail. for private parties. Pool & Darts.
Italian Isla Vista - Now Open! 888 Embarcadero Del Norte
ALDO’S ITALIAN Restaurant 1031 State St. 963‑6687. $$ Open 7 days. Lunch & Dinner. V MC AE DC DV. Local SB favorite for over 25 years offers fast, friendly service in the heart of downtown. Dine outdoors in our heated courtyard. Enjoy new home‑ style cuisine like Chicken Parmigiana or Fresh Fish specials in a comfort‑ able, romantic atmosphere. Vegan & Gluten‑ Free Pasta and Salad Options available. Wine & Beer. Full menu at: www.sbaldos.com
Japanese
KYOTO, 3232 State St, 687‑1252.$$. Open 7days M‑F 11:30a‑2p; Sat Noon‑ 2:30p Lunch; Sun‑Thur 5‑10p Dinner, Fri‑Sat 5p‑10:30p.Complete Sushi Bar. Steak & Seafood Specials! Sashimi, Teriyaki, original Japanese appetizers & Combination Boat Dinner. SB’s only TATAMI Rooms reservations suggested. Beer, Wine & Sake.Take Out. Birthday customers get FREE tempura ice cream & photo on our website! KyotoSB.com
Natural NATURAL CAFE, 508 State St., 5 blocks from beach. 962‑9494 Goleta‑ 5892 Hollister 692‑2363. 361 Hitchcock Way 563‑1163 $. Open for lunch & dinner 7 days. A local favorite for dinner. Voted “Best Lunch in Santa Barbara” “Best Health Food Restaurant” “Best Veggie Burger” “Best Sidewalk Cafe Patio” “Best Fish Taco” all in the Independent Reader’s Poll. Daily Specials, Char‑Broiled Chicken, Fresh Fish, Homemade Soups, Hearty Salads, Healthy Sandwiches, Juice Bar, Microbrews, Local Wines, and the Best Patio on State St. 9 locations serving the Central Coast. www.thenaturalcafe.com
fat free calories delicious flavors daily
SOJOURNER CAFÉ, 134 E. Canon Perdido 965‑7922. Open 11‑11 Th‑Sat; 11a‑10:30p Sun‑Wed. SB’s natural foods landmark since 1978 Daily soups & chef’s specials, hearty stews, fresh local fish, organic chick‑ en dishes,salads & sandwiches & award winning dessert . Espresso bar, beer, wine, smoothies, shakes & fresh juices sojournercafe.com
ICHIBAN JAPANESE Restaurant/ Sushi Bar, 1812 Cliff Dr., 805‑564‑7653. Mon‑Sat Lunch 11:30‑2:30. Dinner 7 days a week, 5‑10pm. Lunch Specials, Bendo boxes. Full sushi bar, tatami seats. Fresh Fish delivered all week.
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1532 State St • 2nd Floor • Santa Barbara CA 93101 OFFICE 805.962.2126 • FAX 805.962.2127 60
THE INDEPENDENT
may 1, 2014
HOLDREN’S 512 State St. 965‑3363 Lunch & Dinner Daily. Featuring $20 Prime Rib Wednesdays‑ USDA 12 oz Prime MidWestern corn‑fed beef char‑ broiled over mesquite; or try from our selections of the freshest seafood. We offer extensive wine & martini lists & look forward to mak‑ ing your dining experience superb! Reservations avail. RODNEY’S Grill, 633 East Cabrillo Boulevard at The Fess Parker – A Doubletree by Hilton Resort 805‑564‑ 4333. Serving 5pm – 10pm Tuesday through Saturday. Rodney’s Grill Menu is Fresh and New. Featuring all natural hormone‑free beef and fresh seafood, appetizers, and incredible desserts. The place to enjoy dinner with family and friends by the beach. Private Dining Room for 30. Full cock‑ tail bar with specialty cocktails. Wine cellar with Santa Barbara County & California best vintages by‑the‑glass www.rodneyssteakhouse.com
Thai YOUR PLACE Restaurant, 22 N. Milpas St., 966‑5151, 965‑9397. $$. Open Mon 4‑9:45pm Tues‑Thurs & Sun 11: 30a‑9:45p, Fri/Sat 11:30a‑10:30p. V MC AE. Your Place ‑ The One & Only. Voted “BEST THAI FOOD” for 26 years by Independent and The Weekly readers, making us a Living Legend! Lunch & dinner specials daily. Fresh seafood & tasty vegetarian dishes. Santa Barbara Restaurant Guide selected us as the Best Thai Restaurant for exceptional dining reflected by food quality, ser‑ vice & ambiance.
WINE GUIDE For as long as anyone can remember, Portugal’s only real red wine export was the fortified, dessert‑minded beverage Port. That’s all changing now, and it’s about time, as the hearty, heady varietals of Touriga Nacional, Touriga Franca, and Touriga Roriz pack a powerful yet nuanced touch. This $17 example blends all three for a raspberry balsamic reduction nose followed by Indian spices and sautéed black cherry flavors once sipped. See sogevinus.com.
(805) 962-2126
Steak
SPENCER’S LIMOUSINE & Tours, 884‑ 9700 Thank You SB, Voted BEST 18yrs! Specializing in wine tours of all Central Cal Wineries. Gourmet pic‑ nic lunch or fine restaurants avail TCP16297 805‑884‑9700 www.spencerslimo.com
$9. View our full inventory @ www.renegadewines.com. We store your wine. 3000sq feet of temp. controlled wine lockers; 8 case lockers‑300 case rooms. Off‑street parking. 2 blocks from State St. (2nd driveway @ 126 E. Haley) Monthly tastings & pri‑ vate tastings available. We ship wine. Keep in touch: Facebook, Google+, Twitter
Wineries/Tasting Rooms
SANTA BARBARA Winery, 202 Anacapa St. 963‑3633. Open Sun‑ Thurs 10a‑6p & Fri‑Sat 10a ‑ 7p, small charge for extensive tasting list. 2 blocks from both State St & the beach. This vener‑ able winery is the county’s old‑ est‑ est.1962, and offers many internationally acclaimed wines Wine Shop/Bar from their Lafond Vineyard in the Santa Rita Hills. Try some RENEGADE WINES: 417 Santa of Winemaker Bruce McGuire’s Barbara St. Ste A‑6, 805‑568‑1961. small production bottling. Tues‑Fri 11a‑6p, Sat. 12‑6p. www.sbwinery.com Sun‑Mon by appointment. SB’s oldest wine shop, over 23 years same location. We are Santa Barbara’s premier wine retailer, offering a wide variety of local and imported wines. Our diverse assortment of wine comes from the world’s finest vineyards with prices starting around
The Restaurant Guy
+++++++++++++++
by JOHN DICKSON
Giveaway on Hiatus
I
n February, I wrote that Pace restaurant, at State Street, announced that they were giving away their restaurant and even produced a YouTube video about it. News of this contest spread far and wide and was picked up by New York Magazine and the Los Angeles Times. Reader DR let me know that new information about this contest has just appeared on their website: “Regretfully we are canceling the contest at this time due to unforeseen circumstances. Our plan is to relaunch the contest in the near future. If you are still interested in the contest, and/or have begun working on your submission, please send your contact information to pacefoodanddrink@gmail.com and we will send you an email alerting you to the new dates once they are firmed up. Thanks for your understanding. —The Snyders”
ily recently purchased local icon Farmer Boy restaurant ( State St.) and have closed the eatery for several months of renovation. The diner, which arrived on the scene in 1958, will reopen in the fall. I am told it will be a family-friendly environment with a diner platform. “The footprint will remain the same, but everything needs to be brought up to date,” said new owner John Bennett. “Health and building codes require a complete overhaul. There may be some subtle rebranding, but we are committed to the history of the location and honoring Ralph Karleskint’s lifetime of commitment to the community and the business.” Thanks to reader Tim for the tip.
HAROLD’S CARIBBEAN KITCHEN: This just in from reader Jaya: “Hi, I wanted to inform The Restaurant Guy about a new Caribbean-style restaurant that opened yesterday. Chef Harold Welch of World Cuisine Express opened Harold’s Caribbean Kitchen. He is operating out of Tony Ray’s place in De la Guerra plaza. He is serving lunch and dinner 11:30-1:30 p.m. and 5-8 p.m. Closed Sundays.”
Several readers tell me that there is now a sign on the front window that reads “closed until further notice.” I tried calling the restaurant, and the phone number was out of service.
iGRILL UPDATE: Reader Brendan let me know that iGrill Korean BBQ at State Street has been closed for a couple of weeks. I stopped by and spoke with an associate who told me that they are in the process of changing the menu and some of the staff and hope to reopen in another week.
SHAVE IT: Last week I wrote that Spudnuts is coming to Seville Road in Isla Vista, next to Firehouse Subs. Reader Cris tells me that a franchised eatery named Shave It will be opening next door to Spudnuts. Its website, shaveitnation.com, describes the business: “If you have ever scooped up a handful of soft and fluffy freshly fallen snow and taken a bite, you know how snow melts in your mouth. Imagine that same white snow drenched with your favorite flavor — that’s a Shave It.” Flavor offerings include pink lemonade, passion fruit, root beer, and many others.
OH THANK HEAVEN: The Santa Barbara NewsPress reports that a new commercial building, to be occupied by -Eleven and Subway, is coming to State Street, directly across the street from an ampm minimart and gas station. DELI EXPRESS: Reader Glenn tells me that a restau-
CHOCOLATE DE VINE: The Santa Barbara Rape
Oven Mediterranean Bakery & Café has opened at Trigo Road in Isla Vista, the former home of Café Int’l and Fresh Wok.
rant named Deli Express has opened in the Winchester Canyon area next to El Sitio, Calle Real in Goleta.
MAGIC PITA CAFÉ CLOSES: Magic Pita Café at
West Haley Street replaced Greek House Café last November.
Santa Barbara Duo Debut A rare chance to see two of the world’s most highly regarded banjo players and fearless musical explorers together. Each has won independent acclaim: Béla Fleck, as the 14 Grammy-winning musical chameleon; Abigail Washburn, as the “daring, definite talent” (The Wall Street Journal ) with the beguiling voice. The pair will perform a mix of traditional and original songs. WED, MAY 7 / 8 pM / ucsb cAMpbELL HALL Tickets start at $32 / $18 ucsb students
(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu
C O M E E N J OY
CHILI COOK-OFF: Local competitive cooks will
simmer up Southwest flavors for the Carpinteria Chili Cook-Off on Saturday, May 3, 2-6 p.m. at the Carpinteria Woman’s Club ( Vallecito Rd.). The Restaurant Guy will be one of several participating judges. The event, a fundraiser auction for Kinderkirk Preschool and Daycare, pairs competitive cooking and an AllAmerican theme. Attendees can vote for their favorite chili, bid for bargain auction items, and enjoy food, drinks, and music. Tickets can be purchased for $25 by calling 684-4070 or at the door. Anyone who wants to enter the cook-off should call Peter at 453-4878.
LOVE IS IN THE AIR: Readers tell me that Lovin’
SEE P. 39
Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn
CONTEST CANCELED: Pace Food + Drink’s Snyder family (pictured) has canceled a contest in which people pay a $500 entry fee for a chance to receive a free restaurant and have the lease paid for a year.
’50S REFURBISHED: Santa Barbara’s Bennett Fam-
MORE FOOD
PAUL WELLMAN FILE PHOTO
Pace Restaurant
Crisis Center’s Annual Chocolate de Vine fundraiser will be held on Saturday, May 3, at The Greek Orthodox Church Salon ( San Antonio Creek Rd.) from 5-7:30 p.m. Tickets are $65 in advance and $75 at the door. For more information and to purchase tickets, call 963-6832 or visit sbrapecrisiscenter.org.
John Dickson’s reporting can be found every day online at SantaBarbara.com. Send tips to info@SantaBarbara.com.
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independent classifieds
legals Administer of estAte NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: DANIEL WILLIAM STONECIPhER NO: 1466793 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of DANIEL WILLIAM STONECIPhER A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: WILLIAM D. STONECIPhER and JOhN S. STONECIPhER in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara ThE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that WILLIAM D. and JOhN S. STONE STONECIPhER be appointed as personal representatives to administer the estate of the decedent. ThE PETITION requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. ThE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have wavied notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: on 05/29/2014 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: Five SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Anacapa Division. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE‑154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: John J. Thyne III Law Offices of John J. Thyne III 2000 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105 Published May 1, 8, 15, 2014. NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: PhILLIP ALAN MORLAN NO: 1466687 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of PhILLIP ALAN MORLAN A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: JOhN FRANZEN in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara ThE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that JOhN FRANZEN be appointed as personal representatives to administer the estate of the decedent. ThE PETITION requests the decedent’s
will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. A hEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: on 05/29/2014 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: Five SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Anacapa Division. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE‑154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Matthew J. Long 1836 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 Published Apr 24. May 1, 8 2014.
fBn ABAndonment STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Pacific Coast Bartenders School at 320 S. Kellogg Ste. E2 Goleta 93117. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed Jan 20, 2011. in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2011‑ 0000217. The person(s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Colleen Rickman 5611 Berkeley Rd. Goleta, CA 93117; John Rickman (same address). This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 08, 2014 I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office, Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. Published. Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
fiCtitious Business nAme stAtement FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Cruisers Paradise BMX Shop at 216 Milpas Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Edgar Hernandez 116 North Alisos Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Edgar hernandez This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 1, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0000958. Published: Apr 3, 10, 17, 24, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: WINC at 35 Industrial Way Buellton, CA 93427 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Alexander Oxman This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 16, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001138. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014.
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phone 965-5205
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e m a i l a d s @ i n d e p e n d e n t. c o m
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Fenestra Counseling at 284 Calle Esperanza Santa Barbabra, CA 93105; Megan Kauffman (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 26, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0000906. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Pilates By Juliana at 100 Olive Mill Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Juliana Fabio (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Juliana Fabio This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 14, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0001108. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: J.McLaughlin at 1253 Coast Village Road Montecito, CA 93108; Georgica Pine Clothiers, LLC, 236‑250 Greenpoint Ave. Bldg 6 2nd Fl Brooklyn, NY 11222; This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 19, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0000822. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Yellow Belly Tap Sucker Bar And Restaurant at 2611 De La Vina Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Yellow Belly LLC 1134 Garden Street #10 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Wendy Simorangkir This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 9, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001049. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Lark Enterprises of Santa Barbara at 180 Kingston Ave Unit B Goleta, CA 93117; Leslie Anne Russell (same address); This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Leslie Russell This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 31, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0000954. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: The Colton Law Firm at 825 Jennings Ave Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Michael A. Colton (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Michael A. Colton This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 10, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑0001069. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Bad Day Bail Bonds at 5395 Paseo Cameo Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Carrie Alvarado (same address) Jeffery Alvardo (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: Jeff Alvardo This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on March 31, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0000938. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Click2Jet at 1072 Casitas Pass Road, Suite 246 Carpinteria, CA 93013; Air Charter Solutions, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 09, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001046. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: American Riviera Landscaping at 2720 Las Positas Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Zacarias Gonzales (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Zacarias Gonzalez This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 31, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0000953. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: hamlet Inn at 1532 Mission Drive Solvang, CA 93463; Point Pacifica Associates, LLC 2612 Taft Court Fullerton, CA 92835 (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Wendy Simorangkir This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 9, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001052. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Arch Rock at 608 Anacapa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; RR2SS LLC 114 E. Haley St. Suite O Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 10, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001070. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Providence, Providence, A Santa Barbara Christian School at 3723 Modoc Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Providence SBCS, Inc. Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Thomas R. Smith, Providence SBCS, Inc. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 3, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0000988. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Families Live Safe, Family Live Safe, Family Protection Zone, Family Safety Journal at 3905 State St. Suite 7228 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Scalable Commerce, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 03, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0000991. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Corse Moto Transport, Pista Moto Transport at 1537 Cliff Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Corse Moto Transport, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Daniel Trotti, President This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 3, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0000990. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Loan Closet, Serenity house at 509 E. Montecito Street, #200 Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Visiting Nurse & Hospice Care of Santa Barbara Foundation (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 02, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0000971. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: 805 Roadside Towing at 823 East Mason Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Aaron Boucher 1811 Bath Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 2, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0000974. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Francisco’s Mobile Detailing at 1020 North Nopal Apt 1 Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Francisco Villegas (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Francisco Villegas This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 24, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0000876. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Prison Yoga Project Santa Barbara at 351 Paseo Nuevo, 2nd Floor Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Virginia Davis Kuhn 2470 Calle Almonte Santa Barbara, CA 93109 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Virginia Kuhn This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 1, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0000969. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: B&E Photography at 1427 Laguna Street #73 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Brandon Brown (same address) Erica Brown (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 13, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0000753. Published: Apr 3, 10, 17, 24, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Fasting Center International at 27 West Anapamu St. #360 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Dennis Paulson 2065 Mission Ridge Rd #2 Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Dennis Paulson This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 1, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0000966. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Ambassador house SB at 1601 Anacapa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Peter M Chiarenza 1610 De La Vina Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Pete M Chiarenza This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 7, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2014‑0001021. Published: Apr 10, 17, 24. May 1 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Seacoast Yacht Sales, Seacoast Yachts, Seacoast Yachts of Santa Barbara at 125 Harbor Way #11 Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Seacoast of Santa Barbara, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Vicki Vanhook, CEO This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 7, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001007. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Crystal Clear Window Cleaning at 2910 State Street‑4 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Maria L. Keagan (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Maria L Keagan This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 7, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001013. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Rick’s Auto Repair at 36 West Gutierrez Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Richard D. Clarke 1906 Castillo Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Rick Clarke This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 7, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001012. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Path Igniter at 1843 El Camino De La Luz Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Jeff Appareti 208 West Arrellaga Street #2 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Stan Krome 1843 El Camino De La Luz Santa Barbara, CA 93109 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Stan Krome This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 9, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0001042. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: MG Communications at 583 Refugio Road Santa Ynez, CA 93460; Roger G. Billings 1428 Laguna Street, Unit A Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Roger G. Billings This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 9, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑0001054. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Goodland Garden Supply, Goodland Garden at 298 Orange Avenue Goleta, CA 93117; Kenneth Todd Falstrom (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Kenneth Todd Falstrom This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 8, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001022. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Acorn harvest Co. at 1718 De La Vina Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Gabriel Nicholas Rivera (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Gabriel Nichols Rivera This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 8, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0001024. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Iconic Seafood Santa Barbara at 5190 Carpinteria Avenue Carpinteria, CA 93013; Andrew Douglas Perry (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Andrew Douglas Perry This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 15, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001124. Published: Apr 17, 24. May 1, 8 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Goodland Designs at 5902 Daley Street Goleta, CA 93117; James Henry Height 1412 Gillespie Street Apt. C Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: James height This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 31, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0000951. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Social Fiduciary Services at 411 W. 5th Street Los Angeles, CA 90013; Russell Pottharst (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Russell Pottharst This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 08, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001032. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Ranch & Reata Magazine, Range Radio at 3569 Sagunto Street Santa Ynez, CA 93460; Rangeworks, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 11, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001091. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014.
May 1, 2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Translating Technologies at 2571 Puesta Del Sol Santa Barbara,CA 93105; Charles Walker (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Charles A. Walker This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 14, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑0001111. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: honeysuckle Possums at 4558 Auhay Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Lisa A. Macker (same address) Susan M. Reeves (same address) This business is conducted by a Copartners Signed: Susan M. Reeves This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 07, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001009. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Michelle Dillon Media at 797 N. La Cumbre Road Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Michelle Dillon (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 11, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001087. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: The Civil Attorneys Association of Santa Barbara County at 535 Fireside Lane Goleta, CA 93117; Marie A La Sala 222 Meigs Rd, #15 Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Maria Salido Novatt 535 Fireside Lane Goleta, CA 93117; Kevin E Ready 2525 Garden Street Solvang, CA 93463 This business is conducted by a Unincorporated Association Signed: Kevin E Ready This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 17, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2014‑0001152. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Crushcakes Kitchen, Crushcakes Kitchen & Tasting Room at 2611 De La Vina Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Crushfoods Inc 1315 Anacapa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Shannon Gaston, President This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 17, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Doe Solis. FBN Number: 2014‑0001147. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: hope 4 Kids, hope 4 Kids Early Learning Center, hope 4 Kids Preschool & Infant/ Toddler Center, hope Santa Barbara, hope 4 Kids Children’s Center, hope 4 Kids Infant/Toddler Center, hope 4 Kids Preschool & Infant/Toddler Child Care Center, hope 4 Kids Children’s Educational Center, hope 4 Kids Preschool, hope 4 Kids Santa Barbara at 560 N. La Cumbre Road Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Missionary Church of Santa Barbara, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Cheri Diaz, Director This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 15, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001130. Published: Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Three Treasures Acupuncture & Wellness Center at 22 North Milpas Street, Suite D Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Monica Gonzalez‑Miller (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Monica Gonzalez‑Miller This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 22, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001193. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014.
THE INDEPENDENT
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employment
COMMITMENT TO OUR COMMUNITIES.
Because we care for our neighbors. A career at Cottage Health System is an experience in caring for and about the people who call our coastal area of California home. Our not-for-profit health system identifies closely with the communities we serve and has a long tradition of providing area residents with highly personalized, clinically excellent care. Patients aren’t just patients here – they’re neighbors. Be there for them through one of the openings below.
Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital
• Speech Language Pathologist II – Clinical
Nursing • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital
Per Diem • LVN – Cottage Residential • Support Counselor – Per Diem • Perfusionist
• • • • • •
• PCT I – Surgical Trauma Clinical
Cardiac Cath Lab Cottage Residential Educator, Med/Surg Med/Surg – Float Pool NICU NICU Oncology Oncology Pediatric Pediatric Endocrinology Endocrinology PICU PICU Pulmonary, Renal Renal Pulmonary, Psych Psych Services Services SICU SICU Surgery Surgery Workers’ Workers’ Compensation Compensation Case Manager Case Manager
LVN – Cottage • Telemetry TechResidential • Unit Perfusionist • Care Techs – Peds & PICU • PCT I – Surgical Trauma
Goleta Valley Goleta CottageValley Hospital Cottage Hospital
• Telemetry Tech Non-Clinical
• • • • • • • • •
Clinical Resource Nurse – ED Clinical Resource Nurse – ED CNA – Temporary CNA – Temporary Physical Therapist – Per Diem Dietary Clerk –Per Diem RNs – Emergency, Physical Therapist Med/Surg, ICU – Per Diem RNs – Emergency, Med/Surg, ICU Pacifi c Diagnostic
• Unit Coordinator – ER • Data Quality Coordinator • Environmental Serv Rep
Non-Clinical • • • •
Food Service Rep Clinical Informatics Analysts Lead Cook Environmental Serv Rep
• Lead Remote Coder (HIM Coder III) Cook RemoteService CoderServers (HIM Coder III) • Room
Management Management • • • • • • • •
Clinical Manager, Nutrition Clinical Manager, Nutrition Manager, Inventory Control Manager, Radiology Inventory Control Manager, Manager, Radiology Supervisor, Housekeeping Supervisor, Housekeeping Patient Business Services/Admitting • Supervisor, Patient Business Services/Admitting
Allied Health • Neurodiagnostic Allied HealthTech • • • • •
Pharmacist – Per Diem Medical Social Worker – Per Diem Pharmacy Tech – Per Diem Pharmacist – Per Diem Speech Language Pathologist II – Per Diem • Pharmacy Tech – Per Diem • Support Counselor – Per Diem
• Room Service Servers • Security Officers • Security Offi cers • Systems Support Analyst – eHealth • Systems Support Analyst – eHealth • Systems Support Coordinator – • Full-Time Systems Support Coordinator – & Temporary Full-Time & Temporary • Systems Support Specialist • Systems Support Specialist • • Workforce Workforce Development Development Consultant Consultant
Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital • • • • • •
RN – Cardiac Rehab ICU RN – ICU RN – Med/Surg – Per Diem RN –– Surgery Med/Surg RN – Per Diem RN – Surgery – Per Diem
Physical Therapist Therapist –– Per Per Diem Diem Physical Psychologist Psychologist Occupational Therapist – Full-Time & Occupational Therapist – Full-Time & Per Diem Per Diem
Laboratories Pacific Diagnostic Laboratories • Certified Phlebotomy Techs
• Certifi Histotechnician • ed Phlebotomy Techs • Systems Support Analyst • Sr. Cytotechnologist • Histotechnician • Please apply to: • Sr. Systems Support Analyst
www.pdllabs.com • Please apply to: www.pdllabs.com
• RENTAL & RELOCATION ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE • RENTAL & RELOCATION FOR SELECT FULL-TIME ASSISTANCE POSITIONSAVAILABLE FOR
REIMBURSEMENT
For more information on how you can advance your future with these opportunities, or to submit a resume, please contact:
Please reference “SBI” when applying. EOE
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THE INDEPENDENT
May 1, 2014
EQUAL RIGHTS Raise $$ for the nation’s top progressive organizations:
$9 – $15.00/hr. Base pay & bonuses 16-40 hrs/wk
805.564.1093 Admin/Clerical
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
CALIFORNIA NANO SYSTEMS INSTITUTE Provides general support for CNSI Director and Associate Director. Interacts independently with scholars from around the world, providing assistance as needed to facilitate their work at UCSB. Duties include travel arrangements and reimbursements, maintaining correspondence, including email, and word processing of proposals. Assists with financial management of faculty member’s extramural grants, including report monitoring. Reqs: Demonstrated strong communication skills and ability to convey complex information obtained from multiple sources both verbally and in writing. Ability to multi‑ task and meet strict deadlines while maintaining a high level of accuracy. Professionalism, initiative, flexibility and analytical skills are necessary. Proficiency in administrative office computer software programs and databases. Notes: Fingerprinting required. $16.97 ‑ $18.47/hr. For primary consideration apply by 5/5/14, thereafter open until filled. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20140172
SELECT FULL-TIME POSITIONS
• CERTIFICATION • CERTIFICATION REIMBURSEMENT
We offer an excellent compensation package that includes above-market salaries, premium medical benefits, pension plans, tax savings accounts, rental and mortgage assistance, and relocation packages. What’s holding you back?
Cottage Health System, Human Resources, P.O. Box 689, Pueblo at Bath Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93102-0689. Please apply online at www.cottagehealthsystem.org.
JOBS TO SUPPORT
Excellence, Integrity, Compassion
www.cottagehealthsystem.org
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE COORDINATOR
ELECTRICAL & COMPUTER ENGINEERING Responsible for the daily administrative support functions of the Central Administrative Office. Updates directory and event information on the ECE web site, and coordinates the maintenance of course web pages. Reqs: Demonstrated administrative background. Excellent verbal and written communication skills. Demonstrated knowledge of a
variety of applications (ie: MS Word, Excel, and FileMaker Pro). Ability to organize, coordinate, and prioritize workload; edit and proofread materials; and work independently under pressure of deadlines. Must be detail oriented with a high degree of accuracy. Note: Fingerprinting required. $19.60/ hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. Apply by 5/5/14 Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20140169
CLINICAL ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE Provides administrative support primarily to the Medical, Nursing and Clinic Managing Directors. Uses advanced skills in word processing and spreadsheets to create and revise clinic documents. Other duties vary from running routine reports, making schedule adjustments for both clinicians and patients, monitoring website clinical information to making appointments for patient via the phone or at appointment desk. Reqs: Demonstrated proficiency in word processing and excel spreadsheets; strong writing skills. Notes: Student Health requires that all staff must successfully complete and pass the fingerprint background check before employment and date of hire. Mandated reporting requirements of child abuse. Any HIPAA or FERPA violation is subject to disciplinary action. Student Health is closed between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. $16.97/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. For primary consideration apply by 5/8/14, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb. edu Job #20140165
PATIENT SERVICE ASSOCIATE
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE Using a computerized scheduling system and a multi‑line phone, schedules medical appointments both by telephone and in person. Accurately determines patient’s medical needs with regards to urgency and appropriateness of patient’s appointment request. Assists patients by providing information on general Student Health services and programs. Utilizes substantial customer service experience and demonstrated abilities to clearly explain appointment procedures and uses sound judgment to handle non‑routine appointment requests. Reqs: Ability to act with professionalism and tact, high sensitivity and confidentiality, high level of attention to detail, and excellent organizational, computer, and written and verbal communication skills. Excellent customer service skills. Notes: Student Health requires that all staff must successfully complete and pass the background check process before employment and date of hire. Mandated reporting requirements of child abuse. Any HIPAA or FERPA violation is subject to disciplinary action. Schedule may vary during quarter breaks. Student Health is closed between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. $16.97/ hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. For primary consideration apply by 5/12/14, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb. edu Job #20140170
Construction LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION valid CA‑DL, Irrigation, driving, planting. $12‑17 DOE apply at www.WilsonEnv. net. References, drug testing.
General Part-Time
Data Collector ‑ Santa Barbara County This job is great for stay at home parents or retired individuals although it can fit into many schedules. You will visit the city of Solvang weekly and the city of Goleta monthly While at the city and county offices you will make copies of public information documents which you will then submit to our office via the internet. Must be thorough and complete in your collection duties. You will need to be able to present yourself well and communicate professionally when you work with the cities. Compensation: $115 a month (this position will only take apx. 3 hours a month) You will be an Independent Contractor and will need to furnish your own equipment. You will need a camera, computer and reliable transportation. Email resumes to hr@ constructionmonitor.com. Please put in the subject line Santa Barbara County (and the city in which you live). You can visit our website constructionmonitor.com
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(Continued)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Beach Ball, Beach Ball Party, Beach Ball Events, Beach Ball Santa Barbara Co., Beach Ball Flowers, Beach Bawl at 1402 W. Valerio Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Anne E. Fortuna (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Jack R. Fortuna This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 10, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001058. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Kallpa Wellness at 1107 Castillo Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Maria Teresa Montero Terry (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Maria Teresa Montero Terry This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 28, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001252. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Computer Repair Montecito, Laptop Repair Santa Barbara, Montecito Computer Repair, Santa Barbara Laptop Repair, Virus Removal Santa Barbara, Computer Repairs Santa Barbara, Laptop Repairs Montecito, Montecito Laptop Repair, Santa Barbara Laptop Repairs, Laptop Repair Montecito, Laptop Repairs Santa Barbara, Montecito Laptop Repairs, Santa Barbara Virus Removal at 309 E. Micheltorena Street Unit C Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Ramsin Eivazzadeh(same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Ramsin Eivazzadeh This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 28, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001258. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Avalon Comics And Games at 10‑C Calle Laureles Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Michael MacDonald 321 Vista De La Cumbre Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 08, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001031. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dawn Designs at 3335 Apt 2 Richland Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Erika Dawn Fischer‑Corners (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Erika Fischer‑Corners This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 16, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001133. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Inspire A Mind (IAM) at 2114 De La Vina St. #5 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Susanne Nagy (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Susanne Nagy This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 24, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001218. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014.
employment Professional
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
CALIFORNIA NANO SYSTEMS INSTITUTE Provides general support for CNSI Director and Associate Director. Interacts independently with scholars from around the world, providing assistance as needed to facilitate their work at UCSB. Duties include travel arrangements and reimbursements, maintaining correspondence, including email, and word processing of proposals. Assists with financial management of faculty member’s extramural grants, including report monitoring. Reqs: Demonstrated strong communication skills and ability to convey complex information obtained from multiple sources both verbally and in writing. Ability to multi‑ task and meet strict deadlines while maintaining a high level of accuracy. Professionalism, initiative, flexibility and analytical skills are necessary. Proficiency in administrative office computer software programs and databases. Notes: Fingerprinting required. $16.97 ‑ $18.47/hr. For primary consideration apply by 5/5/14, thereafter open until filled. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20140172
ASSISTANT TO THE DEAN
COLLEGE OF LETTERS & SCIENCE Provides direct analytical and administrative support to the Dean, Associate Deans and senior staff of Social
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Interim Healthcare of Santa Barbara at 4141 State Street #E‑5 Santa Barbara, CA 93110; At Home Health Care of Santa Barbara, Inc 1524 De La Vina #A Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: At Home Health Care of Santa Barbara, Yanni Titus, Secretary This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 21, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001181. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Ths Company Santa Barbara at 725 Olive Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Ilene Davis (same address) Thomas Sanchez (same address) This business is conducted by a Joint Venture Signed: Ilene Davis This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 22, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001189. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Grow Your Own, Shangri‑LA Garden Landscapes, Shangri‑LA Gardens at 121 E. Alamar Avenue Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Robert William Chamlee This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Robert Chamlee This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 21, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001177. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Wellness Therapy of Santa Barbara at 1226 Santa Barbara Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Mary M Elliott 805 California Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Mary Elliott This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 21, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑0001175. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Righting A Wrong Productions, Searching For A Song To Sing at 1187 Coast Village Road #429 Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Shoerue Productions, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Steven Manis This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 21, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Gabriel Cabello. FBN Number: 2014‑ 0001167. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Heartwood Path at 2969 Glen Albyn Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Courtney Pierce (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Courtney Pierce This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 23, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0001201. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Pause at 518 West Figueroa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Elaine Watson (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 24, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2014‑0001213. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SM Trucking at 4011 Dartmouth Ln Santa Maria, CA 93455; A. Salazar Rangel Trucking Incorporated (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: This statement
was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 21, 2014. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2014‑0001178. Published: May 1, 8, 15, 22 2014.
Name Change IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF SARAH J GONZALEZ ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 1439301 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: A petition has been filed by the above named Petitioner(s) in Santa Barbara Superior court proposing a change of name(s) FROM and TO the following name(s):
FROM: SARAH JOSEPHINE GONZALEZ TO: SARAH JOSEPHINE CARPENTER‑ SANTOS THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Mar 4, 2014 9:30am, Dept 6, Courthouse, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Independent, a newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county, at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated Mar 4, 2014 by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published , Apr 24. May 1, 8, 15 2014.
Tide Guide Day
High
Low
High
Low
Sunrise 6:04 Sunset 7:46
High
Thu 1
6:06 am/ -0.59 12:39 pm/ 3.60
5:24 pm/ 1.98 11:33 pm/ 5.32
Fri 2
6:52 am/ -0.35 1:36 pm/ 3.41
6:03 pm/ 2.31
Sat 3
12:11 am/ 4.95 7:41 am/ -0.05 2:42 pm/ 3.30
6:52 pm/ 2.59
Sun 4
12:53 am/ 4.54 8:35 am/ 0.23
3:58 pm/ 3.31
8:01 pm/ 2.79
Mon 5
1:47 am/ 4.14
5:07 pm/ 3.46
9:40 pm/ 2.81
Tue 6
2:58 am/ 3.79 10:34 am/ 0.63 5:57 pm/ 3.68
11:14 pm/ 2.56
Wed 7
4:21 am/ 3.58 11:27 am/ 0.74 6:32 pm/ 3.95
Thu 8
9:35 am/ 0.47
12:21 am/ 2.14 5:39 am/ 3.52
30 D
7H
12:12 pm/ 0.82 7:00 pm/ 4.25
15
22
(Continued)
Sciences. Coordinates communications, serves as College and Divisional contact point for the campus, the local community, and donors. Maintains multiple, complex appointment calendars and arranges conferences and meetings. Arranges travel/ entertainment and processes approvals and travel vouchers. Researches policies, procedures, and historical data. Prepares reports, compiles information, drafts correspondence, and updates databases and spreadsheets accordingly. Reqs: Excellent communication, interpersonal, and analytical skills. Ability to set priorities and work with multiple demands. Ability to interact effectively with a wide variety of people with diplomacy and tact. Strong organizational skills. Computer fluency in word processing, spreadsheets, and databases. Notes: Fingerprinting required. $18.91 ‑ $20.00/hr. This is an Internal to External recruitment giving primary consideration to current UC employees who apply by 5/6/14. External applications may be considered if an internal candidate is not selected. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20140175
CONTRACTS & GRANTS ANALYST
GEVIRTZ GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION As part of a team responsible for managing a dynamic portfolio of successful contract and grant proposals. Advises researchers and support staff on contract and grant compliance issues. Assists faculty in the identification of relevant grant program announcements. Provides grant proposal preparation and extramural funding administration. Reqs: Excellent organization skills with ability to pay strict attention to detail.
Ability to prioritize workload within deadlines. Excellent communication skills. Demonstrated proficiency in Microsoft Excel. Note: Fingerprinting required. $18.91 ‑ $20.80/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. For primary consideration apply by 5/12/14 thereafter; open until filled.Apply online at https://Jobs.ucsb. edu Job #20140181
EARLY CARE AND EDUCATION (ECE) – INFANT/TODDLER/ PRESCHOOL/FLO ATER / TEACHER CHILDCARE CENTER
Works cooperatively in a team setting to plan and implement a quality program in accredited center. Reqs: Possess Child Development Permit ‑ Teacher Level, or be in process. 12 units ECE plus 3 units infant/toddler req. Exp. with infants and toddlers in a group setting. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Acceptable Statement of Health to include negative TB test results upon hire. Current pediatric CPR & First Aid or within one month of hire. Multiple positions available. These are limited appointment positions working up to 1000 hours with the possibility of converting to career positions. $17.06 ‑ $17.81/hr. +full benefits. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. Open until filled. Apply online at https://Jobs.ucsb. edu Job #20140058
Hair Stylist Station
Uptown Salon has opening for one full‑ time stylist with clientele $625.00/mo. Call John @ 805‑684‑4442
ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS ADVISOR
ASSOCIATED STUDENTS Expert advisor to 4‑6 Associated Students (A.S.) boards and committees in the environmental aspects of their projects. Boards include Coastal Fund, Environmental Affairs Board, and Bike Committee and any other board or committee dealing with an event or issue concerning the environment. Facilitates student development, and serves as an informational source on University and A.S. policies and procedures. Provides a vital link between students and community organizations and governmental agencies concerning current environmental issues. Ensures networking between the environmental groups on campus to encourage collaboration, student development, project design and training initiatives, and to avoid duplication of efforts. Reqs: Master’s degree in Environmental Science, Education or related scientific field or equivalent combination of years of experience. Requires excellent mentoring and communication skills both verbal and written. Experienced professional with background in research and ability to develop educational projects and train students. Knowledge of student development theories and practice. Strong understanding of philanthropic giving practices, conflict of interest and ethical distribution of funds. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Mandated reporting requirements of child abuse. Must work occasional evenings and weekends. $3,980 ‑ $4,500/mo. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. For primary consideration apply by 5/6/14, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20140173
MARKETING MANAGER
OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY AND INDUSTRY ALLIANCES (TIA) Implements all aspects of TIA’s marketing program, including marketing of technology developed at UCSB, designing and maintaining TIA marketing materials, website development/maintenance. Serves as the liaison to the other UC campuses on marketing related topics. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree or combination of education and experience. Strong writing, analytical, and communication skills. 1‑3 years of experience in a marketing or business development role. Experience maintaining a website. Demonstrated attention to detail. Note: Fingerprinting required. $47,760 ‑ $60,000/yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. For primary consideration apply by 5/12/14, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://Jobs.ucsb. edu Job #20140176
Skilled
LOCKSMITH
HOUSING & RESIDENTIAL SERVICES Performs journey level locksmithing tasks for approximately 8,000‑10,000 Residents and related repairs/installations for 8 residence halls, 4 dining commons, 1327 apartments, administrative offices and various owned other University properties. Reqs: Eight years of
experience working at a journeyman level as a locksmith in commercial and residential environments. Experience with Best Inter‑changeable core system and Schlage institutional lock hardware and cylinders. Experience installing and servicing door hardware including exit devices (Von Duprin) and door closers (LCN). Experience with electronic key control systems (Morse Watchman KeyWatcher). Ability to work in an ethnically diverse and culturally pluralistic team environment. Understanding of safety practices and Environmental Health and Safety policies and procedures. Notes: Maintain a valid CA driver’s license, a clean DMV record and enrollment in the DMV Employee Pull‑Notice Program. Fingerprinting required. Hours and days may vary to meet the operational needs of the department. Weekend pager duty and occasional overtime required. Multiple positions available. These are limited positions working up to 1000 hours. $29.31/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20140174
Social Services PathPoint, a leader in support services that empower people with disabilities and disadvantages to be valued members of our communities, has the following professional opportunities available: Direct Support Professional for Residential Programs: Provide direct support in a range of independent living and self‑help skills including, but not limited to, household cleanliness, emergency preparedness, shopping, hygiene, social skills, paying bills, laundry, and cooking. Participate in meetings discussing progress, implementation of new objectives, and needed supports. Help individuals schedule medical appointments and maintain medical records.
may 1, 2014
Direct Support Professional for Community Access Program: Teach living skills to adults with disabilities, some who are non‑ambulatory or non‑ verbal. Implement program curriculum to assist individuals with sensory‑motor and perceptual functioning, communication, cognition, and social and emotional development. Plan/accompany individuals on community outreach activities. Assist individuals in the areas of personal hygiene and other activities of daily living, including feeding, lifting, transferring, toileting and range of motion. Assist individuals with medications. Ensure the facility meets Community Care Licensing regulations. Job Coach for Employment Services: Provide individualized training to help individuals improve work skills and positive work behaviors. Monitor individual’s progress and productivity on the job. Write progress reports and staffing narratives. Maintain good relations with community employers, and act as liaison between employer and individual served. High School diploma or GED required. Experience working with people with disabilities preferred. Strong oral and written communication skills are required. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform essential functions. Must be able to successfully complete required training. Must have a valid CA Driver’s License and clean DMV. May require use of own vehicle during work hours. Must receive criminal clearance from DOJ. Pay Range: $11.13‑$11.87/hour PathPoint offers full‑time employees a generous benefit package, including health, vision and dental insurance, paid time off and participation in a retirement savings plan. All employees receive paid training. Respond to this ad by sending your resume and cover letter to pathpointjobs@gmail.com www.pathpoint.org (IF)
THE INDEPENDENt
65
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Well• being Are you Blue? Sick? In Pain? Troubled?
Let Us Pray For You
Healing Prayer
Christ The King
284-4042
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
e m a i l a d s @ i n d e p e n d e n t. c o m
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Classes/Workshops
Holistic Health
Learn To Dance!
A DETOX COLONIC
Survival Ballroom Classes for May, now forming. Jonathan Bixby 698‑0832
Hotline
Healing Groups
Toll Free
AA 24 hrs 7 days/wk
855-964-9111
Alcoholics Anonymous Call 962‑3332
Now Open
(805) 322-8850
500 N Milpas St. Santa Barbara, CA 93103 (corner of Haley)
7 days 9am-10pm
$10 off first visit on a 1hr massage!
crosswordpuzzle
Ne w A s i a n M a s s a g e
1500 “A” C H A PA L A S T S A N TA B A R B A R A Open 7 Days 9am-10pm
(805) 899-7791
Swedish/Deep Tissue/Shiatsu
Ocean Health Center
www.ZenMassagePlace.com
tt By Ma
Jing Wu Spa
Jones
“Letter Chop” – one splits into two.
1/2hr $40 1 hr $60
detoxcolontherapy.com Gentle therapy‑ 24 yrs exp, Liver/ Candida Detox, Body Ecology Diet. Prof Office. 886‑3542
Healing Touch
23 yrs exp. massage, cranial sacral and aroma therapy. Cheryl 681‑9865 Herbal colon cleanse, liver detox, kidney bladder/flush, natural heavy metal detox, weight loss, lower blood pressure, reduce pain. Naturopath, Nutritionist, Herbalist, Khabir Southwick, 805‑308‑3480, www.NaturalHealingSB.com
Massage (LICENSED)
A RELAXING Journey
Experience Massage Artistry‑unwind, discover peace & renewal. Sports/ Swedish/Deep Tissue/Shiatsu/ Lymph In/ Out Spray Tan Gift certs. Celia Schmidt LMT 962‑1807 www.celiaofsb.com Enjoy the best massage in town. 12yrs experience. Organic oil and hot stones ease your pains and stress away. Energetic clearing and healing available also, call for pricing ‑ Scott. 805‑455‑4791
$10 OFF WITH THIS AD
MARKETPLACE
Expert in Deep Tissue, 20 yrs exp. Work w/chronic pain, stress & injuries. 1st time Client $50/hr. Gift Cert available, Outcall. Laurie Proia, LMT 886‑8792 FOOT REFLEXOLOGY For the unsung heroes of your body. $40/ hour or 5 for $175 prepaid. Gift Certs avail. Call Janette @ 805‑966‑5104
Natural Health‑care
Amazing Massage
325 Rutherford St., Suite C, Goleta , CA (805) 964-8186
DEEP TISSUE QUEEN
Heavenly Nurturing
16yrs exp.Ki Soaring‑Eagle Free Extra In/ Out.truetoyou.abmp.com 698‑5861
LMT Leo Barocio
7 yrs exp, deep tissue, trigger point, swedish, sports, myofascial, cranial, etc 805‑636‑8929. sbmassagecenter.com. New Life Day Spa 5631 Calle Real, Goleta (805) 681‑0460 9AM to 10PM
The 3HOUR MASSAGE
1, 1.5, 2 & 3Hr appts, M‑F. Intro/sliding rates. Shiatzu, Deeptissue, Swedish, Sports, Integrative bodywork. Ken Yamamoto, 30+yrs exp.: 682‑3456
Wellness
HealingsFromHeaven
(an energetic co‑operative ) is now avaliable for apt., after 4 years of preparation and alignment. For more imformation 805‑451‑3210
Cold Noses Warm Hearts
nonprofit dog rescue is looking for weekend fosters! If you love dogs, but don't have time for a commitment, this is for you! We will provide everything and the dog and you can provide the one-on-one time that rescues need to transition from shelter life! Please contact 964-2446 or email coldnosesrescue@gmail.com
Rainbow Bridge Ranch
PALM GROWERS • Carpinteria Over 20 varieties of Coastal Climatized Grown Palm Trees, Tropicals & Bananas. Plant Locating • Wholesale to the Public
805 684 7976 • WE DELIVER
Across
1 “Tommy” group, with “The” 4 Flight segment 9 Midwinter malady 12 They “don’t lie,” so says Shakira 14 Explorer ___ de Leon 15 Horse holder 16 Sphere of expertise 17 Quests 19 Patches up 21 Treat a rapper with contempt 22 “Let sleeping dogs lie,” e.g. 23 Hannah of “Splash” 25 “The Divine Miss M” 26 Georgia’s state tree 29 Unpleasant, as a situation 30 “Skinny Love” band Bon ___ 31 Flip side? 33 Laceration, later 37 Cause bodily injury 38 Evansville’s st. 39 “___ Eightball” (Emily Flake comic) 40 Baby-dressing photographer Geddes 41 River frolicker 43 Metal in supplements 44 Part of MIT 46 Musses 48 Toddler 51 “Get ___” (Aerosmith album) 52 “Delta of Venus” author Nin 53 180 degrees from SSW 54 Reproduction 58 Torte cousins 61 Amble aimlessly 66
THE INDEPENDENT
62 Altoids containers 63 Like models’ hair in shampoo ads 64 In a huff 65 T or F, on some exams 66 Lock of hair 67 Gates portal 1 2 3 4 5
Down
Crash sound Put on the payroll Not settled Me-time place, perhaps Country star known for hot alcoholic drinks? 6 Blacksmith’s block 7 Chills the bubbly 8 Stimpy’s smarter pal 9 Wild 10 Feudal figure 11 Al of Indy fame 13 Measurement system of what’s more pathetic? 15 Dorothy’s footwear, but in a less glamorous shade? 18 Waggin’ part 20 ___ Paulo 24 Cheerleader’s syllable 25 Booker T.’s backup band 26 Peru’s capital 27 Novelist Turgenev 28 Silver streak 29 Farmers who just won’t shut up about milking techniques? 32 Kitchen crawler, if you’re a slob 34 Barbell rep 35 Shaving cream additive May 1, 2014
36 Box score data 41 Big mo. for candy companies 42 1920 play that takes place in a factory 45 Palliate 47 Combine ingredients 48 Word in many reggae song lyrics 49 Remove, as a boutonniere 50 Improvements 51 Sprain site, perhaps 53 Depilatory maker 55 Hospital unit 56 Accessories for a dory 57 Wolverine’s pack 59 Hrs. on the Mississippi 60 Part of iOS
©2014 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-6556548. Reference puzzle #0664
Meet Larry
Meet Phantom
Larry is a funny guy that loves to play Phantom is a sweet miniature poodle with toys and people. He is neutered, that just had a litter of puppies. She is up to date on shots, and microchipped. getting spayed, is up to date on shots, and is microchipped.
Cold Noses Warm Hearts (805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117
These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home
LAST WEEK’S SOLUTION:
Meet Little
Little is a sweet girl that looks like a pipe-cleaner! She is spayed, up to date on shots, and microchipped.
Meet Pachita
Pachita is the most lovable little girl in the world! She is spayed, up to date on shots, and microchipped.
Cold Noses Warm Hearts (805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117
These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home
Announcements
Pets/Animals
PUBLIC NOTICE ANNOUNCEMENT â KQSC(FM)
AKC Shetland Sheepdog male puppy. Fully socialized with other dogs and kids. First shots and wormer. Available now. $1,500.00. 805‑797‑ 4075
On April 8, 2014, an application was filed with the Federal Communications Commission seeking consent to the assignment of KQSC(FM), Santa Barbara, CA, which operates at 88.7 MHz, from the University of Southern California (âUSCâ) to Santa Monica Community College District (âSMCCâ). USC is a not‑for‑profit educational institution. The officers of USC are Chrysostomos L. Nikias, John Mork, Elizabeth Garrett, Albert R. Checcio, Robert Abeles, Todd R. Dickey, Thomas S. Sayles, and Carol Mauch Amir. SMCC is a not‑for‑profit educational institution. The trustees of SMCC are Susan Aminoff, Rob Rader, Nancy Greenstien, Louise Jaffe, Margaret Quinones‑Perez, Andrew Walzer, Chui Tsang, Randal Lawson, and Barry Snell. A copy of the application is on file for public inspection at the KUSC Studios ‑‑ 1149 South Hill Street, Suite H‑100, Los Angeles ‑‑ during normal business hours.
Keep your pet Happy, Healthy, and Protected. Call 800‑675‑7476 Now and get a free Pet Insurance Quote for your Dog or Cat. Choose Up to 90% Reimbursement. Get Special Multiple Pet Discounts. (Cal‑SCAN)
Your BEST FRIEND IS WAITING at K‑9 PALS
View our adoptable dogs at www.k‑ 9pals.org ‑ visit SB Co. Animal Shelter, 5473 Overpass: M‑F 9‑4:30 S 10‑3:30.
Treasure Hunt ($100 or LESS) “NEW” DELUXE DODGER CAP (one size fist all) Orig. $40, now $25. Call Fred 957‑4636. BRAND NEW Transistor Radio. New $18. Sell for $10. Call 805‑957‑4636.
Misc. For Sale
Erectile dysfunction kit. Brend new. New Technology. $300 New, sacrafice for $50. Call 805‑967‑4636
Beautiful Catholic Cemetery Plot in LA. Double vertical plot. $10K. In Southern CA. 805‑636‑9069
PLAYING CARDS ‑ Original Elvis Presley set from New Orleans. Orig. $30, sell for $10. 957‑4636
KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program/ Kit. Effective results begin after spray dries. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com (AAN CAN)
Pocket Etch‑A‑SKETCH. $10. Call Fred, 805‑957‑4636
SAWMILLS from only $4897.00‑ MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill‑ Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1‑800‑ 578‑1363 Ext.300N (Cal‑SCAN)
Want To Buy
USED FISH TANK. Normally $100, selling for $10. Call Fred 957‑4636
CA$H FOR DIABETIC TEST STRIPS!! Don’t throw boxes away‑Help others. Unopened / Unexpired boxes only. All Brands Considered! Call Anytime! 24hrs/7days (888) 491‑1168. (Cal‑ SCAN)
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4693 Gate Way Dramatic & Spacious Townhome Spacious 4 bedroom, 4.5 bathroom townhome tucked away on a quiet cul-de-sac in the desirable Forte Ranch community. Dramatic 16ft ceilings in entry, open living/dining room, family/media room with wet bar, spacious kitchen with island, maple cabinets, huge master suite with two walk-in closets, 2 fireplaces, double garage and secluded back patio. Association provides pool, spa and play area.
Price: $998,700 Stan Tabler 805.563.7261 Stan@StanTabler.com www.StanTabler.com CalBRE 00774377 since 1980
Real Estate
Service Directory
open houses
Domestic Services
Goleta 4693 Gate Way 4BD/4.5BA, $978,700, Saturday 2‑5 Stan Tabler 805.563.7261& Sunday 2‑5 Tenaya Tabler 805.452.9764. Coldwell Banker
Hope Ranch 4030 Mariposa Drive 4+ GH, Sun 2‑ 4, $3,988,000. Morel 252‑4752. Coldwell Banker
Montecito 1135 Summit Road 4BD/5BA, Sun 1‑ 4, $4,250,000. Allison White 705‑ 7332. Coldwell Banker 2480 Bella Vista Drive, Land, Sun 1‑ 3, $6,250,000. Roy A. Prinz 680‑2187. Coldwell Banker 811 Alston Road 3BD/2BA, Sat 1‑3, $1,595,000, Annie Sancedo 689‑1091. Coldwell Banker
Santa Barbara 1225 Miracanon 4BD/2.5BA, Sunday 2‑4, $1,750,000, Barbara Reaume (805) 610‑5403. Coldwell Banker
SPRing MOVE‑IN SPECIALS: 1BD Near Cottage Hospital. 519 W Alamar. Set among beautiful oak trees across the strert from Oak Park. NP. $1050. Call Cristina 687‑0915 Spring MOVE‑IN SPECIALS:1BD near SBCC & beach @Carla Apts NP. 530 W Cota $1050 Rosa 965‑3200
Rooms For Rent
Live Well in the Good Land
Clean, quiet, healthy Goleta home has a large room for rent. Good neighborhood, cozy yards and beautiful gardens. Reasonable rent. Safe environment. 805‑685‑0611
Shared Housing ALL AREAS ‑ ROOMMATES.COM. Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http:// www.Roommates.com. (AAN CAN)
music alley
24 W. Calle Crespis 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 2‑ 4, $715,000, Vanessa Neale 679‑1929. Coldwell Banker
Music Lessons
2437 Calle Galicia 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1‑ 4, $1,275,000. Ryan Strehlow 705‑ 8877. Coldwell Banker
WONDERFUL TEACHER
28 W. Calle Crespis 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 2‑ 4, $935,000. Vanessa Neale 679‑ 1929. Coldwell Banker 3415 Campanil Drive 5BD/4BA, Sat & Sun 1‑4, $2,495,000, Nancy Hussey 452‑3052. Coldwell Banker 501 Brinkerhoff Avenue, Santa Barbara, C2 zoned 2/1, Open Sunday 1‑ 4, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Anthony Bordin 805‑729‑0527
rentals RENTAL PROPERTIES Apartments & Condos For Rent Spring MOVE‑IN $1050 1BD Corner of Hope & San Remo‑N State St‑ Barbara Apts Quiet NP 687‑0610
Enjoy Piano, Voice or Harp Lessons. Exciting new approach to a full musical experience. Read, memorize, compose or improvise any music w/ ease. Vocal audition prep. $52/hr. 1st lesson 50% off!! Christine Holvick, BM, MM, 30 yrs exp sbHarpist.com Call 969‑6698
CLEANING SERVICE
15+ yrs exp. Res/sm business. Refs avail. English speaking cple. 448‑5790
SILVIA’S CLEANING
If you want to see your house really clean call 682‑6141;385‑9526 SBs Best
Educational Services ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TRAINEES NEEDED! Get Microsoft Certified now! No Experience Needed! SC Train gets you trained and ready to work! HS Diploma/GED & PC needed! 1‑888‑325‑5168. (Cal‑SCAN)
Medical Services
Technical Services
Guaranteed Income For Your Retirement! Avoid market risk & get guaranteed income in retirement! CALL for FREE copy of our SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus Annuity Quotes from A‑Rated Companies! 800‑748‑ 3013. (Cal‑SCAN)
Safe Step Walk‑In Tub Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step‑ In. Wide Door. Anti‑Slip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 800‑799‑4811 for $750 Off. (Cal‑ SCAN)
COMPUTER MEDIC
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AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800‑725‑1563 (AAN CAN)
Home Services
EARN $500 A DAY as Airbrush Media Makeup Artist For Ads, TV, Film, Fashion. One Week Course Train & Build Portfolio. 15% OFF TUITION AwardMakeupSchool.com 818‑980‑ 2119 (AAN CAN)
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The path to your dream job begins with a college degree. Education Quarters offers a free college matching service. Call 1‑800‑348‑8192. (Cal‑ SCAN)
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$55/hr. Panel Upgrades.Rewiring,Small/ Big Jobs! Lic707833 ‑ 805‑698‑8357
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Personal Services
55 Yrs or Older?
Need Help At Home? Call REAL HELP because this Non‑profit matches workers to your needs. 965‑1531 PREGNANT? THINKING OF ADOPTION? Talk with caring agency specializing in matching Birthmothers with Families Nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866‑413‑6293. Void in Illinois/New Mexico/Indiana (AAN CAN)
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VIDEO TO DVD
TRANSFERS‑ Only $10! Quick before your tapes fade! Transfer VHS, 8mm, Hi8 etc. Scott 969‑6500
Gardenings, Landscape & Tree Specialist Commercial & Residential
20 Yrs Experience, Free Estimates No job too big or small Save $! • FREE Mulch
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Now Playing
HARPIST VIRTUOSO
FOR ALL EVENTS. Weddings, Concerts, Parties, Churches, Recording Studios. Classical, pop, folk, jazz...Christine Holvick, BM, MM www.sbHarpist.com 969‑6698 MIND COCOON Looking to jam or join a band? Mind Cocoon is looking for musicians to rock out with this guitar & ukulele duo. Contact us if interested. Ryne & Gabby mindcocoon.tumblr.com mindcocoonmusic@gmail.com
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Foreign Cars
Spring MOVE‑IN Specials. 2BDs $1470+ & 3BD flat or townhouses $2190. Near UCSB, shops, park, beach, theater, golf. Sesame Tree Apts 6930 Whittier Dr. Hector or Ricky 968‑2549
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AUTO
Coastal Hideaways (805) 969-1995 Luxury Vacation Rentals Short or Long Term Serving the Santa Barbara community for 18 years
Melissa M. Pierson, Owner vacations@coastalhideaways.com WWW.COASTALHIDEAWAYS .COM 1211 COAST VILLAGE R D., SUITE 4 MONTECITO may 1, 2014
THE INDEPENDENt
67
FEATURED PROPERTY 2567 BANNER AVENUE
FEATURED PROPERTY 275 KING DANIEL LANE
National Reach, Local Experts, Outstanding Results Professional, knowledgeable and exceptional service has made Goodwin & Thyne Properties the best choice for all your real estate needs. • Successful team of Attorneys, Brokers & Realtors® • Award Winning Industry Expertise • Visionary 1.5% Commission structure KEVIN GOODWIN
JOHN J. THYNE III
Don’t settle for less, call us today! (805) 899-1100 1132 NIRVANA ROAD
1075 CHELTENHAM ROAD
15 W. PADRE STREET
NEW PRICE SUMMERLAND Panoramic views.
SANTA BARBARA This 4,318 sq.
4BD/3BA house w/ lower level 1BD guest unit w/ separate entrance, laundry & parking. Open interior, custom features & vaulted ceilings. Steps from Summerland village & the beach.
foot, 5BD/4TH home in the desirable Crown Collection has custom upgrades, an in-law suite, walk in closets, high ceilings, crown molding, 2 fireplaces, gourmet kitchen and more!
$1,695,000 www.GTprop.com/2567BannerAvenue
$1,474,900 www.GTprop.com/275KingDaniel
1119 ALSTON ROAD
367 CHELSEA LANE
PRICE FOR FINISHED HOME MONTECITO Luxurious 5BD/6BA home ready to be built. Views of the ocean & islands. (PRICE WHEN COMPLETE)
CAMBRIA Duplex on cul-de-sac in
$4,800,000 GTprop.com/1119Alston
$1,350,000 GTprop.com/367ChelseaLane
211 BOESEKE PARKWAY
1532 CASTILLO STREET
Leimert Estates neighborhood. Ocean views & 2 car garage. Both units 2BD/2BA.
PENDING
3 UNITS!
SANTA BARBARA New 4,000/sq.ft 3BD/2.5BA, home. Ocean views, energy efficient, patio w/ fireplace & BBQ & more!
SANTA BARBARA Outstanding 2
$2,095,000 GTprop.com/1132Nirvana
$1,950,000 GTprop.com/1075Cheltenham
MONTECITO Located in prestigious “Ennisbrook”, this 1.55 acre parcel is located across from a private 2-acre grass park
SANTA BARBARA Multi-family
story duplex in the heart of downtown SB w/ 3 car garage. Peabody School.
$1,675,000 GTprop.com/15WPadre
$1,550,000 GTprop.com/211Boeseke
$1,395,000 GTprop.com/1532Castillo
2674 DORKING PLACE
401 ORILLA DEL MAR
119 S. VOLUNTARIO STREET
501 ARUNDEL ROAD
501 BRINKERHOFF AVENUE
SANTA BARBARA Panoramic-view home on cul de sac, minutes from downtown. Elegance & privacy. Must see!
house w/3 units! 4BD/2BA main house & newer duplex with 1bd/1ba units.
OPEN SUN 1-4pm
PENDING
NEW PRICE SANTA BARBARA 4BD/2BA home w/
SANTA BARBARA Newly renovat-
SANTA BARBARA Excellent invest-
pool. Modern feel w/ Jacuzzi style tub, natural light, open floor plan & more!
ed duplex w/ 1BD/1BA units. 2 blocks to beach, nice yard, 2 car garage.
ment opportunity. Updated duplex with 2 homes (2BD/1BA + 2BD/1.5BA)
$1,195,000 GTprop.com/2674DorkingPlace
$1,075,000 GTprop.com/401OrillaDelMar
$975,000 GTprop.com/119SVoluntario
1008 W. MICHELTORENA ST.
941 VIA NIETO
3037 CHANNEL DRIVE
NEW LISTING GOLETA 4BD/2BA w/ additional den/ office/bedroom. 1,990 sq. ft. living space on .21 acre lot. Kellogg School District.
SANTA BARBARA C2 zoned mixed
$869,000 GTprop.com/501ArundelRoad
$765,000 GTprop.com/501Brinkerhoff
231 COTTAGE GROVE AVE.
6985 CAT CANYON ROAD
VENTURA This is a “must-see” home on an oversized corner lot, halfway between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.
SANTA BARBARA 3BD/2BA Com-
SANTA MARIA 76 acre parcel with
$599,000 GTprop.com
$549,000 GTprop.com/231CottageGrove
use property on a corner lot. Excellent investment for an owner & business.
NEW LISTING SANTA BARBARA Charming
SANTA BARBARA 2BD/2BA end
3BD/2BA w/ backyard, updated kitchen, formal dining room & more!
unit nestled in sought after Parkcrest development. Low monthly dues.
$745,900 GTprop.com/1008WMicheltorena
$725,000 GTprop.com/941ViaNieto
452 LINFIELD PLACE #K
7630 HOLLISTER AVE. #120
NEW LISTING GOLETA 1BD/1BA Condo. Gorgeous custom remodel. Move in ready. Bright and airy. $369,000 GTprop.com/452LinfieldPlace
BRE# 01477382
GOLETA 1BD/1BA, single level home in complex w/ pool, sauna, gym & more. Near shopping, etc.
Be a “Smart Seller” - get better service and save thousands.
mercial/Residential. Front yard, side patio, detached garage. Priced to sell.
1.5%
potential for home sites, horses and farming. Easy access to and from Cat Canyon
$535,000 GTprop.com/6985CatCanyon
Goodwin & Thyne Properties only charges 1.5% for full, unparalleled service, second to none. Our Sellers work with full-time brokers, Realtors® and attorneys while saving you thousands of dollars.
$359,000 GTprop.com/7630Hollister120
www.GTprop.com 2000 State Street, Santa Barbara 805.899.1100