sept. 3-10, 2015 VOL. 29 ■ NO. 503
PP3
why Pro Athletes (Like NBA StAr festus ezeli)
Also inside:
the Power of
trAiN with MArcus elliott iN the FuNk ZoNe trA
By John zAnt
fridAy night lights:
Presidio sPorts Previews
high school footbAll
VAcAtion froM hell: Mesa Resident stuck in BulgaRian liMBo
•
uPscAle wine: Vincent VineyaRds FulFills PRoMise
•
burning MAn: PyRoPhylactics head to Black Rock deseRt
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“We should revisit the whole Reservation system. It’s inadvisable to have sovereign inholdings in the middle of our nation.”
–Peter Adam, Fourth District Supervisor Santa Barbara County, 2015
Chumash Sovereignty “More than 200 years of federal law, and the Constitution, have upheld the inherent rights of Native American tribes. To say tribal sovereignty is ‘inadvisable’ is to dismiss tribes and say the framers of the Constitution got it wrong. Tribal sovereignty is not just a legal fact; it is the life-blood of Native American nations.”
©2015 Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians
–Mike Lopez Business Committee Member Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians
Stand up to anti-tribal rhetoric and help us build a united community. Visit www.FriendsOfChumash.com to learn more. independent.com
september 3, 2015
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Santa Barbara Museum of Art
AFTER-SCHOOL CLASSES CONTEMPORARY ART: PAINT, SCULPT, CONSTRUCT Ages 6–12 • Tuesdays, September 15 – December 15 • 3:30 – 5:30 pm
FALL AFTER-SCHOOL CERAMICS I Ages 7–12 • Wednesdays, September 16 – December 16 • 3:30 – 5:30 pm
FALL AFTER-SCHOOL CERAMICS II Ages 7–12 • Thursdays, September 17 – December 17 • 3:30 – 5:30 pm
$300 SBMA Members, $350 Non-Members
Location: Ridley-Tree Education Center at McCormick House
Register online at www.sbma.net/kidsfamilies or contact Rachael Krieps at 884.6441 or rkrieps@sbma.net
A Santa Barbara charity for more than 20 years.
JOIN US FOR AN OPEN HOUSE! Thursday, September 24th, 5:30–7:30pm Vitamin Angels Headquarters 111 West Micheltorena Street, Suite 300 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 Learn more about Vitamin Angels, a homegrown, Santa Barbara non-profit organization. Complimentary drinks and appetizers will be served. Interested in attending? Confirm your attendance by e-mailing: events@vitaminangels.org
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2015 - 2016 Season Opening Night Celebration! Arrive early! The party starts at 7 PM in front of The Granada Theatre with music from the SBCC Trombone Choir and New World Jazz Combo, plus NOLA-inspired drink specials next door at The Good Lion.
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue FRI, SEP 18 / 8 PM / GRANADA THEATRE $45 / $35 / $10 all students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price
“New Orleans’ brightest new star in a generation.” NPR New Orleans native Trombone Shorty and his band Orleans Avenue are an “unstoppable force” (The New York Times) in today’s music scene with a hard-edged funk, jazz, rock and hip-hop dynamic that delivers big on rock-star swagger with the musical chops to back it up.
Media Sponsors:
An Historic Collaboration Santa Barbara Debut
Ry Cooder Sharon White Ricky Skaggs
TUE, SEP 29 / 8 PM / GRANADA THEATRE
Event Sponsors: Fredric E. Steck Marilyn & Dick Mazess Media Sponsors:
$75 / $55 / $40 / $25 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price
In a most exceptional pairing, master multiinstrumentalists Ry Cooder and Ricky Skaggs will come together on stage to deliver a revelatory program of blues, gospel and bluegrass. They are joined by Skaggs’ wife Sharon White (The Whites), one of the purest voices in country music, Joachim Cooder on drums and Mark Fain on bass.
Media Sponsor: (805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu
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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
Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 This Modern World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
the week.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 living.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Living Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
one love, mon
courtesy
volume 29, number 503, Sept. 3-10, 2015 paul wellman
Contents
A trip to Jamaica usually involves swim adventures, but for the members of the U.S.A. Youth National Team, it was serious business in deep water during the hot contest for Pan Am Youth Water Polo Championship gold. Indy copy kid Miles Cole — who couldn’t resist texting his friends at San Marcos High a photo of his Monday at a Jamaican beach — and Team U.S.A. swim undefeated as of press time, as does the women’s team, with Santa Barbara’s Abbi Hill and Jewel Roemer representing. Powerhouse competition lies ahead, and the final showdowns take place as we hit the stands.
Food & Drink . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
OVer c STOrY r rY
a&e. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
online now at
independent.com
The Power of P3
cara robbins
Arts Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Art . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Why Pro Athletes (like NBA Star Festus Ezeli) Train in the Funk Zone. (John Zant )
ON THE COVER: NBA star Festus Ezeli (also above) trains with P3’s Marcus Elliott. Photos by Paul Wellman.
Dance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Pop, Rock & Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Arts & Entertainment Listings . . . . . . . . . . 48
film.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
news.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Movie Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Capitol Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
odds & ends. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
opinions.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology . . . . . . . 55
Angry Poodle Barbecue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Barney Brantingham’s On the Beat . . . . . 17
paul wellman
21|
The Restaurant Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Dining Out Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Classifieds.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
s.b. questionnaire
Culture
Chumash celebrate new exhibit at the Bacara (pictured). ...................
pedal on
independent.com/news
Andie Bridges wonders whether bicyclists should roll through stop signs. . . . . . . . . . . independent.com/bicycle
Roger Durling toasts Lady Leslie Ridley-Tree (pictured) on her birthday. . . . . . . . . . independent.com/sbq
goleta grapevine
Vic Cox details the drought’s impact on the Good Land. ...................
independent.com/goleta
SBCC Center for Lifelong Learning FALL 2015: 375+ CLASSES, 70+ NEW CLASSES
Register Now! www.theCLL.org ARTS, CRAFTS, PERFORMANCE
BODY, MIND, SPIRIT
HOME & FAMILY
• Lamp work Glass Bead Making with a Hothead Torch Starts September 11 & October 23
• Take Charge of Your Brain (CEUs) Starts October 17
• Music Times I/II, III, and IV Starts September 9 & September 14
• Southern African Sangoma Healing and Primal Truth (CEUs) Starts November 14
• Gluten-Free Baking - Successful Recipes and Techniques Starts September 24
EVENTS, LANGUAGE, PHOTO
NATURE, SCIENCE, RECREATION
• Spanish I (CEUs) Starts September 17 & September 23
• Become a Savvy Traveler Starts September 15
• How to Publish & Sell Your Book Starts September 26
• Let’s Play American Mah Jongg Starts October 27
• Singing from the Heart, Basics of Singing Starts September 14 & September 25
MIND & SUPERMIND Monday, October 12
“Beyond Emotional Intelligence: The Non-Ordinary Attention of Seers” with Peter L. Nelson, Ph.D. September 8 - December 12
THANK YOU TO OUR MEDIA SPONSORS:
Evenings, Weekdays & Saturdays independent.com
september 3, 2015
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News of the Week
August 27 - september 3, 2015
pau l wellm an
by KELSEY BRU RUgg ggER ER @kelseybrugger, @kelseybrugger, K KEIT EITh h hA hAmm mm,, LÉNA gARCIA @lenamgarcia, TYLER hAYDEN @TylerHayden1, and NICK WELSh, with Independent STAff
agriculture
Bugging Out Nasty Insect Shows Up as County Slashes Top Pest, Plant Jobs
A
by M e l i N d a B u r N s
citrus pest that threatens California’s lemon and orange industry was found in Carpinteria and Goleta at three locations last month, state officials said, bringing the total number of “find sites” to 12 on the South Coast this year and 28 in Santa Barbara County since 2012. The Asian citrus psyllid, as it is known, has not yet tested positive in Santa Barbara County for the bacteria that causes huanglongbing, or HLB, the fatal disease that is devastating Florida crops, said Victoria Hornbaker, citrus program manager for the California Department of Food and Agriculture. But county residents should be on the lookout for uneven yellowing in their lemon trees, she said. The insects, which are undeterred by drought, were detected recently in state traps near Casitas Pass and Foothill roads in Carpinteria, and La Patera Lane and the end of North Patterson Avenue in Goleta. “What’s really alarming is that a couple of counties over, HLB trees are being infected and removed,” Hornbaker said. “This is a disease that will essentially annihilate an entire industry and everybody’s backyard citrus trees.” The latest detections of Asian citrus psyllid in Santa Barbara County have heightened consternation in some quarters over the pending downsizing of two specialist jobs in the Agricultural Commissioner’s office — that of Brian Cabrera, the county entomologist, or pest expert, and Heather Scheck, the plant pathologist, or disease expert. The two PhD scientists provide free identification and advice to hundreds of farmers, ranchers, arborists, landscapers, park officials, and backyard gardeners every year. In January, state officials said, Cabrera intercepted a shipment of Florida tangelos in gift boxes at the Santa Barbara Airport that tested positive for HLB. “If you don’t have any technical people in the field, how are you supposed to know what’s going on?” said Jim Downer, a University of California Cooperative Extension plant 8
tHe INDepeNDeNt
pathologist and horticulturist in Ventura, speaking as an individual. “There are only so many eyes out there. We have many kinds of pests coming at us.” During county budget hearings in June, on the heels of a Board of Supervisors resolution proclaiming June 6-14 as Invasive Pests Action Week, Commissioner Cathy Fisher proposed combining the two specialist jobs. The county’s Agricultural Advisory Committee opposed the idea, but the board majority approved it. Fisher explained that “to address a workload need and improve efficiency,” one of the specialists would serve as both an entomologist and plant pathologist, and the other would be offered a newly created position as biologist, with a cut in pay.
Asian citrus psyllid
“No one’s walking out the door,” she said. Between them, Cabrera and Scheck test hundreds of samples of pests, weeds, and plant diseases yearly. Fisher said the 14 biologists in her office would be able to do the initial screening at a lower cost with no reduction in services. Using high-tech microscopes, she said, they can forward photographs of specimens to the state as needed by email. Often, even an iPhone photo is sufficient for identification purposes, Fisher said. But Sharyne Merritt, an avocado rancher who is vice chair of the county Agricultural Advisory Committee, wrote to the board, “The County needs specialists in the Agricultural Commission Department, not recent college graduates with smart phones.” Overall, the board approved a $5 million budget for Fisher’s office for 2015-16, up $330,000 from last year. Last year, the office reported, agriculture in this county brought in
september 3, 2015
independent.com
Agricultural Commissioner Cathy M. Fisher
nearly $1.5 billion in gross revenues. Lemons were number 13 on the list of top crops; they brought in nearly $13 million. In an interview last week, Fisher said the Asian citrus psyllid trapping and testing program was run by the state and would not be affected by the restructuring. She said there was a shift underway from conventional to organic farming, and that growers were asking for more training in pest control. Growers of strawberries, the top local crop, now send their samples to California Polytechnic State University, Fisher said. “What I’m hearing from the growers is that their needs have changed,” she said. “They have their own pest identification resources and farm advisors.” But many others, such as James and Lauris Rose, the owners of Cal-Orchid, Inc. in Goleta, are dependent on the county specialists. The Roses’ export shipments are inspected for free by Scheck before they leave the country, to meet foreign certification standards. James Rose said he was “totally against” combining the specialist jobs because “they’re two separate doctrines.” “It would be slow and expensive to send leaf samples up to Sacramento,” Rose said. “It would be a real hardship for me.” Last month, Fisher kicked off a series of forums open only to farmers and growers. Based on their feedback, she said she is fashioning a new job to serve them. Paul Van Leer, an Agricultural Advisory Committee member who manages the Las Varas and Edwards ranches, a cattle, avocado, and lemon operation on the Gaviota Coast, said now that Fisher “is willing to create a brand-new position tailored to our needs, I don’t think it’s a setback, as long as she feels she can cover our bases. That’s yet to be determined.” As for the Asian citrus psyllid, Van Leer believes it’s under control for now, but he’s worried. “If it spreads, we’ll end up losing all of our orchards,” he said.“The symptoms don’t show up for years.” n
news briefs LAW & DISORDER
Julio “Candyman” Diaz was convicted in federal court this week on 79 drug-traf drug-trafficking charges. The former Santa Barbara doctor who ran a medical office on Milpas Street was found guilty of overprescribing powerful painkillers to his patients. Authorities believe as many as 20 of Diaz’s patients died from overdoses. In 2011, Department of Justice prosecutors said, he wrote prescriptions for more than 1.7 million doses of drugs like OxyContin, Vicodin, and Xanax. Diaz faces 1,360 years in prison when he’s sentenced next month. Haggen filed a complaint against Albertsons on 9/1, claiming $1 billion in damages and alleging that Albertsons had planned to “sabotage” Haggen’s rebrand of 146 stores in California, Nevada, Arizona, Washington, and Oregon. Among the allegations of Albertsons’ anticompetitive business practices are that the grocery giant strategically cut off advertising to the stores they were planning to sell in the rebrand; intentionally overstocked perishable products, which were transferred to Haggen shelves; and planned discounting and advertising for remaining Albertsons stores on a calculated timetable that would lure customers away from Haggen. Albertsons said the lawsuit’s allegations “are completely without merit.”
Judge Donna Geck ordered former congressional challenger Chris Mitchum to pay $37,757 in attorney’s fees for the defamation lawsuit he filed against Rep. Lois Capps that was thrown out of court earlier this year. In the lawsuit, Mitchum contended Capps distorted the truth of a statement he’d made in her TV ad, costing him the election and causing him emotional distress. Capps won the election by nearly four points.
COUNTY A coalition of Goleta Valley farmers have sued the Goleta Water District, charging the district violated state law by adopting new drought-inspired water rates without providing the required documentation showing the new rates correspond to the actual costs of delivering water. Under a recent court interpretation of a 20-year-old state law, water districts can no longer charge higher rates simply to encourage customers to conserve more. Once the new rates go into effect, the lawsuit contends, ag users in the Goleta Valley will see their rates go up fourfold over what they were just a few months ago. Celebrating the Chumash ancestral presence upon the Gaviota Coast, tribal affiliates, hotel staffers, and members of the community at large gathered to commemorate the opening of a permanent Chumash cultural exhibit and nature walk at the Bacara Resort and Spa. Featuring a mix of modern jewelry, traditional relics, and native plant displays, the new exhibitions
fiNd us ONliNe aT independent.com, faceBOOk, aNd TWiTTer
serve to educate visitors on historical and contemporary Chumash life. Goleta Councilmember Jim Farr, absent from city affairs since early August, explained this week he suffered a stroke on 8/8 that left his left side partially paralyzed. His cognitive abilities were unaffected, he explained, and he’s recovering at the Cottage Rehabilitation Institute. “I want to thank the people of Goleta and City government for their patience regarding my absence,” he said. “I am looking forward to returning to my City Council duties very soon to continue to serve the people of Goleta.”
ISLA VISTA The Board of Supervisors took steps to amend the county code to prohibit oversized vehicles from parking in Isla Vista 10 p.m.-6 a.m. A string of long-term residents who live on the west end of I.V. took to the podium Tuesday to tell the board RVs are a nuisance to the community, limit already saturated parking, and dump waste into the sewers. One person cautioned that an ordinance could harm the homeless population. Supervisor Doreen Farr, who represents I.V., noted the recently opened Pescadero Lofts provide housing to the homeless and that her office is working with churches on safe parking possibilities. cont’d page 10
Blasting the Blast Zone
Joining more than 40 government entities north and south, the Santa Barbara County Supervisors voted to oppose the Phillips 66 application to allow trains to transport crude oil up and down the state to a refinery in San Luis Obispo County. The project’s future is still up in the air, but the matter could go before the S.L.O. Planning Commission as early as late fall. To date, the department has received more than 20,000 public comments on the matter. Where proponents argue oil and other unknown chemicals already travel by rail, opponents contend the crude in question is more flammable and explosive and would be unnecessarily risky. Plus, opponents point out the trains would carry out-of-area oil, which could potentially displace locally produced oil now being treated in Nipomo. Specifically, the project would enable Phillips to unload up to five trains — each 1.4 miles long, carrying about 50,000 barrels of crude oil — per week, or an estimated 250 trains per year, at a Nipomo refinery. Each train would take an estimated 10-12 hours to unload. Trains could enter the state from Oregon, Nevada, or Arizona and would travel up from Los Angeles. Supervisor Salud Carbajal ran through the list of places in the area that fall into the so-called “blast zone” — communities within one mile of the train — such as Goleta, Santa Barbara, and Montecito, among others. There was a record high of 141 oil train “spill release incidents” in 2014, he added. Carbajal and Farr brought the item to the board after each previously drafted their own letter. Supervisors Peter Adam and Steve Lavagnino dissented. “I don’t understand that people aren’t concerned [about] gasoline trucks,” Lavagnino said. “I’m not really sure how else to get the oil where it needs to be … as long as we continue to use it.” — Kelsey Brugger
Holiday from Hell Santa Barbara Resident Locked Up Abroad
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by T y l e r H ay d e N arlier this summer, Len Homeniuk’s family vacation in southeast Europe ended abruptly with his arrest and a nightmarish fight to keep him out of the courts of Kyrgyzstan. Homeniuk, a Mesa resident and wellknown Santa Barbara figure, was on a Danube River cruise with his wife and their 15-year-old son when he was detained at the Bulgarian border. Kyrgyz authorities had issued an Interpol Red Notice for Homeniuk for his alleged “involvement in corruption” during a 2004 deal between Kyrgyzstan and a Canadian mining company Homeniuk headed at the time. Since his arrest on July 27, Homeniuk, 68, has been shuffled between a Bulgarian jail, prison, and house arrest, where he remains. Now, his family and a team of attorneys are on a crusade to clear him of what they say are trumped-up charges and to stop his extradition to Kyrgyzstan, where they fear he won’t receive anything resembling due process. “We are working around-the-clock, doing everything and anything we can,” said Homeniuk’s stepdaughter Madeleine Stephens from her Orange County home. “If you do take a break,” she said, “it hits you — how bad it could be, how scary it could be. We’re fighting for our family.” Homeniuk’s wife, Marina Stephens, has remained in Bulgaria and is taking it “one day at a time.” She’s scared her husband, already suffering from poor health, will be whisked away to Central Asia as leverage in a high-stakes game of gold and politics. The saga dates back to a 2004 restructure deal concerning the Kumtor gold mine in Kyrgyzstan. In that deal, the Kyrgyz government gained about a third of the Canadian company, then called Cameco, that owned the mine. The mine represents a huge portion of Kyrgyzstan’s economy — in 2014 it accounted for 7.4 percent of the country’s GDP. Homeniuk was an executive at Cameco Corp. at the time, and the restructure agreement created an independent company, Centerra Gold, with Homeniuk as its president and CEO. He remained at the helm until he retired in 2008. The deal was scrutinized by lawyers for both sides, involved a number of international banks, and was approved by the Ontario Securities Commission. Since then, there has been much social and political upheaval in Kyrgyzstan, including two revolutions. The current powers-thatbe claim the government in 2004 was corrupt and that the country was shortchanged in the restructure. Kyrgyz leaders are now locked in talks with Centerra over operating terms (Kyrgyzstan owns a third of Centerra’s shares), and Homeniuk’s supporters think he is being used as a pawn in the negotiations, which have dragged on for two years. Centerra has released a statement condemning Homeniuk’s arrest. Representative Lois Capps and Santa Barbara Mayor Helene Schneider have written letters in support of Homeniuk, and Senaindependent.com
cou rtesy
Santa Barbara High School earned a gold star last month as Newsweek magazine ranked it among the top 500 public high schools in the country. College prep, graduation rate, and the number of Dons bound for higher education factored into the accolade. But a few weeks before the announcement, parents received a letter from Principal John Becchio explaining that they could request to transfer their children to a better-performing school because of S.B. High’s “two consecutive years of not making adequate yearly progress … in language arts, math, and graduation rate.” While such a favorable national ranking wouldn’t seem to share the same educational universe as inadequate classroom performance, the apparent dichotomy can be traced to a hotly contested federal law called No Child Left Behind (NCLB). Since its 2002 inception, No Child — with its ostensible aim of improving student performance through high standards and measurable goals — has shifted the national focus “away from student learning and opportunity toward testing, labeling, and punishing the educators and schools serving our most vulnerable students,” according to the National Education Association (NEA). “NCLB was a bad law,” said John Houchin, president of the Santa Barbara Teachers Association. “Its aspirational goals of having all students proficient in reading and math by 2014 was unattainable, and [its] sanctions … did not improve teacher or student performance. [NCLB] will hopefully be repealed and replaced in the fall when Congress reconvenes.” On that front, earlier this year the U.S. Senate passed the Every Child Achieves Act, while the House of Representatives passed its counterpart, the Student Success Act. Both must be forged into a final bill that, according to NEA President Lily Eskelsen García, replaces No Child and ends “a woeful chapter in American education policy.” — Keith Hamm
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High and low at s.B. High
law & disorder
Len Homeniuk and his family
tor Dianne Feinstein’s office is looking into the matter. Senator John McCain has also been approached. In the meantime, the U.S. State Department and Consular Affairs are involved. Last Thursday, a Bulgarian judge told Kyrgyz prosecutors they have not produced enough evidence to justify extradition, which gave Homeniuk’s attorneys some hope that his transfer to Kyrgyzstan is not a fait accompli. A number of countries have openly criticized Kyrgyzstan’s record of human-rights violations in recent years; a 2012 UN report concluded that the use of torture and “illtreatment to extract confessions” is widespread, and prisons are often “inhuman and degrading.” Denial of fair trial in the former Soviet Union republic is common. Homeniuk’s next court date in Bulgaria is scheduled for September 16. Why Bulgaria decided to act on the Red Notice when other countries haven’t remains an unanswered question. The notice was issued in September 2014, and since then, Homeniuk had traveled throughout Europe and Asia unmolested. His lawyers prepared an appeal last March, and the Interpol Commission said it expected to review the case in September 2015. According to Marina Stephens, a lawyer by training, the Red Notice Board is a “self policing” tool, which any member country may take advantage of without Interpol itself getting involved in the merits of the case. (Interpol did not return requests for comment for this story.) Upon reentering the U.S. after recent trips abroad, U.S. officials told Homeniuk they had no interest in investigating the Kyrgyz allegations as they found them baseless. Bulgaria is currently facing a refugee problem, Stephens noted, and is particularly sensitive to border issues. It is also trying to prove its preparedness to enter Europe’s Schengen Area, a zone of 26 EU countries that has abolished many border controls and effectively functions as a single country for international travel purposes. As Homeniuk’s court date nears, Stephens expressed gratitude for the support people back in Santa Barbara have shown her husband. “It’s amazing,” she said. “It makes me incredibly happy and proud to be a part of that community. … I have tears in my eyes saying this,” she went on. “We can’t wait to come home.” n
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cont’d
ice sweep Targets 20
Agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained 20 foreign nationals with criminal histories in Santa Barbara County as part of a four-day raid throughout Southern California that netted 244 arrests. The sweep concluded last Thursday night. Fifteen of the arrests, said ICE spokesperson Virginia Kice, were made in Santa Maria; the others took place in Mission Hills, Lompoc, and Guadalupe. A 30-year-old Mexican male was arrested in Mission Hills with prior convictions for prostitution and possession and sale of controlled substances. Likewise, a 38-year-old Mexican male was arrested in Santa Maria with prior convictions for participating in a criminal street gang, felony spouse abuse, writing false checks, and resisting a police officer. Seven of those arrested in Santa Barbara County had domestic-violence convictions, five for serious drug offenses. What Tice described as last week’s “tactical enforcement action” comes as public debate over illegal immigrants not deported in a timely fashion continues to boil over. GOP presidential contender Donald Trump is still gaining traction by inveighing the essential criminality of illegal immigrants even though the weight of scholarly opinion remains stacked against him. Santa Maria became caught in the rhetorical crossfire a few weeks ago after Mexican immigrant Victor Martinez raped, strangled, and beat 64-year-old resident Marilyn Pharis, who died nine days later. Immigrant-rights activist Hazel Davalos, representing the organization CAUSE (Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy), declined to comment on the specifics of the 20 caught in North County but said, “Most deportations from Santa Barbara have involved people not charged with criminal offenses or were very low-level offenders. This is from ICE’s own statistics.” Davalos expressed concern that as such raids intensify, immigrants would become less trustful of local police, and the less they share information, the less safe their communities will be. “We need to strike the right balance,” she said. Santa Maria Police Chief Ralph Martin said that the criminal element picked up by ICE preyed primarily upon the immigrant community, and he disputed the contention such law-enforcement actions discourage immigrants from cooperating with law enforcement. “All I can say is we’re still getting the calls for service,” said Martin. “I make it clear to my officers our focus is not on the — Nick Welsh hard-working people in the fields but those who break the law.”
news briefs cont’d UCSB pledged this week to contribute $200,000 each year from 2017 to 2024 to a community services district should one be established in Isla Vista. Assemblymember Das Williams’s AB 3, which would establish a mechanism to create self-governance in the unincorporated college town, is expected to appear on the Senate floor next week. If successful and signed by Governor Jerry Brown, the district would still have to be approved by voters.
POLITICS Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson’s California Fair Pay Act passed unanimously out of the Senate on 8/31 and heads to Gov. Jerry Brown. Going further than the federal Equal Pay Act, SB 358 would ensure women receive equal pay for doing work substantially similar to that of their male colleagues, protect women who ask how much their male colleagues are paid, and require employers to show that wage differences are due to reasonable, jobrelated factors. For the second year in a row, a bill co-sponsored by Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson to ban new oil development in state waters in the Santa Barbara Channel — specifically at Tranquillon Ridge — quietly bit the dust in Sacramento, dying a slow death in the Assembly Appropriations Committee. No action was technically taken on the bill, which failed to be “reported out of committee.” A Republican bill authored by Sen. Bob Huff that would require law-enforcement agencies to develop policies requiring its personnel to wear body cameras sailed through the State Senate but failed this week on the Assembly floor, where many Democrats — including Assemblymember Das Williams
— abstained from the vote. SB 175 is not officially dead, but it will turn into a two-year attempt if it is not amended and passed off the Assembly floor before the legislative session ends on 9/11.
EDUCATION A seat on Santa Barbara Unified School District’s Board of Education is up for grabs next year as current director Ed Heron recently announced he will not seek a third term. “Eight years is enough for me,” said Heron, 75. “I love it, but I want to truly retire.” A graduate of Peabody Elementary, La Cumbre Junior High, and Santa Barbara High School, Heron’s decision-making is not removed from district history, and he’s forged a reputation as accessible, fiscally conservative, and big on teaching technologies and long-range planning. Currently, S.B. Unified says no to the sale of alcohol on campuses during special events when students aren’t present, but state law signed last year now permits it in certain situations. In that respect, Superintendent David Cash asked the board if they’d like to revisit district policy. The board took no action this week but did direct Cash to get feedback from various nonprofits that host events on district property. This semester, two Zipcars will be parked at the Beach City Apartments across from SBCC’s main campus for students, staff, and faculty over the age of 18 to rent for $7.50 per hour and $69 per day, gas and insurance included. Those affiliated with the college can become Zipcar members for the reduced price of $25 this first year. The deal comes after SBCC launched a partnership on 8/27 with Zipcar as part of the college’s new sustainable transportation program initiated earlier this month. n
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pau l wellm an f i le photo
Police station Ticketed by N i c k W e l s H
alifornia’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health, aka Cal/OSHA, fined the City of Santa Barbara $7,875 for seven building and safety violations found by its inspectors at the Santa Barbara Police Department. Among the problems inspectors found were high lead levels at the shooting range, mold, asbestos, and water stains. In addition, Cal/OSHA faulted the headquarters for not having a segregated decontamination room where officers could wash off blood and other bodily fluids before entering the station. Santa Barbara Police Sergeant Mike McGrew, head of the Police Officers’ Association, filed the complaint triggering the OSHA inspection earlier this year. “The chief says he’s going to fix all this quickly, and WHISTLEBLOWER: Sgt. Mike McGrew filed that’s what we’re going to do,” said the complaint triggering the OSHA inspection. McGrew. Sparking concern about the station’s safety profile has been the nine months of disruptive construc- to do with a police station that doesn’t meet tion replacing the building’s heating and air state seismic codes. A sales-tax measure that conditioning. That work has triggered an would have covered the costs for a new staeruption of dust and debris throughout the tion house never made it on the public balbuilding. In addition, a number of officers lot. Within City Hall, considerable acrimony have reported health struggles with various remains in the wake of that failure with cancers, giving rise to concern the police sta- administrators and some councilmembers tion—60 years old, rundown, and in need of wondering where McGrew and his union replacement—might suffer from the “sick were during the debate. McGrew said he building syndrome.” Nothing in the OSHA asked the council to bring the union on report shed definitive light on that. City Hall board early on and heard nothing back. In Risk Manager Mark Howard noted that the meantime, new tests for radon, electrorecent air-quality studies were conducted magnetic radiation, and petroleum waste while construction was taking place. Like- products are in the works. As for the station wise, he said, the department is already in the house, City Administrator Paul Casey said, process of rectifying the problems identified. “We’ll continue placing expensive BandThe $60 million question remains what Aids on a very old building.” n
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by k e l s e y B r u g g e r he owners of a 3,500-acre estate known as Las Varas Ranch lost this week the glimmer of hope they once had of readjusting lot lines to potentially allow for a few new oceanfront homes on the Gaviota Coast. The county supervisors voted 3-2 to deny the bulk of the project, following recommendations from the Planning Commission that found mitigation of its impacts was inadequate. The project—the brainchild of the late Tim Doheny—would redraw the land from nine lots into seven, moving one of its existing lots to the coastal side, and create the possibility of a few more houses on the bluffs just east of El Capitan Ranch. It would also dedicate three coastal trails plus a parking lot for public use. But a number of conservationists were unsatisfied and filed into the county Board of Supervisors hearing room Tuesday, sporting colorful signs that read “Save Gaviota.” “The real implication of the project is that it’s shifting development from inland to coastal,” said Gaviota Coast Conservancy attorney Ana Citrin, adding that maintaining agri-
culture operations on the land is a major concern. Supervisor Doreen Farr, who represents the area, pointedly asked Doheny family attorney Susan Petrovich why the applicant proposed the project — lauded by supporters as a boon for public benefit — in the first place. Petrovich said Tim Doheny intended to preserve the land for the long term, as a number of biological benefits are included. Currently, Petrovich said, each of the parcels could be sold as is. But Citrin argued in an interview that approval of the project would make it easier to sell lot by lot. On Tuesday, a few other speakers — as well as supervisors Steve Lavagnino and Peter Adam — said the applicants bent over backward to accommodate the environmentalists, and they reasoned nothing would ever be good enough for the Gaviota Coast. Addressing that school of thought, one enviro said, “In a way, you are right.” Lavagnino and Adam also stressed property rights and warned about future litigation from the Doheny family as a result of the decision. n independent.com
september 3, 2015
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tHe INDepeNDeNt
september 3, 2015
independent.com
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Drip, Drip, Drip Catching Up on the Drought, Climate Change, and Impact on State Pot Crop
MEGA-KUDOS: Nice work by NBC4 news in L.A., which diverted a station chopper from blanket coverage of the 405 to flyovers of the stately homes of celebrities. Thus they scored images of lush green lawn at the $2.6 million manse of Kylie Jenner, notorious half-sister of Kim Kardashian; Kim’s grassy estate also remains verdant, despite an earlier vow to get with the brown-is-beautiful program adopted by millions of ordinary folks. Kardashian’s publicist pooh-poohed when NBC4 inquired about water greedhead behavior: “They’re traffic tickets. Who cares?” she said. “I’m not going to comment every time a helicopter flies over the house.” Oy. NOW BACK TO PLANET EARTH: A must-read new survey about environmen-
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he bottom line on the state’s brand-new water conservation numbers: The Kardashians are not keeping up with Santa Barbara. “Their water use means nothing in the grand scheme of things,” a Kardashian family publicist said, shrugging off an L.A. TV story broadcasting images of emerald green lawns and reporting excessive water use by members of the infamous reality-show clan. So glad we’re all in this together, Kylie and Kim. As for the rest of us, new State Water Resources Control Board data shows that residential users cut water consumption in July by more than 31 percent over the same month two years ago. This exceeds Governor Jerry Brown’s conservation target of 25 percent, affirming anew the Golden State’s matchless sensitivity to environmental values. “This is the drought of the century,” said board chair Felicia Marcus.“Millions of conscientious Californians are the real heroes here—each stepping up to help local water resources last longer in the face of an historic drought with no certain end date.” To the surprise of no one, citizens of the City of Santa Barbara surpassed even the excellent statewide performance, reducing monthly usage by 36 percent. That translates to consumption by each of us of about 62 gallons R-GPCD. As every schoolchild knows, that daunting acronym designates “residential gallons per capita daily.” Fair warning: Multivariable calculus experts are invited to derive similar numbers for their town using the immense ocean of raw data posted on the water board’s website. However, math wimps and other normal people are advised to shortcut it by checking out the extremely cool “drought report card” algorithmic graphic tool, devised by brilliant propeller heads at the L.A. Times, that decodes the numbers, community by community.
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tal attitudes, conducted by the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC), reports that six in 10 Californians now say that drought or water supply is the most important issue facing the state—a 23-point increase since last year. In a related finding, 64 percent of those surveyed said that climate change is contributing to the drought. The numbers are politically significant because the governor and his allies in Sacramento, at press time, were locked in a fierce legislative brawl with oil industry lobbyists, who’ve managed to stall the gov’s climatechange agenda in the Assembly. Brown and state Senate President Kevin de León, D-L.A., are pushing bills to require, among other things, a 50 percent reduction in petroleum use by motor vehicles by 2030, along with tough energy-efficiency and building standards. However, oil interests have been airing TV ads opposing the measures in districts of some moderate Assembly Democrats, who’ve refused to back the governor’s agenda without more specifics about its long-term economic impacts. The PPIC poll found that 73 percent of Californians favor the gasoline-reduction legislation, with even greater support for other pieces of the plan. Beyond citing such public opinion on the matter, Brown and de León also point to recent climate-change commentary by Pope Francis; they’ve also brought several California bishops to Sacramento to lobby lawmakers—not to mention actress Halle Berry. No word yet if Kim K. is on her way.
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IN OTHER NEWS: A coalition of marijuana advocates, known as ReformCA, have announced the start of a bid to gather 365,000 signatures to qualify for the November 2016 ballot an initiative to legalize pot for recreational use. Mindful of drought concerns, theganjier .com, a pro-weed website, recently posted a story asserting that, according to the Mendocino Cannabis Policy Council, a plant yielding one pound of processed flower requires one gallon of water per day. As a practical matter, the article said, this means that 100 gallons of water will produce 450 joints. n You could look it up. independent.com
september 3, 2015
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obituaries
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Deanna Alisa Vazquez 06/02/78 – 09/06/98
Forever Young You will forever be our princess. We love you and miss you terribly. Mom and Dad
Pitt & Bachmann. At the age of 87, Faye had a massive stroke and died 9 days later on July 26, 2015, at Serenity House, surrounded by her family. Faye was a caring, generous, supportive wife, mother, grandmother, and friend. One could count on her sharp intellect and quick wit to help you through the bumps in life. Faye is survived by her husband Fritz, son Steven McCleister (wife Elna Saito), granddaughters Sarah and Emily, her daughter Deborah McCleister (spouse Lydia Emard), and by her two sisters Mary Suther and Dorothy McCarty in Texas. In lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to Serenity House on 930 Miramonte Street in Santa Barbara.
and all stimuli of conversation and “free-thinking.” Elaine always lived in the moment- her close friends and family will verify that. She truly had an unwavering zest for life. Thank you to all who cared for her. She is survived by her two beautiful sons, Landon Harris and Cade Harris, her parents, and many relatives. Patricia Elaine had a spark of life that we will remember always.
Robertson C. Scott
three granddaughters, a grandson-in-law, and a great grandson. Bob Scott had a wonderful life. To tell the full story would fill this entire page and then some. A memorial will be held on Dec. 8, 5-6pm, at First Presbyterian Church, just prior to the 35th annual Messiah Sing Along. Contributions in Bob’s memory can be made to your favorite local charity, or more specifically, to any of those that Bob’s events benefited in past years: Unity Shoppe, the Food Bank, Transition House, Scholarship Foundation of Santa Barbara, Hospice, CALM, and Direct Relief International.
Gregory Allen Knudson
Tobi; a loyal friend; and a loving son, brother, and uncle. We shall all miss his entrances, passion, stories, guitar and song playing, love, and beauty. -Claudia In the United States, Greg’s immediate family members, mother, Leslie Lerner; his siblings (and their families) Dana Sadan, Claudia Knudson, Rafael Osuna, Eric Knudson, and Carrie Lemcool; and uncle, Joel Weinstein appreciate the love and support that have been given during this time. Memorial gathering: Sunday, September 6, Skofield Park, 3:007:00. RSVP (805)455-1781.
Jaya Thomas Jacob 01/02/45 – 08/25/15
08/17/60 – 07/14/15
Patricia Elaine Harris
Nina Faye Podlesny
01/29/66 – 08/07/15
05/04/28 – 07/26/15
Nina Faye Podlesny was born to Leonard Albert Watson and Ada Watson, (née Ada Estelle Crumbly) on May 4, 1928, in Round Mountain, Alabama. The family, including her two sisters and her brother, moved to Wilson, Texas, when Faye was a young girl. She attended Texas Tech University and earned a B.A. in business. Faye met Paul McCleister when he was stationed in Texas during his army days. They married and moved to Anaheim, California, in 1947. She worked in a business office while she earned a teaching credential and began teaching 2nd -grade. During this period she gave birth to Steven in 1948, and Deborah in 1949. Faye and family moved to Santa Barbara in 1957, where she continued to teach at Washington Elementary School for 23 years. After her divorce from Paul, Faye began playing golf and met Robert F. Podlesny (Fritz) on the golf course. They married in 1966. They were members of the La Cumbre Country Club and enjoyed many years of golfing and bridge playing. They also traveled extensively. In 1980, Faye left teaching to begin a career in real estate, working for a number of years for the firm
Patricia Elaine Harris, 49, passed into eternal peace, Friday, August 7, 2015, at the Serenity House in Santa Barbara after a long battle with cancer. She was born on January 29, 1966, in Los Angeles, the daughter of William Geoffrey Harris and Jeannette Harris-Johnson. Elaine graduated from Templeton High School with her fellow Eagles class of 1984. She later graduated with her bachelor’s from UCSB in political science. Elaine started her own company, Kindred Publishing, featuring educational videos and workbooks for recovering addicts and the incarcerated. Kindred Publishing was honored with many awards and an invitation to the White House. She also worked in marketing for Villa Alamar, an assistedliving residence for people with Alzheimer’s in Santa Barbara. She enjoyed being outdoors and time with her friends, hanging out at the beach, dancing, and live music of virtually any kind. She would brighten every room and liven every conversation with her presence. She was never one to shy away from a good argument or heated debate but would rather engage in any
Bob Scott passed away Aug. 10, 2015, at age 93. Although his body just wore out, his mind stayed as sharp as ever until the very end, and his spirit will live forever. He squeezed every last drop out of this life that he could. An avid tennis player until only a few years ago, he simply lost a long tie breaker in the fifth set. Bob came to Santa Barbara with his family in 1971 to operate KDB Radio. Prior to that, he was in broadcasting for 20+ years in Los Angeles and the Southeast. He is best known as the architect of the musical programming on KDB, formerly Santa Barbara’s local classical music station. Through KDB Bob Scott provided listening enjoyment to Santa Barbara and Ventura County residents, plus exposure for local businesses, non-profits, and the arts and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for a variety of charities by means of events such as the Messiah Sing Along, Sweethearts Grand Ball, and Big Band Blockbuster Ball. A bomber pilot in WWII, Bob’s service was acknowledged generously by the community. Bob’s family enjoyed his love and support every day of his life, and he enjoyed theirs. However, he greatly missed Agnes, his wife of 49 years, who passed away in 1996. She was the epitome of kindness. Bob and Agnes had many friends, and all of them say they are better for having known them. Cordial and gentlemanly to all, Bob truly was the man he appeared to be. He is survived by his son and daughter-in-law,
On July 14, 2015, Gregory Allen Knudson was taken in a paragliding accident in the Vosges, France. An avid paraglider, world traveler, and Captain of Cargolux, Greg respected and appreciated the geography of this amazing world. A selftaught man who studied history and cultures, Greg held a deep respect for the people and places where he flew. Born in California and raised in Venezuela, Mexico, and England, he returned to California where he began his love for flying. Moving to Europe in his twenties, he settled in Luxembourg to raise his family, relocating to Germany in 2014. Greg cultivated and cherished friendships throughout the world; whether it was a one-time meeting or a lifetime connection, he had a way of touching the deepest meaning of shared space. He was my eagle lion brother, allowing me to tag along as long as I could keep up and not complain. He was my first geography teacher as we played hiding-and-go-seek in London, continuing in our early twenties explaining various climate processes such as the cloud inversion while sitting behind him as we climbed Camino Cielo on his motorcycle. He was an adventurer and explorer; a devoted husband and father to his wife Lela and sons Kai and
Jaya Thomas Jacob, born January 2, 1945, passed away peacefully on August 25, 2015, at his home in Santa Barbara. Thomas (aka Bunty) was born and raised in New Delhi, India, where he attended St. Stephen’s College for his bachelor and master’s degrees in English. He came to the United States to attend graduate school at the Newhouse School for Journalism at Syracuse University where he met and married his wife, Mary. He worked as a freelance photographer for the India Tourism Development Corporation that enabled him to photograph the landscapes, monuments and people of his beloved India. Thomas and Mary settled in South Hadley, MA, where he initially worked as the manager of Pier One Imports in Springfield, MA, prior to joining the Holyoke Transcript Telegram (Holyoke, MA) as a photojournalist. When that newspaper closed its doors, Thomas was invited to make a career change and joined the salesforce of Valley Wines, a wine wholesaler in western Massachusetts. After that Thomas was the wine buyer for Shamrock Liquors, which at the time was the largest chain of liquor stores in Massachusetts. While working for Shamrock, he started his own photography business,
cont’D
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THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING ERNIE: At age 80, Ernie Salomon is not going quietly
into anybody’s good night. And if Ernie has his way, he’ll make sure nobody else gets any sleep, either, especially Santa Barbara City College’s congenially charismatic Jefe del Mundo, Lori Gaskin. As usual, Ernie —“The Eyebrows That Roar”— Salomon is on a sustained tear, this one about the not-so-quiet violence inflicted on Santa Barbara’s tenants and working families by ever-escalating rents. A public access TV talk-show host for 18 years, Ernie understands there’s no drama without a bad guy. And the bad guy in Ernie’s book is SBCC (with all its out-of-state and international students), UCSB (preparing to expand enrollment by another 5,000), and the fabulously successful English language schools that draw leggy and linguistically adventurous globe-trotting youth to our teeming shores by the thousands. A retired commercial real estate broker, Ernie understands what’s mana for landlords is hell on Earth for tenants seeking a toehold in Paradise. While real wages have remained flat or drooped since 1995, rents have increased by more than 300 percent; Ernie — never given to calm understatement when expectoration and hyperventilation might do — blames SBCC; in that same period, he points out, the college has tripled the number of out-ofstate and international student enrollees. That doesn’t include the 600 EF students who use
Lanny Ebenstein, Santa Barbara’s resident
campus facilities even though they are technically separate and apart from SBCC. With classes now resuming at City College, Ernie’s revving his engines for another assault on the Citadel by the Sea. It won’t be pretty. Ernie is quick to verbally maul those with whom he disagrees, calling them cancers, Nazis, thugs, and racists. He denounced Goleta gal pal pop diva Katy Perry — now embroiled in a weird real estate dispute with elderly Catholic nuns — as “a bitch.” (Ernie, a Jewish refugee from World War II, has become the self-appointed savior for older nuns anywhere squeezed out by real estate speculators and bunco artists.) He dressed down a local journalist whose coverage he deemed subpar as “a child reporter.” It’s tempting to dismiss Ernie as yet another angry kook, but he’s had serious impact. When Lori Gaskin, City College, and pretty much the entire Democratic Party Establishment asked voters last year to approve a $288 million bond measure to pay for a laundry list of much-needed improvements at SBCC, Ernie pretty much killed it singlehandedly. (His crew raised about $3,000; Gaskin and the Machine raised around $350,000.) For a while, Ernie was part of a nine-person committee, most of whom insisted on anonymity. But Ernie’s email rants proved so incessant, nasty, and over-the-top, he and his own committee parted company. Joining Ernie in the crusade to get City College to address its housing impacts is
philosopher king, political busybody, and community crusader. Lanny — in sharp contrast to Ernie — is perhaps the most unfailingly polite person in all of Santa Barbara. When Lanny disagrees with someone, he always finds a way to do so agreeably. Making Lanny even more unique, he genuinely listens to the other side and then engages in actual dialogue. To the extent Lanny has ever gotten outright mad at anyone, it was at me last year for writing critically —“inaccurate” was what he called it — about the aforementioned City College bond measure, which Lanny emphatically championed. Ernie and Lanny may not qualify as the ultimate yin and yang of Santa Barbara politics, but as odd couples go, they’re odd enough to keep Lori Gaskin awake nights. Lanny has been peppering Gaskin and members of the SBCC board with detailed missives pointing out how the number of out-of-state and international students enrolled at SBCC jumped from 872 in 1998 to 2,972 last year. The City College board could vote, he argued, to reduce that number by 1,000. To make up for the lost revenues — these students pay four times more to attend than in-state students — he suggested the board jack up tuition for such students even more than it is. City College, to be fair, is only part of the bigger problem wreaking such havoc on Santa Barbara’s nonexistent rental market. Airbnb is claiming 1,072 vacation rental units in Santa Barbara. That’s a massive chunk of housing to be taken off the rental market. With the simultaneous proliferation of vaca-
tion rentals and out-of-town students, little wonder Santa Barbara renters find themselves squeezed past the popping point. Little wonder Independent reporter Léna Garcia was recently told she had to pony up $115 for her rental application to even be considered by Bartlein management company — $115! If Garcia’s financial records passed muster — and she subsequently signed on Bartlein’s dotted line — Garcia was told the $100 would be credited to her security deposit. But if she declined to sign, Bartlein would keep her $100. Technically speaking, landlords are allowed by state law to charge no more than $44.51 to screen prospective renters for their tenant-worthiness. Landlords are allowed to charge additional “holding fees” or “application fees” — the $100 — but typically that’s extracted only from tenants who pass the first screening. For those tenants who opt not to rent, Bartlein is legally entitled to keep only as much of the $100 as the company “lost” by having to find another tenant. Given the insane demand for rental housing, I’d suggest Bartlein could fill the void in no more than three nanoseconds. As a skim and a gouge, $100 may seem like small potatoes, unless, of course, it’s your pocket from whence said funds come. For tenants, it’s just another quasi-legal shakedown they must endure. In the meantime, it would be nice if Ernie learned not to call people names. Maybe Lori Gaskin and the City College board would hear better what he has to say. Maybe along the way Santa Barbara’s tenants could find a modicum of relief. And maybe we could all — Nick Welsh get some sleep.
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obituaries cont’d which eventually grew into his full-time occupation. Thomas and his family moved to Santa Barbara in 1996. He worked at Goleta Camera until his declining health forced him into early retirement. In retirement Thomas pursued his passions for journalism and photography. He read at least a dozen or more newspapers on-line every day and shared articles that he thought would be of interest via email with his friends in this country and around the world. Many friends charted the ups and downs of his health by the flow of email from him that appeared in their inbox. He thoroughly enjoyed keeping up with his journalistic interests as a commentator on news and events in the South Asia region for the Third World News program on local television, Channel 17. While his health prevented him from working in the darkroom that he loved so much, his computer became his new darkroom. Santa Barbara with its beautiful buildings, landscapes and festivals became the primary focus of his photographic endeavors. I Madonnari was always a favorite event, and in recent years he became friends with many of the chalk artists who participate in it. He loved to share his photos of their work through Facebook and Flickr which he also used to share his photos of Santa Barbara’s Fiesta dancers. Thomas will be remembered for his passion for photography and zest for life. He always had a camera in his hand and loved to give his photographs to others. Over the years many family and friends commented that his photographs are among their treasured favorites. He felt he was a lucky person who was able to turn his avocations (love of photography and wine) into his professions. He enjoyed cooking and sharing wine from his collection with family and friends around the table with good conversations about politics, art and, music that would last long into the night. He loved all types of music, although jazz and the blues were his favorite genres. He was a lifetime member of the Santa Barbara Blues Society. His smile, sense of humor and generosity touched the lives of many. He is survived by his wife Mary; son Rustum and his wife Stephanie; grandsons Elliot and Ethan; sister Piya, brother Nitya, nephew Aryaman, many cousins, and in-laws. A memorial service will be held on November 1. Donations may be made to Visiting Nurse and Hospice Care. Thomas was predeceased in death by his parents, Velothil and Ayesha Jacob.
Dana Schorr
After a life worthy of an adventure novel, fighting for social justice and exploring the world in search of rare gems, Dana Schorr died on August 5, 2015, in Santa Barbara, from complications following a massive heart attack. He was 63. Born Dana Leslie Schorr in Santa Monica, California, in 1952, he spent his early years in California and New York before his family moved to Santa Barbara when he was eight. He grew up here, attended San Marcos High School, and called Santa Barbara home for the rest of his life. A community activist throughout the 1970s, Dana rechanneled his energy into a successful career in precious stones beginning in the early 1980s. After founding Santa Barbara–based Schorr Marketing, he established global partnerships that included village gem miners in Tanzania, stone cutters in Sri Lanka, and a sunstone mine in Oregon. Never compromising his commitment to fair play and democratic values, Dana became an effective advocate for smallscale miners in the developing world, while remaining an outspoken neighborhood leader in Santa Barbara. He embraced life to the fullest, as a supporter of the Santa Barbara Jazz Society, an irrepressible dancer, and loyal and caring friend. Dana is survived by his mother Emmy Schorr, sister Wendy Schorr, brother-in-law Roger Lebow, and a circle of friends around the world. Family and friends hope to create a lasting tribute in his honor. For more information, contact Nansie Chapman at nansiechapman@gmail.com.
Obituaries & Death Notices are available daily at www.independent.com and in print each Thursday For more information on this service, email: obits@independent.com or call 805-965-5208
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on the beat
Barney Brantingham can be reached at barney@independent.com or 965-5205 x230. He writes online columns and a print column for Thursdays.
Dodger Sun Setting?
“All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players … ” —Shakespeare, As You Like It PLAY BALL! On Sunday, 46,679 of us marched
into Dodger Stadium for a day in the sun, but perhaps more important, to play our role in a national TV spectacle. We just didn’t realize what kind of spectacle it was going to be. The Dodgers got hamstrung. Score? Well, I’ll get to that. See, we were there to cheer, boo, or howl basically as sound effects for the millions watching from coast to coast. We were the sound track for their Sunday beer-and-baseball relaxation. We had to pay for the privilege, of course, spear carriers in the production. After all, who would tune in to watch a game played before empty stands, the only sounds being faint shouts among players and “Red hots, getchure red hots”? And how uninspiring would it be for the multimillionaires running around out there if no one was reacting to their hits, runs, and (unfortunately) errors? Speaking of Shakespeare and stages, think of an actor reciting “To be, or not to be …” before an empty house. The score? Well, I’ll get to that. Not having been to a Dodger game in about 20 years (wasn’t that why TV was invented?), I decided
to give the kids as close to an A-ticket experience as possible. So I hit the computer and learned some secrets about Chavez Ravine. For one thing, you don’t have to park a mile away. For a mere $35, I could park a short walk from the field. And by shelling out a shocking amount of money, I could sit within a crack of the bat’s sound of home plate. And the seats actually had backs. A side benefit to blowing months of coffee money on the seats was entrance into the Stadium Club. I’d never heard of it. There awaited air-conditioned comfort and a view down on the greensward below, acres of emerald sod. (What drought? Did you want to watch the millionaires running around on parched earth?) There I could, and did, reserve a table where we could eat, drink, and be merry (more about that later). Or you could belly up to the bar and watch on a huge flat-screen. In fact, it turned out that you could belly up to televisions in Santa Barbara and watch the game, too. ESPN chose this one as its Sunday headliner, which broadcasts on Cox Cable on occasion by special arrangement. Barclay, Wendy, and I opted for a table in the AC-cooled main room, with a great view. (Or we could have sat out on the rail in the heat.) But for that, we were expected to order the all-you-can-eat buffet, a lavish feed cost-
Wendy Brantingham
Opinions
BRUISED: Spectators at Dodger Stadium on Sunday enjoyed a spectacular sunset and game, if they were Cubs fans.
ing a mere $40 each, plus the price of any alcoholic drinks one preferred while watching the “national pastime.” Stuffed, we scooted down to our seats. Of the 46,679 paid customers, I would say about 46,000 of them were loud Cub fans, most wearing the once-beloved Cub logos. As the game progressed, they got louder and louder. Where had they come from?
It was Andre Ethier’s $18 million against Cub pitcher Jake Arrieta’s $3.6 million. Guess who won the battle of the day? As fate would have it, the colorful Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig was not to be seen (on the disabled list). Nor were the Dodgers’ famed pitchers Clayton Kershaw ($30 million this year) and Zack Greinke ($23 million). On the mound was one of the Dodgers’ new acquisitions, Alex Wood, being paid a pitiful $190,000, chump change in this era. The final score? Did I mention that the punchless Dodgers got (ugh!) no-hit by the poverty-level Cubs Sunday? Final score: 2-0. And just (horrors!) nine days after being nohit by the Houston Astros. This is not looking good, folks. This is not looking like a World Series team. And if the Boys in Blue don’t fight off the hated Frisco (there, I said it, and I’m glad) Giants, they won’t even make the play-offs. The kids and I trudged out of Dodger Stadium with the Cub fans’ jeers and cheers bouncing off the walls. It was humiliating. But on the drive back, Wendy played Beatles songs, and we reflected on the (otherwise) great day. In California, it’s the experience that counts. And as in Ernest Thayer’s famed 1888 poem, “Casey at the Bat,” the “mighty Casey” has struck out. But for the Dodgers, there’s always another day. — Barney Brantingham
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Wanna Get Away?
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Evolutions Day Spa offers an escape from life’s everyday stress. A 60 or 90 minute massage, facial, body scrub or wrap can be an amazing “mini stay-cation.” Come in with a friend or loved one, relax together, and you both will receive discounts on your treatments (call for more info). What are you waiting for? You deserve a little break! Evolutions’ Mini Stay-cation Idea #1: Sundãri™ Nourishing Wrap Your 90 minute journey begins in the Vichy shower room where you receive a full body exfoliation to remove all signs of dry, flaky skin. You then transfer to a massage hut and your choice of Ayurvedic Sundãri™ oils will be warmed and poured over your body before you are cocooned in a thermal blanket. As you enjoy the warm comfort of the wrap, you will receive a relaxing head, neck, and foot massage. Complete your treatment with a dry sauna and then a soothing cup of tea in our Tea Lounge. The next day your family and co-workers will all wonder why you look so relaxed and refreshed (and with amazingly soft skin too)!
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The Tame Vacation Renter
I
f someone owns property, they should have the right to use it as they choose as long as it doesn’t victimize others. Renting out all or a portion of one’s property short-term does not victimize anyone. It helps homeowners keep their homes and get by during these difficult economic times. It may benefit someone who’s here temporarily for school, work, or a short vacation, which a hotel or high-cost rental would make difficult. It’s unreasonable to assume that all renters are going to be a roudy nuisance. Even if they were, police citations would eventually bring them under control. As for competition for hotels and such, there are more than enough multimillionaires to patronize those places. It’s time to end the bureaucracy that caters to bazillionaires while oppressing ordinary folks. — Ed Geswein, Lompoc
Medicare and Medicaid at 50
I
n July, Medicare and Medicaid turned 50 years old. While we should celebrate this golden anniversary and be glad these programs have expanded, we should also realize that affordable access to health care in the U.S. still lags other developed nations in Europe and Asia. Even with the Affordable Care Act, 10 percent of us remain without insurance, and 10 percent more have inadequate insurance or are underinsured. Worrisome trends may put us yet further behind other countries as for-profit insurance companies consolidate into huge monopolies and patented drug prices explode. For many, increased premiums and cost sharing leave people “covered” by insurance but without money to actually afford care when serious illness strikes. The solution is to have Medicare cover everyone. This was its original intent, as was controlling costs. The savings from negotiated drug, equipment, and medical service prices, when added to $400 billion in administrative cost savings, would be enough to expand coverage to all and include dental, vision, and hearing care. Emphasis on delivery of, and fair payment for, primary care will increase the numbers of primary care physicians.
It will be a struggle to keep the inadequate system we have, but the real solution is for us all to fight for — Peter Conn, S.B. Medicare for all.
Charge On, Chargers
I
wonder just how much research went into choosing the Ford mid-size SUV as the S.B. Police Department vehicle. Michigan State Troopers hold a challenge every year, and the Dodge Charger won last year hands down on braking, lap time, and acceleration, all necessary aspects of a good squad car. Explorers (and Fords for that matter) are rife with problems recently, the biggest being exhaust in the cabins and braking issues. Also, Ford’s production spans the globe now that it’s closed most of its home factories, and Chrysler is far more interested in keeping production within the U.S. — Steven Reynalds, S.B.
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or several months I have met with local elected officials to ask them to support fossil-fuel divestment resolutions for state pension funds CalPERS and CalSTRS. Some feel divestment could mean losing money, but a new report by Trillium Asset Management says state pension funds lost $5 billion in fossil fuel holdings last year. Hundreds of pension fund beneficiaries have sought divestment over the last three years. Though CalPERS and CalSTRS are doing well overall, divesting from fossil fuels now won’t lose money. It will preserve it.
the NatUral liFt Trust Your Face to a Facial Plastic Surgeon for Long-Lasting Results
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For the Record
¶ Our apologies to Swervedriver fans out there, but the show at Velvet Jones is September 27, not August 27 as we were misled. Also, Pilates instructor Karen Barranco was not actually the person pictured in last week’s Occhiali ad; she appears this week. And the photo in On the Beat last week was taken at a presser in Tucker’s Grove, not Refugio.
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Healthier Living: Managing Ongoing Health Conditions A 6-part Health Education Program Tuesdays · September 15 - October 20 , 2015 4:00 PM – 6:30 PM Mental Wellness Center 617 Garden Street, Santa Barbara To RSVP call (805) 884-8440 $20 optional materials fee. No one will be turned away regardless of ability to pay. Do you or your family member or friend have an ongoing health condition? Do you want to be more active and social? Healthier Living is an award-winning program developed by Stanford University to help you. In this small group you will learn to: • Manage your health to lessen its impact on your life • Lower anxiety and pain, sleep better and have more energy • Communicate better with doctors, friends and family • Set goals and problem solve for better health JOIN US TO PUT LIFE BACK INTO YOUR LIFE!
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K
P3
yle Korver and Al Jefferson are professional basketball players with a combined 23 years of experience in the NBA. During their careers, each of them has made a home in four different cities. Korver, a 67 shooting guard, has moved from Philadelphia to Salt Lake City to Chicago to Atlanta; Jefferson, a 610 center, from Boston to Minnesota to Salt Lake City to Charlotte. During the past six to eight summers, there’s just one place they’ve called home: Santa Barbara. Growing numbers of their NBA brethren have followed them here. The main attraction is not the weather, the beaches, or the smallish-town ambience. It is a nondescript building a few blocks from the beach, with a floor space the size of a basketball court, which houses the Peak Performance Project (P3), a high-tech laboratory for the testing and training of elite athletes. P3 is the brainchild of Marcus Elliott, a graduate of Harvard Medical School who took his two interests, sports and science, and fused them in a new way. He looked at the specific skills and movements that certain sports require (primarily baseball, basketball, and football) and began analyzing how the bodies of players functioned, each in its own way. Instead of giving them cookie-cutter training programs, he was able to tailor exercises that address an individual’s specific strengths and weaknesses. A lengthy article in Sports Illustrated last December explained how Elliott’s methods might help prolong careers by identifying areas of potential injury and taking steps to rectify them. By then, P3 was already on the map in the pro basketball world. Korver and Jefferson both started visiting P3 when they were players with the Utah Jazz. Then-coach Jerry Sloan, now an adviser to the club, was enthusiastic about the off-season program. The Jazz continue to send their players here every year before training camp. “I had a lot of issues going on physically, a really bad knee and some other things,” said Korver, who arrived at P3 in 2008. “I could feel myself getting better. I learned a lot about my body and how to take care of it, how to move more efficiently, how to move more healthily — if that’s a word. It was kind of a turning point for me. I started coming out here every summer. My wife and I bought a house here a couple years ago.” The effort has paid dividends for Korver, 34, who was
cover story
an NBA All-Star for the first time last season. He is a deadly long-range shooter who passed Kobe Bryant for 12th on the all-time three-pointers-made list in March. “I had a good year, and the team did well,” the Hawks guard said. “Our coach [Mike Budenholzer] is a great guy to play for. Every year you keep your group together, develop more chemistry, play in more play-off series — all those things add up to a better team.” But going deep into the play-offs after an 82-game season makes for a long grind. “It’s brutal,” Korver said. “It takes a toll on your body. P3 prepares me for that. They won’t cut the number of games. They’d be cutting the money.”
InnovAtIve IdeA Elliott was thinking about the dollars pouring into pro sports leagues when he opened P3 in 2006. “It was like the emperor’s new clothes,” he said. “Doesn’t everybody else see what I see? Doesn’t it make sense to know more about this player that you’re paying $100 million to? Don’t you realize this guy is a complete unknown in terms of how his body works? It made no sense to me. We have tools we can use to get a better understanding of these systems.” Despite that confidence, he wasn’t sure if it would work. “I thought this would be a damn fun thing to do, and I knew there would be a value for the people and the athletes we touched,” he explained. “From a business perspective, I had no idea what it could be or how much demand there would be. I still pinch myself a little bit. I’m still amazed. Part of it was the right timing, and part of it was having the conviction to do this stuff before other people did, to take a hard stand and invest in the technology and the smart personnel.” The technology includes force plates embedded in the floor and 10 German-made cameras that capture in great detail a body in motion. “It’s the same technology [used to produce] video games,” said Stanford graduate Eric Leidersdorf, the lead bio-mechanist at P3, as he compiled masses of data on a computer screen. Elliott added, “Moving here feels like one of the smarter things I’ve done. I originally felt like Santa Barbara could be a hindrance for focusing on pro athletes. There are no pro teams here. In the end, it’s actually been a positive. It’s a great retreat for the athletes.”
InsIde MArcus ellIott’s PeAK PerforMAnce ProJect,
Where Pro SPortS StarS train in the Funk Zone by John Zant • Photos by Paul wellman
continued >>>
GRIP AND RIP: Memphis Grizzlies defensive basketball star Tony Allen is enjoying a relatively lengthy NBA career, thanks in part to the strength he’s built at P3 gym in Santa Barbara’s Funk Zone.
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Jefferson has come to P3 every year since 2010 in a love/hate frame of mind. “When you work so hard, you hate it, but you know it’s probably good for you,” said the Hornets center, who has steadily recovered from a 2009 ACL injury. “I can tell my knee is getting back to the way it was before. I gotta do what’s best for me.” Jefferson was one of the last NBA players drafted out of high school, in 2004. He came from the small town of Prentiss, Mississippi. “I’m a country boy,” he said. “I’m not a big-city type of guy. Going from my hometown to Boston was, whoa, like going to Germany. I love Santa Barbara, man. It’s small and peaceful. I love to go by the beach. I love the seafood spots. The No. 1 reason is this place [P3], knowing I’m getting better to further my career. I’m only 30 years old. I got a lot more years to play.” The word has gotten out. Korver and Jefferson found themselves in a lot of company this summer. “Every week, new guys show up,” Jefferson said. “I look around; there’s me, Joakim Noah, and Andre Drummond — three of the top centers in the league working out together. You can’t get that anywhere else. When the season starts, we step on the court and try to tear each other’s head off. This is the time everybody wants to go and get better as a player. We can do that together.” P3’s training emphasizes movement, quickness, and agility. It runs counter to the notion that stronger is better.“Originally the performance coaches were called strength
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coaches,” Elliott said. “Literally that’s what they did. They got guys to move weights around. … But you don’t necessarily want guys who are stronger; you want athletes to move better. It’s really easy to take an athlete and make him a lot stronger — he benches more, he squats more — and then he jumps slower, and maybe he doesn’t jump as high, and maybe he’s a lot slower laterally, and his hips are so immobile he can’t put himself in these athletic positions any more. You can
make them a lot worse as they get stronger.” Baseball is another sport where the P3 approach is borne out. Former major leaguer Lou Piniella, who was on the disabled list twice in 18 seasons, recently told the New York Daily News: “When I played, we didn’t have a weight room or a strength coach …. We never heard of an ‘oblique.’ … [W]e were in shape to play baseball. Baseball is a game of fluidity, timing and coordination. It’s not a game of muscle mass.” Injury prevention is a cloudier prospect in football, where the nature of the sport produces forceful collisions. Adam Hewitt, P3’s assistant general manager, noted that the facility’s NBA clients maintain a work ethic that makes them pros for the long term. “They have to be committed to make the trip out here,” he said. “Carmelo Anthony took three flights to get here.” Hewitt added,“Santa Barbara is a little quiet for the younger guys,” who might be looking for action outside the training room. One of the younger guys who made himself at home for several weeks was Thomas Robinson, a 610 power forward who was recently acquired by the Brooklyn Nets. He bought
DROPPING WEIGHTS: A key to P3’s success is escaping the old training regimen of just lifting weights to build strength. At top, NBA stars James Ennis (red sock, also being measured in middle photo by Sam Brown), Al Jefferson (gray tank top), Festus Ezeli (light blue shirt), and Beno Udrih work on their moves. Below, Udrih gets hooked up to sensors to track his flow.
cover story
HANDS-ON HELP: P3’s Mike Swan works on an athlete at top, as Nigerian-born Golden State Warriors center Festus Ezeli stretches on an exercise ball below.
a bicycle to transport himself around town. “I’m here strictly for work,” said Robinson, 24.“I’m not looking for fun. It’s good to learn these things early in your career.” The players do say that the city’s a good place for relaxing in between workout sessions. “Almost all of them are comfortable taking a low-key approach,” Elliott said. “Aside from the fact many are almost seven feet tall and black, they look like Santa Barbara locals. People see them walking around town wearing flip-flops and board shorts.”
It’s the PlAyers’ BAll
At the behest of the NBA, Elliott and his team of specialists have tested prospects at the predraft combines in Chicago each of the last two years. They tested 55 of the 60 selected players before the 2015 draft, and three of the top 10 — Jahlil Okafor (No. 3
pick, 76ers), Stanley Johnson (No. 8, Pistons), and Frank Kaminsky (No. 9, Hornets) — spent some time in Santa Barbara. “The NBA needs to be supersmart,” Elliott said. “As opposed to football or baseball, when one player goes down, it completely changes the dynamic of your team. A team can’t lose a rotation player and not lose a beat; in other sports they can. Six to eight players are critical to an NBA team. They’re investing a whole lot in being the smartest professional sport.” There have been extensive conversations over who should assume custody of the assessments made by P3. Elliott decided that the players should receive the results of this year’s tests. “Is it performance data, or is it medical data?” Elliott said. “Is this measuring a vertical jump, or is this more like measuring somebody’s cholesterol level? I would make the case it’s more like measuring cholesterol. Doctor-patient seems like the right model. That’s where it’s going to go.” Elliott believes that players’ bodies “are their most prized possessions.” He explained, “It doesn’t matter if you’re under contract to the Lakers. It’s not their body; it’s your body. If the players are smart, they’ll share the data with the teams to direct their training pro-
RAISING MORE THAN ROOFS: Al Jefferson started coming to P3 when he was on the Utah Jazz, but he keeps coming back, now as a player for the Charlotte Hornets.
continued >>> independent.com
september 3, 2015
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JUMP AND PUMP: As Al Jefferson works on core strength, Memphis Grizzlies player Beno Udrih gets his hops tested.
Come to the Municipal Tennis Center, home of competitive prices, great facilities, fun classes, and a team of friendly expert instructors. Please visit us online at SantaBarbaraCA.gov/Tennis to find out about our new tennis classes and our affordably-priced tennis permits.
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grams, but they shouldn’t have to. We’re going to give the combined results to the players by September 15. Every player going into the NBA is going to get a biometric sheet from us, showing all their strengths and weaknesses, showing where they’re most at risk in terms of injury and solutions for those. It goes only to the players. They can share it with their organization, they can share it with their agent, or they can just keep it or throw it out. I like the idea of putting that power back in their hands.” Elliott cannot promise that a player will be injury-free. Korver and Jefferson both suffered strains and sprains last season.“If we look at our NBA injury database, there’s a lot of ankle injuries in there,” the P3 director said. “But guys are missing less than a couple weeks, and they don’t recur. We can deal with that amount of randomness. Almost all the serious injuries are as a result of having a system that’s out of balance or some type of movement issue. Those are injuries that are telegraphing themDOCTOR’S IN: Dr. Marcus Elliott combined selves before they manifest.” love of sports and science to develop Creating a sound body in the his the training regime that’s now used by training room breeds a sound, keen professional stars from basketball to mind. “Take Andre Drummond,” baseball, football, and beyond. Elliott said of the Detroit Pistons center. “He can’t wait for the season to start. He just wants to go crush people. He spent six weeks sweating and bleeding every day. He wants to show people the systems he has. If guys have that confidence, that it’s bulletproof, it goes so far in terms of their competitive spirit and what they’re willing to put on the line.”
p3.md for More see
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Run Santa BaRBaRa presents
Pier To Peak Half-Marathon
hIgh school
Sun. Sep. 6th , 2015 6:30am Start Time
footBAll PrevIew 2015
www.runsantabarbara.com Volunteer Check In & Bib Pick-up Saturday, September 5, noon to 5 pm
Packet pick-up at 110 Anacapa St
A look at our region’s five 11-Man teams
by Presidio sports staff Photographs by John dvorak/Presidio sports
The Cardinals, 43-8 over the past four seasons, look to continue their winning ways as they enter their second season in CIF Division 3 with most of their playmakers returning from last year’s 10-2 season. Several players stood out in last Friday’s 14-9 victory over Righetti. CIF sprint champion AV Bennett showed off his speed on a 24-yard touchdown run late in the game, and quarterback Spencer Stovesand completed a 36-yard scoring play to receiver Dylan Streett. The Cardinals expected a stiff challenge from Righetti, a larger school that was a Division 3 play-off team last year. “We came out really bad in the first half,” senior linebacker Matt Shotwell said. “We didn’t execute that well, especially on the first drive. [We] came out and did our thing in the second half, and that’s execute plays even though we’re not the biggest team around.” Shotwell had 15 tackles in the game. It was Bishop’s fifth straight season-opening win. The Cardinals travel to San Diego–area small-schools power Santa Fe Christian on Saturday.
sAn MArcos
“We are in the truest sense a blue-collar team,” coach Anthony Linebaugh said of his 2015 Royals. Linebaugh spent the off-season determining where players could be best utilized for the team to be successful. “I have a lot of players in new positions. We’re doing a lot of learning right now to accelerate that growth, that learning curve, if you will, leading up to the season.” One of the biggest changes was converting D’Shaun Vines into a quarterback. He played tight end last season. Vines will have senior running back Ivan Reyes behind him. He gained 884 yards and scored 11 touchdowns last season. Reyes and Vines will have the luxury of working behind an experienced line that includes seniors Anthony Pico, Anthony Ramirez, Rogelio Lopez, Abe KesFIRST GAME IN BAG: Bishop Diego senior Matt Shotwell With improved size and strength celebrates the Cardinals’ season-opening 14-9 victory ablyan, and junior Josh Harrah. on the line and an experienced, tal- over Righetti on Friday. San Marcos can shake off a ented, motivated group of seniors, 62-14 season-opening loss at the Dons have the ingredients to make a run at a West Ranch this week against Rio Mesa. The Royals’ league title and CIF play-off berth. “We’ve always had home opener versus Pacifica is September 11.
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what coach [Jaime] Melgoza says, ‘the the corazon corazon,’ so we’d always stay in the games,” senior linebacker Carter Soto said. “But more size is actually going to help us push through the fourth quarter and actually win more ball games this year.” The offense starts with quarterback Brent Peus, a three-year starter. He passed for 2,125 yards and 15 touchdowns last season working behind a line that was ravaged by injuries. He has a trio of big-play receivers in 65 senior Blake Kelley, senior Mason Bigelow, and junior Chris “Tic” Jellison. The Dons unleashed their weapons at Hueneme on Friday and rolled to a 64-8 win. They led 43-0 at halftime. Santa Barbara (1-0) moves on to face Santa Maria next. The Dons are playing their final season at Peabody Stadium before it undergoes a major makeover. The home opener is September 11 against Channel Islands.
EZ S
hile NFL and college football teams have yet to debut this season, the high school ranks entered the fray last week and are preparing for a full schedule of games this weekend. To get you ready for the season, Presidio Sports previews the area’s five 11-man football teams and highlights the most anticipated matchups. All five teams have a talented and motivated group of senior players who want to finish their high school careers on a high note. Visit presidiosports.com for additional video interviews with players and coaches.
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Tue Sep 8 7:00p “Run FRee: The TRue SToRy oF Caballo blanCo”
The Santa Barbara Athletic Association & Patagonia present this award-winning, feature-length documentary about ultra-running legend Micah True. Better known as Caballo Blanco – the White Horse – was the focal character of Christopher McDougall’s 2009 best-selling book about the Tarahumara Superathlete Indians of northern Mexico. For more info & tickets please visit www.imathlete.com/events/runfree. A percentage of the film’s profits, including from DVD sales, will go to benefit Norawas de Rarámuri (Friends of the Running People). See you there!
SaT Sep 12 7:00p “CoRazoneS JoveneS en el baile (young heaRTS in DanCe)” Xochipilli de Santa Barbara presents this celebration of talented youth through music
and dances from Mexico. With colorful costumes and inspiring performances by their young dancers, this show is a must-see! For more info please call 805-637-7118. For tickets please visit La Calenda (2915 De La Vina) or Tere Jurado (429 N. Milpas). See you there!
Sun Sep 13 7:00p “viva el aRTe: balleT FolklóRiCo De loS angeleS”
We celebrate the beginning of Viva’s Tenth Anniversary Season with this FREE family show presented by the Luke Theatre and UCSB A&L! Ballet Folkórico de Los Angeles was founded in 2011 by Kareli Montoya who began dancing professionally at the age of twelve. The company has performed in high-profile venues such as the Nokia Theater, the Greek Theater, the John Anson Ford Amphitheater, the Santa Barbara Mariachi Festival, and during halftime for the LA Clippers. For more info please visit facebook.com/VivaElArteSB or call 805-884-4087 x7.
DiD you know? The Luke has several volunteer usher opportunities for our exciting line-up of upcoming events. For additional details or to be added to our usher e-mail list please contact our House Manager Liz at lizzeffiro@luketheatre.org or call 805-884-4087 x3.
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SportS
& SWIMMING FROM pArKS & rECrEAtIoN
HUSTLE AND MUSCLE: Bishop Diego’s John Harris, a hulking 6’2”, 195-pound sophomore sensation, led the Cardinals in rushing in their season opener.
dos PueBlos
Coach Nate Mendoza has more than 70 players on his squad, and several saw action last season.“When you get kids back with game experience, it’s huge,” said Mendoza. Quarterback Kellen Roberts is one of those players with game experience. Because of an injury, he was thrust into duty early last season as a sophomore. The mobile, 62 signal caller will be running a high-tempo attack, which, he says, suits his style of play. Roberts has experienced players around him, starting with big-play senior receiver Josh Flora. His big targets include 61, 220-pound senior Austen Pearce and 63, 195-pound junior Marcellous Gossett. Senior Manny Nwosu (60, 195), who helped the soccer team win the Channel League title and lost 25 pounds in the off-season, will show off his increased speed and strength as a running back; he was a defensive end last season. The Chargers saw good things in the first three quarters of their opener, building a 24-7 lead over Pacifica. But the Chargers let the victory get away by giving up 31 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to lose 38-24.
cArPInterIA
The Warriors were the only area 11-man team with a bye during Week Zero. Carpinteria, coming off a 4-6 season, will host Santa Ynez on Friday. The Warriors have size and experience in the offensive line, which should make quarterback Mikey Garibay feel more comfortable in his first varsity season. Garibay was the JV quarterback last year. The O-line has one underclassman in sophomore David Torres at center, and the rest are seniors with game experience, led by tackles Jose Pancho Sanchez (61, 265) and Nico GarciaJimenez (63, 267). “We have a great nucleus and a really fine corps of guys who are doing everything we ask them to do, and they’re enthusiastic about it,” said longtime coach Ben Hallock.“I feel great about this group.”
LoS BAñoS dEL MAr SwiMMing POOl Get in on a local favorite with lap swim at Los Baños this fall. Truly affordable monthly (or daily!) passes and a gorgeous waterfront location. Please visit us online at
SantaBarbaraCA.gov/Aquatics
or call Los Baños at (805) 966-6110 for more information.
AdULt SportS LEAGUES
Join a City of Santa Barbara sports league for a full season of after-work activity. Basketball league and flag football league registration periods both end next week! For information on softball league, please visit bit.ly/SBparksAndrec_SoftballLeague. Please visit us online at
teamsideline.com/santabarbara
or call our Sports Office at (805) 897-1944 for more information.
rIvAlry gAMes to wAtch
Carpinteria at Dos Pueblos: It’s the first meeting between the Warriors and Chargers since 2001, when current Laguna Blanca head coach Shane Lopes threw for four touchdowns in a 37-21 Dos Pueblos victory. Friday, October 2, 7 p.m. Dos Pueblos at Santa Barbara: It’s the Channel League opener for both teams and the first of three crosstown matchups that decide the city championship. Friday, October 16, 7 p.m. San Marcos at Dos Pueblos: The Battle of the Goodland returns to Scott O’Leary Field after a 27-10 decision last year at Warkentin Stadium in favor of San Marcos. Friday, October 23, 7 p.m.
(805) 564-5418
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CANDID PET PHOTOGRAPHY
Carpinteria at Bishop Diego: The Little Big Game is an annual rite of passage for this longtime rivalry. The Tri-Valley League’s three-game schedule makes each contest incredibly important. Friday, October 30, 7:30 p.m. Cate at Laguna Blanca: The eight-man game is showcased locally when these two engage in their small-school clash. It’s the regular-season finale for the teams as the eight-man CIF postseason begins a week before 11-man. Saturday, October 31, 2 p.m. Santa Barbara at San Marcos: The team records won’t matter in this regularseason finale at Warkentin Stadium.“The Big Game” for city bragging rights is always intense. Last year’s game ended in an on-field scuffle. San Marcos scored in the final seconds to win the game and claim the city championship. Friday, November 6, 7 p.m.
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THE GRANADA THEATRE CONCERT SERIES
PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION a multimedia event featuring USC Thornton Symphony
SAT
SUN
8PM
3PM
SEP 12 & SEP 13
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
TROMBONE SHORTY & ORLEANS AVENUE GROUNDHOG DAY
THE BIG SLEEP
MON SEP 14th 7PM
TUE SEP 15th 2PM & 7PM
FRI
SEP 18 8PM
NEDERLANDER
AN ACOUSTIC EVENING WITH CHRIS CORNELL
WED
SEP 23 8PM
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
AHI ESTA EL DETALLE
THE KING AND I
SUN SEP 27th 3PM
MON SEP 28th 2PM & 7PM
RY COODER, SHARON WHITE & RICKY SKAGGS
SEP 29
| For tickets visit WWW.GRANADASB.ORG or call 805.899.2222 Parking at Granada Garage at Anacapa & Anapamu | Valet parking for donors generously provided by The Granada Theatre on Facebook | #GranadaSB 1214 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101
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TUE
8PM
Independent Calendar by Terry Ortega and Ginny Chung
/sbindependent
the
week
@SBIndpndnt
sept.
3–9
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.
“Reflection on the More Mesa” by John Haugse
9/3-9/7: Free Admission for Military at S.B. Botanic Garden Hey, all nation’s service members: Cool off in the redwoods, take free guided tours, and enjoy trails through native plant communities with your entire family and pet dogs. Free admission will be available for active-duty military and up to five family members. This opportunity will end Labor Day. All other days, the garden offers a reduced admission rate. 9am6pm. S.B. Botanic Garden, 1212 Mission Canyon Rd. Free. Call 682-4726 or visit sbbg.org. 9/3: Family 1st Thursdays: Urban Landscape Collage Gather up the family, and head to the museum to create your own art souvenirs. Sketch hands on mid-tone paper in graphite and white pastel, and collage them onto an urban landscape. This evening is inspired by Herbert Bayer’s “Lonely Metropolitan,” part of the ongoing exhibition of his photomontages, which can be enjoyed after you finish your art project. 5:30-7:30pm. S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free. Call 963-4364 or visit sbma.net.
9/3: Mystic Braves, L.A. Witch, Pearl Charles, The Creation Factory Mystic Braves will bring psychedelic tunes influenced by rock, funk, and musical drones of non-Western sources. Special guests include “reverb-soaked, punked-out rock” band L.A. Witch, California rock ’n’ roll solo artist Pearl Charles, and acid-garage, janglepop soul band The Creation Factory. 9pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10-$12. Ages 18+. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb.com.
easy, fun dances. 7pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo Nuevo. Free. Call 963-0408 or visit centerstagetheater.org.
Friday 9/4
ArnA BAjrAktArević
Thursday 9/3
9/3: CRIT 001 Weslie Ching Dance will host a night of new works and dances-in-progress by many performing artists. What makes this show different? There will be a community critique afterward. Bring out your inner art critic at this night of short,
9/4: Art Reception: Then and Now This exhibit will feature prints by Don and Siu Zimmerman, whose styles are unique, abstract, and figurative and draw on many printmaking techniques. Siu has practice in combining Chinese calligraphy with abstract markings, while Don photographs everyday scenes modified through digital editing and polymer etching. Join these artists in celebration of their visual art. The exhibit shows until October 9. 5-7pm. Architectural Foundation Gallery, 229 E. Victoria St. Free. Call 965-6307 or visit afsb.org. 9/4-9/5: Nithya Shanti A spiritual teacher, happiness coach, healer, and modern-day sage, Nithya Shanti will lead a workshop to aid you in your journey to health, wellness, and finding the road to happiness. Saturday will include mindfulness and meditation teaching and practices. Registration is recommended. Fri.: 7-8:30pm;
9/4: Aireene & The Rarities, Natalie D-Napoleon First influenced by Filipino folk, Aireene Espiritu now mixes Latin/African rhythms, bluegrass, gospel, and timeless Americana with her band, The Rarities. Opening the show will be Australian singer/ songwriter Natalie D-Napoleon. 7:30pm. Cambridge Drive Community Church, 550 Cambridge Dr., Goleta. Free. Call 964-0436 or visit cambridgedrivechurch.org. 9/4: Artificial Sweetener Controversy Do you prefer sugar or artificial sweetener? Clinical Dietitian Stacey Bailey will host classes that encourage and support healthy eating habits for all ages. Bring your own lunch, and discuss the facts behind artificial sweeteners. No RSVP is required. Noon-1pm. Santa Ynez Valley
Cottage Hospital, 2050 Viborg Rd., Solvang. Free. Call 694-2351 or visit tinyurl.com/NutritionClass. 9/4-9/6: 14th Annual Open Studios Labor Day Tour Thirty professional artists will be opening their studios for you from Montecito to Goleta to the Santa Ynez Valley! Talk with the artists, learn about creative processes, and just enjoy the art. This tour will benefit the Breast Cancer Resource Center and is meant to increase public awareness of all things wonderful about art and culture. Tickets will be sold until the day of the tour at Corridan Gallery or online. Fri.: 5-8pm; Sat.-Sun.: 11am-5pm. Reception: Corridan Gallery, 125 N. Milpas St.; tour: various locations. $18-$20. Visit santabarbarastudioartists .com. 9/4: Art Reception: Ed Moses: Works from 1987-2007 Considered one of the most central figures of postwar West Coast and contemporary art, Ed Moses will be featured in Santa Barcourtesy
9/3-9/7: John Haugse S.B. resident and awardwinning filmmaker and artist John Haugse will share his works for just a few days! From graphic novels to animations to works on paper, he has done it all. Stop by and talk to him about his life as an artist and where he draws inspiration from. Noon-5pm. Alhecama Theater, 914 Santa Barbara St. Free. Call 252-7339 or visit johnhaugse.com.
Sat.: 9am-1pm. Trinity Episcopal Church, 1500 State St. Free. Call 965-7419, email office@trinitysb .org, or visit trinitysb.org. Read more on pg. 35.
Sean O’Shea (left) and Sean Jackson
9/4-9/5: Pvt. Wars Don’t miss the last weekend of this comedy/drama about three Vietnam veterans dealing with life in a psychiatric ward after the war as they become friends and work through all their wounds through laughter, sadness, and meaningful moments. All proceeds will benefit the S.B. Theatre Awards. 8pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo Nuevo. $20-$30. Call 963-0408 or visit centerstagetheater.org.
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New Practice Now Open!
Santa Barbara ENT
2420 Castillo St., Suite 100 Santa Barbara, CA 93105 Phone (805) 563-1999 Fax (805) 563-4999
old mission santa barbara Docent Training Class October 5 - November 16 Mondays 9:30am - 12:00pm
We welcome interested people of all faiths to join our dedicated docents who: • Lead tours for visitors from all over the world • Instruct school children on early mission life • Guide guests through La Huerta Historic Garden • Welcome visitors to the Mission church • Conduct special tours on Mission art and architecture
For more information, contact Laura Foss (805) 682-4713 (x166) / museumtours@sboldmission.org Application: www. santabarbaramission.org/docents
bara. Shown in many other prominent galleries around the country, his work includes art of different media and meanings. Celebrate the opening day with light refreshments and others who enjoy art. The exhibit shows through September 30. 5-9pm. The Mitchell Estate Gallery, 110 Powers Ave. Free. Call 568-1700 or visit themitchell estate.com.
DAviD Mcclister
Now Scheduling Appointments (805) 563-1999
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.
3-9
Rebecca D. Golgert, M.D. Adult and Pediatric Otolaryngolgy Head and Neck Surgery
Independent Calendar
sept.
saTurday 9/5 9/5-9/6: Arts & Crafts Labor Day Show The S.B. Arts & Crafts show will feature a special holiday show on Saturday as an addition to the regular Sunday show. Stroll along the beachside and look at or buy handmade, one-of-a-kind treasures. There will be more than 200 artists and artisans with arts and crafts for you and your home on display ready, and they are excited to chat about their work. 10am-6pm. 236 E. Cabrillo Blvd. and Stearns Wharf to Garden St. Free. Call 560-7557 or visit tinyurl.com/ SBlabordayartshow. 9/5: S.B. Fashion Week The De Marcos Fashion Academy will have its sixth annual student fashion show during its first-ever fashion week right here in S.B. The academy is dedicated to teaching creative skills in the fashion industry, such as design, illustration, styling, advertising, modeling, and theatrical design. The guest designer will be past student and designer to the stars Katharine Kidd. Reception: 7pm; show: 8pm. Arlington Theatre, 1317 State St. $25-$100. Call 845-2100 or visit demarcos fashion.com. 9/5: Canned Heat In 1966, blues historians and record collectors founded this band,
9/5: Great Peacock This band is made of Deep South musicians who aren’t afraid of the big city, so don’t expect this folk band to make music for campfires or square dances. Mainly pop music with some fiddle, pedal steel, and a whole lot of acoustic guitar, Great Peacock will provide a night of new and irresistible music. 7:30pm. Standing Sun Winery, 92 Second St., Buellton. $10-$15. Ages 21+. Call 691-9413 or visit standingsunwines.com. which has attained three worldwide hits such as “On the Road Again and “Going up the Country” and headlined the original Woodstock Festival in 1969. Through band member changes and assorted musical trends, Canned Heat has survived and is ready to play in S.B. Some proceeds will be given to Star Jasmine, a program that brings music to schools. 9pm. Mercury Lounge, 5871 Hollister Ave., Goleta. $40. Ages 21+. Call 967-0907. 9/5: Youth Interactive Postcards of S.B. Public Art Mural Project Mayor Helene Schneider will unveil this public mural, a collaborative exhibit of 8x6 vignettes depicting the best days of S.B. The walkway will give pedestrians an artistic insight into the beauty of our city. The ribbon-cutting ceremony will include live mariachi music, canapés, and a street celebration. Youth Interactive provides an opportunity for youths to find their passion and develop. 4pm. Indigo Hotel, 121 State St. Free.
John Zant’s House Calls for Greater Santa Barbara
Dr. Andy Dainsberg, DVM call 895-4340 or visit vetacu.com for more info
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Visit tinyurl.com/sbart muralproject. 9/5: Coal Oil Point Reserve Tour Take a tour and learn about the cultural history of the Coal Oil Point with a small group. Guides will take you on a nice walk to the beach, point out the array of bird species, and discuss the western snowy plover. The trail will bisect the reserve, so get ready for some beautiful views and animal habitats. 10am-noon. Coal Oil Point Reserve, Slough Rd., Isla Vista. Free. Call 893-3703 or email copr .conservation@lifesci.ucsb.edu to RSVP. 9/5: Cubensis, Moonalice Are you a Deadicated fan? If so, you don’t want to miss Cubensis, which will celebrate a live Grateful Dead concert experience. From blues and rock ’n’ roll to country and jazz, this band will make it a unique and exciting night. Opening the show will be Moonalice, a psychedelic, roots-rock band mixing a variety of genres and
Game of the Week
9/6: Running: Pier to Peak Half Marathon On August 2, Santa Barbara trail runner Matt Dubberley blitzed the Mountaineer’s Route up Mount Whitney, ascending to the 14,496-foot summit (the highest in the continental U.S.) in a record 1 hour, 47 minutes, 40 seconds, and also shattering the round-trip record back to Whitney Portal in 2:38:15. On Sunday, Dubberley and several hundred other hardy runners will engage in the annual 13.1-mile race to La Cumbre Peak (elevation 3,995). The starting line is at sea level by the Dolphin Fountain. The record is 1:33:04, set in 2008 by Aaron Gillen. 6:30am. Visit runsantabarbara.com.
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the
week extended musical improvisations. 9pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $15. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb.com. Read more on p. 43.
9/5: Evening of Poetry: Richard Jarrette, Pamela Davis Both of these award-winning poets will share readings from their newest books and sign books afterward. Jarrette’s A Hundred Million Years of Nectar Dances is a poetry cycle of nature that reveals an inherent religious quality, and Davis’s Lunette is an award-winning collection of compelling and innovative poems. 7pm. St. Mark’s-in-the-Valley Episcopal Church, 2901 Nojoqui Ave., Los Olivos. Free. Call 688-4454 or visit smitv.org. 9/5: Amtrak Sampler Train Trip Go on a short rail adventure to Carpinteria or Ventura, and get an inexpensive taste of train travel aboard the modern Amtrak. Museum Director Gary Coombs will escort the morning trip, answering questions and sharing anecdotes, regional history, and interesting facts
about the area rails. Goleta: 9:13am; S.B.: 9:27am. Goleta Amtrak, 25 S. La Patera Ln., Goleta; S.B. Amtrak, 209 State St. $10.50-$17.95. Call 964-3540 or visit goletadepot.org/ride.
sunday 9/6 9/6: Summer Nights on the Water Celebrate Labor Day Sunday on the high seas, cruising with cocktails, friends, music, and fun. This is the last sunset sail of the summer, so don’t miss out. 6:00pm. Condor Express, 301 W. Cabrillo Blvd. $30. Ages 21+. Visit tinyurl.com/ summernightsonthewater. 9/6: USPA Maserati Silver Cup Final Before concluding the Polo Tour at the Tianjin Goldin Metropolitan Polo Club in China, the USPA Maserati Silver Cup, one of the oldest U.S.A. polo tournaments, will make a stop in beautiful S.B. Watch a fun polo game sponsored by Modenese under the cabana or under the sun this Labor Day weekend. 1pm. S.B. Polo & Racquet Club, 3375
suMMer MOVIES
THURSDAY
SEP
17
LAST
COMIC STANDING THURSDAY
AEGIS
24
THU/FRI
OCT
12 &
THUNDER FROM DOWN UNDER
9/4: Magic Lantern Summer Film: Avengers: Age of Ultron Earth’s mightiest heroes, including Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, The Incredible Hulk, Black Widow, and Hawkeye, are the only hope against a villainous, mechanical AI known as Ultron. 7 and 10pm. Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte, Isla Vista. $4. Call 966-3652.
THURSDAY
LITTLE RIVER BAND
luis escoBAr
Run Free: The True Story of Caballo Blanco
SEP
OCT
8
THURSDAY
OCT
15
LITTLE JOE Y LA FAMILIA
9/8: Run Free: The True Story of Caballo Blanco This film chronicles the life of American ultra-running legend Micah True (a k a Caballo Blanco, or “White Horse”) and his creation of a 50-mile ultra-marathon in Mexico’s Copper Canyon to promote and preserve the Tarahumara Indians, super-athletes of northern Mexico’s running tradition. Find out what became of this trailblazer. Part of the proceeds will benefit Norawas de Rarámuri (Friends of the Running People). 7pm. Marjorie Luke Theatre, 721 E. Cota St. $12-$15. Visit luketheatre .org/calendar.
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Girls Inc. of Greater Santa Barbara
TEEN CENTER
sept.
jAMie slone
3-9
Independent Calendar
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.
Girls in 7th, 8th, and 9th grades SANTA BARBARA & GOLETA
3:30 pm – 6:00 pm Monday – Friday
Goleta Valley Center – 4973 Hollister Avenue FREE TRANSPORTATION FROM SCHOOL The Girls Inc. Teen Center is the place to make friends, have fun, and stay on top of your schoolwork. The center is led by caring mentors who have “been there” and want to see each girl fulfill her potential and SUCCEED! CREATIVITY • COMMUNITY • ACADEMICS STEM • LIFE SKILLS • FIELD TRIPS
Enroll now so YOU can help decide which classes and projects we take on for fall term! 9/6: Yappy Hour Enjoy a leisurely couple of hours as you wine taste and hang out with friends while not worrying about having to leave your pooch at home. Bring your fourlegged companion for complimentary sweets and doggie treats as you sip the vino! 4-6pm. Jamie Slone Wines, 23 E. De la Guerra St. Free. Call 560-6555 or visit jamieslonewines.com.
girlsincsb.org
805-963-4757
New 8wk Codependency Group
Foothill Rd., #1220, Carpinteria. $10-$350. Call 684-6683 or visit sbpolo.com.
L VES LOVES ME ME N T
Monday 9/7
Learn How to Cultivate Healthy Relationships
Paula Schaefer
CALL: (805) 966-5100
SBBG.ORG
ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW!
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9/19 9/22 9/23 9/27
Tuesday 9/8
Tales from the Urban Fringe Baja Islands Lecture - Free Free Senior’s Day Roots Workshop with Robert Kourik
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september 3, 2015
9/7: S.B. Democratic Party Labor Day BBQ Join the S.B. County Democratic Party, and enjoy camaraderie, tasty BBQ, beautiful scenery, and the holiday while supporting and fighting for your political beliefs. John Grant of the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 770, longtime leader in the fight for greater worker protections, will be the keynote speaker and will talk about the important battles ahead. 2-5pm. Oak Park, 500 W. Alamar Ave. Free-$25. Visit tinyurl.com/democraticbbq.
9/8: Investing in Your Creative Future This workshop hosted by Art Without Limits will teach artists about saving, budgeting, establishing and maintaining credit, and
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making your money grow so you can continue art without pressure. Arthur G. Swalley, who holds the Certified Investment Manager Analyst designation and is the founding partner and director of investments at Arlington Financial Advisors, is ready to teach you. 5-7pm. Community Partners Ctr., Union Bank, 11 E. Carrillo St. Free. Call 565-1332 or visit awolsb.org. 9/8: Glen Phillips This former frontman and primary songwriter for the renowned alternative rock band Toad the Wet Sprocket is always busy creating. From writing “Departure” (featured in James Cameron’s Ghosts of the Abyss) to collaborating with Grammy winner Nickel Creek to releasing albums, Glen Phillips will share his lone guitar talents and honey-dipped voce again with S.B. 8pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $15. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb.com.
9/8-9/9: Zoo to You! Learn about and listen to amazing stories of rescued creatures! Combining storytelling, fun, and live animals, this program is a blast. You won’t know which animal you’ll get to see until you show up! Surprise! Tue.: 4-5pm. Goleta Library, 500 N. Fairview Ave., Goleta. Call 964-7878. Wed.: 10:30-11:15am. Eastside Library, 1102 E. Montecito St. Call 963-3727. Wed.: 4-4:45pm. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Call 564-5638. Free. Best for ages 5+. Visit sbplibrary.org. 9/8: Hot Breath, Honey Maid, Welfare Talent We all know at least one DIY band. Come on out and support another one or two! Chicago pop-rock band Hot Breath, S.B.-based pop-rock duo Honey Maid, and Ventura rockers Welfare Talent will bring a night of music with so much singalong potential. 8pm. Funzone, 226 S. Milpas St. $5. Visit tinyurl .com/funzoneconcert.
Wednesday 9/9 9/9: S.B. Treble Clef Women’s Chorus Want to spend time with fellow singers? This chorus group is starting its new fall session. No audition or music reading is necessary to be a part of the group. Rehearsals will occur every Wednesday. 6:30-8:30pm. Patio Rm., Vista del Monte Retirement Community, 3775 Modoc Rd. Free. Call 966-3228. 9/9: Vietnam: The War & Its Veterans 50 Years On Watch 10 men of S.B.’s Vietnam Veterans and one spouse tell personal stories, watch films, and listen to music that encapsulates the history of the war. Be a part of this special and rare event hosted by Pierre Claeyssens Veterans Foundation and the Channel City Club. RSVP deadline is September 4. 11:30am. Fess Parker’s DoubleTree Resort, 633 E. Cabrillo Blvd. $40. Call 564-6223, email info@channelcityclub.org, or visit channelcityclub.org. 9/9: Julia Loggins Learn how to take charge of your gut health to access the joy, energy, and positivity that you’ve been missing. Julia Loggins’s new book, It Takes Guts to Be Happy, is the perfect guide for anyone facing
Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.
the
week
BIG NAMES. SMALL ROOM.
JIM MESSINA
with special guest Poco’s Rusty Young “Sittin’ In” SEPTEMBER 13 Performing the music they created as members of Poco, Buffalo Springfield and Loggins & Messina.
9/9: Wayback Wednesdays Get into the groove of the ’80s. S.B.’s favorite DJ Darla Bea (pictured) will be playing new wave, pop, and dance hits from the decade of decadence while Desperately Seeking Susan is playing on the big screen. Get amped for a night of flashbacks; there’s no need to chill! 9pm. Velvet Jones, 423 State St. Free. Ages 21+. Call 965-8676 or visit velvet-jones.com. a catastrophic disease, illnesses, or any other issues. Listen to her talk about her work in relation to chemotherapy, post-surgery, depression, and more. 7pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free. Call 682-6787 or visit chaucersbooks.com. 9/9: Women & Leadership Certificate Program Info. Session Turn in your application for the 2016 Women & Leadership Certificate Program, a unique, low-residency program that empowers students with knowledge, skills, and mentorship to achieve success. During this information session, meet the program director, talk to the admissions team, review the program, and tour the campus. 5:30-6:30pm. Antioch University, 602 Anacapa St. Free. Call 962-8179 or visit tinyurl .com/antiochinfo to RSVP. 9/9: Café KITP: Supernova Hunters This “physics café” will feature Dr. Iair Arcavi, who will give a presentation on supernova hunters. Supernova hunters look for stars that reach the end of their lives by bursting dramatic rays of light. Questions and provocations will follow the lecture. 5pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. Free. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb .com. 9/9: Wine Down Wednesday Stop by this hotel lobby and courtyard for samples of award-winning S.B. Winery’s chardonnay and pinot noir. This series of wine tastings will end September 23, so don’t miss
CHICK COREA & BÉLA FLECK
out. Discount vouchers for S.B. Winery will be given. 4-6pm. Hotel Milo, 202 W. Cabrillo Blvd. Free. Ages 21+. Call 965-4577 or visit hotelmilo santabarbara.com.
SEPTEMBER 15 With a mix of jazz and pop standards, crossing a myriad of genres, from jazz, bluegrass, rock, flamenco and gospel, this will be a casual, intimate evening with two legends from different musical worlds.
THE MILK CARTON KIDS with special guest Joe Pug SEPTEMBER 30
FaRMeRs MaRket scHedule
GILLIAN WELCH
Thursday Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 3-6:30pm Carpinteria: 800 block of Linden Ave., 3-6:30pm
OCTOBER 1
Friday Montecito: 1100 and 1200 blocks of Coast Village Rd., 8-11:15am
CHRIS THILE
Saturday
NOVEMBER 8
Downtown S.B.: Corner of Santa Barbara and Cota sts., 8:30am-1pm
DORADO SCHMITT and
Sunday Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 10am-2pm
the Django Festival All-Stars
Tuesday Old Town S.B.: 500-600 blocks of State St., 4-7:30pm
Wednesday Solvang: Copenhagen Dr. and 1st St., 2:30-6:30pm
NOVEMBER 10
View our Full Season at Lobero.com LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC
LOBERO BRUBECK CIRCLE
805.963.0761 | LOBERO.COM independent.com
september 3, 2015
THE INDEPENDENt
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INFLUENCE. MANAGE. LEAD EFFECTIVELY. Foundations of Leadership, BUSAD X435
• Lead confidently from a position of strength by burnishing that asset no one else has – one’s personal style • Build power teams by expertly identifying players with complementary skills and chemistry • Confidently innovate and be an agent for change • Discern when and how to seize a decision-making opportunity
Instructor: Pauline Chandler, B.S., M.Ed. Founder of Chandler Coaching
Speakers: Tricia Backelin, M.A. PLB Coaching, executive coach with expertise in Emotional Intelligence (EQ) Lisa Braithwaite, M.A. Public speaking coach, trainer, and author of Present Your Best: 11 Strategies for Magnifying Your Confidence... Both Onstage and Off Sara Caputo, M.A. Workplace efficiency coach, trainer, consultant, and author of The Productivity Puzzle: What’s Your Missing Piece? Steve Caputo, M.A. Manager of Development, Cottage Hospital
Other Fall 2015 Leadership Courses: • Business Negotiation (BUSAD X432) • Cultural Perspectives of Conflict (BUSAD X438)
• Trust Across Cultures (ENGR X421) • Diversity and Inclusion in the Workplace (BUSAD X450.38)
2015-Fall-1529 8/15
This course provides you with opportunities to learn techniques and develop skills to make better decisions, resolve conflicts, improve employee performance, and lead change throughout the organization. Through self-assessment, challenging problem-solving studies, and team building exercises, you will develop your own unique leadership style for success. This course helps you to:
805.893.4200 | EXTENSION.UCSB.EDU/BL
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THURSDAY SHOWCASE
Santa Barbara Travel Bureau cordially invites you to a special presentation with
Specializing in small-ship expeditions, tours and safaris on all seven continents with all-inclusive itineraries led by expert guides & lecturers
Thursday, September 3, 2015 Open House: 5 - 8 PM / Presentations: 6 & 7 PM
Santa Barbara Travel 1028 State Street, Santa Barbara Lucky drawing for $1,500 pp air credit towards a Zegrahm Expedition Cruise 34
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New Rate, New Staff
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Pack Walk at Ellwood
living p. 35
Spirituality
courtesy
Scene in S.B.
Text and photos by Caitlin Fitch After learning how many dogs were dying in shelters across the country, Angela Adan created the Santa Ynez Valley– based nonprofit Deserving Dogs. “Now I’ve adopted out over 300 dogs in Santa Barbara County,” said Adan, who hosts a “pack walk” at least once a month at the Ellwood preserve. The outing caters to dogs with behavioral issues, but anyone can come out, support the cause, and enjoy a walk with plenty of furry friends. “I do a lot of dog-rescue activities,” said Faryn Kapala, who brought her dog, Riley (right), to this past weekend’s event, which included 49 dogs. “I just like to come out and support anything that helps animals.” During the walk, which lasts about two hours, Adan and other volunteers walk throughout the crowd providing advice and expertise, for free, to anyone in need of it. The end result is remarkable: Dogs who were growling, bark barking, and snarling at the beginning of the day are able to walk comfortably next to other dogs and people by the end. To learn more, see facebook.com/DeservingDogs.
WISDOM AND WELL-BEING: Internationally respected spiritual teacher Nithya Shanti comes to Trinity Church for a two-day mindfulness and meditation retreat this Friday-Saturday.
Nithya Shanti’s Innate Wisdom
Dressage
Kaili Graf N Rides Rescued Horse to Championships date back to the 1700s with the ranches of the American West and Spanish vaqueros. Western Horsemanship meets the English Classical Dressage in a style that emphasizes “lightness” and “subtle cues.” For Kaili and Soby, the goal in competition is to execute techniques as a single unit and to make their movement as instinctive and intuitive as possible. The importance of this upcoming World Championship goes beyond personal aspirations, however, as Kaili wants to advocate for the sport and rescue horses. “I want to inspire the riders who think they could never make it,” says Graf. “There’s an existing structure that no one wants to challenge.” If Kaili and Soby can prevail at the World Championships, it will show that rescue horses and anyone from modest means can find success with hard work. The cost of Kaili Graf competing is not cheap, though, so the duo can use all the support they can rally. To help contribute to their cause, see speak equine.com or attend A Country Night Out fundraiser at Sharkeez on September 19 at 7 p.m. See GoCountry .nightout.com for info and tickets. — Austin Murphy courtesy
M
ost horses that contend at the highest level of equestrian competitions come from large ranches and carefully selective breeding. That’s not the case for Soby, the rescue horse equestrian that trainer Kaili Graf will be riding at the Western Dressage World Championships in Tulsa, Oklahoma, this coming November. Kaili rescued Soby back in 2010 as a baby when she was neglected and left out alone in a field. The two had an instant connection, as rider and horse developed a strong partnership in a short time that would typically take weeks for other trainers. “As soon as I saw her, I said, ‘This is not a normal horse,’ ” said Graf, a trainer who has been riding horses for as long as she can remember. “Soby has a goofy personality, but she loves to work.” Soby was one of the earliest rescue horses that Kaili ever worked with, and as such is a bit of a “poster child” for rescue horses competing in Western Dressage, having won four state titles in 2014. A new discipline, Western Dressage’s influences
ot rooted in any one belief system, Nithya Shanti teaches the importance of witnessing and questioning our own thinking, and how this can help us cultivate higher-quality thoughts—of wishing well for others, of wanting to share, of bringing out the best in any situation. He quotes Aristotle to illustrate the philosophy he developed after spending seven years as a Buddhist monk: “It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” The internationally respected spiritual teacher comes to Trinity Church for a two-day mindfulness and meditation retreat on FridaySaturday, September 4-5. Called Resting in Our Innate Wisdom and Wellbeing, the weekend will focus on ways people can find the wisdom Wellbeing that is already within them. “We have within us a wellspring of wisdom, a wellspring of wellbeing that’s always accessible if we just turn around and look, if we just learn the art of pausing and reconnecting,” explained Shanti. “This is what I discovered when I was 16 years old, that there was a happiness there which I never even noticed.” That was the age he attended his first meditation course, where he started to feel more naturally peaceful by finding happiness from within. Shanti advocates living in the present, a particular challenge in our fast-paced, goal-oriented society. But instead of trying to make more time, Shanti urges us to question the way we think of the present moment, believing that “the moment” is separate from time. “The moment is so big, the entire universe fits in it,” he recalled an old teacher telling him. “So we have to think of the present not as a miniscule amount of time [that] we’re trying to force ourselves into. … When we understand that, then we see it not as something that is interfering with our life purpose or our life goal.” — Gilberto Flores
4•1•1
Nithya Shanti’s two-day retreat at Trinity Church (1500 State St.) is Friday, September 4, 7-8:30 p.m., and Saturday, September 5, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Call 965-7419 or see trinitysb.org for details.
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tHe INDepeNDeNt
september 3, 2015
independent.com
santa ynez valley
apps
paul wellman
Food &drink
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MENUS TO U: SBMenus.com founders Bryan Brand (right) and Dusty Stutsman now offer an app to make food delivery easier.
Vincent Vineyards Aims for Upscale PROMISE MADE GOOD: It was back in 2006 when Tony Vincent promised to hire Lee Lauthowers (pictured) to manage his Vincent Vineyards winery if it ever got built — and Lathouwers was indeed in charge when it opened doors on August 22, quite pleased that Vincent’s word was his bond.
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sBMenus.coM GETS FOOd TO Your Y door Ordering food online has never been simpler, as SB Menus.com continues to improve the way people in Santa Barbara find and enjoy restaurants. Founders Bryan Brand and Dusty Stutsman took their site a step further by launching a mobile app that lets you order your favorite food with a single click. The new app, available for free on your iPhone, iPad, or Android, offers menus from more than 80 different restaurants for both delivery and takeout. The delivery feature has expanded in the past year to now reach all parts of Goleta and as far south as Montecito. “We set out to create a convenient way for people to order food delivery and takeout from their favorite restaurants, said Brand. “Now with the new app, we’re making it easier than ever to do so from their personal devices.” A key feature of the app allows you to constantly track your order to see where your food is at all times, a major advancement for the site that has been feeding Santa Barbara residents since 2008. The two founders met at SBCC in 2004, and their shared penchant for entrepreneurship has been instrumental in their site’s success, as has their familiarity with the area. “We knew how awesome Santa Barbara is as a community, and it turned out to be a great market for our model,” said Stutsman, who reports using the app several times a week due to the wide selection of cuisines available. New restaurants are encouraged to join SBMenus. com to spread the word about their menus and special deals. “The barrier to entry is nonexistent,” said Brand. “Aside from a small setup fee, our goal is to help grow all businesses.” See SBMenus.com. — Austin Murphy
bout eight years ago, when Lee Lathouwers high ceilings, sparklingly sleek but classic design notes, was managing Mattei’s Tavern in Los Olivos, he and sprawling patios whose walls are covered with got to know a customer named Tony Vincent. wine-country frescoes, quite a contrast to the rural barn Vincent took a liking to the smooth, efficient motif that rules the region. “It’s not really like a tasting style of the Chicago-born, Santa Barbara–raised Lathouwers room—it’s like a high-end lounge,” said Lathouwers. and divulged that he was planting grapevines and building a “No expense was spared.” winery down the road.“I give you my word,” said Vincent to A considerable expense was battling for years with Lathouwers.“If this project gets done, and you’re still around, the County of Santa Barbara, which is clamping down you’re the guy.” on winery development—particularly of tasting rooms and parties—due to the concern of some In 2014, with Vincent Vineyards about to leap the last of countless permitting hurdles, neighbors. To get approved, Vincent Vineyards, whose first proposal was Lathouwers — then semiretired after submitted in December 2009, four decades in the hospitality busigave up grander special-event ness—answered the phone to find Vincent offering him that job. “For dreams but became one of the how many guys in the world today first approved to do basic food is their word still their bond?” service.“We do little bites and , , Lathouwers asked me in May, when appetizers,” said LathouwI visited the almost-done winery. ers, whose large but legally “There’s nothing he can’t do, but he limited kitchen can also host licensed caterers. “With only held my hand, made me a promise, wine, that’s just 50 percent of and made good on it. People like that by Matt KettMann the experience.” still do exist in the world.” That guy’s full name is Anthony The benefit of the long road Vincent Zehenni, a Lebanese octogenartraveled is wine that’s enjoyed ample ian who’s built a fortune developing everything aging time. The 15-acre estate vineyard was from Hawaiian hotels and Lake Arrowhead resorts planted in 2007 on a former walnut orchard by to Los Angeles freeways and Nigerian bridges through his renowned grape expert Bill Kesselring, who opted for Aladdin Developers, Inc. Though turning 83 on September Bordeaux varietals of cabernet sauvignon, merlot, cab19,Vincent is still reportedly as vital as ever, whether showing ernet franc, petit verdot, sauvignon blanc, and a little bit of “That is great for us.” Production of more than a half-dozen off the collection of vintage cars he keeps under his Sunset the RhÔne grape syrah. The first harvest was in 2010, and bottlings—including the Vincent Black Shadow project, Strip high-rise office or reminiscing about the days he hung those wines—which were showing quite fantastic the day which Lathouwers said will be “our Screaming Eagle”—is in Las Vegas with the Rat Pack. “Those were his regular I tasted them, despite such young vine age—were made by expected to hover in the 5,000- to 7,000-case range once all running-around buddies,” said Lathouwers, pointing to a Etienne Terlinden of Summerland Winery and Cordon. He pistons are firing. hanging picture of Sinatra, Sammy, and Dean on the wall of also made the 2011 and 2012 vintages before Mike Roth, of Lathouwers said that Vincent is very hands-on, as is his wife, Tanya, who was sweeping the floors the day I visited. He the winery’s VIP room. Lo-Fi Wines, stepped in for 2013 and 2014. Though Vincent remains a humble, private fellow—“he’s Then just recently, right in time for this year’s harvest and credits this to their respect for old-school family values and Old World,” said Lathouwers—he wanted to make his mark the August 22 opening of the tasting room, Roxie Ward was hard work, explaining, “They treat people like people.” And on the Santa Ynez Valley wine-tasting scene by creating an appointed as winemaker. She comes from the Terravant cus- he still can’t get over what’s transpired since that handshake. upscale experience on an impressive spread, starting with tom crush facility in Buellton, which is where Vincent wines “It’s the most fascinating thing that’s happened in my life,” the ornate gates that drivers approaching Los Olivos along were made until this year.“She has been with Terravant as the said Lathouwers.“We are standing in what was just a promise Highway 154 have noticed for years.“When you drive up to winemaker since our first harvest in 2010,” said Lathouwers. eight years ago.” those gates, your aesthetic meter peaks,” said Lathouwers. “You have to keep it up inside.” That translates to Now open to the public, Vincent Vineyards is located at 2370 North Refugio Road, Santa Ynez, off Highway 154.
Newest
estate winery
opens doors impresses eyes and entertains paLates
OFF HIGHWaY 154
/sbindyfood
@sbindyfood
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See vincentvineyards.com. The winery’s exclusive tour partner is Stagecoach Wine Tours, so call 686-8347 or see winetourssantaynez.com to arrange for an even more unique visit. independent.com
september 3, 2015
tHe INDepeNDeNt
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paul wel
eat this
matt kettmann
tktk
Ω
Plenty of space for wine, no room for snobbery
Santa Barbara
®
Voted Best Wine Shop for Six Years in a Row!
santa barbara®
Winner
Largest selection of Central Coast wines anywhere! Plus a whole lot of imports. – Cheers, Bob, Betty & Dennis Hours: Mon-Sat from 11-7, Closed Sundays 3849 State St. in La Cumbre Plaza • (805) 845-5247 38
tHe INDepeNDeNt
september 3, 2015
independent.com
pan-Fried summer squash tacos
matt kettmann
Though quite popular since it opened in 2011 with Santa Barbara’s picky happy hour crowd — that Cajun pork sausage brioche slider with harissa and tomato-cornichon relish is pretty legit — Le Café Stella, across the municipal golf course, is a superb lunch hideaway, too. The sultry French soundtrack and brasserie vibe pair nicely with this savory sandwich, whose thinly sliced, herb-crusted lamb packs a gamy bite through the soft ciabatta roll, enhanced ever so delicately by the piquantly sweet whole-grain mustard and caramelized onion topping. (But maybe a little more lamb, please?) The salad with red onion vinaigrette works well as the included side dish, but folks love the fries, and the tortilla soup, if offered, makes a nice dipper for the ciabatta ends. Not into sheep meat? Then try the chicken-brie sando instead. $13.75. 3302 McCaw Ave., 569-7698, lecafe stella.com — Matt Kettmann
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Food & drink •
Dining Out Guide
• Wine Guide
roasted Lamb sandwich @ Le café stella
Like our seasonal tomato overabundance, squash of all shapes and colors tend to jam Santa Barbara shelves during the summer. If you’re always on a taco kick like my family, but not requiring meat nightly, this is a relatively healthy and quick dinner option. Cut the squash into roughly halfinch-thick wedges, heat olive oil in a fairly hot pan, toss in crudely chopped chunks of garlic, and then add the squash (seasoned to your liking, though simple sea salt and fresh cracked pepper do fine) after the garlic starts to glisten. As you warm tortillas, the key is to get the squash slightly brown on the fleshy sides while keeping it moist inside, thereby retaining the rind’s natural snap without the guts going mushy. It’s a delicate balancing act, aided by high heat for the browning and the occasional splash of white wine for the moisture, but you always want the pan close to looking dry. Frequent tasting of the squash as you cook for five to 10 minutes is the best way to ensure a desirable result. When almost done, top with the shredded cheese of your choice and then kill the flame, allowing the cheese to melt across the squash. Finish with dried oregano from your garden, plop it onto a hot tortilla, and top with avocado, bell pepper slices, and salsa, ideally the ghost pepper or serrano chile ones that your neighbors made. It’s savory, fresh, and surprisingly meaty, from concept to mouth in less than 20 minutes. — MK
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THE LITTLE DOOR OPENS: Last May I men-
tioned that a new restaurant named The Little Door will be opening toward the end of the year at 129 East Anapamu Street, the former home of Piano Riviera Lounge and Elements Restaurant & Bar. Reader David tells me that a sign on the door indicates that they are now open. I am told hours are Tuesday-Saturday, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. and 5-11 p.m. Renovations are still underway and should be done in December, at which time The Little Door will be open seven days a week. Visit thelittledoor.com.
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Dining Out Guide
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eader Bruce let me know that Caffé Primo at 516 State Street (formerly Pierre Lafond Wine Bistro) is having a soft, dinner-only opening on September 14. I stopped by and spoke with general manager Andrew Morgan and regional director Anthony Riviera. Riviera tells me that Caffé Primo began life in Los Angeles, where it currently has two locations. In addition to Santa Barbara, the company has a presence in San Diego, Anaheim, and Woodland Hills. Riviera says Caffé Primo in Santa Barbara is an Italian restaurant offering casual dining with full service. A large counter in the middle of the restaurant creates a fast casual feel. Only dinner will be available at opening, but after a week, the menu will be expanded to include breakfast (available all day) and lunch.“We will be involved in the community here in Santa Barbara,” says Riviera. “It’s a city unto its own, and we look forward to earning their business.” Their website, iloveprimo.com, describes the business this way:“Primo brings to life the atmosphere; [sic] taste and charm of what locals thrive on, a local place to refresh, refuel, and relax in their daily lives. Caffé Primo perfectly blends the warmth of an eatery with the modern touches of a sleek restaurant, bringing European style and ambience to America in a casual atmosphere. Most Europeans have more of a ‘gathering’ mentality whether it would be with family, friends or people in their community. Caffé Primo affords that common spot where guests are free to spend time from mid-morning until late night. Caffé Primo, like its Italian meaning, represents all that
is ‘First In class’; guests enjoy simple, impeccably prepared food in an elegant setting, at very affordable price without the confines of a formal dining room.” The menu includes a variety of coffee offerings, smoothies, fresh-squeezed juices, breakfast, brown rice bowls, pressed panini, wraps, French crêpes, pizza, pasta, soups, salads, beer, and wine. Call 845-9301.
Food & drink •
CAFFE CREW: General manager Andrew Morgan (left) and regional director Anthony Riviera are working to open Caffé Primo by the middle of the month.
Parking on Salsipuedes 2321730R
ICE CREAM
AND YOGURT ! 201 West Mission St. • 569-2323
Fine Ice Cream and Yogurts 201 West Mission St. • 569-2323
BUENA ONDA HAPPENING:
This just in from reader Cyndie: “Saw this sign at The Goodland Kitchen in Goleta today. It’s a separate company who come and set up after Goodland closes. The employee here said everyone raves about it. You can bring your own beverage or walk directly across the street to Santa Barbara Gift Baskets to buy wine and bring it back over. Open Thu., Fri. & Sat. 5:30-9 p.m. Menu includes Empanadas, Ceviche, Tamales and Salads.” KOL’S CAFÉ COMING TO ISLA VISTA:
Reader Primetime let me know that Crushcakes has closed its location at 6533 Trigo Road in Isla Vista. Crushcakes moved to 5392 Hollister Avenue in Goleta, partnering with Simply Pies. A sign on the empty store in Isla Vista says the next tenant will be Kol’s Café. Visit kolscafe.com.
Isla Vista - Now Open! 888 Embarcadero Del Norte
John Dickson’s reporting can be found every day online at SantaBarbara.com. Send tips to info@SantaBarbara.com. independent.com
september 3, 2015
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TRADITIONS RETOOLED: Karina Rodriguez serves up Mexican fare in the same location where her parents did the same for 15 years.
Santa Barbara County 4-H invite you to attend…
Celebrating National 4-H week Saturday, October 3, 2015 Rancho La Patera & Stow House 304 No. Los Carneros Rd. Goleta
1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Free Admission Please leave your pets at home
UCCE Santa Barbara County 4-H Program 7127 Hollister Ave., Suite 7| Goleta | CA | 93117| 805-893-3410| sb4h.org It is the policy of the University of California (UC) and the UC Division of Agriculture & Natural Resources not to engage in discrimination against or harassment of any person in any of its programs or activities (Complete nondiscrimination policy statement can be found athttp://ucanr.edu/sites/anrstaff/files/169224. http://ucanr.edu/sites/anrstaff/files/169224. pdf) Inquiries regarding ANR’s nondiscrimination policies may be directed to Linda Marie Manton, Affirmative Action Contact, University of California, Davis, pdf Agriculture and Natural Resources, 2801 Second Street, Davis, CA 95618, (530) 750-1318.
FOOd & drinK •
TEDDY BEAR CANCER FOUNDATION
Dining Out Guide
Come enjoy a family fun-filled afternoon participating in projects, watching demonstrations, and learning about all the opportunities available for ages 5 to 18 with Santa Barbara County 4-H.
• Wine Guide
Learn what 4-H is all about!
We provide financial and emotional support to families of children with cancer living in Santa Barbara, Ventura, and San Luis Obispo counties. Go Gold in September!
#GoGoldTBCF
T
La Hacienda Now Serving OLd TOWn GOLeTa
ucked away on Pine Avenue in Old used to be solid concrete, looks much sleeker with Town Goleta, there’s a familiar wood- hardwood paneling, and the patio’s blinds give shingled building that reopened privacy for special occasions and parties. To help introearlier this year under new ownerduce La Hacienda ship. Jorge and Karina to the public, they Rodriguez remodeled El are now hosting a weekly slew of speRincon Bohemio, which belonged to Karina’s cial events, from an parents for 15 years, and impressive culinary rechristened the restauvariety on Taco rant La Hacienda. Tuesday and daily by Austin Murphy Jorge and Karina took 4-6 p.m. happy over in May 2014 when hours to an elevated her father retired, and closed the location briefly atmosphere on Friday’s Mariachi night. Once footin December 2014 for the renovations and menu ball season starts back up, Jorge plans to install a changes. In January 2015, La Hacienda opened its 60-inch television outside for fans and also launch new specials. doors to the public for the first time. Though the interior space remains largely simiWith a friendly atmosphere, an elegant laylar, the Rodriguezes added a brand-new bar and out, and authentic Mexican cuisine, La Hacienda enclosed an outdoor patio that was previously should be next on your list of new restaurants to only partially covered. The outside flooring, which check out in Goleta.
JOrGe and Karina rOdriGuez remaKe and rename ename Her PParenTS'
eL rincOn BOHemiO
What to Order There’s lots to explore at La Hacienda, from carnitas tortas and tropical salmon to the Mayan steak, which used to be available only on special occasions and is now a regular menu option. Here are some highlights:
lar dish in Mexico is traditionally served in a gigantic bowl big enough for four people. With a mild flavor, the molcajete bowl is about average in terms of the spiciest dishes on the menu.
Mezcal Mule: This cocktail, created with the help of drink specialist Randy Brown, combines mezcal, passion fruit, cucumber, and ginger beer. Mezcal is similar to tequila in that it comes from the heart of the maguey plant, a form of agave native to Mexico. This tangy drink is one of the most popular cocktails on the menu alongside the Chingon (made from homemade horchata), Mamacita (a favorite among the ladies), and La Hacienda (a spicy tequila-based drink).
Cochinita Pibil: Created by head chef Alberto Carachure, this pulled pork dish is typically served on a large banana leaf that covers an entire plate. The savory pork is marinated in a variety of spices and comes with beans, rice, habanero pico de gallo, and tortillas. This is one of Karina’s personal favorites.
Molcajete: Served in a large steaming bowl, this entree for two is made by combining chicken, steak, shrimp, fish, chorizo, Mexican cheese, and a special house sauce. This popu-
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Open Monday-Thursday 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Friday 11 a.m.-10 p.m., and SaturdaySunday 9 a.m.-9 p.m., La Hacienda is located at 298 Pine Avenue in Old Town Goleta. Call 683-0456 or see lahaciendasb.com.
TeddyBearCancerFoundation.Org 2320 Bath Street, Suite #107 Santa Barbara, CA 93105 (805) 962-7466
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Mole Poblano: Normally served as a quarter chicken topped with the house mole sauce—made from dark chocolate, California chiles, crackers, onion, and cinnamon—the enchilada variation was just as sweet as expected. This recipe was originally available only as a special but was added to the menu due to popular demand.
september 3, 2015
independent.com
paul wellman
mexican food
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Guide
ethiopian Authentic Ethiopian CUISINE Featured at Petit Valentien Restaurant 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Serkaddis Alemu offers an ever changing menu with choices of vegetarian, vegan, and meat options. Catering Avaliable for parties of up to 40 people. french Petit Valentien, 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Open M‑F 11:30‑3pm (lunch). M‑Sat 5pm‑Close (dinner). Sun $24 four course prix fixe dinner. In La Arcada Plaza, Chef Robert Dixon presents classic French comfort food at affordable cost in this cozy gem of a restaurant. Petit Valentien offers a wide array of meat and seafood entrees along with extensive small plates and a wine list specializing in amazing quality at arguably the best price in town. A warm romantic atmosphere makes the perfect date spot. Comfortable locale for dinner parties, or even just a relaxing glass of wine. Reservations are recommended. indian Flavor of INDIA 3026 State 682‑6561 $$ www.flavorofindiasb.com VOTED BEST 17yrs. Finest, most authentic Indian cuisine is affordable too! All You Can Eat Lunch Buffet $9.95 M‑S dinner combos $9.95+ Specials: Tandoori‑ Mixed or Fish, Chicken Tikka Masala, Shrimp Bhuna. Also: meat, curries & vegetarian. Wine & Beer. Take out. 20yrs of Excellence!
sip this
irish Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant, 18 E. Ortega St. (next to lot 10) SB, 568‑0702. $$. 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 welcome. Avail. for private parties. Pool & Darts. Japanese KYOTO, 3232 State St, 687‑1252.$$. Open 7days M‑F 11:30a‑2p; Sat Noon‑2:30p Lunch; Sun‑Thur 5‑10p Din‑ ner, Fri‑Sat 5p‑10:30p.Complete Sushi Bar. Steak & Seafood Specials! Sashimi, Teriyaki, original Japanese appetizers & Combination Boat Dinner. SB’s only TATAMI Rooms reservations suggested. Beer, Wine & Sake.Take Out. Birthday customers get FREE tempura ice cream & photo on our website! KyotoSB.com steak Rodney’s Grill, 633 East Cabrillo Bou‑ levard at The Fess Parker – A Doubletree by Hilton Resort 805‑564‑4333. Serving 5 pm ‑10pm Tuesday through Saturday. Rodney’s Grill is a fresh American grill experience. Enjoy all natural hormone‑free beef, locally‑sourced seafood, appetizers, and incredible desserts. The place to enjoy dinner with family and friends by the beach. Private Dining Room for 30. Full cocktail bar with specialty cocktails. Wine cellar with Santa Barbara County & California’s best vintages by‑the‑glass www.rodneys steakhouse.com
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The Independent Independent’s Dining Guide is a paid advertisement and is provided as a service to our readers. Restaurants are listed according to type of food served. Bon appétit! AVERAGE PRICE PER MEAL $ Up to $10 $$ $11-$15 $$$ $16-$25 $$$$ $26-Up To advertise in the Dining Guide, call 965-5208. Wine country tours Spencer’s Limousine & Tours, 884‑9700 Thank You SB, Voted BEST 18yrs! Specializing in wine tours of all Central Cal Wineries. Gourmet picnic lunch or fine restaurants avail TCP16297 805‑884‑9700 www.spencerslimo.com Wineries/ tasting rooms
Santa Barbara Winery, 202 Anacapa St. 963‑3633. Open Sun‑Thurs 10a‑6p & Fri‑Sat 10a ‑ 7p, small charge for exten‑ sive tasting list. 2 blocks from both State St & the beach. This venerable winery is the county’s oldest‑ est.1962, and offers many internationally acclaimed wines from their Lafond Vineyard in the Santa Rita Hills. Try some of Winemaker Bruce McGuire’s small production bottling. www.sbwinery.com
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Arnaldo Caprai “Collepiano” Sagrantino di Montefalco 2009: There’s
a reason this 2009 is a current release: Sagrantino is one of the most tannic grapes. That means, yes, this is a big, chewy wine but a delight with roasted meats, roasted vegetables, or the richest of cheeses. The varietal helped put Umbria on the Italian wine map, earning its DOCG status in 1992. For years they let the grape dry to make a high-powered dessert wine, and that intensity carries into this relatively refined “secco” (that is dry) pour, thanks to 22 months in French oak barrique and a minimum of six months in bottle. Think the darkest of cherries, plus blueberry and raspberry, all accented with herbs and earth. It’s a fascinating, unusual wine. — George Yatchisin See arnaldocaprai.it.
• Wine Guide
SB Coffee Roasting Company 321 Motor Way SB 962‑5213– NOW WITH FREE WI‑FI! Barbara’s premier 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 location ‑ Corner of State & Gutierrez. Gift baskets, mail order & corporate gifts avail. sbcoffee.com.
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 specialties. World Class Indian Chefs at your service! Traditional floor seating. Indian & Draft Beers, Local Wines. www.indiahouseusa.com
Dining Out Guide
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Food & drink •
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WEEKLY SPECIALS Local Swordfish— 15.95 lb Local Ahi Tuna — $18.95 lb Scottish Salmon Lox — $15.95 lb $
With this coupon. Expires 9/9/15.
10% OFF
excluding specials IN STORE ONLY
117 Harbor Way, Suite A, Santa Barbara, CA 93109 | ph. 805.965.9564 | www.sbfish.com
Santa Barbara’s best Mexican comfort food! Buy one entree, get one
20% OFF
FREE!
with purchase of 2 beverages
ENTIRE BILL!
Coupon valid Tuesday-Thursday
Coupon valid every day
expires 9/17
expires 9/17
Come Sundays for brunch with bottomless mimosas!
413 State Street 805.845.6364
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september 3, 2015
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SANTA BARBARA’S CULTURAL NIGHT DOWNTOWN
www.DowntownSB.org
1 Thursday st
arT CraWL: 735 Anacapa Street The Santa Barbara Arts Collaborative, in partnership with Downtown Santa Barbara, will lead a curated Art Crawl through 1st Thursday festivities. The Art Crawl starts at 5:30pm in de la Guerra Plaza on the back steps of City Hall (735 Anacapa Street, then head around to the back).
September 3 rd • 5-8pm
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.
– Lole will provide mats as needed. The night continues with an hour of connecting with new and old friends in our courtyard following class. Class will be one hour and start promptly at 5:30pm followed by a community hangout in the courtyard!
D ENCa ENC NTO: 1114 State Street #22 • 805-722-4338 ENCANTO, a women’s boutique which specializes in unique clothing, jewelry, scarves, + shoes is one of the most beautiful shops in town AND has one of the most exciting venues each month! This month, come join us for an evening of some really fine bluegrass music with the SALT MARTIANS, local musicians who will definitely keep your toes a tappin’. E CEBada CEBada WINE: 5 East Figueroa Street, 2nd Floor • 805-451-2570 Cebada Wine welcomes the artwork of local artist Vanessa Wallace-Gonzales! Her energetic works of art were influenced by the vibrant and warm culture she was surrounded by as a young adult. We will be sipping on our award winning 2012 Pinot Noir by the glass as well as showcasing our special vertical tasting.
GaLLErIEs, MusEuMs & VENuEs dIVINE INsPIraTION raTION GaLLEry ra
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1528 State Street • 805-962-6444 MAGICAL MOMENTS . . . WINDOWS OF SOUL: Three local artists have worked collaboratively to create this unique concept in mixed-media depicting beautiful scenes of Santa Barbara using a combination of photography and pastel. A ‘magical moment’ in time, captured in the past by photo was brought into the living energy by combining it with pastel, creating a ‘world within a world’. Come have a glass of wine and enjoy!
micheltorena street
2 Ca Ca’ a’darIO GaLLEry: ry 31 E. Victoria Street • 310-895-0134 ry: Sophie Kipner is an artist and writer from Topanga, CA. She will be showing her new series, DONTLIFTUPDONTLOOKDOWN, a collection of pen, ink and charcoal portraits, including Bowie and Iman, Bob Marley and The Beatles, among others. In this series, Sophie draws without looking at the paper or lifting up the pen, and then shades in the work afterwards. She takes commissions and will draw live portraits tonight. Wine and snacks by Ca’Dario.
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11 East Anapamu Street • 805-730-1460 Sullivan Goss opens a new Fall Salon painting in our Haines Gallery, featuring a selection of important paintings from the last 100 years of American Art. Also on view, CA Cool, and Robin Gowen: Landmark.
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105 E Anapamu St, 1st floor Join us at 6PM, for a lively walk-thru tour of FOR THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE: GOVERNMENT AT WORK 1850-1950, by Michael Allen, Clerk of the Board and local historian, Hattie Beresford. This exhibition takes a historic look back at the origins of government. The Board of Supervisors is offering its citizens a rare opportunity to view original ledger books, historic photographs, maps and artifacts from that period. Follow the transition of California from a Mexican state to a State of the Union, witness remarkable stories of early citizens and learn who the people were that led the government during that time.
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1114 State Street, La Arcada Court #8 • 805-965-6611 Gallery 113 presents original art by members of the Santa Barbara Art Association. The Artist of the Month is Linda Nelson who shares her insights into the plein air artist’s process. The featured artists are Elaine Wilson, Ann Russell, Lori Lenz, Rebecca Stebbins, Norah Bierer, Patty van Dyke, and Kristy Vantrease. (Open 11-5 Monday-Saturday and 1-5 on Sunday.)
10 OLIVEr r&E Es sPIG: 1108 State Street • 805-962-8111 A lizard emerges from a piece of Serpentine, a playful pod of dolphins leap in a wave of Quartzite, an octopus camouflages itself against a piece of Butte Opal - stone is transformed into life. The exhibition includes a selection of natural stones and minerals that are hand carved, representing an interaction of life and nature. Visit our gallery, experience art from the world around us. 11 BELLa BELL rOsa Osa GaLLErIEs Osa IE : 1103-A State Street • 805-966-1707 IEs Aubrey Falk creates paintings which inspire the awe and wonder of nature within all of us. A third generation Santa Barbara native, her majestic landscapes and beach scenes have delighted locals and visitors for many years. New originals as well as limited edition giclees will be available for purchase. Enjoy wine tasting to benefit the Breast Cancer Resource Center of Santa Barbara. 12 ChurChILL JEWELErs: 1015 State Street • 805-962-5815 After a 30 year music career, Ruth Ellen Hoag started painting and found her new passion. While her styles vary from series to series they are all connected with an evocative sense of movement. Join us in welcoming award-winning painter and teacher, Ruth Ellen Hoag. Ongoing: Thomas Van Stein.
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16 saNTa NTa Bar NTa BarBara B hIsTO s rICa sTO IC L MusEuM ICa 136 East De La Guerra Street • 805-966-1601 Extravagant Costumes! Continue the Fiesta with our exhibition dedicated to beautiful Old Spanish Days fashion, art, and history. Celebrate with Spanish guitar, pop-up performances and a tribute to the legacy of the Museum, built fifty years ago. Always family friendly.
tHe INDepeNDeNt
september 3, 2015
Casa MaG Casa a aZINE a
H sOJOurNEr: 134 East Canon Perdido • 805-965-7922 Art, wine and music…join us for wine tasting, a dual art show with Chris Potter and Kevin Gleason, all while you’re entertained by singer/songwriter Lainey Taylor, an aspiring young artist who has been playing for us for several years. I INdusT dus ry hOME: 740 State St. Suite 1 dusT NEW is the word of the month! We have new makers, fun new events, AND a whole new look! Come celebrate all of the new things we have going on with freshly brewed coffee from one of our local makers, beer, wine, and sushi! j saLT: 740 State Street, 805-963-7258 Move your hips to the beat of the drum in our Himalayan Salt Cave! Discover how hula-hooping can strengthen your core and improve your mood. All you have to do is show up, pick up a hula-hoop and start moving! Salty treats and libations will be served. sErVICE rVICE r VICE OBJECT OBJECTs s
27 E. Cota Street, Suite 500, 5th Floor • 805-963-1700 Service Objects is dedicated to improving the environment with real time data validation technology. Come for our Open House and enjoy wine and beer while we exhibit performance photography by Amber Paresa. Her work has appeared in numerous publications and exhibits, including a showcase in the Who Shot Rock and Roll exhibit at the Annenberg Space for Photography. Amber is a 1993 graduate of Brooks Institute of Photography and currently resides in Santa Barbara.
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524 Chapala Street • 805-957-1115 Some of the 580 members of the Santa Barbara Art Association (SBAA) were juried into this show with diverse themes, media, and styles. Please come visit the show during our reception from 5-7:30pm, when we will have live music featuring Jazz Plus, wine, and appetizers.
PErFOrMaNCEs MIssION CaNyON: Corner of State & Anapamu Street Mission Canyon, Robert Brown and Pat Hackney, brings to life songs and good memories with acoustic instruments and vocally rich arrangements. From Americana to Motown, songs widely known and loved, Pat specializes in instrumental solos and harmony and lead vocals while Robert covers lead and harmony vocals and rhythm and lead guitar. huLa aNyONE 900 State Street, Marshalls Patio, 5:00-8:00pm Escape to the islands and join Angelita Eller and Hula Anyone for an evening of Hawaiian hula and Tahitian dance traditions. A Santa Barbara favorite for more than 35 years, Hula Anyone provides a platform for dancers of all ages to learn Hawaiian and Polynesian Culture through traditional dancing, song, music and instruments. Hula Anyone will showcase dances ranging from ancient “kahiko” style hula to modern “hula ‘auana” as well as lively Tahitian dancing and will feature old favorites alongside brand new dances. Paseo Nuevo Center Court The Santa Barbara Trombone Society (SBTS) is an ensemble comprised of both professional and amateur musicians that reside throughout Santa Barbara County, with members ranging from age 16 to 80+. The group rehearses weekly, thanks to a partnership with Santa Barbara City College’s Music Department, and performs not only at SBCC Music events, but also for off-campus functions, including weddings, birthday parties, memorial servicesand much more. (This performance is sponsored by the Santa Barbara Performing Arts League.)
1st thursday thursday pReSeNTING SpONSOR:
MusEuM OF CONTEMPOrary arT ar
653 Paseo Nuevo Terrace • 805-966-5373 Curated Cocktails: Fall into Techno: Dranks & Bytes 1.0 Join us for happy hour at the Museum! MCASB is offering $5 signature cocktails created by Outpost at the Goodland’s resident mixologist, Chris Burmeister. FREE themed art activities, a special set from DJs Myster Mause and Watson, treats from Whole Foods Santa Barbara, and tours of the current exhibitions: Then they form us and Bloom Projects: Yara El-Sherbini, Border Control. Sound provided by Watson Sound.
1st thursday thursday SpONSORS
1 sT Thursday ParTNErs
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1323 State Street • 805-364-5141 13 ZFOLIO GaLLEry: ry 1013 State Street • 805-845-7375 ry: Engel & Völkers Santa Barbara welcomes you to experience culture come to life for 1st Thursday Downtown Santa Influenced by childhood memories of the snow-covered landscape and clear icy light of winter in North Dakota, Barbara. View some of the finest estates and vacation homes the surprise country of the month has to offer while you Paul’s glass art is perfect, or it doesn’t see the light of day. Each piece is hand blown, cut and polished involving clas- enjoy music, wine, and hors d’oeuvres. sical form, contemporary design and bright clean colors. Using Italian techniques of canework, Paul pulls thin rods of colored glass encased in clear glass to a length of ninety feet. After cutting, he carefully sizes and weaves patterns B saNTa NTa Bar NTa BarBara Bara PuBLIC MarKET together resulting in distinctive spiral designs. 38 West Victoria Street • 805-770-7702 Enjoy all the Public Market has to offer before school kicks off again. Stephanie Guilin will be showing off her brilliant 14 sLINGshOT GaLLEry knack for photography while new delectable treats from Rori’s Artisanal Creamery cool the summer night. Beckmen 220 West Canon Perdido Street • 805- 770-3878 Vineyards and New Belgium Brewery will be handing out tasters in the Kitchen and Stone Brewery will be sampling fun Discover our unique gallery and join the party! This exhibition features the work of Michelle Oliner who recently new beers in Wine+Beer. made the jump from fabric artist to print maker. Her series of hand colored prints have an organic yet elegant C COrEPOWEr yOG quality and showcase her interest in objects from nature and the simplicity of the human form. Look for our gallery y a: 1129 State Street • 805-884-9642 a few blocks west of State Street. Our Fringe neighborhood is home to several art studios to round out your 1st Join our community for a night of courtyard yoga, live music and mingling! Let your mind settle and body relax as you Thursday experience. flow through a restorative vinyasa with Adam Peot playing classical Spanish guitar. Bring your mat or leave it at home
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23 East Canon Perdido Street • 805-965-6448 “Focus on the figurative” is an exhibition featuring Colleen Kelly’s “Naked Under Her Clothes,” monotypes with chine colle, along with a juried exhibition of figurative work by local artists. There will be a “dance happening,” coordinated with the exhibition. Live music with Harold Kono on the piano and light refreshments.
saNTa BarBara TrOMBONE sOCIETy arT IN ThE MayO ar ay r’ ayO r’s ’s OFFICE
735 Anacapa St, Entrance on De La Guerra Plaza, Second floor Mayor Helene Schneider, with support from the Santa Barbara Arts Collaborative, presents the latest in a series of rotating exhibitions of artwork by regional artists. (The Mayor’s office will only be open from 5–6pm on 1st Thursday for public viewing.)
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F saNTa NTa Bar NTa BarBara Bara TraVEL: ra 1028 State Street • 805-966-3116 Join us for an evening exploring the exotics, featuring cultural Japan, the natural wonders of Patagonia and small ship expeditions around the world. Santa Barbara Travel presents Zegrahm Expeditions, specializing in small-ship expedition cruises, tours, and safaris on all seven continents to the most remote places. (Presentations at 6pm & 7pm)
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1114 State Street # 9 • 805-962-8885 The Gallery is going on its 31st year and 24 years in La Arcada Courtyard. 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 5:45pm.
figueroa street
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7 saNTa NTa Bar NTa BarBara B arTs arT Ts: 1114 State Street #24 • 805-884-1938 For Stephen Lewis, landscape photography has always been his preferred mode of artistic expression because it offers the opportunity to share travel, nature and the world around him in a creative and visual way. As digital overtook analog, he became fascinated with the intersection of photography, post-processing, and digital effects which he puts to use in his “painterly” landscape style. Wine poured by Grassini Family Vineyards.
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de la vina street
Transit Center
anapamu street Court House
La Arcada
1130 State Street • 805-963-4364 Family 1st Thursday: Lonely Metropolitan: Design your own version of Herbert Bayer’s Lonely Metropolitan (1932) in shades of black, white and grey by sketching hands on mid-tone paper in graphite and white pastel, then collaging them onto to an urban landscape. (5:30 – 7:30pm, Free) Exhibitions on View: The Paintings of Moholy-Nagy: The Shape of Things to Come This exhibition is the first to explore how the practice of painting served as the means for the artist to imagine generative relationships between art and technology. László Moholy-Nagy (1895–1946) is now recognized as one of the most influential members of the Bauhaus.
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5 arT arTa TaMO GaLLEry: ry 11 West Anapamu Street • 805-568-1400 ry: A combined retrospective of works by German-American artist Jack N. Mohr shows a selection of acrylic and mixed media paintings (created in the U.S. after 1997) during the month of September, while earlier collages, drawings, prints, paintings and photos done in Germany are exhibited at the neighboring Karpeles Museum the same time and until the end of the year. 6
victoria street
The New Vic
santa barbara st
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sola street
anacapa street
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independent.com
1St thurSday: aFTEr hOurs! ThE LOBErO ThEaT a rE aT 33 E. Canon Perdido St. • 805.963.0761
It’s curtains up for the seventh season of DANCEworks, and a brand new season of events in the Historic Theatre District! Get to know this year’s DANCEworks resident company, New York-based Adam Barruch Dance, as they perform in a cabaret setting. While in town, they will be creating a new work of Dance Theater based on highlights from Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
email: arts@independent.com
Music for Masses band has used its lucky position to further the folkloric freedom and tribal togetherness McNamee and his friends grew up with. “We all grew up as children of the 1960s, when music and poster art were not a business; they were forms of self-expression that were either free or really, really inexpensive,” he said. He fondly remembers days when one could Spreads see Pink Floyd for a dollar, or attend the
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Moonalice
courtesy
’60s Gospel of free culture
GO ASK MOONALICE: Roger McNamee (second from left) and his bandmates have used their lucky position to further the folkloric freedom and tribal togetherness McNamee and his friends grew up with.
The band is, at this point, a summertime mainstay in San Francisco’s Union Square — fittingly for McNamee, a man forged of a rare union between capital achievement and populist sentiment. A wildly successful tech investor by “dumb luck,” McNamee is a ’60s child at heart, his belief in creativity’s unifying powers unbroken, his enjoyment of altered states left unaltered. He and his band’s truest investment has been into the arts. Whether it’s in the commissioning of unique poster art for each show, the faithful archiving of every concert, or the fabling of the colorful characters and cannabinoids that compose Moonalice legend and lore, the
the hands of “criminal” music businesspeo-ple. “I find it immensely frustrating that the people who run the music industry actually like things just the way they are,” McNamee said. “They have absolutely no interest in fixing what’s wrong with music.” Moonalice’s answer to this and other social imbalances has been to make their culture as free and familial as possible. They have the played for free to families in parks and to residents at the Delancey Street Foundation (their loudest crowd ever) and are known to inspire fans to create their own art or engage in random acts of jubilation, like a mass Hula-Hooping in Union Square. Moonalice’s good-karma agenda has come back to serve them this particularly “magical” summer. With a cosmically aligned Grateful Dead farewell opening slot and shows in states with newly legalized weed, their ’60s revival has perhaps never felt more realized, and with the concurrent resurfacing of undead sociopolitical tensions, it has perhaps never felt more apropos. “This is an excellent time to be in a creative field and willing to speak your mind because there are a lot of topics desperately needing attention,” McNamee said. McNamee promises a good time at their upcoming SOhO show and encourages Santa Barbarans to listen to any of their 500some archived gigs online before spending their hard-earned cash. But he assures even the doubters a rocking and communal experience awaits. “Look, we’re all on this little blue marble here, going around the sun, and we could either do it together, or we could do it alone,” McNamee said of the Moonalice spirit. “We prefer to do it together.”
paul wellman file photo
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hen I rang Moonalice leader Roger “Chubby Wombat Moonalice” McNamee, I was enjoying the justposted video of his band’s Union Square performance. “You can’t enjoy it half as much as we did,” McNamee countered. It was an epic show, by his reckoning. Under towering retailers, the band lured all strata of passersby with their countercultural psychedelia, gathering more than 1,000 listeners within the city’s bustling commercial and communal crossroads.
massive Summer Jam at Watkins Glen for $10.50, and feels most would prefer music had remained so accessible. McNamee finds optimism in the possibilities of music democratization offered through the Internet, particularly in the way it has inspired a “huge shift in behavior” toward a much more creative and selfexpressive populace through cheaper tools of music making. He does feel, though, that the balance of power is still unevenly held in
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dillon francis this Mixtape is Fire
Shooting to the #1 spot on the iTunes dance chart within the first hour of its release, Dillon Francis’s long-awaited EP proves to be the right amount of new and old sound. Five of the seven tracks — which feature distinguished artists including Calvin Harris, Skrillex, Bro Safari, and others — roar classic moombahton rhythms with unique spins. Among these, two tracks lie outside the Dillon Francis realm yet under the EDM umbrella term. “Lies,” featuring Chromeo, slows the heavily funk-influenced tempo down while “Coming Over,” featuring Kygo and James Hersey, resonates with keys and that relaxed tropical-house feel, both adding good variety to this fire of an EP. — Ginny Chung
— Richie DeMaria
play SOhO Restaurant & Music Club (1221 State St.) with Cubensis on
Barrence Whitfield & the savaGes Under the savage sky
Under the Savage Sky will be remembered as one of the better punk records of the year for its decidedly un-punk elements of New Orleans brass breakdowns and full-throated R&B passion. But rock and roll is such a robust recipe that the aforementioned ingredients enrich, not distort, the flavor — blues, punk, R&B genres be damned; it’s been the same hearty meal all along. Under the Savage Sky is at once fresh and familiar, bristling with energetic revivals of time-tested rock truths. Best of all, Whitfield, at 60 years old, is a fiercer and stronger singer than most. It’s telling of his abilities when he, as an elder rocker, can make a lot of kids look muted by comparison. — RD
PLAY IT AGAIN: David (left) and Susie Couch have moved their popular dinner theater to the newly renovated Timbers Restaurant.
Tri-Tip and TheaT Thea er
at theTimbers Thanks to our industrious theater community and the vision and persistence of David and Susie Couch, Santa Barbara has long enjoyed the reliable presence of a satisfying and popular dinner theater. After many successful years at the Circle Bar B Guest Ranch in Refugio Canyon, where the theater program ended after the 2014 season, the Couches are back, and in a place that’s three whole exits closer to Santa Barbara on route 101. Their new production company is called Prism, and after some months of negotiation with HJL Group Restaurant Advisors, Prism plans three shows, all including complete dinners, at the historic Timbers Restaurant on Winchester Canyon Road in Goleta. The first offering, Murder at Café Noir Noir, is a comic tribute to the Humphrey Bogart films of the 1940s and will take advantage of a feature of this new location that was not available at Circle Bar B by integrating the dining experience with the show. The audience will decide who perpetrated the murder while at the same time enjoying a three-course meal. It sounds fun. Murder at Café Noir opens on Thursday, September 17, and runs through Sunday, September 27. The season’s other two shows will employ the traditional approach of a buffet meal followed by the performance. From October 22-25, it’s Rich Hoag in his charming and extraordinarily re-watchable one-man show Will Rogers’ America. From there, the Prism team moves to the kind of thing they do exceptionally well — British farce. This one has a holiday theme and goes by the already amusing title of The Farndale Avenue Housing Estate Townswoman’s Guild Dramatic Society presents A Christmas Carol. Expect cocked eyebrows, slamming doors, plummy accents, and some festive holiday shrieking from the cast December 3-13. To purchase tickets for any of these events, call 705-9598, or visit prismproductions.org for more information. — Charles Donelan
m o r e a r t s & e n t e r ta i n m e n t > > >
Open Art Studio
a&e | ART REVIEW
Sale & Exhibition
LOOPED: Devin Kenny’s Alone We Play involves original music, digital filmmaking, and cultural critique.
Sat. & Sun.
courtesy
Sept 5 & 6 • 11:30-4:30
Exton Quinn Painter
1321 East Haley Street SB 93103 contact: 805.284.5790
COUPLES
MARRIAGE
Therapeutic Coaching
The New Rules of Marriage Program
(Terry Real)
Are You In Pain About Your Marriage?
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Ph.D, MFT 1207 De La Vina SANTA BARBARA 805-962-2212 WWW.WENDYPHD.COM #MFC21158
Is Your Marriage in Crisis?
Then they form us. At Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara. Shows through October 25.
From Marriage Tune-up to Last Chance
Reviewed by Charles Donelan
Intensive Therapy
I WILL HELP YOU.
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Speak Spanish with Alonso Benavides, ph.d.
Sept. 28 — Dec. 18, 2015 Day and Evening Classes and Saturdays
Our method calls for small groups (6 maximum) and conversation as soon as it is possible
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12 sessions $300 24 sessions $600 Private $75 hr.
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free PottinG SoiL bUy any PottinG SoiL at mSrP and receive another free SaLe eXtended UntiL 9/24/15 • GMO/Corporate food alternatives • Modern Garden Tech, Hydroponics, Aquaponics, Beer-making • Warehouse Prices • Solid Advice • Locally Owned
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204 n. QUarantina St. 805-687-6699 44
Technologies of The self
tHe INDepeNDeNt
september 3, 2015
T
he six artists in Then they form us represent a widespread perception that’s also become an art world phenomenon. The show, organized by MCASB Associate Curator Brooke Kellaway, takes its title from one half of a statement that defines the widespread perception, “We shape our tools, and then they shape us.” Although the attribution of this quote to the popular philosopher of media Marshall McLuhan has proved to be a mistake, the concept is certainly his, and the observation has never been more trenchant. The tools we use to communicate and to act condition the things we think, say, and do. The recipient of a handwritten letter, delivered by a postal worker and paid for with a stamp, lives in a different universe than the person looking at a digital inbox full of emails or glancing at a smartphone to respond to a text. And pretty much everyone these days is aware of this—that’s the widespread-perception half of this equation. On the other side loom the artists, many of them recent grads from the world’s top art schools and independent study programs. They’ve been trained to embrace this change, and to reflect on it, using every tool available to them, from traditional painting and sculpture to video, digital photography, performance, and even rap music. Take Devin Kenny, whose 2014 series Alone We Play occupies the entire side gallery of the exhibition’s main room. Kenny grew up in Chicago, attended The Cooper Union, where he received his BFA, and went to UCLA, where he became an MFA in the university arts program’s New Genres department. Most recently, Kenny participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art’s elite Independent Study program in 2013-14. Alone We Play involves original music, digital filmmaking, and cultural critique. Viewers wear headphones in order to view enigmatic video loops while listening to the eccentric yet sophisticated music of Devin KKenny, Kenny’s rap persona. In the most provocative of these short and oblique vignettes, the screen shows a cartoon image of a girl slumped over the keyboard in front of an old-school video monitor. The image is still but for her computer mouse, which dangles off the edge of the desk, swinging back and forth. On the soundtrack, Devin KKenny raps “as Netlife BDSL” about “breath-
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play,” and “safewords.” It’s eerie in a wholly unfamiliar way, a fragment of retro imagery that nevertheless feels torn from someplace that’s about to exist. There’s more video art in the main room, where Cécile B. Evans has installed her 2014 piece Hyperlinks or it didn’t happen, which also includes various objects and a backdrop that references the early computer ENIAC. Evans, who is based in Berlin but has been showing most recently in London, emerged from the undergraduate program in theater and performance study at NYU as an actress, and then switched to making art after moving to Paris. She cites her first encounter with the Fischli and Weiss film The Way Things Go as a critical moment in her development, and she has been an advocate of technology from the start of her career as a fine artist. Using a digital camera and Final Cut Pro, she reimagines icons from pop culture and their work as operating on the same emotional plane as figures more identified with the intellect. To use her words, “in this world, Paula Abdul goes with Pina Bausch.” This work, which includes narration by a deliberately degraded CGI image of the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, juxtaposes original digital media with the popular anime character Hatsune Miku. While it can be hard to know exactly what is going on at any particular moment, the video is weirdly beautiful, and Evans clearly has mastered her digital craft. One of the ways that technology has affected our lives most deeply is through personal communication — and its surveillance. Constant Dullaart fills the back room of MCA with images of men who stand accused of aiding in the electronic crackdown on personal communication during the Arab Spring by providing governments with software and devices. A plastic surface layer blurs their features, as though these static portraits were somehow waiting for a browser to buffer them fully before resolving into clarity. The three other artists in the show hail from widely divergent locations: Hayal Pozanti is from Istanbul, Julien Prévieux from Grenoble, and Xavier Cha from Los Angeles. Each of them has something to contribute to this fascinating collection of objects and images n intended to reveal how “they form us.”
a&e | dance feature
Fanning the Flames
Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award-winning Historian
brittany randolph
David McCullough
Lessons in Leadership from the Pioneers of Flight THU, OCT 1 / 8 PM / GRANADA THEATRE $40 / $25 / $15 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price
LIGHT IT UP: With quick, flowing movements rooted in hours of practice, Pyrophylactics perform using fire tools including hoops, fans, palm torches, and rope dart.
AreA Fire-Spinning group PyrOPhylactics to perForm At Burning man 2015 by Olivia Davi
O
nce a year, tens of thousands of people gather in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert to create Black Rock City, a temporary metropolis dedicated to community, art, self-expression, and self-reliance. In this crucible of creativity they call the Burning Man festival, all are invited to participate, including a small group of fire performers from Santa Barbara, Ventura, and Camarillo, known as Pyrophylactics. This will be Pyrophylactics’ second year inside the Great Circle alongside fire artists from all over this world, a prestigious honor that you must audition for annually. With quick, flowing movements rooted in hours of practice and technical tuning, Pyrophylactics performs using fire tools, including hoops, fans, poi, staff, palm torches, Levi Wand, and rope dart. I recently had the opportunity to talk with Pyrophylactics’ Shin, or “Fire Mother,” Dana Morton on fire spinning at Burning Man. Tell me about Pyrophylactics. Pyrophylactics was formed in 2013, with Kenny Katz as Shin (leader), and is made up of a mix of fire spinners from Camarillo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. About half of our performers were a part of Pyrophylactics last year, and a few of our members were previously part of the Santa Barbara Conclave, which existed from 2010-12. The rest of our members are first-timers, so we have a wide range of experience in our group. We have 14 performers total, plus fire safeties and drummers — a total of 25 members. This year we have eight different tools, and most performers use at least two tools in our Burning Man act. Can anyone join? In the early planning stages between February and March, we are open to anyone joining as long as they are willing to commit and work hard. If people don’t already spin fire, that’s okay; they just have to really want to learn! Last year, some of the people who had just started fire dancing are now some of our most skilled members. Do you know where the tradition of spinning fire originated? My understanding is that fire spinning originated in Polynesian culture (poi especially). I know that Crimson Rose, a founding boardmember of Burning Man Project, is responsible for the origins of fire dancing at Burning Man and the creation of the Fire Conclave.
What does it take to perform at Burning Man Festival? The Burning Man Fire Conclave is special because you get to perform at the base of the Man on Saturday night, right before he burns. The conclave forms a giant circle around the Man, and all of the groups perform at once, so there is this ring of fire spinners around the Man with everyone in Black Rock City watching. Fire-spinning groups have to audition every year. We had our first planning meeting in January, then submitted our “intent to audition” in March. We really started practicing and building our choreography after that. We had to submit our audition video by June 24 and found out we were accepted early in July. Our entire group of 25 will be attending. What is the most challenging part of being Shin? The Shin is basically the point of contact between the Fire Conclave Council and the rest of the group. The most challenging part for me was working with everyone’s schedules to find practice times that work, making sure everyone has transportation and that people show up. There is also the anxiety associated with not knowing whether you did enough to get accepted to perform. Of course it is everyone’s responsibility, but as Shin I would have felt terrible if we did not get accepted. Our group this year has worked really well together, and I think it shows in our performance. How do you become Shin? At the very first planning meeting in January, which was only members from the previous year, we talked about who would be Shin for the upcoming year. I guess I made a good impression last year because I was suggested, and everyone was on board with it. Our Shin last year, Warren Ramos Geisler, agreed to be Assistant Shin, so that was reassuring. The Shin really just needs to be someone who is organized and good at working with people … and good at checking their email.
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Pyrophylactics will perform Saturday, September 5, at Burning Man, Black Rock City. For more information, additional performance dates, and booking inquiries, email Dana Morton at dana.n.morton@gmail.com.
“McCullough is one of our most gifted living writers.” The Washington Post Author of the New York Times best-sellers 1776, John Adams and The Path Between the Seas, David McCullough has been widely acclaimed as a “master of the art of narrative history.” Drawing from private diaries, notebooks, scrapbooks and more than 1,000 letters, McCullough tells the human side of the Wright Brothers’ story, including the little-known contributions of their sister, Katharine.
Media Sponsor:
Books will be available for purchase and signing
Event Sponsors: Anne & Michael Towbes
(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222
DIJO Production Presents...
Reconnected
A Collection of One Act plays by Ed Giron Directed by Joseph Beck, Jerry Oshinsky and Ed Giron
September September September September
18 20 24 26
& 19 at 8 pm at 3 pm & 25 at 8 pm at 3 pm and 8 pm $17.00 General Admission $13.00 Student or Senior
Tickets available online at plazatheatercarpinteria.com, at Seastrand (919 Linden Ave., with cash or check only) and at the theater box office prior to showtime.
Plaza Playhouse Theater 4916 Carpinteria Ave. | Carpinteria | CA plazatheatercarpinteria.com | 684.6380 independent.com
september 3, 2015
tHe INDepeNDeNt
45
50th Anniversary Show
Saturday
Thursday 9/3 - 9:00
mystic braves
wiTh SPEciAl gUEST
gill lANDRY
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 AT 6PM
sept. 5 9pm tickets $40
la witch pearl charles the creation factory Friday 9/4 - 9:30
live salsa! la tribu
Dance lessons and live band Saturday 9/5 - 9:00
mercury lounge 5871 hollister ave, Goleta
cubensis & moonalice Grateful Dead & Psychedelic Rock
Sunday 9/6 - 12:00-3:00
snap! drag revue
Tickets available at
Mercury lounge & the imperial
SABADO SEPTIEMBRE 12, 2015
9:00
DEATH CAB FOR CUTIE WITH SPECIAL GUEST
BEST COAST
soul majestic sb roots showcase
w/ one-2tree, dylan judah, rastan & caleto, mr. beenie, alla & dj selecta shaggy
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 at 7pm
Monday 9/7
club closed Happy Labor Day!
UNA VEZ MAS , UNA VEZ AL MES!
3 P I S O S / / 2 P I S TA S .
Tuesday 9/8 - 8:00
glen phillips
frontman for toad the wet sprocket Solo Acoustic
$10 PREVENTA $15 PUERTA FACEBOOK.COM/DANCESBDANCE
Wednesday 9/9 - 5:00-7:00
cafe kitp
“supernova hunters” dr. lair arcavi 8:00
SEPTEMBER 30Th
aT
PA T RO C I N A D O P O R :
W W W. P RE C I S I O NA B. CO M 10PM
SANTA BARBARA
21+
surpise me, the chores, you should know
6PM
local rock
Thursday 9/10 - 9:00
cory sipper
cd release “make your magic”
zach madden 1221 State Street
962-7776
advance ticketS available for Select ShowS
H ap py Labor Day!
www.SohoSb.com call (877) 548-3237
Medical Marijuana
Evaluations
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tHe INDepeNDeNt
september 3, 2015
independent.com
805-497-9190
Tuesday, September 8
a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ PREVIEW
Musical EvoluTion
T
barfly
he former lead vocalist and bassist for ’90s alternative-rock band Concrete Blonde, Johnette Napolitano has been touring in support of her upcoming album, Naked, a follow-up to her recent EP featuring new tracks “Here,” “Memory Go,” and “Jazz on Vinyl.” Her trek across the West Coast will take her through Santa Barbara with a performance September 14 at SOhO Restaurant & Music Club. As Napolitano continues to evolve musically, her live show is focused on sparse arrangement with just acoustic guitar and voice. In addition to creating new music, Napolitano has released a book titled Rough Mix and delights in sharing passages during her live shows; she is in the process of finishing a second, Rough Mix #2. I had a chance to talk with Napolitano about her current projects and musical direction. Former ConCrete Blonde Lead Singer
How did you decide on the title Naked for your album? Does it have anything to do with the minimalistic arrangement?
JohnETTE
napoliTano
It has everything to do with that, and that’s exactly the point. I’ve been touring the idea for this show by myself by Austin Murphy for the last two years with the concept that I want to record a live DVD. I’ve had to consciously come up against the way things are done now — everyone wants to YouTube your ass [laughs] against your will … I wanted to take it to another level. I didn’t want to just sit up there and play and stick a camera in front. I wanted to utilize the graphics, the illustrations; I read from my books. I wanted to add another dimension to the show, and it’s taken me quite a while to work it out. So it’s basically just me and a guitar, but it sounds a whole lot like more than me and guitar.
PLayS Soho
You mentioned that “Here” is your most mature love song. In what ways have you seen yourself mature as an artist in recent years? Well, I’m an adult — it’s
as simple as that. It’s gonna happen hopefully. I see a lot of people clinging to things and not letting go of things and not really “grasping the branch above them” as the Chinese say, and it just starts to happen because otherwise you’re stuck as a person. I don’t take myself too seriously, and yet I do take it more seriously. I have a good balance in my life that I never had before. I was a raging workaholic — I just didn’t have any balance. I was a really manic person, and I’m not interested in being that way anymore, because it’s not healthy.
Having had such a storied career, where do you find the motivation to keep creating and to keep performing? Because I love it. It’s what I do, and I’m
now available at independent.com
better at it than I ever was. And if you’re gonna do something as long as I’ve been doing it, hopefully you get better. I know I’m singing better than I ever have, and I think I’m writing better than I ever have, and I have a body of work that I’m proud of.
Is there any chance that we’ll hear some of Rough Mix #2 when you play at SOhO? There is a chance, yeah. I’ve been going through the stock of material that I have for the second book, and there’s definitely a chance.
You’ve had such a long career. Is there anything left in the world of music that you still want to accomplish? I studied flamenco for 20 years — I studied in
Spain — and I wish I had more time to devote to that because one of the things about flamenco I really love is the older you get, the more you respect you get. … You can go see an artist that’s in their eighties, and they can still kick your ass. [Laughs.] It’s something you can do and age gracefully, and that’s really important to me.
4•1•1
Johnette Napolitano plays Monday, September 14, at SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State Street. For more information, call 962-7776 or see sohosb.com. independent.com
september 3, 2015
tHe INDepeNDeNt
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arts & entertainMent listinGs
Theatre Under the Stars
“A wildly funny Adventure!” -The Tribune
Aug 21 - Sep 13 Solvang FeStival Fe theater
Ends sEptEmbEr 13th A play by Rick Elice. Based on the novel by Dave Barry & Ridley Pearson. Music by Wayne Barker. Originally produced on Broadway by Nancy Nagel Gibbs, Greg Schaffert, Eva Price, Tom Smedes, and Disney Theatrical Productions.
SOAK IN THE OAK: “Grandmother Oak” and other paintings by Aubrey Falk are on view at Bella Rosa Galleries through September.
TickeTs 922-8313 | box office 12:30-7pm wed-sun | pcpa.org
art exhibits MuseuMs Karpeles Manuscript Library and Museum – Parker Wittenberg, through Oct. 30; First Long Distance Telephone, Jack N. Mohr: Acrylic paintings, collages, other early works, through Dec. 31. 21 W. Anapamu St., 962-5322. Rancho La Patera & Stow House – Multiple permanent exhibits hosted by the Goleta Valley Historical Society. 304 N. Los Carneros Rd., Goleta, 681-7216. Museum of Contemporary Art S.B. – Then they form us; Conrad Ruiz: Bloom Projects, through Oct. 25. 653 Paseo Nuevo, 966-5373. S.B. Historical Museum – The Story of Santa Barbara, permanent exhibition. Free admission. 136 E. De la Guerra St., 966-1601. S.B. Museum of Art – Carousel of Physics, through Sept. 17; The Visionary Photomontages of Herbert Bayer, 1929-1936, through Sept. 27; The Paintings of Moholy-Nagy: The Shape of Things to Come, through Sept. 27; Degas to Chagall: Important Loans from the Armand Hammer Foundation, Visions of Modernity: 20th-Century Japanese Woodblock Prints, ongoing exhibitions. 1130 State St., 963-4364. S.B. Museum of Natural History – Ray Strong: Artist in Residence, through Oct. 4. 2559 Puesta del Sol, 682-4711. S.B. Museum of Natural History Sea Ctr. – Multiple permanent installations. 211 Stearns Wharf, 962-2526. Santa Ynez Valley Historical Museum – Samurai: The Warrior Horsemen of Japan, through Oct. 31. 3596 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 688-7889. Wildling Museum – Nature's Patterns, through Sept. 28; Legacy and Loss: Landscapes of the S.B. Region, through Feb. 1, 2016. 1511-B Mission Dr., Solvang, 686-8315.
Galleries Allan Hancock College Library – Children’s book illustrations, ongoing. 800 S. College Dr., Santa Maria, 922-6966. Architectural Foundation Gallery – Don and Siu Zimmerman: Then and Now Now, through Oct. 9. 229 E. Victoria St., 965-6307. Artamo Gallery–Jack N. Mohr: Then There & Here Now Now, through Sept. 27. 11 W. Anapamu St., 568-1400. Arts Fund Gallery – How I See It It, through Sept. 5. 205-C Santa Barbara St., 965-7321.
Beatrice Wood Ctr. for the Arts –Ventura County Potters' Guild: The Natural World and Nina de Creeft Ward: A Retrospective, through Oct. 3. 8585 Ojai-Santa Paula Rd., Ojai, 646-3381. Bella Rosa Galleries – Aubrey Falk, through Sept. 30. 1103 State St., Ste. A, 966-1707. Cancer Ctr. of S.B. – Art Heals, a permanent exhibit. 540 Pueblo St., Ste. A, 898-2204. Carpinteria Arts Ctr. – From an Abstract Point of View, through Oct. 12. 855 Linden Ave., Carpinteria, View 684-7789. Channing Peake Gallery–For the People, By the People: Government at Work in S.B. County 1850-1950 1850-1950, through Sept. 18. S.B. County Administration Bldg., 105 E. Anapamu St. Gallerie Silo – Michael Armour, through Sept. 13. 118-B Gray Ave., 640-5570. Gallery 113 – Linda Nelson; Ann Russell: Mother-Love, through Sept. 25. La Arcada, 1114 State St., 965-6611. Gallery Los Olivos – Sheila Underwood: The Bold & The Beautiful Beautiful, through Sept. 31; Lauren McFarland: Our Beautiful Central Coast Coast, through Oct. 7. 2920 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, 688-7517. Goleta Library – GVAA September Art Show, Sept. 4-30, 500 N. Fairview Rd., Goleta, 898-9424. The Good Life – John Card: Potpourri IIII, through Oct. 30. 1672 Mission Dr., Solvang, 688-7111. GraySpace Gallery – Charlene Broudy, Carolyn Fox, and Steven Gilbar, through Oct. 18. 219 Gray Ave., 886-0552. Hospice of S.B. – Margaret Singer: Celebrations, through Oct. 31. 2050 Alameda Padre Serra, 563-8820. Inez Gallery – Rebecca Gomez: Cast Shadows, Sept. 10-Nov. 10. 2446 Alamo Pintado, Ste. B, Los Olivos, 688-8884. JadeNow Gallery – Ryan and Jeff Spangler, ongoing. 14 Parker Wy., 845-4558. Los Olivos Café – Sheila Krause: From Heart to Art Art, through Nov. 5. 2870 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, 688-7265. Lucky Penny – Campbell Baker, ongoing. 127 Anacapa St., 284-0358. Marcia Burtt Studio – Patricia Doyle and Marcia Burtt: Water's Edge, through Oct. 18. 517 Laguna St., 962-5588. MCASB Satellite – Magic Mountain, through Jan. 31, 2016. Hotel Indigo, 121 State St., 966-5373. The Mitchell Estate Gallery – Ed Moses, Sept. 30. 110 Powers Ave., 568-1700. Montecito Aesthetic Institute – Eye, through Sept. 10. 1150 Coast Village Rd., Ste. H, Montecito, 565-5700.
To be considered for The Independent’s listings, please visit independent.com and click “Submit an event” or email listings@independent.com. 48
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september 3, 2015
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sept. 3-10 Ojai Café Emporium – Sharon Butler's students, through Sept. 13. 108 S. Montgomery St., Ojai, 646-2723. Oliver & Espig Gallery of Fine Arts– Tielle Monette and Sergey Fedotov, ongoing. 1108 State St., 962-8111. Pacifica Graduate Institute – Mythic Threads: Art, Healing and Magic in Bali Bali, ongoing. 801 Ladera Ln., 879-7103. Porch Gallery Ojai –You Can Get There from Here, through Sept. 27. 310 E. Matilija St., Ojai, 620-7589. El Presidio de Santa Bárbara State Historic Park – Nihonmachi Revisited: Santa Barbara’s Japanese American Community in Transition, 1900-1940 and Memorias y Facturas, ongoing. 123 E. Canon Perdido St., 965-0093. S.B. Artwalk – Arts & Craft Show, ongoing Sundays. Cabrillo Blvd. at State St. S.B. City Hall Gallery – Ray Strong: Shared Vision/Common Ground Ground, through Feb. 18, 2016. De la Guerra Plaza, 568-3994. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – Morrison Hotel Gallery, ongoing. 1221 State St., 962-7776. Sullivan Goss, An American Gallery – CA Cool, through Sept. 27; Robin Gowen: Landmark, through Oct. 4; Lockwood de Landmark Forest Brass Cutouts, through Dec. 31. 7 E. Anapamu St., 730-1460. Tamsen Gallery – R.W. Firestone, ongoing. 3888 State St., 687-2200. wall space gallery – Contemporary Korean Photography: Surveying the Landscape, through Oct. 31. 116 C-1 E. Yanonali St., 637-3898. Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art – Dane Goodman and Keith Puccinelli: tug, through Oct. 17. 955 La Paz Rd., 565-6162.
liVe MusiC pop, roCk & jazz
Blush Restaurant & Lounge – 630 State St., 957-1300. sun: Chris Fossek (6pm) Brasil Arts Café – 1230 State St., 245-5615. fri: Live Music Cambridge Drive Community Church – 550 Cambridge Dr., Goleta, 964-0436. fri: Aireene & The Rarities (7:30pm) Chumash Casino Resort – 3400 E. Hwy. 246, Santa Ynez, (800) 248-6274. thu 9 /3 : Face to Face (8pm) thu 9 /10 : Kansas (8pm) Cold Spring Tavern – 5995 Stagecoach Rd., 967-0066. fri: Grass Mountain (7-10pm) sat: Stolen Thunder (2-5pm); Paradise Road (5:30-8:30pm) sun: Tom Ball and Kenny Sultan (1:154pm); Chicken Bone (4:30-7:30pm) mon: Tina Schieleske and the Exiles w/ Sister Laura (1:30-4:30pm) The Creekside – 4444 Hollister Ave., 964-5118. thu: Centaur Midwife (9pm) fri: Bella and the Heart & Soul (9pm) sat: DJ Frank Ramirez (9pm) wed: Country Night Dargan’s – 18 E. Ortega St., 568-0702. thu: Traditional Irish Music (6:30pm) tue: Karaoke (9pm) Figueroa Mountain Brewing Co. 137 Anacapa St., 694-2255. fri: Live Music (5pm) Funzone – 226 S. MIlpas St. tue: Hot Breath, Honey Maid, Welfare Talent (8pm) The Goodland – 5650 Calle Real, 964-6241. 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 Jazz Band (7:30-10:30pm) sun, mon: Karaoke (9pm) tue: Teresa Russell (10pm) wed: Victor Vega and the Bomb (10pm)
Maverick Saloon – 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 686-4785. fri: Molly Ringwald Project (8:30pm) sat: Owen Johnston (3pm) sun: The Belmores (2-5pm); Soul Cats (7pm); DJ Petey (9pm) Mercury Lounge – 5871 Hollister Ave., Goleta, 967-0907. sat: Canned Heat (9pm) Moby Dick Restaurant – 220 Stearns Wharf, 965-0549. wed-thu: Derroy (5-8pm) fri-sat: Derroy (6-9pm) sun: Derroy (10am-2pm) Monty’s – 5114 Hollister Ave., 683-1003. thu: Karaoke Night (7pm) Pure Order Brewing Co. – 410 N. Quarantina St., 966-2881. sat: Darius Lux (4-6pm) Reds Tapas & Wine Bar – 211 Helena St., 966-5906. thu: Music Thursdays (8pm) Roundin’ Third – 7398 Calle Real, 845-8383. thu, tue: Locals Night (7pm) Sandbar – 514 State St., 966-1388. wed: Big Wednesday (10pm)funz Seven Bar & Kitchen – 224 Helena Ave., 636-0913. fri: US Elevator with The Mutineers (9:30pm) SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – 1221 State St., 962-7776. thu: Mystic Braves, L.A. Witch, Pearl Charles, The Creation Factory (9pm) fri: Live Salsa (9pm) sat: Cubensis & Moonalice (9pm) sun: Soul Majestic (9pm) tue: Glen Phillips (8pm) wed: Surprise Me, You Should Know, The Chores (9pm) thu: Cory Sipper, Zach Madden (8pm) Standing Sun Winery – 92 Second St., Unit D, Buellton, 904-8072. sat: Great Peacock (7:30pm) Tiburon Tavern – 3116 State St., 682-8100. fri: Karaoke Night (7:30pm) Velvet Jones – 423 State St, 965-8676. tue: Easy Skanking (8pm) wed: Wayback Wednesday (9pm) thu: Drag the River, Wil Ridge, Donald Spence (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)
ultimate DRIVING the
328i BMW Giveaways One given away every week in September at 10pm
Free Play Drawings 7pm-10pm
theater Center Stage Theater – Pvt. Wars. 751 Paseo Nuevo, 963-0408. fri-sat: 8pm Hatlen Theater – Naked Shakes: The Death of Kings. 552 University Rd., UCSB, 893-3241. thu 9 /3 : 8pm Solvang Festival Theater – Peter and the Starcatcher. 420 2nd St., Solvang, 686-1789. thu-sun, wed-thu: 8pm Westmont College – 955 La Paz Rd., 565-7140. thu: The Lover (7pm); Poor, Poor, Lear (8:15pm) sat: Poor, Poor Lear (2pm); The Lover (4pm); The Cherry Orchard (7pm) sun: Poor, Poor Lear (2pm); The Lover (4pm); The Cherry Orchard (7pm)
play with your club chumash card to qualify
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TEDDY BEAR CANCER FOUNDATION
★★★★
“BLINDINGLY BEAUTIFUL AND METICULOUSLY ASSEMBLED.”
“It’s impossible not to fall in love with ‘Mistress America’.”
—JEANNETTE CATSOULIS
“A MOVING TALE OF SUPER HUMAN PERSEVERANCE.”
Joe Neumaier,
—THE PLAYLIST
★★★★
“BREATHTAKING. ” —TOM KEOGH, THE SEATTLE TIMES
We provide financial and emotional support to families of children with cancer living in Santa Barbara, Ventura, and San Luis Obispo counties. Go Gold in September!
#GoGoldTBCF
“TERRIFYING YET BEAUTIFUL!” —MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN,
THE WASHINGTON POST
“MERU THRILLS… WORTH SEEKING OUT ON THE BIG SCREEN.” —ALAN SCHERSTUHL, LA WEEKLY
“AN IRRESISTIBLE WHITE-KNUCKLER.”
—SCOTT TOBIAS, THE DISSOLVE
“SPECTACULAR! MERU WILL OPEN YOUR EYES.”
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
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—KENNETH TURAN, LOS ANGELES TIMES
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CHARLIE FOWLER AWARD
TELLURIDE MOUNTAINFILM 2015
BELIEVE IN THE IMPOSSIBLE
PLAZA DE ORO Wednesdays - 5:00 & 7:30
A FILM BY JIMMY CHIN AND ELIZABETH CHAI VASARHELYI
September 9 - STEVE JOBS:
(R)
THE MAN IN THE MACHINE
September 16 - KAHLIL GIBRAN’S THE PROPHET (PG) merufilm.com © SOUTHPORT MUSIC BOX CORPORATION
TeddyBearCancerFoundation.Org 2320 Bath Street, Suite #107 Santa Barbara, CA 93105 (805) 962-7466
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SANTA BARBARA Riviera (877) 789-MOVIE
September 23 - THE FOOL (DURAK)
(NR)
September 30 - STEAK (R)EVOLUTION (NR)
Showtimes for September 4-10 H = NO PASSES
FAIRVIEW
CAMINO REAL
PASEO NUEVO
225 N FAIRVIEW AVE, GOLETA
7040 MARKETPLACE DR, GOLETA
8 WEST DE LA GUERRA PLACE, SANTA BARBARA
H A WALK IN THE WOODS E Fri to Mon: 1:30, 4:00, 6:30, 9:00; Tue to Thu: 2:30, 5:00, 7:30 THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. C 2:30, 5:10, 8:00 WE ARE YOUR FRIENDS E MISTRESS AMERICA E Fri to Wed: 6:40, 10:05; Fri to Mon: 2:00, 4:30, 7:10, 9:20; RICKI AND THE FLASH C Thu: 10:05 PM Tue to Thu: 2:50, 5:30, 7:45 5:20, 7:45 NO ESCAPE E 2:00, 5:00, 7:40, THE DIARY OF A TEENAGE SHAUN THE SHEEP B 10:10 GIRL E Fri to Mon: 1:20, 3:50, Fri: 3:10 PM; Sat to Mon: 1:00, 3:10; 8:45; Tue to Thu: 2:20, 7:15 AMERICAN ULTRA E Tue to Thu: 3:10 PM RICKI AND THE Fri to Wed: 4:15, 10:00; FLASH C Fri to Mon: 6:20 PM; Thu: 4:15 PM RIVIERA Tue to Thu: 4:50 PM STRAIGHT OUTTA COMP2044 ALAMEDA PADRE SERRA, TRAINWRECK E TON E 1:50, 4:30, 6:50, 9:15 SANTA BARBARA Fri to Mon: 1:40, 4:20, 6:40, 9:30; MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE Tue to Thu: 2:40, 5:10, 8:00 MERU E Fri: 5:00, 7:30; ROGUE NATION C 1:40, Sat to Mon: 2:40, 5:00, 7:30; FIESTA 5 3:30, 7:00, 9:00 Tue to Thu: 5:00, 7:30 916 STATE STREET, PIXELS C 1:20, 7:30 SANTA BARBARA H A WALK IN THE WOODS E 2:20, 5:00, 7:30
METRO 4
H THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED C 1:10, 4:40, 6:30, 9:55
50
tHe INDepeNDeNt
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Thursday, September 17 - 8:00 pm
ROGER WATERS: THE WALL Arlington
INSIDE OUT B 1:30, 4:00
DOPE E Fri to Mon: 7:00 PM; Tue to Thu: 5:30 PM H UN GALLO CON MUCHOS HUEVOS C H THE TRANSPORTER REARLINGTON Fri to Mon: 1:20, 3:50, 6:20, 8:45; FUELED C Fri to Mon: 1:30, 1317 STATE STREET, Tue to Thu: 2:20, 4:50, 7:15 4:10, 7:00, 9:20; Tue to Thu: 2:40, SANTA BARBARA 5:40, 7:45 NO ESCAPE E Fri to Mon: 1:30, 4:00, 6:50, 9:20; Tue to Thu: 3:00, WE ARE YOUR FRIENDS E MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 5:20, 7:50 ROGUE NATION C 2:00, Fri to Mon: 1:05 PM; AMERICAN ULTRA E 5:00, 8:00 Tue to Thu: 2:50 PM Fri to Mon: 6:40, 9:00; HITMAN: AGENT 47 E PLAZA DE ORO Tue to Thu: 7:30 PM Fri to Mon: 3:25 PM; 371 SOUTH HITCHCOCK WAY, SINISTER 2 E Tue to Thu: 5:20 PM SANTA BARBARA Fri to Mon: 9:30 PM; STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPH STEVE JOBS: THE MAN Tue to Thu: 8:00 PM TON E Fri to Mon: 1:00, 3:50, 6:30, IN THE MACHINE E THE MAN FROM 8:15, 9:40; Tue to Thu: 2:30, 5:00, U.N.C.L.E. C Wed: 5:00, 7:30 8:00 Fri to Mon: 1:40, 4:10, 6:30, 9:10; BEST OF ENEMIES E Tue to Thu: 2:40, 5:00, 7:40 THE GIFT E Fri to Mon: 5:45, Fri to Tue: 2:45, 7:30; Wed: 2:45 PM; SHAUN THE SHEEP B 9:30; Tue to Thu: 8:10 PM Thu: 2:45, 7:30 Fri to Mon: 1:50, 4:20; ANT-MAN C Fri to Mon: 1:20, IRRATIONAL MAN E 5:15 PM Tue to Thu: 2:50 PM 4:00, 6:50; Tue & Wed: 2:10, 4:50, PHOENIX C Fri to Tue: 2:30, INSIDE OUT B 7:30; Thu: 2:10, 4:50 Fri to Mon: 2:00, 4:30; 5:00, 7:45; Wed: 2:30, 7:45; H THE VISIT C Thu: 7:30 PM Thu: 2:30, 5:00, 7:45 Tue to Thu: 2:30, 5:00 CHECK OUT OUR NEW WEBSITE! www.metrotheatres.com 877-789-MOVIE 618 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA
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JOHN ERICK DOWDLE & DREW DOWDLE JOHN ERICK DOWDLE
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a&e | FILM REVIEWS
How tHe Masters Debate
Best of Enemies. William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal star in a documentary written and directed by Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville.
HOT TUBS & SPAS SINCE 1974
SANTA BARBARA 628 E. Haley St. • 963-5353 Mon-Fri 8:30-5:30 • Sat. 9-4
Reviewed by D.J. Palladino
W
atching two intellectuals debate politics on 1968 broadcast television, we naturally feel a wave of nostalgia. It was better back then, especially when you consider the hammerheaded, ham-fisted quality of GOP television debate a few weeks ago. In 1968, politics was on ABC television, low in ratings, and on a budget that made the then-controversial decision to cut their gavel-to-gavel coverage and add a series of short exchanges by two articulate men who genuinely hated each other: quirky New Englander William F. Buckley, who reinvented conservatism in his day, paving the way for the Reagan years, versus Gore Vidal, the patrician-voiced novelist-turned-politician who railed against the American Empire yet made a living with historical novels about Aaron Burr, Abraham Lincoln, and Calvin Coolidge. Given the vocabulary level alone, it’s easy to think, “Those were the days.” America seemed smarter. However, when watching this brilliant doc by Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville, the Santa Barbara–bred documentarian who made Twenty Feet from Stardom, the knee-jerk nostalgia abates as these noble voices go petty pretty quick. Vidal asks Buckley about Ronald Reagan, a Hollywood actor of juvenile roles who suggested government get out of American
GOLETA 345 Pine Ave. • 964-2100 Tue-Fri 9:30-5:30 • Sat. 9:30-5
ARCHNEMESES: Best of Enemies features William F. Buckley (left) and Gore Vidal squaring off in a series of heated political debates in 1968.
lives. Flexing and tongue-ing, Buckley then dismantles Vidal’s glib Reagan put-down, implying that Vidal is an undemocratic snob. He never gets around to the meat of the question — neoconservative libertarianism. Then comes the famous exchange — Vidal called Buckley a crypto-Nazi, and Buckley called Vidal a queer — which makes great television but is not exactly political philosophy. Maybe things haven’t changed much. And this documentary focuses on all these issues, with smart extra footage like Santa Barbaran Haskell Wexler’s Medium Cool street scenes from Chicago with everybody chanting, “The whole world is watching.” This is ultimately a movie about media. We don’t have The HuntleyBrinkley Report watched by 80 percent of us anymore. But we have colorful characters, divisive moments, and ratings. What the whole world watches might be different, but it had deep roots in the childish arguments of two smart men. n
By Grace Designs
LiMitLess Horizons Meru. Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin, and Renan Ozturk star in a documentary directed by Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi. Reviewed by Richie DeMaria
F
ilmed at death-defying altitudes of more than 20,000 feet, with long glacial valleys hanging below, Meru puts viewers right in the climber’s harness on the face of one of Earth’s most challenging climbs. Directed and shot by climber Jimmy Chin, Meru captures the story of three alpinists — Chin, Conrad Anker, and Renan Ozturk — and their attempts to ascend the notoriously dangerous Shark’s Fin on the Himalayan Mt. Meru. Meru is impressive on many levels — Chin happens to not only be a world-class climber but an excellent cinematographer, as well (as if it’s not enough to be just either — figures). As a fourth member of the climbers’ party, dangling in the dizzying danger of frostbiting blizzards over stunning snowscapes, we are given unparalleled access to an extreme and by all accounts inaccessible peak. The many reverential shots of Himalayan vistas are beautiful, transporting scenes of a rare caliber. Just as astounding as the climbers’ ascent is their utmost calm in dire conditions and their clinical precision in emotion as with climbing strategy. As storytellers, they can be somewhat modicum in their words,
INTO THIN AIR: Meru is an inspirational documentary that puts viewers right in the climber’s harness.
letting the views and their unspoken trust and camaraderie do the talking. Into Thin Air author Jon Krakauer adds some welcome narrative color to the mountain men’s understatement, portraying just how gnarly the climbs are for us laypeople when the climbers make things like midair, at-altitude brain strokes seem like just another difficult bu t not insurmountable obstacle. Seeing the steady-temperedness with which the climbers deftly tackle hazards will certainly make you feel a bit petty in your daily squabbles and perhaps a bit daunted by the mountain of your relative laziness, but it conversely may make you feel limitless in the potential of your human abilities. While a mostly straightforward telling, Meru is also interesting for its spiritual element. It’s a movie about the way in which lives reorganize and settle upon a path after a destabilizing cataclysm, the way fates surprisingly intertwine in the avalanche of unpredictable force. In all, it makes for a great outdoor film — inspirational, motivating, and slightly mystic, with view after view of peaks and limitless horizons. n
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Movie Guide
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The Diary of a Teenage Girl
FIRST LOOKS O Best of Enemies
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SCREENINGS
(87 mins.; R: sexual nudity and
language)
Reviewed on page 51.
Plaza de Oro
See The Week for “Summer Movies” on p. 31. Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine (120 mins.; R: some language)
O The Diary of a Teenage Girl (102 mins.; R: strong sexual content including dialogue, graphic nudity, drug use, language, and drinking, all involving teens)
Watching this movie is thoroughly engrossing, like reading a friend’s journal behind their back. Granted, the topic has automatic and universal appeal, a girl’s sexual awakening in 1970s San Francisco, but the narrative never lets up. We never know exactly where it’s going even though it exploits tons of clichés. The movie begins abruptly when young Minnie (the remarkable Bel Powley) exultantly proclaims she’s just gotten laid and wonders if people on the street can tell. It’s not ’til she gets home and confides to her tape recorder that we learn her lover is her mother’s slimy boyfriend (Alexander Skarsgård). The movie maps familiar territory, from Rocky Horror night to an LSD trip (liberally employing animation, since Minnie wants to be a cartoonist). Yet it manages to keep surprising us. It shares themes with The Perks of Being a Wallflower, but here sex is the heartbeat, and even if it isn’t graphic, it’s insistent. Like this film. The two big discoveries here are director Marielle Heller and Powley. Heller worked as a television writer, but this directing debut has exhilarating grace. She builds her movie up from interior spaces — from Minnie’s huge room full of secrets and knickknacks to her lover’s fishbowl apartment, and every setting feels recognizable and metaphoric. But Powley is her real find. Sullen with large dark eyes like a younger Isabella Rossellini, she plays cool, awkward, and, in later scenes, devastatingly contrite. She makes the role sexual but in an unconventional way, both needful and aggressive, that fits the setting. (The nudity never seems male gaze-y.) There’s a lot more sex in the film than you’d expect, but it never feels exploitative. (Yet, I kept thinking of the constant seething in Blue Is the Warmest Color.) Powley embodies the rush and ruin of an American era when 1960s fancies started playing out in middle-class households. The results were liberating and sad — just like this excellent film. (DJP) Paseo Nuevo
O Meru (87 mins.; R: language) Reviewed on page 51. 52
Edited by Michelle Drown
The following films are playing in Santa Barbara FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, through THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. Descriptions followed by initials — RD (Richie DeMaria) and DJP (D.J. Palladino) — have been taken from our critics’ reviews, which can be read in full at independent.com. The symbol O indicates the film is recommended.
Riviera
This documentary chronicles the personal and private life of the legendary Apple CEO.
Wed., Sept. 9, 5 and 7:30pm, Plaza de Oro
PREMIERES The Transporter Refueled (96 mins.; PG-13: sequences of violence and action, sexual material, some language, a drug reference, and thematic elements) Frank Martin is back (with Ed Skrein in the Jason Statham role), living a quiet life transporting classified documents. A visit from his father, however, pulls Martin back into the world of fast cars and fast women. Camino Real/Metro 4 Un gallo con muchos huevos (99 mins.; NR) Celebrated animated characters from Mexico come to the U.S. in this film about Toto the young chicken, who has to save his home. Fiesta 5 The Visit (94 mins.; PG-13: disturbing thematic material including terror, violence, and some nudity and brief language)
M. Night Shyamalan’s latest offering involves a single mother whose kids visit their grandparents. After the visit, things go terribly wrong.
Camino Real/Metro 4 (Opens Thu., Sept. 10)
A Walk in the Woods (104 mins.; R: language and some sexual references)
Robert Redford and Nick Nolte star in this film based on Bill Bryson’s best-selling book about his hike of the Appalachian Trail with his oldest friend.
Fairview/ Paseo Nuevo
NOW SHOWING O American Ultra (96 mins.; R: strong bloody violence, language throughout, drug use, and some sexual content) Though pitched as a stoner-action film, it’s actually closer to broad satire, more like Scary Movie than Pineapple Express, and the humor lies in bloodsoaked excesses interrupted by tender feelings. The setup is an American Ultra-cliché (Matt Damon’s Bourne is the most obvious version), as are the hardware store battle and the fireworks assault. The protagonists rebel against a parade of weirdo
cameos by the likes of John Leguizamo (pathetic doper) and Bill Pullman (government super-creep). Funny and gory, this is a movie you don’t have to be a complete doper to enjoy. It probably helps, though. (DJP) Camino Real/Fiesta 5 Ant-Man (117 mins.; PG-13: sci-fi action violence) Had Ant-Man been a Marvel superhero version of Honey, I Shrunk the Kids with visual wit and a healthy sense of microcosmic wonder, it would have been a great movie. But what should have been fun ended up overinflated with too much awkward Disney moralizing. (DJP). Metro 4 (2D) Dope (103 mins.; R: language, drug content, sexuality/ nudity, and some violence — all involving teens)
This coming-of-age dramedy starring Shameik Moore is about a geeky boy who tries to get by in his tough neighborhood of Inglewood while juggling his senior year of high school and applying for colleges. Fiesta 5
O The Gift
(108 mins.; R: language)
No Escape (103 mins.; R: strong violence including a sexual assault and language)
Soon after the Dwyer family moves from the U.S. to a new unnamed overseas country, the country undergoes a coup. Suddenly the Dwyers are in a frantic race to escape, as all foreigners are being executed. Camino Real/Fiesta 5 Phoenix (98 mins.; PG-13: some thematic elements and brief suggestive material)
A disfigured concentration camp survivor who becomes unrecognizable after facial reconstruction searches postwar Berlin for her husband, who may have betrayed her to the Nazis. Plaza de Oro Pixels (105 mins.; PG-13: some language and suggestive comments) Intergalactic aliens discover video feeds of classic arcade games and use them as models to attack Earth. The president calls upon 1980s champions — who are all grown up — of each game to defend the planet. Camino Real (2D)
The Gift is a genuinely creepy tale spun with adult themes: domestic intruders, cuckolding fears, and awkward reunions with ghosts from the past. Unnervingly tense and paced with surprising character twists, it’s a deeper and more relatable horror than others this summer. It’s refreshing to have a thriller about the monstrosity of everyday life. (RD)
Ricki and the Flash (101 mins.; PG-13: thematic
Hitman: Agent 47 (96 mins.; R: sequences of strong violence and some language)
O Shaun the Sheep
Metro 4
Rupert Friend stars as an elite, genetically engineered assassin who is tasked with taking out the leaders of a mega-corporation who plan to create an army of killers more powerful than even Agent 47. Metro 4
O Inside Out
(94 mins.; PG: mild thematic elements
material, brief drug content, sexuality, and language)
Director Jonathan Demme helms this film about a hard-rocking singer/guitarist (Meryl Streep) who gave up her family for her dream of fame and is now returning home to set things right with her daughter and long-suffering ex-husband (Kevin Kline). Fairview/Paseo (85 mins.; PG: rude humor)
Aardman Animations is ba-a-ack. Shaun the Sheep is living proof that great artists of wacky vision are best left to muck about in those visions. This claymation, sight-gag-rich, slapstick-with-a-humanheart studio has never been better. (DJP) Fairview/ Fiesta 5
Sinister 2 (97 mins.; R: strong violence, bloody and
and some action)
disturbing images, and language)
This film’s inner journey is a blast, especially the map of consciousness provided: A train of thought takes viewers from long-term memories, through the Unconscious, and down to a scary pit where memories go to die. We believe a silly premise and feel the war between regrets and happy days raging in a world of animated change. (DJP)
If you love watching families being tortured, this is the movie for you! For its thematic seed, Sinister 0 builds on the horrors of the child’s imagination. The shadowy spirit Bughuul returns from the first Sinister to pop up as the in-house murder maestro and all-around spontaneous guy. Problem is, when you base a horror movie around a subset of horror films watched within the characters’ world by otherwise unharmed children, it’s not that scary. (RD)
Camino Real (2D)/Fiesta 5 (2D)
O Irrational Man
(95 mins.; R: some language and
sexual content)
Since the end of Woody Allen’s Golden Age, his best films have been the unfunny ones that have to do with murders or violence. This is one of those bloody movies, and in it Joaquin Phoenix plays Abe, a tempestuous popular philosophy professor who is in a funk. The “solution” to his problem provides fine sinister impetus. (DJP) Plaza de Oro The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (116 mins.; PG-13: action violence, some suggestive content, and partial nudity)
Guy Ritchie directs this action/adventure comedy about CIA agent Napoleon Solo (Henry Cavill) and KGB operative Illya Kuryakin (Armie Hammer), who team up to fight a mysterious criminal organization trying to proliferate nuclear weapons.
Fairview/Fiesta 5
O Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation (130 mins.; PG-13: sequences of action and violence and brief partial nudity)
This is the first of five Mission: Impossible movies not helmed by a big-name director (the illustrious past equals Brian De Palma, John Woo, JJ Abrams, and Brad Bird), and it feels the most like my dad’s favorite TV show. The best part of the movie is Sean Harris, who is rapidly becoming the greatest villain in screen history, and it’s his banal evil figure that makes this plot so much better than fancierdirected installments. (DJP) Arlington/Camino Real Mistress America (84 mins.; R: language including
some sexual references)
In this comedy, a New York college student becomes friends with her soon-to-be stepsister, who takes her on adventures throughout the city.
805-312-6367
Fiesta 5
O Straight Outta Compton
(147 mins.; R: language throughout, strong sexuality/nudity, violence, and drug use)
This is a well-made if unchallenging biopic about the pioneering hip-hop group N.W.A and its founding fathers, Eazy-E (Jason Mitchell), Dr. Dre (Corey Hawkins), and Ice Cube (played by his son, O’Shea Jackson Jr.). This flick feels soft and tame in its ways, but it’s still a great watch. It reminds us of the rappers’ fiercest days and why their legacy remains so vital — the endurance of their great music, their undefeatable willingness to be uncompromising, and their poetic call for justice. (RD)
Camino Real/Metro 4
O Trainwreck (125 mins.; R: strong sexual content, nudity, language, and some drug use)
In Trainwreck, Amy (Amy Schumer) crashes through a variety of dating wreckages en route to a happier partnership. But the film isn’t just about the disasters but also the grace to recover from them, and reminds us that if there’s a light at the end of this crazy tunnel, it’s through the redemption of laughter. The result will be remembered as one of the funnier risqué adventures of the summer. (RD)
Paseo Nuevo
We Are Your Friends (96 mins.; R: language throughout, drug use, sexual content, and some nudity)
Zac Efron stars as an aspiring deejay looking to make it in the electronic dance music scene. When he falls for his mentor’s girlfriend, however, he has to make tough choices about his future.
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Camino Real/Metro 4
Paseo Nuevo
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a&e | Rob bRezsny’s fRee will astRology week of septembeR 3 ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): “Excess is the common substitute for energy,” said poet Marianne Moore. That’s a problem you should watch out for in the coming weeks. According to my astrological projections, you’re a bit less lively and dynamic than usual. And you may be tempted to compensate by engaging in extreme behavior or resorting to a contrived show of force. Please don’t! A better strategy would be to recharge your power. Lay low and take extra good care of yourself. Get high-quality food, sleep, entertainment, art, love, and relaxation.
best strategy in the coming weeks. It will eventually deliver you to where you need to go, even if there are bouncy surprises along the way.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Money doesn’t make you happy,” said movie star and ex-California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. “I now have $50 million, but I was just as happy when I had $48 million.” Despite his avowal, I’m guessing that extra money would indeed make you at least somewhat happier. And the good news is that the coming months will be prime time for you to boost your economic fortunes. Your ability to attract good financial luck will be greater than usual, and it will zoom even higher if you focus on getting better educated and organized about how to bring more wealth your way.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): For a pregnant woman, the fetus often begins to move for the first time during the fifth month of gestation. The sensation may resemble popcorn popping or a butterfly fluttering. It’s small but dramatic: the distinct evidence that a live creature is growing inside her. Even if you are not literally expecting a baby, and even if you are male, I suspect you will soon feel the metaphorical equivalent of a fetus’s first kicks. You’re not ready to give birth yet, of course, but you are well on your way to generating a new creation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “I stand up next to a mountain, and I chop it down with the edge of my hand.” So sang Jimi Hendrix in his raucous psychedelic tune “Voodoo Child (Slight Return).” We could view his statement as an example of delusional grandiosity and dismiss it as meaningless. Or we could say it’s a funny and brash boast that Hendrix made as he imagined himself to be a mythic hero capable of unlikely feats. For the purposes of this horoscope, let’s go with the latter interpretation. I encourage you to dream up a slew of extravagant brags about the outlandish magic powers you have at your disposal. I bet it will rouse hidden reserves of energy that will enhance your more practical powers.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “Since U Been Gone” is a pop song recorded by vocalist Kelly Clarkson. She won a Grammy for it and made a lot of money from its sales. But two other singers turned down the chance to make it their own before Clarkson got her shot. The people who wrote the tune offered it first to P!nk and then to Hilary Duff, but neither accepted. Don’t be like those two singers, Gemini. Be like Clarkson. Recognize opportunities when they are presented to you, even if they are in disguise or partially cloaked.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): It’s the phase of your cycle when you have maximum power to transform yourself. If you work hard to rectify and purify your inner life, you will be able to generate a transcendent release. Moreover, you may tap into previously dormant or inaccessible aspects of your soul’s code. Here are some tips on how to fully activate this magic. (1) Without any ambivalence, banish ghosts that are more trouble than they are worth. (2) Identify the one bad habit
CANCER (June 21-July 22): “Going with the flow” sounds easy and relaxing, but here’s another side of the truth: Sometimes it can kick your ass. The rippling current you’re floating on may swell up into a boisterous wave. The surge of the stream might get so hard and fast that your ride becomes more spirited than you anticipated. And yet I still think that going with the flow is your
you most want to dissolve, and replace it with a good habit. (3) Forgive everyone, including yourself. (4) Play a joke on your fear. (5) Discard or give away material objects that no longer have any meaning or use.
such an adventure will be the coming two weeks. Keep the following questions in mind as you brainstorm: (1) What are your life’s greatest mysteries, and what sort of journey might bring an awakening that clarifies them? (2) Where could you go in order to clarify the curious yearnings that you have never fully understood? (3) What power spot on planet Earth might activate the changes you most want to make in your life?
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I hope you’re not getting bored with all of the good news I have been delivering in recent weeks. I’m sorry if I sound like I’m sugarcoating or whitewashing, but I swear I’m simply reporting the truth about the cosmic omens. Your karma is extra sweet these days. You do have a few obstacles, but they are weaker than usual. So I’m afraid you will have to tolerate my rosy prophecies for a while longer. Stop reading now if you can’t bear to receive a few more buoyant beams. This is your last warning! Your web of allies is getting more resilient and interesting. You’re expressing just the right mix of wise selfishness and enlightened helpfulness. As your influence increases, you are becoming even more responsible about wielding it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): When he died at the age of 77 in 1905, Aquarian author Jules Verne had published 54 books. You’ve probably heard of his science fiction novels Journey to the Center of the Earth and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. He was a major influence on numerous writers, including Jean-Paul Sartre, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Arthur Rimbaud. But one of his manuscripts never made it into book form. When he finished it in 1863, his publisher refused to publish it, so Verne stashed it in a safe. It remained there until his great-grandson discovered it in 1989. Five years later, Verne’s “lost novel,” Paris in the Twentieth Century, went on sale for the first time. I suspect that in the coming months, you may have a comparable experience, Aquarius. An old dream that was lost or never fulfilled may be available for recovery and resuscitation.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): When 16th-century Spanish invaders arrived in the land of the Mayans, they found a civilization that was in many ways highly advanced. The native people had a superior medical system and calendar. They built impressive cities with sophisticated architecture and paved roads. They were prolific artists and had a profound understanding of mathematics and astronomy. And yet they did not make or use wheeled vehicles, which had been common in much of the rest of the world for over 2,000 years. I see a certain similarity between this odd disjunction and your life. Although you’re mostly competent and authoritative, you are neglecting to employ a certain resource that would enhance your competence and authority even further. Fix this oversight!
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): “I enjoy using the comedy technique of self-deprecation,” says stand-up comic Arnold Brown,“but I’m not very good at it.” Your task in the coming weeks, Pisces, is to undermine your own skills at self-deprecation. You may think they are too strong and entrenched to undo and unlearn, but I don’t — especially now, when the cosmic forces are conspiring to prove to you how beautiful you are. Cooperate with those cosmic forces! Exploit the advantages they are providing. Inundate yourself with approval, praise, and naked flattery.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): If you have ever fantasized about taking a pilgrimage to a wild frontier or sacred sanctuary or your ancestral homeland, the next 10 months will be an excellent time to do it. And the best time to plan
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 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700.
Homework: What other name would you give yourself if you could take a vacation from your present name? Why? Visit FreeWillAstrology.com.
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Legals Administer of Estate NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: GORO TAKEUCHI NO: 15PR00313 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of GORO TAKEUCHI A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: MICHAEL G. TAKEUCHI in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara THE PETITION for probate requests that (name): KAREN K. TAKEUCHI and MICHAEL G. TAKEUCHI be appointed as personal representative 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 waived 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 10/22/2015 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: 5 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, P.O. Box 21107 Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Probate 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: James P. Griffith 1129 State Street Suite 3 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 ; (805) 805‑962‑5821. Published Aug 27. Sep 3, 10 2015.
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FBN Abandonment STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Maria Isabel Hair Design at 3008 State St , Santa Barbara, CA 93105. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 1/05/2015 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2013‑0000019. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Gerardo Roca 2128 Modoc Rd #F, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 27 2015, 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 Noe Solis. for Published. Sept 3, 10, 17, 24 2015. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Simply Pies at 5392 Hollister Ave. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 2/3/2015 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2015‑0000391. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Hallie Katnic This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 04 2015. 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 Noe Solis. for Published. Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Simply Pies at 5392 Hollister Ave Santa Barbara, CA 93111. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 2/19/2015 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2015‑0000582. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Claire Bonnie, LLC This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 04, 2015. 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 Noe Solis. for Published. Aug 13, 20, 27. Sept 3 2015. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Star Nails at 5155 Tabano Way, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 10/28/2013 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2013‑0003288. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Thao Nguyen, 5155 Tabano Way, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17 2015, 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal for Published. Aug 20, 27, Sept 3, 10 2015.
Fictitious Business Name Statement FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Sherk Counseling Services at 5266 Hollister Avenue Suite 215 Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Debra Sherk 86 Willow Springs Ln. #201 Goleta, CA 93117; John Sherk (same address) This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Gracie Huerta filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 11 2015. 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 Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2015‑0002410. Published:
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Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Janizz.com at 4998 San Marcos Court Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Rohit Jain (same address) Kavita Pabby (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jul 14 2015. 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: Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002197. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Rumi Educational Center at 28 W. Arrellaga Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Fariba Enteshari (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Fariba Enteshari filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jul 13 2015. 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 . FBN Number: 2015‑0002184. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Mail Road Wines at 835 East Canon Perdido Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Palmerpiazza, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Michael Palmer, Owner filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jul 30 2015. 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 . FBN Number: 2015‑0002325. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Chinese Medicine at 138 E Carrillo Street Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Kristen Elizabeth Swegles 250 Sherwood Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Kristen E Swegles filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jul 20 2015. 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 . FBN Number: 2015‑0002243. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dapper Photography at 1425 Chino Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Dapper Photography LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 05 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002379. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Savoy Cafe & Deli at 24 West Figueroa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Savoy Cafe & Deli, Inc. 6588 Camino Venturoso Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Paul Shelds, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 10 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002399. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Gracie Huerta Consultant, Hearfelt Training And Facilitation at 7079 Del Norte Goleta, CA 93117; Graciela Huerta (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Gracie Huerta filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 04 2015. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk.
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Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2015‑0002363. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Shelton Huts at 519 Fig Avenue, Santa Barbara CA 93101; Mattie Braden Shelton, 801 Cold Spring Road, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Mattie Braden Shelton filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 11 2015. 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: 2015‑0002414. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Bay Club Downtown Santa Barbara at 21 West Carrillo Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Spectrum Clubs Santa Barbara, Inc. 1 Lombard Street San Francisco, CA 94111. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: . filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal . FBN Number: 2015‑0002469. Published: Aug 20, 27, Sept 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Bay Club Goleta at 6144 Calle Real, Goleta, CA 93117; Spectrum Clubs Santa Barbara, Inc. 1 Lombard Street San Francisco, CA 94111. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: . filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal . FBN Number: 2015‑0002467. Published: Aug 20, 27, Sept 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Bay Club Uptown Santa Barbara at 3908 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Spectrum Clubs Santa Barbara, Inc. 1 Lombard Street San Francisco, CA 94111. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Spectrum Clubs Santa Barbara, Inc. filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal . FBN Number: 2015‑0002468. Published: Aug 20, 27, Sept 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Home Watch at 324 1/2 North Alisos Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Paul D’ Antoni III, 324 1/2 North Alisos Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93103, This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Paul D’Antoni III filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jul 30 2015. 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: 2015‑0002454. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Cielo Spa Boutique at 1725 State St Suite C, CA 93101; Roxanne R. Zbinden, 287 Pebble Beach Dr. Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Roxanne R. Zbindena filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 3, 2015. 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002353. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Star Nails
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at 5801 Calle Real Suite F Goleta, CA 93117; Qui Thi Nguyen, 945 Ward Dr. 114, Goleta, CA 93111; Sean Thai Nguyen, 100 Sumida Gardens Ln Apt 103, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Sean Thai Nguyen filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002471. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Paradise Real Estate Group at 1526 Marquard Terrace, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Colette B Fischer same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Colette B Fisher filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002464. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Valor Business Services at 408 W. Pedregosa St. #B, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Robert Del Rosario (samea address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Robert Del Rosario filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 4 2015. 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002362. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Tecis Insurance Services at 201N. Civic Drive Suite 100 Walnut Creek, CA 94596; Algentis, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 13 2015. 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 Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2015‑0002434. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Elvira’s Photography And Video at 5729 Hollister Avenue Goleta, CA 93117; Elvira Rodriguez‑Lezama 5810 Mandarin Drive #A Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Elvira Rodriguez‑Lezama filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jul 30 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002331. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Concrete Cutting at 3969 Foothill Road Santa Barbara, 93110; Jennifer J Grgich Trustee (same address) Thomas C. Harden JR Trustee (same address) This business is conducted by a Trust Signed: Jennifer J. Grgich filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 12 2015. 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002432. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: University Auto Sales at 414 Chapala Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Samah Yasin 66 Ocean View Avenue Apt 60 Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Samah Yasin filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jul 31 2015. This statement expires
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five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Teresa Ann Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002341. Published: Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SB Bone Broth Company at 789 Mission Canyon Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Brislia S Cardenas 4280 Calle Real #85 Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Ava Churchill 789 Mission Canyon Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Brislia S Cardenas filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 10 2015. 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 Andrea Liparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002406. Published: Aug 13, 20, 27. Sep 3 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: G & M Road Fund at 2743 Glendessary Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Harry Edward Heron (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Harry Edward Heron filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 19, 2015. 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 Jessica Sheaif. FBN Number: 2015‑0002483. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Pleasure 2 Treasure at 1721 De La Vina Apt C Santa Barbara, 93101; Brian Williams (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Brian Williams filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 20, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002510. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Barbara’s Consignment Concierge at 1103 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Barbara Jennifer Reed 45 Greenwell Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Barbara J. Reed filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 21, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002422. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Showers of Blessing at 6595 Covington Way Goleta, CA 93117; Interfaith Initiative of Santa Barbara County 86 Harbor Way #249 Santa Barbara, CA 93109 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Martin G. Jenkins filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 14, 2015. 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002455. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Richard Abrams And Associates at 464 San Marino Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Richard Abrams (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Richard Abrams filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 19, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002486. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s)
September 3, 2015
is/are doing business as: Laser Rehab Institute at 1520 State Street Suite A Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Kevin Khalili 3115 Calle Fresno Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Kevin Khalili filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 20, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002504. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Ferm Pickles Fermpickles at 3115 Calle Fresno Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Indra Smith (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Indra Smith filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 20, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002503. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Next Level Culture at 636 Andy Ln. Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Business Success Team (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Simon Darcy, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 06, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002385. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Jensen Guitar & Music Co, Jensen Pro at 2830 De La Vina St Ste F Santa Barbara, CA 93105‑3457; Artichoke Music Services, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Chris Jensen filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 12, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002431. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Point & Line, Point & Line Wines at 212 W. Pedregosa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Catalyst Three LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Russell Kostin filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 21, 2015. 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 Jessica Sheaif. FBN Number: 2015‑0002517. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Bentley‑Forbes Security at 222 West Carmen Lane Suite 202 Santa Maria, CA 93458; Bentley‑Forbes Security Training Academy, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 19, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002486. Published: Aug 27. Sep 3, 10, 17 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Neils Conrad Larson, D.C. at 5350 Hollister Avenue #A3 Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Neils Conrad Larson 914 Castillo Street #6 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Neils C. Larson filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 24, 2015. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County
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Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2015‑0002530. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2015‑0002520. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Teresa Ann Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002438. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Isla Vista Management Company at 4235 Cresta Ave Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Robert Larson 4625 Spencer Drive Plano, TX 75024 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Robert Larson filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002472. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Em El Consulting at 5511 Somerset Dr. Goleta, CA 93111; Michael Lee; 785 Camino Del Sur #119 Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Michael Lee filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 18, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002479. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Five Star White Glove House Cleaning, White `Glove Estate Cleaning Services, Master Care Home Cleaning, White Glove Five Star Cleaning, Mastercare Home Cleaning Services, White Glove House Cleaning at 5786 Hollister Avenue Goleta, CA 93117; Mastercare Ultraclean, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Spencer Dean, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 18, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002480. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Bottle Pros at 735 State Street #229 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Pura Stainless LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Jennifer Moore filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 13, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002437. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Reed Interiors at 3821 Santa Claus Lane Carpinteria, CA 93013; Reed Floors, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Myriam Doussineau filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 25, 2015. 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 Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2015‑0002536. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Perfect Fits, The Perfect Fits, Weaves Police at 3463 Stae Street Suite 326 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Janice L. Hayes (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Janice L. Hayes filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 20, 2015. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Wholesome Chow at 760 Chelham Way Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Jeffrey Bailey (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Jeffrey Bailey filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 25, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002562. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Stanley Ray Guitars at 5171 San Vicente Dr Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Chris Raymond Frink (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Chris R. Frink filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 06, 2015. 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 Miriam Leon. FBN Number: 2015‑0002386. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Appraisal Services at 524 E Micheltorena St Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Seattle Appraisal LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Steve L filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 06, 2015. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Eco‑Village at 121 West Pueblo Street #14 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Bruno Treves 1105 North Ontare Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Bruno Treves filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 25, 2015. 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. Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002542. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CA Makes at 919 Medio Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Chelsea Aiello (same address) Wesley Prunckle (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: Chelsea Aiello filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 20, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbel. Iqbel. FBN Number: 2015‑0002509. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Flowering Gifts, Senior Citizens Advocacy,
Hair For Cancer Patients, The Perfect Fits, Kids Monitoring Services at 3463 State Street Suite 326 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; The Good Samaritian (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Janice L. Hayes, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 19, 2015. 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 Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2015‑0002493. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Quinn Fiduciary Services at 1811 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Jacquelyn 333 Old Mill Road Space 168 Santa Barbara, CA 93110 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Jacquelyn Quinn filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 26, 2015. 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 Miriam Leon. FBN Number: 2015‑0002560. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Peka Construction at 650 Northview Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Michael Wayne Peka (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Michael W Peka filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 28, 2015. 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 Teresa Ann Iqbal. FBN Number: 2015‑0002576. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: 805 Street Bites & Events at 4024 Modoc Rd Unit A Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Christian Cortes (same address) Abigail Placencia (same address) This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Christian Cortes filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 04, 2015. 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 Andrea Luparellio. FBN Number: 2015‑0002374. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Paddle Sports Center, Paddle Sports of Santa Barbara at 117 Harbor Way Ste B Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Channel Islands Outfitters, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Fraser Kersey, CFO filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002459. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Fairview Mattress & Furniture at 5729 Hollister Ave. Goleta, CA 93117; Gabriel Solrzano 718 W. Sola St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Gabriel Solorzano filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 28, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002575. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Royal Thai Massage at 3204‑A State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Natacha Chaiseree 4123 Via Andorra Santa Barbara, CA 93110 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Natacha Chaiseree filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 27, 2015. 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: 2015‑0002570. Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 24 2015.
Name Change IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF DIANA MARIE PASTERNAK ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV02192 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: DIANA MARIE PASTERNAK TO: DIANA MARIE DIMAURO 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 Oct 7, 2015 9:30am, Dept 1, 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 Jul 06, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Aug 20, 27. Sep 3, 10 2015. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF LINDSAY LOGAN LEACH ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV02309 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: LINDSAY LOGAN LEACH TO: LYNDSAY LOGAN LEACH 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 Oct 14, 2015 9:30am, Dept 1, 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 Aug 21, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Sep 3, 10, 17, 24 2015.
capublicnotice.com (Cal‑SCAN)
Summons No: 15‑7‑00218‑1 Notice and Summons by Publication (Termination) (SMPB) SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON COUNTY OF CLALLAM JUVENILE COURT Dependency of: DELILAH LONG D.O.B.: 04/12/2008 To: RICHARD JONES, father of DELILAH LONG and/or JOHN DOE, NAME/IDENTITY UNKNOWN and/or ANYONE ELSE CLAIMING A PATERNAL INTEREST IN THE CHILD A Petition to Terminate Parental Rights was filed on JULY 7TH, 2015, A Termination First Set Fact Finding hearing will be held on this matter on: OCTOBER 21 ST, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. at CLALLAM COUNTY JUVENILE SERVICES, 1912 W. 18TH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA 98363. You should be present at this hearing. The hearing will determine if your parental rights to your child are terminated. If you do not appear at the hearing, the court may enter an order in your absence terminating your parental rights. To request a copy of the Notice, Summons, and Termination Petition, call DSHS at Port Angeles, at (360) 565‑2240 or Forks DSHS, at (360) 374‑3530. To view information about your rights, including right to a lawyer, go to www.atg.wa.gov/TRM.aspx. Dated: 08/26/2015 W. BRENT BASDEN Commissioner, BARBARA CHRISTENSEN, County Clerk, JENNIFER CLARK, Deputy Clerk Published: Sep 3, 10, 17 2015.
Public Notices DID YOU KNOW Information is power and content is King? Do you need timely access to public notices and remain relevant in today’s hostile business climate? Gain the edge with California Newspaper Publishers Association new innovative website capublicnotice.com and check out the FREE One‑Month Trial Smart Search Feature. For more information call Cecelia @ (916) 288‑6011 or www.
Employment Accounting/ Bookkeeping
BOOKEEPER Non‑profit advocacy firm seeks p/t bookkeeper resp. for payroll rept., A/P, A/R, stmts & benefit admin. Knowledge of Excel and QB acctg software req’d. Send resume and salary rqmts by 7/7/15 to obailey@ E n v i r o n m e n t a l D e f e n s e C e n t e r. org. More information at EnvironmentalDefensecenter.org
FINANCIAL & PAYROLL ASSISTANT
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM (EOP) Independently responsible for the design, coordination, implementation and management of the administrative and financial operations facet of EOP for Summer Transitional Enrichment Program (STEP), Summer Orientation Program and Spring Insight. Determines administrative objectives, interprets and implements policies and establishes procedures in pursuing program goals. In consultation with the STEP Coordinator, provides recommendations based on self‑directed analysis and complete knowledge of all administrative and
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logistical activities and objectives; helps resolves issues that have a significant impact on the overall goals and mission of the program and coordinates multiple activities independently. Reqs: Must be proficient in personnel payroll systems and familiar with accounting and clerical/office procedures including financial principles. Strong computer skills, including experience with spreadsheet and database applications. Ability to handle time‑sensitive and confidential materials. Must be able to work with people of diverse backgrounds. Notes: Fingerprinting required. May work occasional weekends. $20.59 ‑ $21.57/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 9/14/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150466
Activism DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 10 Americans or 158 million U.S. Adults read content from newspaper media each week? Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916‑288‑6011 or email cecelia@cnpa. com (Cal‑SCAN)
THE INDEPENDENT
September 3, 2015
Business Opportunity OBTAIN CLASS A CDL IN 2 ½ WEEKS. Company Sponsored Training. Also Hiring Recent Truck School Graduates, Experienced Drivers. Must be 21 or Older. Call: (866) 275‑2349. (Cal‑SCAN)
Domestic Wanted : Nanny to pick children ages 11 & 13 up from school and drive to various after school activities. Requirements: car in good working condition, valid drivers license, insurance, and a minimum of two references. Compensation $15/hr plus mileage. Call (805) 994‑0045
General Full-Time
General Part-Time
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here – Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866‑231‑7177. (Cal‑SCAN)
ADVERTISING SALES ‑ Work from home as an Independent Contractor and be your own Boss! Commission Only Based Program. Self‑Starter, Motivated, Experience in Advertising Sales a plus. Send Resumes to cecelia@ cnpa.com or fax 916‑288‑6022. No phone calls please! (Cal‑ SCAN)
ATTN: Drivers – Great Miles + Top 1% Pay Loyalty Bonus Quality Equipment w APUs Pet/Rider Program Matching 401K CDL‑A Req ‑ (877) 258‑8782 www.drive4melton.com (Cal‑SCAN)
Employment Services
Part and full‑time positions available NOW!!!!! Campaign DRIVERS ‑ No experience? Some or Fundraising Positions for Democratic and Progressive groups. Telefund is LOTS of experience? Let’s Talk! We support every driver, every day, every seeking activists to call like‑minded people and mobilize their support for mile! Call Central Refrigerated Home. 888‑302‑4618 www.environmental, human rights issues, C e n t r a l Tr u c k D r i v i n g J o b s . c o m and the 2016 Presidential election. Earn $9‑$11.50/hr, plus bonuses!! (Cal‑SCAN) DRIVERS – NO EXPERIENCE? Some Convenient S.B. location, near bus. or LOTS of experience? Let’s Talk! No CALL NOW: 564‑1093 Or VISIT: www. matter what stage in your career, it’s telefund.com time, call Central Refrigerated Home. Want A Career Operating Heavy Equipment? Bulldozers, Backhoes, 888‑ Excavators. Hands On Training! 302‑4618 w w w . C e n t r a l Tr u c k D r i v i n g j o b s . c o m Certifications Offered. National Average 18‑22hr. Lifetime Job (CalSCAN) Placement. VA Benefits Eligible! 1‑866‑362‑6497. (Cal‑SCAN)
independent.com
Immediate P/T (20‑30hrs/wk) openings in the germination department at established commercial seed testing lab in Santa Barbara. Flexible schedule, within normal business hours. This can be a great job to work around a school schedule. No experience needed, and will train. A background/interest in agriculture and/or botany is helpful. Must be able to work independently, exhibit attention‑to‑detail, and remain focused. Located in Riviera Research Park near El Encanto Hotel. Starting at $10/hr. Email cover letter and resume to ammemployment@gmail.com. No phone calls, please. EOE. WHO SAYS? You cannot earn a powerful income part‑time out of your home? We are doing it. We are looking for a couple of great Leaders. If you think you are qualified call 602/397‑7752 for an interview. Bonuses included. (Cal‑SCAN)
Medical/Healthcare
Professional
Lead Case Manager – Emergency Department
ASSOC. DIR. OF DEVELOPMENT, DONOR RELATIONS & STUDENT ENGAGEMENT
Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital seeks full‑time Lead Case Manager to support the Emergency Department. Will be responsible for completing psychosocial evaluations, psychotherapeutic and psychoeducational groups, and aftercare planning. Master’s degree in social work, clinical psychology or counseling required; 3+ years acute care experience. Cottage Health offers an excellent compensation package that includes above market salaries; premium medical benefits, pension plans, and tax savings accounts. Please apply online at: www.cottagehealth.org. EOE Personal Attendants Wanted Provide in‑home support to adults with Developmental Disabilities FT and PT available call 692‑5290
DEVELOPMENT OFFICE Works to develop increased philanthropy awareness among the UCSB student population. Centralizes a program for stewarding scholarships and award donors. Augments donor‑student engagement by way of events, intimate receptions and enhanced donor‑student recognition. Works closely with the student body to plan and execute philanthropy‑related initiatives. Mentors and guides the UCSB First Committee (student philanthropy group), as well as collaborate with the Annual Fund, Alumni Affairs, and Student Affairs on various projects which include, but are not limited to: Gaucho Gratitude Project (annual student Thank‑you program), Senior Class Gift awareness and fundraising (annual), Campus‑wide Scholarships Reception development, Donor‑student intimate receptions, UCSB First events and donor society events (Chancellor’s Council and Lancaster Society receptions). Reqs: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of education and experience. Excellent
independent classifieds
Employment communication and presentation skills, both written and verbal. Demonstrated interpersonal skills to establish and maintain good working relationships with diverse groups, including colleagues, faculty, staff, donors, and students. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Annually renewable contract position. Ability and willingness to travel. Ability and willingness to work evenings and weekends. Salary is competitive and commensurate with qualifications and experience. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 9/10/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20150458
DEVELOPMENT ANALYST, UC SANTA BARBARA FOUNDATION
DEVELOPMENT OFFICE Strong understanding of the department’s programs and goals and participates in long range planning for the department. Provides support for operations, financial budget, budget recommendations and logistics related to board meeting weekends and other Trustee related events, University engagement opportunities, and Trustee fundraising initiatives. Logistics include analysis resulting in briefings for the Chancellor, the Associate Vice Chancellor for Development (“AVC”), the Sr. Director and other Directors in the Executive Development Team. Strong focus on gift and prospect management and analysis, donor research, gift fund management, departmental services and training for operations. Prepares sophisticated reports that contain complex and sensitive information about donors or prospects, segmenting data for strategic invitations, coordinating efforts with events management to ensure actual events are efficient and productive for the university’s mission advancement in identifying prospect donors. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of education and experience. Strong organizational skills and unfailing attention to detail and accuracy. Exceptional verbal and interpersonal skills that foster positive relationships with diverse populations. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Must work occasional evenings and weekends at various Development Office, Institutional Advancement or campus‑wide events. $21.86 ‑ $23.94/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 9/14/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150464
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phone 965-5205
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e m a i l s a l e s @ i n d e p e n d e n t. c o m
(Continued)
EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING ANALYST 1
HUMAN RESOURCES If you are highly committed to excellence in higher education; enjoy working in a fast‑paced, team‑oriented environment; have proven administrative, organizational, and customer service skills; and have a strong interest to serve as a HR generalist in the areas of recruitment, training, database management, and customer support, then we invite you to consider this rewarding job opportunity. Reqs: Ability to work independently and act with sound judgment. Strong organizational skills. Demonstrated interpersonal abilities working with a diverse group of people. Strong analytical and problem‑solving skills. Possess moderate to advanced knowledge and application skill in Word, Excel, and database programs. Excellent written and verbal communication skills. Note: Fingerprinting required. $19.87 ‑ $22.00/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive
consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 9/10/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply on line at https://Jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20150460
DEDICATION TO BEING OUR BEST.
It’s our highest priority.
POLICY COORDINATOR & DEPUTY ADA COMPLIANCE OFFICER
VICE CHANCELLOR ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES Investigates, researches, and analyzes a variety of issues, programs, reports, and policy and procedures to respond to questions, resolve concerns/complaints, writes reports, and make recommendations. Under the direction of the ADA Compliance Officer, administers campus‑wide compliance with federal and state laws as well as University policies and procedures pertaining to protections for persons with disabilities. Reqs:
The County is hiring!
The County employs over 4000 employees in jobs from entry level to executive! Visit our website for a list of current openings:
www.sbcountyjobs.com
Setting high standards is one thing. Embracing them is another. At Cottage Health System, we make it top priority to work constantly at being our best...for patients, their families, our communities and fellow team members. If you would enjoy living up to your potential at a health system that strives for – and achieves – excellence, come to Cottage.
Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital Nursing • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Birth Center Cath Lab Clinical Manager – ER GVCH Clinical Nurse Specialist Clinical Quality Consultant CRN – Perioperative Facilitator Electrophysiology Emergency Psychiatric Emergency Psych Supervisor Manager – Cardiology Manager – Villa Riviera Med/Surg – Float Pool MICU Mother Infant Neuro/Cardiovascular Coordinator Neurology/Urology NICU Peds PICU Pulmonary Renal SICU Stroke Coordinator Surgery Surgical Trauma Telemetry
Part time jobs that
Allied Health
make a difference!
• • • •
Work with like-minded people on the most important political and social issues of the day. Flexible hours that fit your schedule.
Earn up to $16+/hour Convenient Downtown SB, Near Bus
Call: (805) 564-1093 www.telefund.com
Clinical
Admissions Facilitator – SLO Clinic Case Manager – SLO Clinic Echocardiographer – Per Diem Intraoperative Neuro Monitoring Technician • Physical Therapist – Per Diem • Speech Language Pathologist II – Per Diem • Surg Tech IV
• • • • • • •
Behavior Health Clinician – Per Diem Licensed Psych Technician LVN – Emergency Dept. Patient Care Tech – Telemetry Personal Care Attendant I – Villa Riviera Telemetry Technician Unit Care Technicians – MICU
Non-Clinical • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Bed Control Coordinator Catering Set-up – Part-Time Client Systems Administrator (EPIC) Cook – Temporary Environmental Services Rep Environmental Services Supervisor EPIC Ambulatory Manager Floor Care Representative Food Service Rep Infection Preventionist Data Support (RN) Interface Analyst (EPIC) Lean/Process Improvement Facilitator Manager, ISD Customer Service Manager – Nutrition Patient Financial Counselor II – Admitting Patient Financial Counselor II – Credit/Collections PBX Operator – Per Diem Research Analyst & Project Development Specialist Security Officers Supervisor, Utilization Review Denials & Appeals Process Systems Support Analyst – Supply Chain
Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital • Patient Care Tech I – Per Diem • Prospective Payment Systems Coordinator
Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital • • • • • • •
CNC – Nursing Administration CRN – Nursing Administration Patient Financial Counselor – Per Diem RN – Emergency (Nights) RN – ICU (Nights) RN – Med/Surg (Nights) Security Officer – Per Diem
Cottage Business Services • Patient Financial Counselors – Admitting & Credit Collections • Supervisor – Patient Business Services
Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital • Endoscopy Technician – Days • EVS Lead • • • • •
Manager – Nutrition Manager – Radiology Patient Financial Counselor RN – ED – Per Diem and Part-Time RN – Med/Surg – Per Diem
Pacific Diagnostic Laboratories • • • • •
Certified Phlebotomy Techs Clinical Lab Scientists Cytotechnologist – Per Diem Histotechnician Lab Assistant II
• Please apply to: www.pdllabs.com • RENTAL & RELOCATION ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE FOR SELECT FULL-TIME POSITIONS • 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? For more information on how you can advance your future with these opportunities, or to submit a resume, please contact: Cottage Health System, Human Resources, P.O. Box 689, Pueblo at Bath Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93102-0689. Please apply online at www.cottagehealth.org. Please reference “SBI” when applying. EOE
independent.com
Excellence, Integrity, Compassion
www.cottagehealth.org September 3, 2015
THE INDEPENDENt
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INDEPENDENT CLassiFieds
empLoyment Legal experience/J.D. strongly preferred. In lieu of legal experience/ J.D., a Bachelor’s degree in a related field or an equivalent combination of education and professional experience is required. Excellent verbal, written and interpersonal communication skills. Ability to handle multiple tasks, meet deadlines, work independently in a fast paced office. Note: Fingerprinting required. $5,057‑ 6,938/mo. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/
Handyman
General repairs, painting, drywall, decks, plumbing. 35 yrs experience. NLC Chuck 805‑636‑7934
Business services AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $25/ MONTH! Call 855‑977‑9537
domestic services 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)
SILVIA’S CLEANING
If you want to see your house really clean call 682‑6141;385‑9526 SBs Best
finAnciAl services HELP PREVENT FORECLOSURE & Save Your Home! Get FREE Relief!
PHONE 965-5205
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E M A I L s a L e s @ i n d e p e n d e n t. C o m
(Continued)
Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 9/15/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://Jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20150456
seRViCe diReCtoRy Building/ construction services
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PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATIVE ANALYST
OFFICE OF EQUAL OPPORTUNITY & SEXUAL HARASSMENT/TITLE IX COMPLIANCE Investigates complaints of alleged
Learn about your legal option to possibly lower your rate and modify your mortgage. 800‑469‑0167 (Cal‑SCAN)
Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1‑800‑357‑0810 (Cal‑SCAN)
REDUCE YOUR Past Tax Bill by as much as 75 Percent. Stop Levies, Liens and Wage Garnishments. Call The Tax DR Now to see if you Qualify. 1‑800‑498‑1067. (Cal‑SCAN)
DISH TV Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) SAVE! Regular Price $34.99 Ask About FREE SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 888‑992‑1957 (AAN CAN) Class: Misc.
SELL YOUR structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1‑800‑673‑5926 (Cal‑SCAN)
generAl services DID YOU KNOW 144 million U.S. Adults read a Newspaper print copy each week? Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916‑288‑6011 or email cecelia@cnpa. com (Cal‑SCAN) KILL ROACHES‑GUARANTEED! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available: ACE Hardware, The Home Depot (AAN CAN)
Home services DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/ month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed
medicAl services ATTENTION: VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! A cheaper alternative to high drugstore prices! 50 Pill Special ‑ $99 FREE Shipping! 100 Percent Guaranteed. CALL NOW: 1‑800‑624‑9105 (Cal‑SCAN) CANADA DRUG Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 93% on all your medication needs. Call today 1‑800‑273‑0209 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. (Cal‑SCAN) GOT KNEE Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain‑relieving brace ‑little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1‑ 800‑796‑ 5091 (Cal‑SCAN)
behavior in violation of University policy regarding protected based discrimination and harassment (including sexual violence), educates campus administrators and managers about their role in the resolution process, consults with the education programmers, and manages complaint resolutions. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of education and experience. Minimum three years of demonstrated expertise and skill in exercising independent judgment
HOT FLASHES? Women 40‑65 with frequent hot flashes, may qualify for the REPLENISH Trial ‑ a free medical research study for post‑menopausal women. Call 855‑781‑1851. (Cal‑SCAN) 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) VIAGRA 100MG or CIALIS 20mg. 40 tabs +10 FREE all for $99 including FREE, Fast and Discreet SHIPPING. 1‑888‑836‑0780 or Metro‑Meds.net (Cal‑SCAN)
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? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical, and continued support afterwards. Choose adoptive family of your choice. Call 24/7. 1‑877‑879‑4709 (Cal‑SCAN)
in the assessment, investigation, and resolution of discrimination and harassment concerns. Demonstrated knowledge of best practices and methodologies for conducting investigations, fact‑finding and investigative interviewing. Demonstrated ability to handle personal, confidential, sensitive and complex information and matters with composure, mature judgment and utmost discretion. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Multiple
professionAl services
Residential Mover
Homes, Apartments, Studios, In‑House, Coordinating. Give your toes a break, No job too big or small. CA‑PUC‑Lic 190295, Insurance. 805‑698‑2978. SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1‑800‑ 966‑1904 to start your application today! (Cal‑SCAN)
positions available. $60,691‑$84,929/ yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 9/24/15, thereafter open until filled.
Packages starting at $19.99/mo. Free 3‑Months of HBO, Starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2015 NFL Sunday Ticket. Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only IV Support Holdings LLC‑ An authorized DirecTV Dealer. Some exclusions apply ‑ Call for details 1‑800‑385‑9017 (CalSCAN)
VIDEO TO DVD
TRANSFERS‑ Only $10! Quick before your tapes fade! Transfer VHS, 8mm, Hi8 etc. Scott 969‑6500
Holistic HeAltH
FIND THE love you deserve! Discover the path to happiness. New members receive a FREE 3‑minute love reading! Entertainment purposes only. 18 and over. 800‑639‑2705 (Cal‑SCAN)
Healing Touch
23 yrs exp. massage, cranial sacral and aroma therapy. Cheryl 681‑9865
#1 MASSAGE IN SB!
clAsses/WorksHops
SWING AND SURVIVAL BALLROOM
Classes begin 9/9 and 9/10 Call Jonathan 805‑698‑0832
HeAling groups
Divorced? Separated?
mAssAge (licensed)
BEST MSOFFICE Help
Best Help with your MsOffice work / Interface building, macros and processes automation. We service businesses, individuals and students. 20+ Yrs of experience. Contact 805‑807‑3222 / BestHelp@ Outlook.com.YOUR SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
YOU ARE NOT ALONE! Using an advanced method of Hypnotherapy, I can help. I have specialized in Personal Growth and Well Being since 1998. Offering Hypnotherapy, Reiki and Intuitive Readings. Call for your FREE consultation: Mary Avila CCht 805‑636‑8686
Divorce Care Support Group beginning Sept. 10th, 7‑9pm for 13 weeks. FCC (corner of State and Padre) 805‑252‑4105
Relaxing Massage
4010 Calle Real #7 • Santa Barbara • Call 805.682.5400
FAST RELIEF FROM PAIN, STRESS, & INJURY! 1 HR=$85, 1.5 HRS=$120, OR 2 HRS=$150. (OUTCALLS+$40) Jeff Dutcher, CMT, 1211 Coast Village Road in Montecito. Call/Text me now: (203)524‑4779 or book online at: gladiatormassage.com. CA State License #13987.
DEEP TISSUE QUEEN
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
WONDERFUL TEACHER
HARPIST VIRTUOSO
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
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. FREE 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care of. Call 800‑731‑5042 (Cal‑SCAN)
domestic cArs CASH FOR CARS: Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1‑888‑420‑3808 www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN)
trucks/recreAtionAl GOT AN older car, boat or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1‑ 800‑743‑1482 (Cal‑SCAN)
FOR ALL EVENTS. Weddings, Concerts, Parties, Churches, Recording Studios. Classical, pop, folk, jazz... Christine Holvick, BM, MM www. sbHarpist.com 969‑6698
Santa Barbara County 4-H invite you to attend…
Celebrating National 4-H week Saturday, October 3, 2015
maRKetpLaCe gArAge & estAte sAles
treAsure Hunt ($100 or less)
FOOT REFLEXOLOGY For the unsung heroes of your body. $40/ hour or 5 for $175 prepaid. Gift Certs avail. Call Janette @ 805‑966‑5104
3 STERLING silver 4 band mint julep cups hallmarked international 1950s minor dings, light scractches, no monograms. $750 set. 805‑331‑0639
The 3HOUR MASSAGE
misc. for sAle
BJORN RYE LIMITED EDITION NUMBRED ETCHINGS There are 12 different etchings CALL 805‑687‑4514 (KATHY) FOR PRIVATE SHOWING ‑ $55 TO $100
1, 1.5, 2 & 3Hr appts, M‑F. Intro special $40/hr & sliding rates. Shiatzu, Deeptissue, Swedish, Sports. Ken Yamamoto, 35yrs exp. 682‑3456
cAr cAre/repAir
2015 VICTOR HAMMER VIN# 5VPHA36N2F3042618 CA LIC# 22P0577 LIEN SALE 09‑21‑15 10:00AM 5836 HOLLISTER AV GOLETA CA 93117
Virus/Spyware Removal, Install/ Repair, Upgrades, Troubleshoot, Set‑up, Tutor, Networks, Best rates! Matt 682‑0391
noW plAying
auto
motorcycles / scooters
COMPUTER MEDIC
music lessons
AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get started by training as FAA certified AviationTechnician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800‑725‑1563 (AAN CAN)
WANTED: OLD Mercedes 190sl, Jaguar XKE or pre‑1972 foreign SPORTSCAR/convertible. ANY CONDITION! I come with trailer & funds. FAIR OFFERS! Finders fee! Mike 520‑977‑1110. (Cal‑SCAN)
tecHnicAl services
musiC
Astrology
skilled
luXury cArs
SWITCH & Save Event from DirecTV!
WeLL• Being
Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150459
BURIAL PLOTS ‑ (4) grave sites for sale, at Santa Barbara cemetery in Montecito. Nice location, bordering top plateau. $32,000 total. 966‑0707
FOR SALE!
Brass pots, Tudor chargers, a dining table by Bassett ‑ two leaves. Seats up to twelve. Soft cover, 6 chairs. Call Patricia 805‑687‑6359.
Large round dining table, beautiful wood finish
Upholstered chair and ottoman, Victorian rocker, antique pine corner cabinet. All in great condition and reasonably priced. Call 805‑682‑3911. LECTERN ‑ new table used for speeches. Dark brown, red tinge, rich color. $60 or best offer. 805‑845‑8866
Rancho La Patera & Stow House 304 No. Los Carneros Rd. Goleta
1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Free Admission Please leave your pets at home UCCE Santa Barbara County 4-H Program 7127 Hollister Ave., Suite 7 Goleta | CA 93117 805-893-3410| sb4h.org
Wellness LOWEST PRICES on Health & Dental Insurance. We have the best rates from top companies! Call Now! 888‑989‑4807. (Cal‑SCAN)
Meet Princess Princess is cute as can be. She has lived in an apartment all her life and unfortunately has been bred many times. She is due for a break and a happy home.
Prayer Christ The King Healing Hotline EPISCOPAL CHURCH 284-4042 60
tHe INDepeNDeNt
September 3, 2015
Meet Melody
Melody is 7 years old but full of life. She was turned in because her owner could no longer take care of her. She is spayed, has all shots, and best of all is housebroken.
Meet Angel
Angel is 7 years old, neutered, up to date on shots, and best of all housebroken. He came to us because his family could no longer care for him.
Cold Noses Warm Hearts
Cold Noses Warm Hearts
(805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117
(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
independent.com
Meet Naugiemae Naugiemae just came from the shelter so she is still a little frightened. After a day or two she really comes around. She just needs love.
These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home
INDEPENDENT CLassiFieds
ReaL estate reAl estAte for sAle misc. reAl estAte for sAle AUCTION ‑ SAT. APRIL 25TH. TULAROSA, NM. Operating Pistachio/ Pecan Farm. 97+/‑ ac. ‑ 3 Tracts. Harvesting Equipment 800‑223‑4157. Birdsongauction.com Birdsong Auction & Real Estate Group, LLC. 10% Auction Fee. (Cal‑SCAN) NORTHERN AZ WILDERNESS RANCH $249 MONTH! Quiet & secluded 38 acre off grid ranch at cool clear 6,400’ elevation near historic pioneer town & lake. No urban noise & dark sky nights. Blend of evergreens and grassy meadows with sweeping views across 640 acres of adjoining State Trust land. Maintained road/free well access. Camping and RV ok. $28,900, $2,890
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dn, guaranteed financing. Pics/topo map/ weather/ area info 1st United 800.966.6690 arizonaland.com (Cal‑SCAN)
(Cal‑SCAN)
NORTHERN AZ WILDERNESS RANCH $249 MONTH! Quiet & secluded 36 acre off grid ranch at cool clear 6,400’ elevation near historic pioneer town & fishing lake. $28,900, $2,890 dn, seller financing. 800.966.6690 sierramountainranch.com (Cal‑SCAN)
ApArtments & condos for rent
SECLUDED 39 Acre Ranch $193 Month! Secluded‑quiet 6,100’ northern AZ ranch. Mature evergreen trees/meadowland blend. Sweeping ridge top mountain/valley views. Borders 640 acres of Federal wilderness. Free well access, camping and RV ok. Maintained road access. $19,900, $1,990 dn, guaranteed financing. Pics, maps, weather, area info 1st United 800.966.6690 arizonaland.com
PHONE 965-5205
rentAl properties
1 BD. Townhomes/Goleta ‑$1275 Incl. Parking 968‑2011 or visit model www.silverwoodtownhomes.com SPRING MOVE‑IN $1080 1BD Corner of Hope & San Remo‑N State St‑Barbara Apts Quiet NP 687‑0610 SPRING MOVE‑In Specials‑Studios $1080+ & 1BDs $1200+ in beautiful garden setting! Pool, lndry & off‑street parking at Michelle Apartments. 340 Rutherford St. NP. Call Erin 967‑6614
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SPRING MOVE‑IN SPECIALS:1BD near SBCC & beach @ Carla Apts NP. 530 W Cota $1080 Rosa 965‑3200 SPRING MOVE‑IN SPECIALS: 1BD Near Cottage Hospital. 519 W Alamar. Set among beautiful oak trees across the street from Oak Park. NP. $1080. Call Cristina 687‑0915
E M A I L s a L e s @ i n d e p e n d e n t. C o m
Tide Guide
WAnt to rent
Day
High
PROFESSIONAL SEEKING guest house with small yard on gated large property or estate. Great references! Have 2 well‑trained dogs. Interested in feeding & caring for your horses in exchange for rent or possible rent reduction. Thanks! 310‑953‑1783
Thu 3
1:46 Am/ / 4.2
SPRING MOVE‑IN Specials. 2BDs $1500+ & 3BD flat or townhouses $2220. Near UCSB, shops, park, beach, theater, golf. Sesame Tree Apts 6930 Whittier Dr. Hector 968‑2549
The Independent’ s Office will be closed on
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TEDDY BEAR CANCER FOUNDATION
H ap py Labor Day!
Low
Sunrise 6:31 Sunset 7:26
5
12 D
21 H
crosswordpuzzle
s tt Jone By Ma
“Enter the Dragon” – I sea what you did there.
We provide financial and emotional support to families of children with cancer living in Santa Barbara, Ventura, and San Luis Obispo counties. Go Gold in September! #GoGoldTBCF
Monday, September 7 early Advertising deadline:
Friday, September 4, at noon Our office wilL reopen for normal business hours
Tuesday, September 8
TeddyBearCancerFoundation.Org 2320 Bath Street, Suite #107 Santa Barbara, CA 93105 (805) 962-7466
across
1 “Hey, sailor!” 5 Ambien amount, e.g. 9 Wear away 14 Command represented by an outdated floppy disk 15 Milky gem 16 Radio tube gas 17 Dairy product used to fill a pastry? 20 Car ad fig. 21 Abbey recess 22 “2001” hardware 23 Gold amount 25 Agrologist’s study 27 Round figure? 30 One, in Verdun 31 Not as vigorous 33 Sweet statue of Sean Combs in the late ‘90s? 37 It may be Photoshopped out in school photos 38 17th Greek letter 39 Strap on a stallion 40 Part of the theme song for Blossom, Bubbles, or Buttercup? 45 Like reserved seats 46 Whence farm fresh eggs 47 Name in “Talks” 48 Goes pfft 50 In a class by ___ 54 Improve, in the wine cellar 55 Brick in the organics section 57 He played Jim in “The Doors” 58 Frivolous article in the middle of the page? independent.com
63 Previous conviction, informally 64 Peas, for a pea shooter 65 “Desperate Housewives” character Van de Kamp 66 Lots of paper 67 Like 7-Eleven, right now 68 1990s puzzle game set in an island world
1 2 3 4 5
Down
Arts acronym Curly-haired Marx brother Hardly in hiding “I approve the motion!” Aural “shift” named for physicist Christian 6 ___ Dei (“The Da Vinci Code” group) 7 Strongboxes 8 North Pole laborer 9 Let it out 10 Film spool 11 “___ Crazy Summer” (Cusack/ Moore rom-com) 12 MS-___ 13 Reverse of WSW 18 Hawaii’s ___ Kea 19 Boss 24 Hip-hop trio with Lauryn Hill 26 “Get ___ My Cloud” (Rolling Stones hit) 27 Like some siblings 28 Changed the decor of 29 ___ Mawr, PA 32 Empire builders 33 Make a point 34 Without a hitch? 35 “Oooh, you said a swear!” type
September 3, 2015
36 “Weird Al” Yankovic cult movie 37 Calendar entry, for short 41 Hammerstein’s musical collaborator 42 Practitioner, as of a trade 43 Sheer fabric 44 In a riled state 49 Ask a tough trivia question 51 Not just some 52 They hold kicks together 53 Armada 54 Lepton’s locale 56 “You want a piece ___?” 58 EMT’s special skill 59 Palindromic poetry preposition 60 “Boyz N the Hood” actress Long 61 Kung ___ shrimp 62 Watson’s creator
©2015 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 #0735 Last week’s soLution:
tHe INDepeNDeNt
61
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presented by:
C SCott M CCoSker For details, see page 3
Visit us online at bhhscalifornia.com
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351 Sycamore Drive $729,000 Mary Layman 805.448.3890 Beautiful Sycamore Ranch 5BD/3BA 2-story home in Buellton. Featuring a gorgeous manicured backyard & spa. A wonderful community just 35 min from SB.
136 W Haley St $585,000 Bryan R. Uhrig 805.331.3191 NEW PRICE! Vintage California Classic - Brinkerhoff Bugalow Triplet III - 1BD/1BA, redone in 2012. www.136WestHaleyStreet.com
New Listings!
september 3, 2015
OPEN BY APPT.
773 Park Ln Dan Encell
$6,500,000 805.565.4896
6544 Camino Venturoso Sharol Mulder
$1,029,000 805.259.7988
3034 Calle Rosales The Easters
$939,000 805.570.0403
2007 Robbins St
independent real estate
1046 Miramonte Ave #2 $565,000 Heather Martineau 805.231.3558 Updated 2BD condo with newer kitchen & baths, flooring. Conveniently located near the Mesa.
SATURDAY OPEN HOUSES
$879,000
Freed/Roche
805.895.1799/805.705.5334
927 W Valerio St Angela Moloney
$799,000 805.451.1553
SATURDAY OPEN HOUSES (Cont.) $5,995,000 805.280.9797
632 Dara Rd, Open Sat 2-4 Steve Heller
$1,029,000 805.252.2749
1931 Eucalyptus Hill Rd, Open Sat 1-3 Randy Glick
$2,495,000 805.563.4066
1835 Chapala St, Open Sat 1-4 Dan Encell
$995,000 805.565.4896
3054 Calle Noguera, Open Sat 2-4 The Easters
$1,199,000 805.570.0403
3034 Calle Rosales, Open Sat 1-4 The Easters
$939,000 805.570.0403
218 Santa Barbara St, Open Sat 2-4 Marsha Kotlyar
$1,175,000 805.565.4014
332 W Alamar Ave #B, Open Sat 2-4 Ken Switzer
$859,000 805.680.4622
4509 Auhay Dr A, Open Sat 1-4 Kathy Strand Spieler
$1,175,000 805.895.6326
927 W Valerio St, Open Sat 1-3 Angela Moloney
$799,000 805.451.1553
222 Calle Granada, Open Sat 1-4 Joel Butera
$1,145,000 805.448.4831
2
1098 Golf Rd, Open Sat 1-3 Jason Streafeild
For additional open houses this weekend, check out: www.BHHSCalifornia.com
SANTA BARBARA 805.687.2666 | MONTECITO 805.969.5026 | SANTA YNEZ VALLEY 805.688.2969 3868 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105
1170 Coast Village Road Montecito, CA 93108
2933 San Marcos Avenue, Suite 102 Los Olivos, CA 93441
© 2015 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. CalBRE# 01317331
T
Address: 525 Miramonte Drive Status: On the market Price: $1,350,000
tain-drive-by-the-sea became an area where houses have been passed down through generations, and families tend to stay put. Kenneth died in 2003, and when Elaine passed away earlier this year at the age of 101, the sisters decided it was time to let a new owner take over the house. Having been in their family all these years, it is now on the market for the very first time. The three-bedroom, three-bath home is still in its original condition, and a new owner will probably want to redo the baths and kitchen. The quirky kitchen boasts colorful patterned wallpaper that has a story of its own. The Urtons were said to enjoy preparing elaborate meals with their friends, including actor Vincent Price. They admired Price’s kitchen wallpaper so much that they copied its
design for their own kitchen walls. The house also sports custom skylights fashioned by Kenneth and built-in cabinetry in almost every room. Despite whatever details the home’s next owner might decide to change, the huge living-room windows of this house will continue to look out over the neighborhood and the harbor beyond and tell the stories of this home for generations to come.
525 Miramonte Drive is currently for sale in Santa Barbara, listed by Linda Mason of Home Realty & Investments. Reach Linda at 698-8335.
OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
realestate.independent.com
Resort Style LIVING
september 3, 2015
the Arlington Theatre, the original Santa Barbara Airport, and many other classic buildings. It was built by Kenneth and his father, Charles Urton, the wellknown builder of the Granada Theatre. Kenneth and Elaine had moved to Santa Barbara as newlyweds in 1935. Their two daughters were born shortly thereafter. Charles brought Kenneth on as a partner in his business, and they built the home together in 1939. It has been in the family ever since. Elaine was an artist in many media. One of the most striking features of the house is her art studio, which is now a legally permitted guest house plus studio, full of natural light and custom cabinetry. One of the neighbors reminisced that Elaine would dress her young daughters in red so that she could keep an eye on them as they played and scrambled on the hills above their house. The sisters grew up in the house and walked to nearby McKinley School together. Apparently the neighborhood was a somewhat Bohemian enclave, filled with artists, writers, and professors. This moun-
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he home at 525 Miramonte Drive is full of stories. If you’ve lived in the Santa Barbara area for more than a few years, you’ve probably driven by and noticed its sharp angles and huge windows gazing down from its distinctive façade. The house sits on the hill above City College near Loma Alta, a neighborhood marked by vintage streetlights and, as I recently learned, the longevity of its residents. When I visited last week, there was a steady stream of visitors to the open house. Eavesdropping on snippets of their conversations, I could tell that almost all of them were neighbors, and almost all of them had stories about the home and the family who had lived there all of its life and all of their lives. The family home of Kenneth and Elaine Urton, the house was designed by Joseph Plunkett, who also designed
by Sarah Sinclair courtesy
Prominent Perch hits Market for first time
Make Myself at hoMe
3
Please join us on
Monday September 21, 6-8pm at Keller Williams Santa Barbara
1435 Anacapa St. for a wine tasting and education class to benefit KW Cares. KW Cares is a 501(c)(3) public charity created to support Keller Williams associates and their families with hardship as a result of a sudden emergency.
Suggested Donation: $15 RSVP by September 17, 2015 to 805-456-3600 Limited number of tickets available.
Wine provided by:
3375 FOOTHILL ROAD #1114 + 1113 | CARPINTERIA
Once in a lifetime Opportunity, Adjacent Units at the Distinguished Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club. An Exquisite Renovation with Luxury Upgrades & Postcard Views.
4 Bedrooms | 4 Bathrooms
Food provided by:
Offered at $1,898,000
CalBRE 00494253
The CHOCOLATE GALLERY
C. Scott McCosker | 805. 687.2436 www.ScottMcCosker.com Scott@ScottMcCosker.com
©2015 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage office is owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC.Coldwell Banker® and the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International® and the Coldwell Banker Previews International Logo, are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals.
LIVE WITHOUT COMPROMISE IN THE CENTRAL COAST.
Falcon Heights offers everything you need in a new home and more. Beautiful curb appeal outside and bright, open living spaces inside with amazing views of the Burton Mesa Reserve. Living here, you’ll have access to the region’s best destinations – local vineyards, world-class golf, miles of trails, and serene beaches.
4
independent real estate
september 3, 2015
realestate.independent.com
Expansive Homesites | Single-Story View Homes Up to 3,494 sq ft Interiors | 3 & 4 Bedrooms Scenic 50 minute drive to Santa Barbara Priced from the $600,000s
805.741.7302 TAKE A VIRTUAL TOUR at WILLIAMSHOMES.com 372 Falcon Crest Drive | Vandenberg Village 93436
Prices effective date of publication, subject to prior sale and availability. Square footage is approximate. Models do not reflect racial preference. Williams Homes, Inc. is a California Broker, License no. 01449126.
Take Hwy 1 to Constellation Road exit north, turn right on Burton Mesa Blvd, turn left on Clubhouse Road and follow the signs.
paul wellman
greeN Your Crib
by Cynthia Carbone Ward
girsh Park’s Creative Map to Success
Wise Window
realestate.independent.com
5
Dennis Allen is chair of Allen Construction, an employee-owned company committed to building and operating sustainably. He also serves as chair of the Dean’s Council at the Bren School of Environmental Science & Management at UCSB and as a boardmember of the Community Environmental Council.
improvements. “At this point we are basically the parks and rec department for the City of Goleta,” said Harrington. “We don’t facilitate our own programs, but we maintain and oversee the facility. We focus on what we’re good at. We’re a recreation enterprise.” And Girsh Park does seem like an enterprise: innovative, inventive, and responsive to community needs. As we walk around outdoors, Harrington shows me where the Goleta Chamber of Commerce hosts its annual Lemon Festival, where the Rotary Club offers fireworks on the Fourth of July, and the meadow where the Easter-egg hunt happens. He mentions the use of reclaimed water and explains the advantages of synthetic turf on Goleta’s clay soil as a superior playing surface and water-saving measure. He points out a fountain with a fitting that facilitates refilling water bottles, observes places where good shade trees will thrive, and espouses his thoughts on playground equipment. He contemplates how welcome food and refreshments will be at baseball games, as well as the potential revenue of leasing the kitchen space to a provider. “In general, parks don’t make money,” Harrington said. “It’s really difficult to make them self-sustaining.” But by combining fee-for-service income, private donations, endowment interest, and city contributions, Girsh Park succeeds, and the collective good it yields cannot be measured. “I think it’s fair to say we’re mitigating problems of obesity, drug use, even depression …” mused Harrington. The park generates upward of 350,000 visits per year and, in Harrington’s view, may well be the true heart of Goleta.“It’s one place to go for most of your recreational needs,” he said. “We’re a multigenerational facility with people from all different backgrounds. When they get here and use the park, they’re all on the same level. They’re all playing by the same rules. It’s kind of a beautiful thing.” n See girshpark.org.
september 3, 2015
W
indows perform more func- being essential —it is important to get tions than any other compo- separation, still seeking a low U-value nent of our buildings. They but getting as high a SHGC number as provide daylight, natural ventilation, and possible to let in more heat radiation. glare control. They control fading, sound There are many types of coatings now intrusion, water tightness, and thermal added to glass. The most common, a buffering. They determine condensation, low-E coating (low emittance), improves durability, clarity of views, and mainte- the insulating value of a window, roughly nance schedules. And, of course, they equivalent to adding another pane of need to be attractive and affordable. glass. These coatings keep the summer Because of all these functions, it is heat out and the winter heat in. Most new advisable to purchase the highest-per- houses today have windows with two formance windows you can afford. Most low-E coatings (called low-E squared). windows now carry In designing for pasrating labels developed sive solar, placement by the National Fenesof these low-E units on the north and west tration Rating Council orientations is good (NFRC). They tell the U-value, which reflects practice. But a different insulating effectiveness; configuration is needed the solar heat gain coef coeffor south and east ficient (SHGC), which exposures — one that tracks how much heat still has good insulatradiation passes through ing value (low U-value) a window; and the visibut allows infrared ble transmittance, which radiation to enter (high covers daylight, views, SHGC). glare, and fading. The frame materiby Dennis Allen California building als (wood, vinyl, metal, codes now require that fiberglass), quality of all windows be dual glazed (have two construction (strength and tightness of layers of glass) with a U-value no higher corners), type of hardware, and number than .32. (The lower the number, the bet- of layers and durability of weather stripter the insulating performance.) The ping are other factors to consider in winSHGC varies between 0 and 1. A lower dow purchase. And it all adds up; over the number reduces cooling costs. Usually, past 30 years, windows have transformed U-values and SHGC numbers move up from being one of the worst-performing or down together, but for passive solar elements of a home to now being one of design — winter heating from the sun the best and most versatile.
E
ven in the midday heat, Girsh Park is humming with activity: There’s a lively pickup basketball game in progress, a group of kids practicing soccer, and a mother reading to two little boys in the welcoming shade of a tree. The 25-acre park is a landscape people engage with, a setting that draws folks of all ages and income levels, and Executive Director Ryan Harrington is understandably proud. “This is one location that brings everyone together,” he said. “Kids and adults with different norms, values, socioeconomic levels, all gathering for games, picnics, birthdays … even quinceañeras and weddings.” The park was originally envisioned in 1998 as a buffer of open space on land owned by Dr. Lester Girsh between the Camino Real Marketplace and the neighborhood around it. Girsh entrusted the project to developer Mark Linehan, who saw the need for an active community park in Goleta and went beyond mere buffer, creating a 12-acre park that included a soccer field, softball field, basketball courts, picnic area, playground, and community room. When the County of Santa Barbara declined to take over the park, Linehan organized it as a nonprofit entity with a board of community-minded citizens, and the Foundation for Girsh Park was born. A creative business model evolved. “The foundation relies on user fees from entities such as Dos Pueblos Little League and AYSO, an endowment, fundraising campaigns, corporate sponsors such as MarBorg Industries, and funding from the City of Goleta,” Harrington explained.“It’s an unusual partnership of private and public entities.” An additional 12 acres for Little League baseball, now called Elings Fields, was acquired in 2003; a subsequent capital campaign helped finance the building of a state-of-the-art soccer field; and a current campaign will fund a field house, a concession stand with a commercial kitchen, and other
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How to Choose a
paul wellman file photo
Neighborhoods
Santa barbara county SaleS area
Seller
buyer
price
date
addreSS
buellton/solvang
MenDIZZa MICHael eu
KoRte JaCQuelIne J
$405,000
8/18/15
646 FloRal DR
HollanD tHoMas W tRustee
MuRPHY WIllIaM a eu
$1,525,000
8/17/15
1325 vIa DIneRo
CaRPInteRIa
MCIntYRe sHeRYl a l ea
WIlDe laRRY eu
$1,865,000
8/18/15
7390 sHePaRD Mesa RD
MCKee PeteR tRustee
West baRbaRa M tRust
$650,000
8/21/15
5446 eIgHtH st 17
CuYaMa
CuYaMa PRoPeRtIes InC
alManZa osCaR s
$98,000
8/21/15
4844 sIsQuoC st
goleta
$1,400,000
8/18/15
5266 JaMes RD
$929,000
8/18/15
773 Dos HeRManos RD
tRensCHel toM l tRustee
taPPeIneR DavID J eu
$1,499,000
8/19/15
1155 vIa bolZano
sCRone DanIel F ea
HoPe bRYan eu
$477,000
8/18/15
568 MIlls WaY
toWleR MelIta eu
tHoMPson MaRY D tRust
$505,000
8/19/15
129 s ellWooD statIon RD
FaCunDus saMuel P
FaCunDus DanIel W eu
$600,000
8/18/15
123 KaMala WaY
HansMa Helen g tRust
sPItZeR RICHaRD a eu
$762,500
8/19/15
6284 PaRKHuRst DR
olY CHaDMaR sanDPIPeR8
so Young Ha eu
$775,000
8/20/15
HollIsteR ave
olY CHaDMaR sanDPIPeR8
sHeloR aDRIan
$131,000
8/21/15
HollIsteR ave
olY CHaDMaR sanDPIPeR8
nYMan RobeRt D tRustee
$914,500
8/21/15
HollIsteR ave
PeteRson KIRK l tRustee
PoRtnoY elIZabetH s
$505,000
8/21/15
7624 HollIsteR ave 325
anDeRson saunDRa J
gaRCIa Jose a
$189,000
8/21/15
131 n D st
eagle vIst eQuItIes llC
MItCHell ClauDIa
$272,000
8/20/15
509 n PoPPY st
saWYeR RanDal l JR
Deleon Ruben eu
$275,000
8/21/15
721 n seventH st
West PoInte HoMes InC
vasWaMI MotI
$194,500
8/19/15
1422 PluM ave
West PoInte HoMes InC
MeDIna geoRge s
$324,000
8/20/15
1417 CRoWn CIR
FIelDs RaYMonD t
FloRes teResa R
$167,000
8/18/15
282 vIllage CIRCle DR
ZoHRabIan eDWaRD tRustee
FRanZ baRbaRa C tRust
$1,550,000
8/18/15
1157 HIgH RD
tHoMas RebeCCa tRustee
Dugan DanIel s tRustee
$1,628,500
8/21/15
105 Calle bello
santa baRbaRa
golDneR JuDItH ea
CaRRoZZo MICHael J tRustee
$1,010,000
8/21/15
2840 KenMoRe Pl
santa MaRIa
6
independent real estate
baRleY stePHen R eu HuCKa MICHael eu
MonteCIto
september 3, 2015
realestate.independent.com
loMPoC
CRooKs nan H tRustee taPPeIneR DavID J
sCHellIng JaMes g tRustee
tuCKeR ben P ea
$1,060,000
8/21/15
903 CHeltenHaM RD
MCFaRlanD eFale a
PelloW DavID n eu
$1,049,000
8/19/15
2324 CHaPala st
WooD JennIFeR4 l tRustee
DeMPseY bRIan tRustee
$2,050,000
8/20/15
1618 gRanD ave
baDone susan R tRust
seReboFF steven C tRustee
$964,000
8/18/15
530 De la vIsta ave
ReDDICK stReet PRoPeRtIes
ReDDICK llC
$1,400,000
8/20/15
723 ReDDICK st
bRoIDa aleXa
tRevIllIan teRRI l
$2,900,000
8/19/15
527 MeIgs RD
CaMPbell elIZabetH tRust
loZa IgnaCIo III eu
$270,000
8/21/15
21 CaMIno CalMa 1
sHaCKelFoRD KIMbeRlY C tRustee
DReW RegInalD e
$415,000
8/19/15
217 W gutIeRReZ st
RolanD tHoMas C tRustee
KusHneRov Paul J
$900,000
8/19/15
1111 ManItou RD
neWenDoRP PeteR W tRustee
CoX bRanDon
$1,407,000
8/20/15
136 olIveR RD
anDeRson RobeRt e
MaRgolIs Paul eu
$600,000
8/21/15
235 vIsta Del MaR DR
PelonIs CHRIs a
sHaW CaRol F eu
$1,020,000
8/17/15
23 WaDe Ct
neWton alICIa v
WRobleWsKI eDMunD eu
$920,000
8/18/15
3007 saMaRKanD DR
beCK MICHael
Reaves MIRIaM l
$522,500
8/20/15
2727 MIRaDeRo DR #310
gRoss CaRol s
sKaFte DIanne M
$876,000
8/18/15
3721 gReggoRY WaY 1
guglIelMo DaRIn ea
WIlson RanDall H tRustee
$1,500,000
8/18/15
233 aRgonne CIR
KusHneRov Paul J
HaHn JaClYn
$508,000
8/19/15
3663 san ReMo DR #5J
basHaM MaRK C tRustee
HollanD tHoMas W tRustee
$2,100,000
8/18/15
1230 noRtHRIDge RD
RoDRIgueZ albeRto tRustee
anDeRson CHRIstIne H tRust
$2,300,000
8/21/15
1020 la vIsta RD
FaRIsH CHaRles tRustee
sCHoCK JoHn R tRustee
$700,000
8/18/15
116 noRtHRIDge RD
gIRon FRanCIsCo J tRustee
MCDonalD JeFFReY l eu
$680,000
8/21/15
5860 IMPala tRaIl
MIlleR JustIn C
HeRnanDeZ FRanCIsCo a eu
$356,000
8/20/15
584 luPIn ln
KellY teRRI a
WatKIns RanDY D eu
$417,500
8/21/15
1144 vIllage DR
HesteR gIna
gaRDneR aRtHuR l eu
$225,000
8/20/15
4072 HIlltoP RD a
sCHultZ steven D
HeRnanDeZ stePHanIe l
$360,000
8/20/15
3858 ventana Ct
CHannel IslanDs HolDIng Co
gIDeon MaCHelle C
$147,500
8/21/15
3350 santa MaRIa 202a
solano JunentIno M eu
lagunas MaRtIn eu
$289,000
8/21/15
2067 tangleWooD DR
nelson Janet tRustee
DotY Jesse W eu
$485,000
8/18/15
4531 CoaCHMan WaY
gaRIbaY antonIo eu
HeRnanDeZ J guaDaluPe eu
$260,000
8/19/15
505 W Donovan RD
HeRnanDeZ, CHRIstoPHeR JaMes
esCaRsega antoInette
$330,000
8/21/15
2406 n bentleY ave
CPH HaRvest glen llC
DHalIWal JasPal s eu
$356,500
8/17/15
925 W ClaRenCe Ct
CPH HaRvest glen llC
MaDIson tHoMas eu
$434,500
8/18/15
1841 s olYMPIa DR
ContReRas FRanCIsCo eu
ContReRas JoRge
$295,000
8/21/15
1019 RoseWooD DR
MeYeRs MICHael a eu
beCeRRa albeRto o eu
$240,000
8/21/15
1138 W FRanK ln
bootH MICHellle v ea
gonZaleZ HenDRICK
$492,500
8/21/15
820 RaabeRg ave
CItY natIonal banK
lIXeY eDWaRD J eu
$300,000
8/21/15
725 e MCelHanY ave
u s banK na
Mann Ken eu
$243,000
8/17/15
735 e CYPRess st
evans tRenton J
guZMan Jose v eu
$290,000
8/21/15
833 e MaRIPosa WaY
CHannel IslanDs HolDIng Co
DoMIngueZ auRea
$158,500
8/21/15
828 e boone st 1
santa YneZ
loCKHaRt Dan eu
MoRaDIan tonY H
$2,050,000
8/18/15
5176 baselIne ave
Motta sIlvIo l tRustee
MaRtIn WIllIaM M eu
$1,645,000
8/20/15
4126 CaseY ave
unInCoRPoRateD
bRoWn lInDa
eDWaRDs baRbaRa
$245,000
8/21/15
1332 W WIlloW ave
PoHlMan bRanDon eu
CaRuana MaRCel J
$365,000
8/21/15
713 ColeMan DR
PolleY Ian ea
JosePH KevIn a eu
$399,000
8/19/15
1801 W loQuat ave
HuIICoCHea MaRCos C eu
HeRReRa MonICa
$255,000
8/19/15
3584 vIa seMI
WHeeleR JaMe s tRust
JenKIns tRavIs eu
$295,000
8/21/15
4021 altaIR Pl
ReIgle tHoMas J eu
PoHlMan bRanDon eu
$465,000
8/21/15
965 CRaIg DR
eDgaR luCIlle n tRustee
PoHlMan JoCelYn t eu
$380,000
8/21/15
40 galaXY WaY
DeWeIl FRanCes tRustee
galatI CaRMelo eu
$469,500
8/21/15
1250 CRaIg DR
Hale RobIn M
MIlleR MInDY
$455,000
8/21/15
760 HIll st
This data is provided to The Santa Barbara Independent by an outside third-party source and represents a partial list of recorded residential sales in Santa Barbara County on the dates listed. While this information is public record, The Santa Barbara Independent cannot guarantee the accuracy nor the completeness of this list.
FoR SaLE 7549 Sea Gull Drive, Goleta, CA 93117 4 bd/2 ba, Santa Barbara Shores Home, $835,000 Open Saturday & Sunday 12-3pm 39 Dearborn Pl. #100, Goleta, CA 93117 2 bd /1 ba, Nicely Updated Goleta Condo, $415,000 Open Saturday & Sunday 12-3pm
Coming Soon! Duplex in amazing quiet location! 2 bd/1 ba each unit, $950,000 We know of many homes not yet on the market.
Light & Bright Goleta Home!
Let us know what you are looking for. CaLL Today!
oPen SundAy 2-4Pm
realestate.independent.com
In the Heart of Downtown with Beautiful Riviera Views.
september 3, 2015
RuthAnn@SellingSB.com SellingSB.com
independent real estate
1815 Bath St #2, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 1 bd/1.5 ba, Great Downtown Condo, $525,000 Open Sunday 12-3pm
7
486 Evonshire Ave, 4bd/2ba, $739,000 This charming & centrally located 4 bedroom 2 bath home is convenient to shopping, schools and the Goleta bike path! The open and inviting floorplan features smooth ceilings, hardwood floors and great natural light. Sunny, enclosed back yard with concrete patio and large avocado tree! Fabulous location, great layout and the opportunity to add touches to make this home your own!
Stunning PenthouSe single-level â&#x20AC;&#x153;loft styleâ&#x20AC;?. 2 bed, 2.5 spa bathrooms, 1815 sq. ft.! 618 Anacapa Street, Suite 7 $1,669,000 View at anacapavillas.net
Ali Evans 805.980.8007 alievans@kw.com www.alievansrealty.com bre #01846603
Janice Laney Realtor/Property Consultant CalBRE #01794041
805 705 6474 JaniceLaney.com | LaneyRealestate@gmail.com
OPEN HOUSES
4527 Carpinteria Avenue A, 2BD/BA, $595,000, Sun 1-4, $595,000, Coastal Properties, Gary Goldberg, 805-969-1258 5931 Birch #1, 2BD/1BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $349,500, Prestigious Properties & Inv., Stella Anderson 805-570-8529 realestate.independent.com
4780 Chandler Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $749,500, Assist-2-Sell, Roger Jacobson 805692-5060
2911 Foothill Road, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $939,500, Berkshire Hathaway, Debby Rexford 805-886-8773
5066 Birchwood Road, 2BD/1.5BA, Sun 2-4, $529,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kalia Rork 805-689-0614
632 Dara Road, 4BD/2BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $1,029,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Steve Heller 805-252-2749
2960 Glen Albyn, 5BD/3.5BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $1,695,000, Coldwell Banker, Don Haws, 805-895-7653
5082 Calle Real A, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $599,000, A.J. Addeman Properties, Doug Conrad 805-455-2463
1064 Via Regina, 5BD/4BA, Sun 1:304:30, $1,159,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Joe Stubbins 805-729-0778
Montecito
5248 Plaza Aleman, 4BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $879,000, Foundation Real Estate Group, Norman Popp 805-729-3050
39 Dearborn Place #100, 2BD/1BA, Sun 12-3 SUN 12-3pm, $415,000, Keller Williams, Ruth Ann Bowe Real Estate Team 805-6980354
3553 Padaro Lane, 2BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $5,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kathleen Winter 805-451-4663
september 3, 2015
2866 Foothill Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $939,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Chris Jones 805-708-7041
203 Serpolla Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $1,075,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Chierici & Associates 805-680-0501
3375 Foothill Rd #113 & 114, 4BD/4BA, Sun 2-5, $1,898,000, Coldwell Banker, Scott McCosker, 805-687-2436
independent real estate
1365 Via Veneto, 4BD/4.5BA, Sat 12-3, $3,195,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Karen Davidson 805-320-2489
Goleta
1531 Nantucket Court, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $850,000, Coldwell Banker, Nancy Hussey 805-452-3052
8
2659 Todos Santos Lane, 4BD/4BA, Sun 1-4, $3,695,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Paula Goodwin 805-451-5699
Carpinteria
1431 Tomol Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $765,000, Coldwell Banker, Gloria Carmichael 805 896-6567
216 Moreton Bay Lane Unit 5, 2BD/1.5BA, Sun By Appt., $439,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Mike Pearl 805637-6888, Gail Pearl 805-637-9595
4747 Camino Del Rey, 3BD/2BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $669,500, Coldwell Banker, Patty Colman 805-689-6517 6211 Avenida Ganso, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $825,000, Assist-2-Sell, Roger Jacobson 805692-5060
Downtown Santa Barbara
6836 Fortuna Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $879,000, Coldwell Banker, Jessie Sessions, 805-709-0904
401 Chapala Street 222, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 11-4, $1,325,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876
7549 Sea Gull Drive, 4BD/2BA, Sat 12-3 Sun 12-3, $835,000, Keller Williams, Ruth Ann Bowe Real Estate Team 805-698-0351
401 Chapala Street 302, 1BD/2BA, Sun 11-4, $1,495,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876
Hope Ranch
401 Chapala Street 312, 1BD/2BA, Sun 11-4, $1,275,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876 401 Chapala Street 403, 2BD/2BA, Sun 11-4, $2,200,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876 618 Anacapa St #7, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun open, $1,669,000, Keller Williams, Janice Laney 805-705-6974 725 De La Vina Street, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $1,099,999, Keller Williams, Epstein Partners 805-689-9339 1109 Olive Street, 2BD/2BA, Sun 12-3, $959,000 Berkshire Hathaway, Brett Buschbom 805-451-9108 1815 Bath Street #2, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 12-3, $525,000, Keller Williams, Ruth Ann Bowe Real Estate Team 805-698-0352 1831 Chapala Street, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $749,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Jennifer Berger 805-451-5484 1835 Chapala Street, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $995,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Hristo Hristov 805-284-8471 2415 Chapala Street, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $990,000, Coldwell Banker, Jeani Burke 805451-1429
Eastside Santa Barbara 218 Santa Barbara Street D, 2BD/2.5BA, Sat 2-4, $1,175,000, Berkshire Hathaway, David M. Cohn 805-214-8244 426 Por La Mar Circle, 1BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $545,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Gene Archambault , 805-455-1190 611 East Sola Street, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,139,000, Keller Williams Realty, Jon Gilkeson 805-335-4749 641 Por La Mar Cir #B, 2BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $939,000, Village Properties, Billy Mandarino 805-570-4827 645 Costa Del Mar C, 2BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $979,000, Village Properties, Billy Mandarino 805-570-4827 1010 North Nopal Street, 2BD/1BA, Sun 1-3, $769,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Mary Whitney 805-689-0915 1305 Blanchard Street, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,095,000, Santa Barbara Estates, Christopher A Page 805-284-8422 1116 North Nopal Street, 3BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $695,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Isaiah J. Polstra 805-722-5085
Submit your open house listings to gustavo@independent.com Tuesday by 3pm to be included in this directory.
4178 Creciente Drive, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $4,195,000, Coldwell Banker, Pat Costello 805-451-3977 4426 Via Alegre, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $2,695,000, Coldwell Banker, , Dave Goldstein 805-448-0468 4509 Auhay Drive A, 4BD/2.5BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $1,175,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Bob Ratliffe, 805-448-6642
The Mesa 20 Barranca Ave 2, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,150,000, Mike Richardson Realtors, Mike Richardson 805-963-1704 222 Meigs Road Unit 19, 4BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $1,275,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Diane Waterhouse, 805-886-2988 821 Weldon Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,125,000, Mike Richardson Realtors, Mike Richardson 805-963-1704 1114 Del Sol Avenue, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,350,000, Berkshire Hathaway Home Services, Hristo Hristov 805-284-8471 1266 San Miguel Avenue, 3BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,625,000, Coldwell Banker, Kirk Hodson 805-886-6527
Mission Canyon 224 Vista De La Cumbre, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,485,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Jim Alzina 805-455-1941 408 Los Robles Lane, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $1,649,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Deb Archambault 805-455-2966 715 Mission Canyon Road, Sun 1-4, 5BD/4.5BA, $2,995,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Will Stonecipher 805-450-4821 790 Mission Oaks Lane, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-3, $1,949,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Doug Van Pelt 805-637-3684 858 Cheltenham Road, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,150,000, Coldwell Banker, Jeani Burke 805-451-1429 907 Cheltenham Road, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,250,000, Coastal Properties, Gary Goldberg 805-969-1258 967 Cheltenham Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-5, $1,200,000, Berkshire Hathaway, John Comin 805-689-3078 2286 Las Tunas Road, 4BD/5BA, Sun 2-4, $3,795,000, Coldwell Banker, Patrice Serrani 805 637-5112 2634 Puesta Del Sol, 1BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $895,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Paula Goodwin 805-451-5699
12 West Mountain Drive, 2BD/2.5BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-4, $1,495,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Toni Sutherland 805-6186880 62 Olive Mill Road, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $1,439,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Brooke Ebner 805-453-7071
Riviera 116 Orizaba Road, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $2,200,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Joe Boudre 805-319-5364
211 Rametto Road, 4BD/3.5BA, Sun 2-4, $3,395,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Jenny Hall 805-705-7125
859 Jimeno Road, 3BD/3BA, Sat By Appt, Sun 1-4, $1,290,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Jeanne Palumbo 805-689-1968 Carol Mineau 805-886-9284
298 East Mountain Drive, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 2-4, $2,995,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Daniela Johnson 805-453-4555
936 Garcia Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,295,000, Coldwell Banker, Chris Palme 805-448-3066
352 East Mountain Drive, 3BD/3BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 2-4, $3,495,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Linda Brown “Brownie” 805-666-9090
1010 East De La Guerra, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $895,000, Coldwell Banker, Dana Zertuche 805-403-5520
395 Woodley Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $2,575,000, Coastal Properties, Gary Goldberg 805-969-1258
1545 Knoll Circle Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $1,800,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Bryan Uhrig 805-331-3191
618 Tabor Lane, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,399,000, Coastal Properties, Gary Goldberg 805-969-1258
1931 Eucalyptus Hill Road, 3BD/2BA, Sat & Sun 1-3, $2,495,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jessica Stovall, 805-698-9416
830 Riven Rock Road, 4BD/3.5BA, Sun 12-3, $7,750,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Ron Brand 805-455-5045
1889 Eucalyptus Hill Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,465,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Justin Corrado 805-451-9969
923 Buena Vista Drive, 6BD/6.5BA, By Appt., $5,495,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Frank Abatemarco 805-450-7477
2220 Santiago Road, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 2-4, $3,195,000, Coldwell Banker, Arielle Assur, 805-906-0194
1098 Golf Road, 5BD/4BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-3, $5,995,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Taylor & Tara Toner 805-451-4801
Samarkand
1211 East Valley Road, 4BD/4BA, Sun 12-3, $2,595,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Yolanda Van Wingerden 805-570-4965 1220 Coast Village Road Unit 110, 3BD/2BA, By Appt., $1,150,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Frank Abatemarco 805450-7477 1420 East Valley Road, 6BD/7BA, Sun 2-5, $6,150,000, Coldwell Banker, Brian Goldsworthy 805-570-1289 1445 South Jameson Lane, 5BD/6.5BA, Sun 1-4, $4,495,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Diane Randall 805-705-5252 1530 Mimosa Lane 6BD/4BA, Sun 2-4, $7,750,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Michele White, 805-452-7515 1709 Overlook Lane, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, $5,250,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Mark Lomas & Kristin Wolf, 805-845-2888 1775 Glen Oaks Drive, 6BD/4BA, Sun 2-4, $3,995,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Barbara Neary 805-698-8980 3055 Hidden Valley Lane, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $2,095,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Paula Goodwin 805-451-5699
Noleta 239 Ribera Drive, 4BD/4BA, Sun 1-4, $1,175,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Olesya Thyne 805-708-1917 536 Pintura Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $879,000, Village Properties, Regina Magid 805-451-1994 585 El Sueno Road, 4BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $1,175,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, David Mires 805-705-8986 1045 Ocean Vista Lane, 5BD/5.5BA, Sun 2-4, $1,625,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Ken Switzer, 805-680-4622
3791-E State Street, 3BD/2.5BA, By Appt., $1,279,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jan Banister 805-455-1194
San Roque 219 Toyon Drive, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,630,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Amie Strickland 805-570-7677 222 Calle Granada, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $1,145,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Alexandra Viscosi, 805-755-9005 332 West Alamar Avenue B, 2BD/2.5BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 1-4, $859,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Ken Switzer 805-680-4622 730 Willowglen Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $1,099,000, Village Properties, David Kim 805-296-0662 1228 Manitou Lane, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,525,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kay Davis 805-440-7254 1333 Santa Teresita Drive, 3BD/4BA, Sun 2-4, $3,250,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Dan Johnson 805-895-5150 2525 State Street 25, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 1-4, $599,000, Coastal Properties, Sylvia E Miller 805-448-8882 3034 Calle Rosales, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 12-3, $939,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Robert Johnson 805-705-1606 3054 Calle Noguera, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 1-4, $1,199,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Debbie Kort 805-368-4479 3639 San Remo Drive 32, Sun 1-4, 2BD/2BA, $435,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Stu Morse 805-705-0161 3844 Lincoln Road, 6BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,649,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Joe Parker 805-886-5735
>>>
OPEN HOUSES
history 101
CONTiNUED
by Michael Redmon
What’s up with the old structures at
Coal oil Point?
Santa Ynez Valley
3987 La Colina, 3BD/3BA, Sun 12-3, $1,499,000, Berkshire Hathaway, The Easter Team 805-570-0403
2089 Rebild Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-3, $629,900, Village Properties, Lynn Golden 805-570-5888
Summerland
363 Terrace Court, 3BD/2BA, Sun 11-2, $599,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Chris McCool 805-680-3594
350 Greenwell Avenue, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $3,750,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Andrew Petlow 805680-9575 2210 Calle Culebra, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,850,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Jason Siemens 805-455-1165
Upper East Santa Barbara 15 West Padre, 5BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,499,000, Coldwell Banker, Mark Schneidman 805-452-2428 2025 Garden Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,795,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Ken Switzer 805-680-4622
630 Rancho Alisal Drive, 3BD/3BA, Sat 1-4, $349,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Susan Beckmann 805-245-8141 1138 Via Mavis, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $363,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Karin Aitken 805-252-1205 2785 Lewis Place, 5BD/3.5BA, Sun 12-3, $735,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Marlene Macbeth 805-689-2738
2731 Miradero Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $849,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Frank Hotchkiss, 805-403-0668
Westside Santa Barbara 316 West Pedregosa Street, 2BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $785,000, Coastal Properties, Gary Goldberg 805-969-1258 927 West Valerio Street, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 2-4, $799,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Madhu Khemani 805-252-0625
Submit your open house listings to gustavo@independent.com Tuesday by 3pm to be included in this directory.
Sherryzre@gmail.com
6449 La Cumbre Rd, Somis NG
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NE
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Who says you can’t have it all? Charming Country Pool HomeSituated on one flat and usable acre. This One story, 5 bedroom, 3 bath home has it all. Over 3500 Sq ft with large and inviting entry, Formal living room & Dining room, Large family room, two fireplaces. This home offers complete privacy and great country setting. Ideal for entertaining. Completely fenced, Shimmering pool, RV parking and 3 car garage make this home one of the best buys on the market! $895,000
(805) 386-3748
Experience, Integrity & Results in Any Market. Representing Fine Properties Ventura & Santa Barbara Counties Since 1990 Cal BRE: 01060866
Michael Redmon is the director of research at the Santa Barbara Historical Museum.
realestate.independent.com
www.SherryZre.com
september 3, 2015
2007 Robbins Street, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $879,000, Berkshire Hathaway, David M. Cohn 805-214-8244
(the bodies have since been removed to Washington, D.C.), and son Colin Jr. took over the ranch operations. In 1941, he decided to close down the estate. The subsequent auction drew a number of celebrities including Charlie Chaplin and Cary Grant. A dance floor ended up at Oak Park. The estate remained in family hands until 1946 when the Devereux School purchased the property. The school’s roots go back to New Jersey, where Helena T. Devereux opened her first school for slow-learning children in 1912. A residential school opened in Pennsylvania in 1918, and in 1945 a West Coast campus was begun on property that now is part of Westmont College. The school was able to purchase the entire Campbell Ranch for $100,000, an amazing price when one considers the manor house alone had cost some $500,000 to construct. The Devereux Foundation continues to operate a treatment center for developmentally disabled children and adults on 30-plus acres, other acreage being sold off over the years. The finely carved granite cross that once marked the resting place of Colin and Nancy Campbell still stands on the ocean-side bluffs.
500 Rancho Alisal Drive, 3BD/3.5BA, Sat 1-4, $767,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Susan Beckmann 805-245-8141
independent real estate
1919 with the arrival to American shores of the wealthy Colin Campbell family. Campbell was a retired British army officer who had served in India and Afghanistan, and as a British military attaché in Tsarist Russia. His wife, Nancy, was the daughter of Levi Leiter, a partner in the highly successful Marshall Field retail chain based in Chicago. One of her sisters married Lord Curzon, a viceroy of India. In England, the Campbells made their home in an imposing seaside castle in Kent and led the kind of sumptuous lifestyle that money and blue-blood connections could bring. English taxation of their Americanderived income was extremely high, thus their decision to come to the U.S. Looking for property that would be similar to their coastal residence back home, they originally were interested in Hope Ranch but eventually settled upon a 250acre tract at Coal Oil Point in Goleta, just west of Isla Vista. They also bought a separate 250-acre parcel further inland. The Campbells then sent for their three children and an estimated six train car loads of furnishings and set up temporary housekeeping at the Bonnymede estate in Montecito. The colonel had a paved road, today’s Storke Road, built from Hollister Avenue to his new ranch. Month by month, the estate took shape with dozens of buildings, windbreaks of cypress and eucalyptus, and a polo field. Tragically, Campbell would not live to see his dream completed; he was struck down by a heart attack in the spring of 1923, just short of his 65th birthday. Nancy Campbell pushed ahead with the development of the estate and the completion of the main house. The result was magnificent — a two-story, Spanish-Colonial Revival residence of some 20,000 square feet, which included more than 30 rooms and 18 baths. Architect Mary Craig utilized adobe made on the estate grounds to build the home. Craig and Nancy Campbell, both widows, went on to become close friends. The family filled the home with the finest of furnishings, art, and an incomparable library of first editions. The garage held five Rolls-Royces. The grounds included a blacksmith shop, tennis courts, a private lake, elaborate barbeque/picnic grounds, and a large red barn. A beach house was built at the bottom of the bluffs. Wheat and lima
beans were grown on outlying parts of the property. Nancy often entertained in a grand manner; one party in 1926 was attended by Prince George of England, who would later ascend to the English throne. Nancy died in 1932 and was buried next to her husband, overlooking the Pacific
santa barbara historical museum
T
his area’s recent history begins in
San Roque (continued)
© 2015 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals.
the gArden doyen
FAbled gAbles
by G. Vince Giovannoni courtesy
by Virginia Hayes
All About Aloe: Showy Flowers
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independent real estate
505 Chapala street A
loes are hard to miss in the area land-
scape because they are everywhere. When they are blooming, as they are starting to do this month, they are particularly evident. Showy flowers in shades of orange, coral, and sometimes yellow rise out of their spiky surroundings, attracting the attention of hungry hummingbirds, as well as us humans. Native to the dry habitats in Africa, aloes come in a staggering variety of shapes and sizes. The smallest rosettes hug the ground just a few inches tall and across, while their arborescent (that just means “treelike”) cousins can reach heights of 30 feet or so. Whatever their size, almost all aloes are armed with some spines. For the most part, these teeth occur just along the edges of the leaves and pose no great threat of bodily harm. They are generally brittle and break off, leaving only minor scratches to the gardener in charge. One of the most likable species, Aloe plicatilis, has such small teeth on the edges of its flat, gray leaves that they are almost unnoticeable. This plant looks like a sculpture composed of tongue depressors. Other common ones include A. arborescensand a hybrid of A. ferox and A. wickensii often called Aloe salm-dyckiana. These two branch prolifically, eventually forming dense clumps up to five feet or more in height and are planted all around Santa Barbara and its environs. If it looks like a blooming aloe this month, it is probably one of these latter species. All aloes naturally grow in warm to hot climates and in soils that tend toward the dry side. Most are fairly forgiving of the area’s
Virginia Hayes is a curator of Ganna Walska Lotusland.
heavy soils, but for all aloes, it is wise to site them on sloping or raised beds and incorporate sand into the soil for best health. While they can withstand long periods without water, aloes will bloom and look their best with infrequent, but regular, irrigation. Besides their inherent good looks, aloes are noted for a number of other beneficial attributes. Almost all of them contain some amount of the compound called aloin, which gives them medicinal value. Aloe extracts have been used as a purgative to treat stomach complaints, but the most common use for the juice is to treat burns and other skin irritations. Commercial sources of the most active aloe ingredients, aloin, are mainly produced from one species, Aloe barbadensis, commonly known as aloe vera. Many cosmetic products, from skin creams to hair-care products, now contain aloe gel, the homogenized fleshy inner portion of the leaf. Without investing in these processed products, it is a simple matter to break off a leaf and apply the gel of aloe vera or one of its close relatives such as A. ferox and apply it directly to the skin for instant first-aid treatment of burns or minor wounds. More and more different species of aloes are being propagated and are increasingly available. Check out Terra del Sol in Goleta for one of the largest area selections. For lots of excellent advice on not only names of aloes and their hybrids but also growing information, go to wholesale nursery San Marcos Growers’s website. If the aloe is listed there, it will be available at a local nursery — perhaps not every week, but certainly by special order.
I
n 1876, Samuel Brinkerhoff, Santa Barbara’s first physician and prominent entrepreneur, owned this undeveloped section of property. Eleven years later, in 1887, when the residence was constructed, the economy was undergoing vast changes from farmland to residential development, as a thriving building boom was underway largely due to the Southern Pacific Railroad connecting Los Angeles to Santa Barbara. This simple one-and-a-half-story house, which is built on a wooden foundation and features shiplap siding, was most likely designed by a carpenterbuilder of the era to incorporate Victorian and Italianate architectural styles. The roof is high-gabled, the bay window is supported by decorative brackets, and the transom window, located directly above the front door, adds a sense of height to the home’s entrance. The Italianate porch’s support columns are enhanced with Gothic scroll ornamentation. By 1889, this house belonged to a widow, Mrs. S. Levy, who may have been the wife of Samuel Levy, a merchant with the Santa Barbara Lumber Company. Two years later, in 1891, ownership passed to a probable relative, Leon Levy, a saloonkeeper and owner of a liquor store located at 510 State Street. For the next five decades, the home was occupied by the Harry L. and Emilia Myers family. In 1957, with the addition of a room and passageway, the Levy house was connected to the neighboring property, which served as a treatment center for alcoholics. Currently, the home is privately owned.
Original Owner: Sarah Levy Year of Construction: 1887 Based on information from, among other sources, Survivors; Santa Barbara’s Last Victorians, a publication of the Santa Barbara Historical Museum.
G. Vince GioV Gio Vannoni
september 3, 2015
realestate.independent.com
Arise from Spiky Surroundings
Gustavo the GaRDenatoR
How to Grow a
Jaw-Dropping Rose Garden What’s the one thing I can do to make my neighbors jealous of my garden?
Y
—Keeping-Up-with-Jones Joanie, Summerland
Please join us for a
Celebra?ng the Life of our beloved
Gary L. Woods Date: Saturday, September 19, 2015 Time: 4:00 pm to 6:45 pm Loca?on: Plaza del Sol, Fess Parker Hotel, 633 E Cabrillo Blvd, Santa Barbara, CA 93103 (Complimentary parking & refreshments) Please RSVP by phone or e-‐mail before Sept/15 to: 805-‐680-‐8930 e-‐mail: gandlwoods@earthlink.net
As Gary would oZen say: “If you are not having a good ?me, don’t do it”
11
(1950-‐2015)
realestate.independent.com
Sunset Memorial Service
Scott WilliamS Berkshire hathaway homeservices scott@scottwilliams.com
september 3, 2015
Gustavo Uribe is a fifth-generation agricultural specialist who has worked as a professional gardener in Santa Barbara for more than 30 years. Send your gardening questions to gustavo@independent.com .
“A well-presented home is a staged home – one where the owner and I have worked diligently to create maximum appeal. I’m the only local Realtor to have taught Staging in the SBCC Adult Ed; nearly 500 people took the course. I enjoy managing the process of bringing a home to its top condition – using paint, color, furniture arrangement and other changes to enhance the look and feel of the home.”
independent real estate
ou have a manicured lawn, a multimillion-dollar house, and a white picket fence, and yet something is missing. You sip your fancy tea in dismay as you realize that your childhood dream of becoming the by Gustavo Uribe Queen of England is still so very far away. It’s time to step up your gardening game for that elusive dream we call “the immaculate rose garden.” Luckily for you, Gustavo has tips for growing rosas bonitas. Manicuring: “Tienes que cortar todo la rosa como siete pulgadas al diagonal, donde empiece la hojita.”When the rose is finished blooming, cut diagonally about seven inches from the flower, right above the leaf’s stem. For a bunch of roses, follow the same rule where the bunch starts. Gustavo says,“Si no las cortas, vienen la plaga y hormigas.” If you don’t trim the roses, they will get plague and ants. Fertilizer: Add fertilizer about every three months. Gustavo adds,“Uso organico para la ambiente y las plantas, a no contaminar la tierra.” Use organic fertilizer because it’s good for the environment and the plants. Trimming: Trim the actual rose bunch at least once a year in December or January “cuando están dormidas” — when they’re sleeping. You can trim a second time in June. He says this is vital “para tener las healthy and beautiful rosas.” Watering: Gustavo says don’t water them from the top because they will again get plague and ants. Instead, use a Purple Rain Watering Wand— Wand a gardening tool that you can hook up to your hose so that the water comes out dispersed. He waters his roses en “el troncito alrededor”— alrededor” around the little rose trunk.
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