Barney Brantingham: To Sue oct. 22-29, 2015 VoL. 29 ■ No. 510
SharkS GettinG Chummy with
Spearfisherman Survives hammerhead Attack by Keith hAmm
Goleta Green-Lights more Growth • n.y.C. ballet Shows its moves
PLuS: hiroshima Survivor Remembers; ice Climber Speaks; blue Agave becomes nectar
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independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
3
Two Nights, Two Breathtaking Programs! Live Music!
New York City Ballet MOVES
“The foremost creative ballet troupe in the world.� The New York Times
MON, OCT 26 & TUE, OCT 27 8 PM / GRANADA THEATRE Tickets start at $45 $20 UCSB students and youth (18 & under) A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price
Peter Martins, Ballet Master in Chief Principal dancers will include: Tiler Peck, Amar Ramasar, Tyler Angle, Megan Fairchild, Sterling Hyltin, Teresa Reichlen, Daniel Ulbricht, Gonzalo Garcia, Rebecca Krohn and Andrew Veyette
MON, OCT 26
Justin Peck: In Creases William Forsythe: Herman Schmerman Pas de Deux Jerome Robbins: A Suite of Dances Alexei Ratmansky: Pictures at an Exhibition TUE, OCT 27
Jerome Robbins: In the Night Jean Pierre Frohlich: Varied Trio (in four) Jerome Robbins: Other Dances Christopher Wheeldon: This Bitter Earth Peter Martins: Hallelujah Junction Programs and cast are subject to change
Dance series sponsored in part by: 4
THE INDEPENDENT
Event Sponsor: Sara Miller McCune Ercolone and his family Additional support provided by Barbara Delaune-Warren and an Anonymous donor
Annette & Dr. Richard Caleel Margo Cohen-Feinberg & Robert Feinberg and the Cohen Family Fund Dorothy Largay & Wayne Rosing ocTobEr 22, 2015
independent.com
Media Sponsor:
Back by Popular Demand The Acclaimed Choreographer Behind the 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony
Akram Khan Company Kaash
Akram Khan, Artistic Director TUE, NOV 10 / 8 PM GRANADA THEATRE Tickets start at $35 $19 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price
“The dancing is furiously controlled, explosive and precise.” The Independent (U.K.) “An exquisitely beautiful shifting tapestry of tightly sewn motion, light and dark.” The New York Times Inspired by creation and destruction, Hindu gods, Indian time cycles and black holes, Kaash returns to the stage in a stunning revival and continues Khan’s quest to bridge the worlds of contemporary dance and the Indian classical dance form kathak. Don’t miss this superb work by an artist “who speaks tremendously of tremendous things” (Financial Times).
(805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 independent.com
www.GranadaSB.org ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
5
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Editor in Chief Marianne Partridge Executive Editor Nick Welsh; Senior Editors Michelle Drown, Matt Kettmann; Feature Writer Ethan Stewart; Photography Editor Paul Wellman News Editor Tyler Hayden; News Reporters Kelsey Brugger, Brandon Fastman, Léna Garcia, Keith Hamm; Columnist Barney Brantingham; State Political Columnist Jerry Roberts; Opinions Editor Jean Yamamura; Videographers Phyllis de Picciotto, Stan Roden Executive Arts Editor Charles Donelan; Assistant Editor Richie DeMaria; Arts Writers Tom Jacobs, Joe Miller, D.J. Palladino; Calendar Editor Terry Ortega; Calendar Assistant Ginny Chung Copy Chief Jackson Friedman; Copy Editors Diane Mooshoolzadeh, Amy Smith Art Director Ben Ciccati; Associate Art Director Caitlin Fitch; Editorial Designer Maija Tollefson; Web Producer/Social Media Michael S. Gahagan; Web Content Assistant Nya Burke Sports Editor John Zant; Outdoors Editor Ray Ford; Food Writer George Yatchisin; Contributors Rob Brezsny, Ben Bycel, Cynthia Carbone Ward, Aly Comingore, Victor Cox, Roger Durling, Marilyn Gillard, Virginia Hayes, Rachel Hommel, Eric Hvolboll, Shannon Kelley, Bill Kienzel, Kevin McKiernan, Mitchell Kriegman, Cat Neushel, Michael Redmon, Starshine Roshell, Elizabeth Schwyzer, Tom Tomorrow, Silvia Uribe; Editorial Interns Simrun Bhagat, Gilberto Flores, Sydnee Fried, Sam Goldman, Arianna Irwin, Michael Stout, Ava Talehakimi; Founding Staff Emeriti Audrey Berman, George Delmerico, Richard Evans; Honorary Consigliere Gary J. Hill Copy Kids Henry and John Poett Campbell, Chloë Bee Ciccati, Miles Joseph Cole, Asher Salek Fastman, Delaney Cimini Fruin, Madeline Rose and Mason Carrington Kettmann, Izzy and Maeve McKinley, Miranda and Gabriel Ortega, Marie Autumn Smith, Sawyer Tower Stewart Office Manager/Legal Advertising Tanya Spears Guiliacci; Administrative Assistant Gustavo Uribe; Distribution Scott Kaufman; Advertising Representatives Camille Cimini Fruin, Suzanne Cloutier, Rachel Gantz, Mark Hermann, Laszlo Hodosy, Stewart Mills, Tonea Songer Production Manager Megan Packard Hillegas; Associate Production Manager Marianne Kuga; Advertising Designer Alex Melton Chief Financial Officer Brandi Rivera; Director of Advertising Sarah Sinclair Publisher Joe Cole The Independent is available, free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Back issues cost $2 and may be purchased at the office. The Independent may be distributed only by authorized circulation staff or authorized distributors. No person may, without the permission of publisher, take more than one copy of each Independent issue. Subscriptions are available, paid in advance, for $120 per year. The contents of The Independent are copyrighted 2015 by The Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. No part may be reproduced without permission from the publisher. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. A stamped, self-addressed envelope must accompany all submissions expected to be returned. The Independent is published every Thursday at 122 W. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Advertising rates on request: (805) 965-5205. Classified ads: (805) 965-5208. The Independent is available on the Internet at independent .com. Press run of The Independent is 40,000 copies. Audited certification of circulation is available on request. The Independent is a legal adjudicated newspaper — court decree no. 157386.
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october 22, 2015
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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
the week.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
living.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Living Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Starshine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
25|
OVer c STOrY r rY
Getting Chummy with Sharks
Spearfisherman Survives Hammerhead Attack
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Food & Drink . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 The Restaurant Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Dining Out Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
a&e. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
in the house
The place where music and technology meet— or technology and just about anything from skateboard trucks to poetry— poetry fascinates Nya Burke, who helps our web wizards keep The Indy website fresh and bouncy, when he’s not speedboarding down a hill, that is. He spends a few days a week in our offices — often plugged into Curtis Mayfield or Afrika Bambaataa — and other days with his friends deejaying, emceeing, or singing, and at City College. “I love biology,” he enthuses, enthralled with the complexity of all the systems that breathe: “Life is magical.”
Arts Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Dance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Classical . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
online now at
independent.com richie demaria
ON THE COVER: Hammerhead shark. Theater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Photo by Shane Gross. ABOVE: The 10-foot hammerhead that attacked a spear- Pop, Rock & Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 fisherman off Santa Cruz Island. Positively State Street . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
endorsements.. . . . . . . . . . . 9 Arts & Entertainment Listings . . . . . . . . . . 68 news.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 odds & ends. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Capitol Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
opinions.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Barney Brantingham’s On the Beat . . . . . 19 Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 This Modern World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Voices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
paul wellman
volume 29, number 510, Oct. 22-29, 2015 courtesy
Contents
Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology . . . . . . . 75
film.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Movie Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Classifieds.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
opinions
Readers fire back on our City Council endorsements and Best of Santa Barbara® issue. ������������������
independent.com/opinions
historY 101 Promising vistas like these, on the way to the Silver Peak Wilderness in Big Sur, often belie the failed journeys ahead.
Michael Redmon recounts the time that Alice Keck Park Memorial Gardens almost became nine-story high-rises � � independent.com/history101
outdoors
ConCert reviews
Richie DeMaria on when wilderness adventures don’t go exactly as planned � � � independent.com/outdoors
Hozier at the Bowl, Tijuana Panthers at New Noise, and more �������������������
independent.com/reviews
Santa Barbara CityFirefighters City Council Endorsements 2nd District • Mesa 3rd District • Westside
1st District • Eastside
Andria
Martinez Cohen
Randy
Rowse
Cathy
Murillo
Andria Martinez Cohen’s experience working with local governments throughout California on economic development, budget and finance is much needed on the Council. She is not afraid to ask the tough questions and has a passion for serving our community. Andria will be an effective leader in improving public safety in the first district and responsive government throughout the City. Randy Rowse provides a level headed approach to critical issues. He studies the issues, understands the need to listen to all sides, and works to create consensus. We are confident he will continue to balance the needs of his Mesa District while doing what’s best for the entire City. All Vote-By-Mail election
Please make sure your ballot is postmarked by November 3rd.
Cathy Murillo has consistently shown her dedication to protecting public safety. She has fought to maintain staffing levels in the fire department, ensuring that first responders can maintain quick response times in the event of a fire or medical emergency. Paid for by Santa Barbara City Firefighters Association Political Action Committee PO Box 1260, Santa Barbara, CA 93102 independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
7
8
THE INDEPENDENT
ocTobEr 22, 2015
independent.com
Endorsements
City Council
BIG NAMES. SMALL ROOM.
RICHARD THOMPSON
Andria Martinez Cohen, Randy Rowse, and Cathy Murillo
NOVEMBER 6
DISTRICT 1:
Andria Martinez Cohen
“The finest rock songwriter after Dylan and the best electric guitarist since Hendrix.” – LA Times
Of the three districts up for grabs, District 1—which encompasses the Eastside and a significant swath of the waterfront, including the Funk Zone—has traditionally been the least represented on the City Council and is undergoing
the most pronounced changes.
Of the five candidates on the ballot, three are serious contenders. Of those, Jacqueline Inda and Jason Dominguez have much to recommend them, but not enough to make us comfortable in endorsing either. Though Andria Martinez Cohen is clearly the greenest, her enthusiasm, optimism, and practical brand of political progressivism impress us. Inda is by the far the most of, for, and by the disenfranchised population she seeks to represent. She also has the most extensive track record of grassroots community involvement. However, there have been a couple of incidents that make us wonder whether her political judgment can keep pace with her activist impulses. Likewise, Jason Dominguez is exceptionally articulate and boasts the most dazzling résumé. Yet his last stint as director of the financially troubled Legal Aid Foundation proved rocky and, at eight months, notably short-lived. If elected, Dominguez, we suspect, would function as a skeptical moderate. But given the dramatic shifts in the political company he’s kept, we’re not really sure. And yes, we have questions about Martinez Cohen, as well. Her lack of experience and strong support from the Democratic Party and public employee unions give rise to concerns she’ll function as “the stooge” for “the machine.” We’re persuaded, however, that will not be the case. She brings an energetically independent mind and spirit. Her focus is on getting things done rather than promoting sterile gamesmanship and partisan posturing. Martinez Cohen has also worked with 10 Southern California cities in her job as a nonprofit loan officer to leverage private funds to promote economic development, so she comes equipped with some of the tools to figure out city finances.
CHRIS THILE NOVEMBER 8
“The most remarkable mandolinist in the world.” – London’s Independent
DISTRICT 2:
DORADO SCHMITT
Randy Rowse
With five years of council experience under his belt, Randy Rowse has established himself as a congenial, rightof-center, pro-business moderate. Clearly, we disagree with him on certain issues. We never bought his insistence that homeless people are chasing visitors away from downtown in droves and take exception to his insistence that “perception is reality” where street people are concerned. But Rowse brings a good-faith energy and common-sense style to the council. More often than not, his insights and arguments are steeped in actual experience rather than ideology. His presence helps keep the debate honest and real. Lastly, we were much impressed by how Rowse stepped outside his political comfort zone when he worked on behalf of a failed sales-tax increase to cover City Hall’s unmet infrastructure needs. Rowse now finds himself representing a district that includes the Mesa and portions of the Westside. As a 30-year resident of the Mesa, he’ll have no problem taking care of his own neighborhood. But we hope he’ll expand the focus to include the Westside more than his campaign materials reflect. Challenger Luis Esparza should be commended for the thoughtful intelligence he brought to the race; likewise, Missy McSweeney-Zeitsoff enlivened the forums with her straight talk and direct personality.
DISTRICT 3:
Cathy Murillo
District 3 makes up Santa Barbara’s Westside and lower Westside neighborhoods, home to some of the poorest, most densely packed households in town. Murillo has lived there for 15 years, and as the only Latina ever elected to the City Council, she has made it her mission to represent the city’s Hispanic community. As a councilmember, Murillo has lent an eager ear to the city’s progressive activists. She was an ardent supporter of the plastic-bag ban and spoke out on behalf of endangered steelhead trout. During desalination discussions, she pushed to convert our wastewater into a potable supply. When it appeared the Metropolitan Transit District was about to inflict wholesale destruction on transit service funding, Murillo was the only councilmember attending MTD meetings. Murillo used to work at The Santa Barbara Independent, and so some of us have a personal familiarity with her foibles as well as her strengths. What impresses us about Murillo is her passion and commitment, but sometimes there’s too much of a good thing. For her next term, we’d suggest less flag waving would go a long way. Likewise, we’re troubled by reports Murillo is already positioning herself for a mayoral bid two years hence. Her focus needs to be on building relationships with her council colleagues and familiarizing herself with the nuts and bolts of getting things done. Also running for District 3 is Sharon Byrne, Murillo’s longtime nemesis and doppelgänger who runs the Milpas Community Association (MCA). Although the rhetoric of the MCA has frequently been too strident and polarizing for our comfort level — on issues like the homeless, the gang injunction, and medical marijuana dispensaries — it must be acknowledged that Byrne has been a highly effective neighborhood advocate. Given that, we were disappointed by the lack of advance notice that she provided affected businesses when she and the MCA unveiled their plans to create a business improvement district along the Milpas corridor. That has since generated a race-infused debate that’s grown increasingly inflamed. Byrne calls to mind Lyndon B. Johnson’s classic conundrum: whether it was better to have former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover “outside the tent pissing in or inside the tent pissing out.” Johnson concluded the latter. Where Byrne n — a formidable and creative force on the Eastside — is concerned, we favor the former.
and the
Django Festival All-Stars with special guest Roger Kellaway
NOVEMBER 10 Back by popular demand! Celebrating the legacy of Django Reinhardt.
Buy a ticket for a Veteran. Info at Lobero.com
Nov. 11 at 7:30 PM Presented on Veterans day, this performance is a humorous, poignant and moving evening of wartime letters from American soldiers, Marines, sailors and airmen and their loved ones at home, brought to life in a new play. This performance made possible by The Wood-Claeyssens Foundation LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC
LOBERO BRUBECK CIRCLE
805.963.0761 or Lobero.com independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
9
News of the Week
OctOber 15-22, 2015
by KELSEY BRuggER @kelseybrugger, KEITh hAmm, LÉNA gARCIA @lenamgarcia, TYLER hAYDEN @TylerHayden1, and NICK WELSh, with Independent STAff
Eight red silhouettes flanked De la Guerra Plaza Thursday night, representing Santa Barbara women recently killed by domestic violence. One had just been carved for Kimberly Hamilton, a 45-year-old Los Olivos woman who police suspect was shot by her husband in a murder-suicide. The Hamiltons left behind three children. Advocates, family members, and friends of victims gathered in the plaza for a vigil and march organized by Domestic Violence Solutions, which hosted two other events this month. Here, State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson hugs Elizabeth Tang, whose daughter Alexandra was murdered by her — Indy Staff boyfriend in 2012.
Boom Times Booming 175-Unit Old Town Village in Goleta Wins Final Approval
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by T y l e r H ay d e N
iting the South Coast’s critical shortage of workforce housing and leaping at the chance to breathe new life into Old Town, the Goleta City Council on Tuesday approved a 175-unit mixed-use development for a farm field just below Hollister Avenue. The 3-2 split vote came after significant debate over adding yet another project to what’s recently felt like a nonstop assembly line of new construction in the small city. Neighbors arrived in force to express anxiety that the Old Town Village will suck up water and spit out traffic, and they worried the council is sacrificing the character of their beloved community. “This is not the way we were supposed to be,” said one 35-year resident. “We don’t want to be L.A.; we want to be the Goodland.” “I feel like Goleta’s soul has been sold to the devil,” added another neighbor. “What you call housing I call an out-of-control urban nightmare.” Former mayor Margaret Connell (an online columnist for The Independent) spoke on behalf of the Goodland Coalition and said 1,500 new residential units are already coming to Goleta. She stated the project’s market-rate homes will do little to address the low-income-housing need. Julia Crookston, who owns the Goodland Kitchen and Market nearby, said she’s lived through ill-advised expansions in San Francisco’s Mission District and Silver Lake in Los Angeles. “Unsupported growth is a disaster,” she said. Those on the other side of the discussion — like the Goleta Chamber of Commerce and a recent UCSB graduate who said the 10
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proposal will be good for people trying to take the step from student to young professional — noted how the project’s mix of townhomes, live-work units, and shopkeeper spaces is designed to attract workers who would otherwise be priced out of the area’s impenetrable housing market. Right now, they argued, the starting salaries of firefighters, teachers, Sheriff’s deputies, and city planners aren’t enough to keep them in town, forcing them to commute from North County or move out of the area altogether. Bill McReynolds, vice president of Ventura-based development firm City Ventures, said 161 of the units will cost between $400,000-$600,000 and be marketed to locals earning 120-200 percent of the area’s median income, which is $75,400 for a family of four; 14 units are earmarked as affordable. City Ventures is certified to offer FHA loans, allowing buyers to put just 3 percent down, McReynolds also explained. He complimented the city on its GEM (Goleta Entrepreneurial Magnet) program and said Old Town Village fits nicely into Goleta’s unique vision for smart growth. Project planners told the council that the 12-acre property, which sits next to Highway 217 by the Honda dealership on South Kellogg, has a water service agreement to use 86.3 acre-feet of water per year. Last year, it used 24 acre feet. The development will use 28. Traffic consultants said the new living and work spaces will generate an additional 1,100 car trips through the area per day. Planning manager Lisa Plowman talked of the project’s green design that features a reclaimed water system, lots of glass for natural light, multiple open spaces, bike storage,
october 22, 2015
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a community garden, and private yards or rooftop decks for each unit. McReynolds also stated that City Ventures agreed to give 2.5 acres of the property to the city, at a value of $2.75 million, so the city can extend Ekwill Street as part of a larger traffic-improvement scheme throughout the Hollister area. During deliberations, Councilmember Michael Bennett said he opposed Old Town Village because it would generate far less tax-revenue than the hotel and conference center that had originally been envisioned for that site — $24,000 a year, which he described as “budget dust,” compared to $2 million a year. In its approval, the council agreed to amend the city’s General Plan to rezone the property from visitor-serving to residential-commercial. Councilmember Tony Vallejo sympathized with those who complained of steady construction, but he said projects like the Village at Los Carneros and Hollister Village were approved many years ago. “These things aren’t happening all at once,” he said. “Right now we’re overlapping, but we’re almost done.” Vallejo noted Goleta’s extremely low 0.99 percent vacancy rate when he gave his yes vote. Councilmember Roger Aceves assented as well, excited at a new path that will be built between the property and Hollister Avenue, a five-minute walk away. The foot traffic will funnel directly toward a proposed new civic center and town hall in Old Town, he pointed out. “Assemblymember Das Williams sent a letter in support,” he summed up.“I don’t agree with him on a lot of things, but I agree with him on this.” n
LAW & DISORDER cou rtesy
pau l wellm an
Fresh Violence Before a Vigil
news briefs
The 10/17 crash of a small plane in the San Bernardino Mountains killed Santa Barbara residents and Accurate Aviation employees Bob Trimble and Terri Day (pictured above). National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) officials said their Piper PA-28 Cherokee was returning from Palm Springs when it went down in the harsh terrain of Morongo Canyon. While the incident continues to be investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration and NTSB, Accurate Aviation representatives said inclement weather is suspected to be a factor in the crash. “To Bob and Terri: ‘Blue skies and tailwinds,’” the company said in a statement. “The Accurate Aviation family will miss you both dearly.” Actor Randy Quaid and his wife, Evi, were released from a Vermont state prison on 10/15 after a judge dismissed fugitive charges against the couple. Judge Alison Arms ruled there was no legal basis to keep the Quaids — who fled Santa Barbara squatting and vandalism charges in 2010 — in custody in Vermont, thus allowing the couple to remain there unprosecuted. Randy Quaid told reporters that he looks forward to staying and joining the volunteer fire department in the small town of Lincoln. Two Santa Barbara city police officers responded on 10/17 to a call of a man causing a disturbance at a wedding at the Carriage Museum. The man, Jorge Rodriguez, 22, of Goleta, had wandered into the reception uninvited and refused to leave. Rodriguez reportedly punched one officer in the face and bit him on the shoulder. When a police K-9 latched onto Rodriguez, he bit the dog and wrenched one of its legs. Once released from the hospital, Rodriguez will be booked into County Jail on a number of felony charges. Former KCOY news anchor Paula Lopez’s arraignment and her DUI and battery case have been postponed to 11/20. At a court hearing on 10/19, Lopez’s attorney Matt Conley said discovery is still taking place. Because the six counts against her are misdemeanors, Lopez was not required to be in court. Later this month, TV reporter Melissa Mahan, who graduated from UCSB in 2002, will take over Lopez’s evening anchor position on KCOY 12 Central Coast News.
CITY After nearly 12 weeks of court hearings and transfers between jail and house arrest, Len Homeniuk is free to return to his Mesa home three months after his arrest in Bulgaria on what turned out to be trumped-up
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While new science shows incredible brain development within the first five years of life, it’s the same old story when it comes to high-quality early care and education countywide. Basically, there aren’t enough licensed facilities, and about 25 percent of existing spots are of low quality, according to Ben Romo, executive director of First 5 Santa Barbara County, which hosted a discussion Monday night on “the preschool and child-care crisis.” More stats painted an even bleaker picture. Countywide, it’s estimated that 65 percent of children 5 years old and younger have both parents, or their present single parent, in the workforce, a situation that makes preschool more likely a necessity than a choice. But in that respect, Romo continued, only 11,000 licensed spaces exist for 20,000 kids in need. And lastly, preschool teachers — tasked with nurturing children during the most critical time of brain development — get paid the least, compared to K-12 instructors. Governor Jerry Brown’s recent veto of AB 47, which would have set a timetable for providing state-subsidized preschool for 4-year-olds from low-income families, exacerbated Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson’s frustration with the issue. As part of Monday’s panel, she explained that investment in early education helps save money down the road, as better-educated kids tend to take paths that don’t lead to jail, for example. “This is not rocket science,” Jackson said. “But it’s been very difficult to get this message to the governor.” In the meantime, Jackson said she’s working on legislation that would provide corporate incentives for on-site child care. She specifically cited Ventura-based Patagonia as a model program. — Keith Hamm
corruption charges. A Bulgarian judge ruled Kyrgyzstan failed to produce enough evidence to justify an extradition. The judge also questioned whether the statue of limitations for such a case had already expired and noted Kyrgyzstan’s well-documented pattern of human rights violations.
Social Venture Partners Santa Barbara, connects area nonprofits with potential funders and offers cash prizes for the best threeminute business pitches. “The $15,000 plus the exposure for YStrive will help support our scholarship funds for high-risk youth and their families,” said Terry. YStrive offers mentoring and job-training services to reduce gang violence and incarceration rates.
Just three weeks before the race, the Santa Barbara Veterans Day Marathon and Marathon Relay, which typically draws 4,000 runners, was unexpectedly canceled after organizers said not enough people had signed up to cover production costs. The half marathon and half-marathon relay, however, will proceed as scheduled on 11/ 7. The course starts at the UCSB campus, goes along State Route 217, procedes around Hope Ranch, and finishes at Leadbetter Beach. pau l wellm an fi l e photo
COuNTY
The winners of this year’s Fast Pitch S.B. were announced 10/19, with Keith Terry (pictured) of YStrive taking home the competition’s $15,000 Impact Award. The two-month Fast Pitch S.B. training program, organized by
Prompted by concerns with disaster preparedness in Santa Barbara, Supervisor Janet Wolf called a meeting of the County Disaster Council to talk openly about the Refugio Oil Spill as well as the drought and upcoming El Niño. It will take place 10/27 at 9 a.m. in the conference room at the County Administration Building. As Board of Supervisors chair, Wolf also chairs the disaster council, which is made up of representatives from the Office of Emergency Management, County Counsel, Sheriff, Fire, Public Health, General Services, and Public Works. The Land Trust for Santa Barbara County announced today that its nearly 24,000-acre portfolio of protected natural resources and agricultural countryside now includes the 100-acre Big Bend Ranch, donated by Judy and Jack Stapelmann. Located in the El Jaro Creek watershed southeast of Lompoc, Big Bend cradles riparian habitat, oak woodland, and leased portions in farming and grazing. “We know the Land Trust will protect it,” Mrs. Stapelmann said. “It’s a win-win.” The St. George Family Youth Center, under construction since November, celebrated its grand opening 10/13 at Estero Park in Isla Vista with supporters, program alumni, and eponymous developer Ed St. George in attendance. The new 3,200-square-foot building replaces the Isla Vista Teen Center, which had operated out of portable classrooms at Estero Park since 1999. The new center offers after-school homework help and leadership and recreational activities to youths in grades 6-12. cont’d page 12
law of the Jungle Governor Signs Fair Pay and Many Other Bills
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pau l wellm an f i le photo
Preschool rocket Science
state
by K e l S e y B r u g g e r
tate Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson and Assemblymember Das Williams — political allies and personal friends — were distant on more than one issue this year. For instance, Williams agitated area Democrats when he abstained from the mandatory-vaccine vote, a bill Jackson coauthored. Likewise, Williams’s opposition to the so-called right-to-die bill put him at odds with some strong supporters. On Williams’s Isla Vista self-governance bill, Jackson was conspicuously silent until the bill made it to the Senate floor, where she ultimately cast a yes vote. Yet the Santa Barbara legislators teamed up following the Refugio Oil Spill and coauthored legislation in response. One bill requires the State Fire Marshal to inspect all interstate pipelines every year. Another, the Rapid Oil Spill Response Act, allows commercial fishing vessels to respond to an oil spill and requires quick notification to the Legislature if dispersants are used. Williams also authored a bill that requires oil pipelines near environmentally sensitive areas to have “the best available technology,” including automatic shutoffs. The governor signed all three. Altogether, Brown signed nine of William’s bills and 14 of Jackson’s, and he vetoed three each. Fair Pay: Attracting national attention
this year was Jackson’s Fair Pay Act, which strengthens existing equal-pay laws in California — home to 12 percent of the country’s women. The law prohibits employers from paying a woman less than a man for “substantially similar” work under similar working conditions unless seniority, merit, education, or training is a factor.“The real goal here is to get businesses to just reevaluate their pay schedules,” Jackson said. “I believe most employers do not intentionally discriminate on the basis of gender, but there have been such subconscious biases.” The bill, supported by many Republicans and the California Chamber of Commerce, allows the filing of an administrative complaint through the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement or legal action. In Santa Barbara, the state agency office is staffed with eight people to cover Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Ventura, which attorney Bruce Anticouni believes is woefully understaffed. “Things that traditionally years ago would take a matter of a few months now take six to eight months,” the employment-law attorney said. Jackson said her offices have been told the agency has the resources to handle more cases.“We’ll see how many there are,” she said. Anticouni, who represents both employees and employers, said he is already getting calls from employers to audit their staff positions to determine similar duties when the bill becomes law on January 1, 2016. Larger firms, such as tech companies, might be more susceptible to class-action lawsuits while smaller independent.com
Refugio Oil Spill
employers could make the case each person does different types of work, he added. Supporters say the bill strengthens strictly written equal-pay laws — beneficial given the abundance of skills and professions in today’s world. Employment attorney Janean Acevedo Daniels called the bill significant because it will shift the burden of proof from employees to employers. Employees fear complaining about working conditions out of worry they’ll lose their job, she said. Brown also signed Jackson’s bill to update child-care laws and prohibit an employer with 25 or more employees from discriminating against a parent or guardian with a child in day care or grade school for taking off up to 40 hours each year for school activities. In a big loss for all employees, Anticouni said, the governor vetoed AB 465, which would have made it illegal for an employer to require employees to sign a waiver of rights as a condition of employment and would have prohibited employers from retaliating or discriminating against people who refused. Opponents argued the bill would conflict with federal law and that arbitration resolves employment disputes without overburdening the judicial system. Kibosh on Kardashian-sized Weddings:
Among the 133 bills Brown vetoed this year was one provoked by Kim Kardashian’s massive Montecito wedding in 2011. The more than 300 guests caused hours of congested traffic and neighborhood complaints, but the homeowner was fined $100. Williams’s AB 514 sought to allow counties to impose a fine more than three times the permit or up to $5,000. County Planning & Development Director Glenn Russell traveled to Sacramento to support the bill, saying the current state fines fail to deter “scofflaws.” Brown contended the bill lacked “the balance needed to prevent unintended consequences, especially on those with modest means and those who are unfamiliar with their local ordinances.” Brown also vetoed Jackson’s bill making drones less than 350 feet above a persons’ property illegal without his or her permission. n
october 22, 2015
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TOGETHER WE GO FURTHER 805-312-6367
Halloween 2015 parking restrictions in isla Vista may affect you!
Villaraigosa for Gov?
Antonio Villaraigosa, Antonio Villaraigosa the former mayor of Los Angeles who is expected to run for governor in 2018, spent a hot Friday afternoon in Santa Barbara to talk about the state’s troubled criminal-justice system, environmental issues, and, with gridlock causing a commuter nightmare in Southern California that day, transportation. The gathering at La Casa de la Raza with State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson marked the 27th day of his “listening tour” that’s taken him to Salinas, the Central Valley, San Francisco, San Diego, and Coachella. In beginning discussions, Chief Probation Officer Lupe Rabago brought up Proposition 47, which decreased some drug and theft crimes from felonies to misdemeanors. Data presented to the Santa Barbara supervisors last week showed that, since the enactment of Prop. 47, the percentage of people who fail to appear in court has increased by 45 percent and drug-treatment participation is down. Villaraigosa, who supported the new law, said he endorsed the concept of reducing prison sentences and investing in prevention programs but suggested the matter needed to be carefully scrutinized to ensure Prop. 47 outcomes matched those intended. On environmental issues, Villaraigosa noted the nexus of conservationism and social justice, remarking on the disproportionate impact of carbon emissions on poor people living in cities. “If you want the poor community to get behind this, there has got to be something for them,” he said. On what he called the “broken tax system,” Villaraigosa said he voted against Prop. 13, a property-tax reform originally passed in 1978, and called for the state to take up tax increases or restructuring — especially “as the state gets bluer.” Villaraigosa’s Santa Barbara visit came the day after a new Field Poll showed he is among three probable candidates with early support; the others are Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti. Villaraigosa, who is a big Hillary Clinton supporter, has not said publicly if he plans to run for governor, but in closing remarks Friday, he said, “I think you’ll see more of me.” — Kelsey Brugger
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Thousand Oaks & Santa Barbara
cont’d
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News of theWeek
isla Vista parking
No street parking in Isla Vista from 9am on 10/30 until 7am on 11/1 for Del Playa residents (6500, 6600, 6700); Camino Del Sur residents between Del Playa and Trigo; Camino Pescadero residents between Del Playa and Trigo; El Embarcadero residents between Del Playa and Top of Loop; Trigo residents on 6500 only.
El Nido residents on 6500 and Sabado Tarde residents on 6500, 6600, 6700 do not need to move cars off street, but vehicles will not be allowed to enter or exit through roadblocks from 9am on 10/30 until 7am on 11/1.
ucsB campus parking
no oVernigHt Visitor parking is allowed on tHe ucsB campus from friday octoBer 30tH tHrougH sunday noVemBer 1st. • Registered UCSB Undergrads with an Annual Night & Weekend parking permit can park in designated lots on campus beginning at 9am Friday, October 30th until 7:30am on Monday, November 2nd Parking is allowed only in Structure 22, 18 (Mesa Structure) and Lot 16. • Apply/order on-line by October 16th to ensure your permit arrives by USPS mail prior to October 30th. Visit our office to purchase a permit now through October 25th (permits ordered after the 16th are NOT guaranteed to arrive by the 30th). Annual N/W permit is discounted by 50% from $52.50 to $26.25 plus $5.95 shipping/handling fee = $32.20. Permit is valid through June 30, 2016. One permit per registered student; vehicle must be linked to permit.
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ocTobEr 22, 2015
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news briefs cont’d Peoples’ Self-Help Housing (PSHH) cut the ribbon on 10/15 at Casas de las Flores, a 43-unit affordable housing complex at 4096 Via Real in Carpinteria. PSHH purchased the land, originally home to a camper park, from an absentee landlord 12 years ago. The apartments, which will be home to low-income and formerly homeless families, include a community room, kitchen, clinic space, youth education and computer room, and offices. The surrounding area will also have a playground, a half basketball court, walking paths, and new laundry facilities.
EDUCATION A silver shovel broke ground Tuesday morning on Crane Country Day School’s estimated $4.5 million, 6,100-square-foot expansion (pictured above). The project — the biggest construction endeavor in the school’s 88-year history — includes administrative offices, English and math classrooms, an amphitheater, and an engineering and design center where newly hired instructors will collaborate with Dos Pueblos High School’s famed engineering academy. By partnering with Dos Pueblos, the K-8 private school will further deepen an educational style that’s long been hands-on and inventive, said Joel Weiss, Crane’s head of school. The new space is slated to open next fall. n
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NOT ALL CREATED EQUAL: Environmental attorney Philip Seymour told the board not all types of chaparral qualify as sensitive.
Valley of Thorns
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by K e l S e y B r u g g e r
even years ago, when the county started the Eastern Goleta Valley Community Plan process, no one thought the argument in the 11th hour would be about thorny brush. But whether all types of chaparral qualify as environmentally sensitive habitat was one of two major issues discussed Tuesday, when the supervisors ultimately voted 3-2 to approve the plan. While many acknowledged the longcontentious battles in the Goleta Valley —over development in a low-density area — had been largely resolved, several environmentalists took to the podium to dispute county staff’s determination that chaparral could be cut back 100 feet (or up to 300 feet with fire department approval) around structures so as not to fuel wildfires. Environmental Defense Center attorneys, who met with Planning and Development staff at the tail end of the lengthy process, argued chaparral supports sensitive species, protects watersheds, and that the ordinance limits the types of chaparral identified as sensitive, creating inconsistencies within the plan. But Philip Seymour — the self-described “most biased speaker,” a firefighter turned environmental attorney who now lives near Painted Cave — said all chaparral that is
located in the area is not sensitive. Supervisor Janet Wolf, who represents the Goleta Valley, called the issue personally difficult because on one hand, she has been evacuated from her home twice since it burned down in the Painted Cave fire, but on the other, she appreciates the incredible chaparral-filled mountainside. She disapproved of unsanctioned clear-cutting. The other main issue was an argument about rezoning properties along the Hollister Avenue corridor from commercial to mixed-use zoning. Supervisors Steve Lavagnino and Peter Adam, who argued that a rezone could be a death sentence for the businesses that are located on the 55 parcels and could be considered an economic taking, voted against the plan. “At the end of the day, we should be extremely reluctant to take … value out of our neighbors’ property,” Adam said. County staff noted the rezone would not impact a business immediately; it would have to change its use. Wolf argued the rezone of the Hollister corridor is an “integral string that ties this whole plan together.” Refuting the argument that the owners were in the dark about the change, Wolf said there were many opportunities for owners to voice concerns. n
dry with a chance of drier
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by K e i T H H a m m
ith California entering its fifth year of drought on October 1, rainfall totals remain the driest in the state’s recorded history. Even with a strengthening El Niño seemingly ramping up the likelihood of a very wet winter—perhaps even rivaling 1997-98’s record-setting deluge—the city’s water team on Tuesday reiterated the boon of its free low-flow showerhead exchange and toilet-leak test kit. So far, residents’ efforts have helped reduce demand by 33 percent in September alone, eclipsing the city’s target goal of 25 percent. Such conservation efforts bode well in light of the unreliable rainfall predictions for the coming three months. While this winter promises to be warmer than usual, city water-supply manager Kelley Dyer said that,
according to National Weather Service forecasts, the chances of below-normal, normal, and above-normal rainfall are equal. Meanwhile, on October 12, Cachuma Reservoir checked in at a lowly 16.7 percent of capacity. “We are approaching lake levels never seen before,” Dyer told councilmembers. In related news, the Montecito Water District’s retiring General Manager Tom Mosby is anticipating Santa Barbara’s terms of agreement concerning future deliveries from the city’s long-mothballed desalination plant, slated to be in production in September of next year. Mosby added that several dozen applicants are vying for his position, and he’ll likely continue with the district until his replacement is trained. The n application period ends next week.
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october 22, 2015
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Capitol Letters
the Darkest Horse
You don't have to stop your life To start your recovery
Beltway Chin Strokers Talk Up President Jerry Brown, but State Dems Are Less Enthused
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by J e r r y r o b e r t s
nly three things stand between Governor Jerry Brown and the White House: (a) Hillary Clinton is still breathing, (b) he makes Methuselah look like a kid, and (c) his home-turf partisans turn thumbs down. In a below-the-radar boomlet, East Coast pundits in recent weeks floated scenarios that foresee California’s venerable chief executive emerging from the tumult of the 2016 presidential campaign as the Democratic nominee. “Why Aren’t the Democrats Trying to Draft Jerry Brown?” demanded the limousine liberal magazine Vanity Fair, while the usually sensible Washington Post published “The Case for Jerry Brown” and the staunchly conservative Weekly Standard posed the question, “Jerry Brown Considering Running for President?” Warhorse populist Ralph Nader even forecast a ticket topped by Brown and Elizabeth Warren, the progressive U.S. senator from Massachusetts. “I know Jerry Brown,” Nader told the New Haven Independent. “And he’s just waiting. He’s not going to campaign. But if Hillary sinks before the primaries, if she gets in real trouble — he’s ready.” President Brown? Really? NOT A FAVORITE SON: As a practical
matter, the chances of Brown being nominated, let alone elected — sans any fundraising apparatus or an iota of national organization— are roughly equivalent to Dale Francisco becoming Secretary of Transportation. The most recent data point highlighting the folly of the Jerry Option, as set forth by the Beltway bloviator brigade, is a brandnew Field Poll; although a huge 73 percent majority of registered Democrats give Brown high marks as governor (statewide, 56 percent of registered voters approve), only 39 percent of Dems think he should run for president. “Despite Brown’s high overall standing with voters, likely voters in California’s Democratic primary next year are cool to the idea of Brown becoming a candidate for their party’s presidential nomination,” wrote survey director Mark DiCamillo, with characteristic understatement. The 77-year-old governor, who blundered through failed campaigns for the White House in 1976, 1980, and 1992, until recently pooh-poohed the thought of another national race: “If I could go back in a time machine and be 66, I might jump in,” he told reporters last spring.“But that’s a counterfactual, so you don’t need to speculate on that.” (Slight digression: How can you not treasure a pol who uses the word “counterfactual”?)
In a CNN interview last month, however, Brown himself ignited the recent speculation, offering an equivocal, murky answer when asked why he has yet to endorse Hillary, left-wing Senator Bernie Sanders, or anyone else in the Democratic field: “I would say, though, it is early,” he said. “You could have a lot of big surprises, a lot of action between now and the first Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire primary. A lot’s going to happen in the Republican primary, and I think some things could happen on the Democratic side, as well.” HAMLET AND THE CLOWN CAR:
The mere sound of pundits blathering about Brown reflects the unsettled state of the ’16 campaign, which features both a clown car spectacle on the Republican side and frequent displays of frailties and foibles by front-runner Hillary Clinton, who generates lingering, restless anxiety among Democrats. Despite Clinton’s recent surge following the first Democratic debate, a host of uncertainties still shape an unstable political environment: Washington’s obsession with drip-drip stories about her emails, her scary 2013 encounter with a life-threatening blood clot near her brain, the public’s current enthusiasm for political outsiders, the unexpected strength shown by Sanders, the endless political Hamlet act performed by Vice President Joe Biden as he mulls a run, for starters. Amid these inconstant conditions, the interest in Brown among the Capitol’s chattering class is a tribute—not only to his strong performance as fourth-term leader of the nation’s largest state but also to his singular standing as a sui generis political lifer who, for five decades, has crafted and sustained a public role as an independent thought leader in a professional field routinely dominated by intellectual pygmies and craven dunces. “ … Brown’s case against Clinton is as serious as anyone this side of Biden,” wrote Chris Cillizza, the Post’s chief peddler of conventional wisdom. “And the threat he would pose to her is not to be dismissed.” Except … BOTTOM LINE: California-based polit-
ical media hucksters, including this one, for months have augured that Brown will not be in the picture when the presidential deal goes down. A few days ago, we asked one of his most steadfast strategists if the recent national political prattle should change that prognostication. His advice: “Stand n pat for now.”
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ocTobEr 22, 2015
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Joseph Avedis Ignatius
sister-in-law, four children, four grand grandchildren, and seven nieces and nephews. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, November 21 at 11 a.m. at All Saints-By-The-Sea Episcopal Church in Montecito, CA. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be sent to Serenity House in Santa Barbara; Visiting Nurse and Hospice Care (Santa Barbara); or The Ignatius Lecture FundStanford Department of Surgery.
Cinder Jean Nooney 09/21/58-10/05/15 Joseph Avedis Ignatius, general surgeon, founder of The Surgical Index, gifted athlete, and devoted husband and father, died from natural causes Sunday, October 4, at the age of 90 in Santa Barbara. All who knew him felt elevated in his presence. He loved inclusive discourse, encouraging participation from all present. It was never about him but about you, finding out what your passion was, or simply how your day went. He loved politics, movies, and music — the jazz greats, but also the Beatles and Dylan. He had a wonderful sense of humor and a love of life. Born in Glendale, CA, in 1925, Joe was a first-generation American of Armenian heritage and the youngest of three children. He received both undergraduate and graduate degrees from Stanford University. Interrupted by service in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War, he returned to Stanford to complete his surgical residency. Joe set up private practice in Los Altos, CA, and taught at Stanford Medical School and California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco. He was an active contributing editor to the American College of Surgeons continuing medical education program and a member of the editorial board of the Archives of Surgery. In 1950, Joe married his first wife, Virginia Eddy, with whom he had four children, Peter, Barbara, Michael, and Elisa. In 1978, he married his second wife, Cherie, with whom he happily enjoyed 37 years of marriage. In the 1960s, he joined Concerned Physicians and Scientists Against the War and later was appointed by Dr. Phil Lee, then assistant secretary for the Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare, to help establish one of the first medical clinics to provide care for people in rural communities who had little access to quality medical care. In 1972, Joe began The Surgical Index, which was perhaps his proudest achievement and most enduring legacy. Each month, his astute critical reviews of the surgical literature were an immense aid to practicing surgeons and surgical residents. More than 3,000 surgeons and universities subscribed worldwide. In 2011, the Annual Ignatius Lecture in Surgery was established at Stanford University in his honor, acknowledging his contribution to the field of medicine and to the practicing surgeon. A lifelong tennis player, Joe began to compete both nationally and internationally in his 40s. By the end of his competitive career, he had achieved a ranking of number five in the world and had represented the U.S. in multiple international senior Davis Cup-type competitions. Joe is survived by his wife, brother, 16
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Cinder Jean Nooney, 57, passed away on Monday October 5 2015, after a long battle with complications from leukemia. She was born September 21 1958, in Torrance, California, and lived in Manhattan Beach until she was 11. Her parents, Jean Nooney Ill and Helen Marie Nooney, moved to Goleta in 1969. She graduated from Dos Pueblos High School and attended Santa Barbara City College. She is now with her mother who passed away in August 2015. She is survived by her brother Ross Nooney, (Sue Nooney) her father Jean Nooney and the longtime love of her life, Robert Thomas Bucy. She is also survived by her niece Melissa Gutierrez (Armando), her nephew Robert Nooney (Kelli), her great nephew and nieces Blake and Madelyn Gutierrez and Reese Nooney. During her early teen age years she discovered her natural talent for music, poetry, songwriting and singing. These talents sustained her throughout her life where she entertained, traveled, produced CDs and taught guitar lessons.“I have lived a very happy life and fulfilled so many of my dreams. Carry on please. In this life we are so resilient and can find our way back after loss. We can find new love and new friends. God designed our spirits to bounce back after a season of grief. Please hold me in your thought and minds. Don’t ever forget the fun times we have had together! Put photographs on your walls and remember always.” She and Tom shared a common interest in music, songwriting and entertaining together and are well-known in the Santa Barbara area and the big island of Hawaii. She loved the ocean with all her heart and especially the crystal blue waters of Hawaii. She was so grateful for the inspiration and love from the Big Island. She also shared the love and companionship of their four cats, Kimbe, Shelby, Pearl and Little One, who are like family. “Remember, the music I have created in this world is who I am and needs to never be forgotten. Being a songwriter and performing my songs live on stage has given me the greatest joy in life and I know that’s why I was put on this earth. Writing songs, recording songs and performing them for people has been the most amazing thing ever! I always want
ocTobEr 22, 2015
to be remembered as Cinder Jeavinger/ songwriter. My students are wonderful, and I love them all. Ask them to keep on playing guitar and singing and carry the seed of music to the next generation of children.” She is loved by many and will be deeply missed. A celebration mass will be held at St. Raphael’s Church, 5444 Hollister Ave. Santa Barbara, on Friday, October 23 at 10am.
Paul Jacobs
04/29/34-10/08/15
Musician, Engineer, Pun-Loving Tax Man Paul Jacobs, 81, passed away Thursday, October 8, 2015, in Santa Barbara, California, after a sudden illness. Paul is survived by his wife, Barbara Logen, of Goleta, California; son Harold and wife Lynne and grandson Gerald of Texas; daughter Barbara and husband Sergio and grandsons Daniel, Gabriel, and Mateo; and daughter Nancy and granddaughter Taya. This musical and mathematical man was born April 29, 1934, in the Bronx, New York, to Israel and Sarah Jacobs. His background in music and engineering gave him a unique perspective of the world. His wicked sense of the absurd and mastery of the pun made his humor one of the important things his friends and family knew about Paul. Also immediately apparent to those around him was his intelligence. After graduation from the prestigious New York High School of Music and Art in Manhattan, he attended the City College of New York and received a degree in music, later acquiring a second degree in engineering. During his career as an electrical engineer, he worked at Honeywell, Raytheon, and Delco. Changing careers in the 1980s, he became a self-employed tax preparer and accountant and continued this work until his passing. Paul was passionate about music. He played French horn for the Santa Barbara Symphony from 1972-1979 as well as with Santa Barbara Civic Light Opera and other local orchestras. He also played oboe, piano, cello, bassoon, recorder, harpsichord, and the viola da gamba. His knowledge of composers, compositions, and funny stories about each was encyclopedic. He enjoyed playing music with Barbara and friends, and as the music filled the room it also filled his heart. Paul and Barb explored many European countries together, learning the architecture, enjoying the museums, and everywhere finding good music. A day was not complete without a New York Times crossword puzzle (always completed), his daily walk in the neighborhood, a movie on Netflix, and a gourmet meal. He was a Grandmaster of Chess, and had been an avid tennis
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player. On Saturday, November 7, there will be an Open House Memorial gathering at Paul and Barbara’s home in Goleta from 3-5pm. Donations in Paul’s memory may be made to: Santa Barbara Symphony, in care of the YS private lessons program, 1330 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101.
Peter W. Ehlen
01/05/33-10/01/15
Peter W. Ehlen, beloved husband, father, respected Santa Barbara Structural Engineer and esteemed watercolor artist, passed away peacefully on Oct. 1, 2015, with his wife, Jean Clarke Ehlen, and immediate family at his bedside. Peter had been courageously navigating his gradual decline from Parkinson’s Disease with Lewy Body Dementia. During his illness he never complained and was always smiling and thankful. Peter was the only child born to John Henry Ehlen and Paula Weller Ehlen in Pasadena on Jan. 5, 1933. He grew up in Pasadena but made many trips over the summer months to the Midwest to visit cousins and to Orange, California, to visit his paternal grandparents and cousins and the legendary Ehlen and Grote mercantile store started by his grandfather. During his youth, Peter was a member of the Pasadena Boy’s Choir and was chosen from 200 boys for a 20-boy choir that sang with the San Francisco Grand Opera Company in a production of “Boris Godounoff” in the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. He also sang in “La Boheme” and “Carmen” at the age of 12. He was in school leadership and lettered in football and track in both jr. high and high School. He envisioned starting his college career in Architecture at UC Berkeley but changed course to major in civil engineering when given the opportunity to attend Stanford University. Graduating from Stanford in 1955 in Civil Engineering, Peter then spent two years in Anchorage, Alaska as a private in the Army and was newly wed. After his service he and his wife moved to Santa Barbara and started a family. He was blessed with three children, Pete, Mark and Alison. Peter leaves a strong structural engineering legacy in the City of Santa Barbara. Many of the Santa Barbara engineers currently in practice today worked for him and benefited from his mentorship and generosity. He began his career working for Don Shugart and Stan Mendes as well as being lead engineer at Arendt Mosher Grant Architects. In 1963 he returned to Stanford to pursue a Master’s degree in their new structural engineering program. Upon graduation he returned to Santa Barbara with his young family and opened his own structural engineering
practice in 1966. The office and legacy continues to this day at 1119 Garden Street as Ehlen, Spiess & Haight, Inc. He will be remembered for his professional one-liners as well as the invention of the “System 1000” drafting system. Peter was inspired by the natural beauty of our local environment and appreciated the history of Santa Barbara and the many historically significant buildings that are our treasured and protected structures. Being an avid enthusiast of California history, Peter loved to visit the Museum of Natural History and the Santa Barbara Historical Museum. He also appreciated the walking paths and beauty of the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden. With a keen eye for the beauty in older buildings, Peter joined the Victoria Street Group (Bill Mahan, Ed Lenvik, Fred Sweeney, Jack Dewey), a small group of Santa Barbarans who painted every Saturday and exhibited their work at shows. Many of Peter’s paintings hang in private collections as well as the Santa Barbara Biltmore Hotel. Peter loved listening to Handel’s “Messiah,” cutting the grass while smoking a cigar, overnight hikes to Forebush Flat, riding his bicycle, buying a new bicycle, chocolate, The Awhanee Lodge at Yosemite, The Copper Coffeepot, Casa Blanca Restaurant, train rides, running, sailing, teasing architects, selling paintings, geology and the mystery of earthquakes. Peter loved to sail on “Wet Wednesdays” with longtime friends Tom and Nancy Bollay. This friendship included trips from running the Bay to Breakers race in San Francisco to masterfully building creations for the yearly sand castle contest on East Beach (making sure that the castles were structurally sound). They traveled to Italy and gained new inspiration for painting. Week #6 at Stanford Sierra Camp on Fallen Leaf Lake near Lake Tahoe was an annual family tradition beginning when his children were young to years spent with his adult children and grandchildren. This will be forever a special place in all of his children and grandchildren’s hearts who were able to enjoy the magic of that week with their grandpa. During his children’s high school and college years, Peter was a supportive fan of all of their sporting events, becoming a driver for many of his daughter Alison’s track team members for meets out of town. He visited their colleges and took great pride in his three children’s professional lives that would unfold after college graduation. He always made an effort to see his children at least once a year, no matter where they lived. In September of 2000, Peter married his beloved Jean Clarke in a beautiful ceremony in the courtyard of the Covarrubias Adobe surrounded by their closest family and friends. This marked the beginning of a time of great happiness and travel, shared watercolor painting interest, CAMA concerts and the welcoming of new family members and grandchildren. Thanks go to mutual friends Mary Jean and John Van Dyke for setting them up on a blind date. Peter will be missed by his loving wife Jean, his son Pete (Vicki) Ehlen and their children Ryan, Heather and
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in Memoriam
Dana schorr 1953-2015
B
A Life Wild and Free
by D o n B o e k e l h e i D e and k a r e n M a D s e n Z w i c k e
RichaRd hughes/couRtesy Lotus gemoLogy
respondence course in gemology and began traveling the world in search of jewels, reinventing himself as etween global expeditions in search of pre- an international entrepreneur. Schorr’s penchant for cious gems, Santa Barbara gem trader Dana persuasiveness, honed as a radical organizer, served Schorr would regale friends with tales from him well in his new profession. During a trip to Bangkok in the mid-1980s, he Tanzania, Tibet, and points beyond, where village miners armed with picks, shovels, and sieves befriended gemologist and writer Richard Hughes. still seek precious jewels in muddy pits, as they have Like Schorr, Hughes was brilliant and entirely selftaught. Together, they went on gem-hunting expedisince biblical times. Schorr specialized in “colored stones” — rubies, tions worthy of Indiana Jones — to Burma’s jade and sapphires, emeralds, and lesser-known gemstones. ruby mines and to Madagascar, Tibet, and Africa’s According to the Wall Street Journal, the colored-gem Great Rift Valley, from Mozambique to Ethiopia. trade is dominated by adventurers like Schorr, “who “Dana was a fearless traveler, who had no qualms wander some of the globe’s most dangerous and under- about descending deep into mines, nor walking to the developed places in search of treasure.” edge of great precipices,” Hughes wrote. In the late 1990s, critics began to raise concerns Schorr grew up in Santa Barbara and attended San that colored gems might be like Marcos High. Dark eyes flashing and a black mane of hair “blood diamonds,” tainted by tumbling over his shoulders, he child labor or links to terrorists. Schorr acknowledged problems abandoned school to follow his but took a contrary view. With own path in the early 1970s. Paul Broeker met Schorr close ties to artisanal miners, in 1971: “My wife, Debby Lipp, especially in Tanzania, Schorr and I had hopes of starting a said top-down “solutions” would restaurant on State Street. Dana devastate small miners, gem cutwas organizing a Community ters, and traders, most based in Union and had space in the the developing world. same building. He was 19, totally Since only large corporauninterested in school or any tions could afford the imposiother institution. He lived wild tion of traceability and other requirements, Schorr feared that and free and wanted to do truly “fair trade” regulation would radical organizing.” Schorr, Broeker, and Lipp turn independent miners into found an old house on lower “employees” and destroy the Anacapa and moved in with a independent colored-gem tradraggle-taggle band of comrades. GEM HUNTER: Dana Schorr visited the ing network. At a conference in They christened their “collec- ancient galleries at Tajikistan’s Kuh-i-Lal. London in late 2014, Schorr made tive” Anacapa House. With its his case before a packed audience gathered-food dinners, earnest household meetings, of gem professionals, including strong human rights and Big Mike the Biker sleeping in a panel truck in and fair-trade advocates. Schorr effectively brought the driveway, Anacapa House became Schorr’s second artisanal miners’ perspectives to the table, arguing that first-world organizations needed to improve labor and family. Anacapa House housemate Karen Madsen remem- marketing practices at home instead of imposing rules bered: “I was dazzled by my handsome, fiercely intel- abroad. The hot debate about ethics continues within ligent, irreverent, and wickedly funny roommate at the colored-gem trade. Anacapa House. Dana and I became romantically Schorr was not simply a contrarian. He could use involved. We split up a year later but remained close his multilingual charm to get people talking across cultural and linguistic barriers. His longtime girlfriend friends for the next 40 years.” At the time, I was an earnest, young journalist for a Cheryle Carmitchel Robertson remembered how he new alternative newspaper, the Santa Barbara News & once skirted language barriers in Zanzibar: “The barReview. I also lived at Anacapa House, out back in the tender spoke only Swahili, we had one Swedish guy unheated shed beyond Big Mike’s truck. Schorr, then a and a German couple who barely spoke English, and radical printer, never tired of offering outspoken opin- in about 15 minutes Dana had everyone talking as he ions about how to keep the paper true to its progressive translated for each of them.” values. (The SBN&R decades later merged with The As decades passed, and his flowing mane became a Weekly to create The Santa Barbara Independent.) Jean-Luc Picard pate, Schorr showed no signs of slowHe was working with Peter Katoff at Sabot Press, ing down. Before his London presentation, Schorr took named for fed-up workers who used their wooden his mother, Emmy, on a trip to Machu Picchu in Peru. shoes, or sabots, to jam hated mill machinery dur- Between gem expeditions, he was active in neighboring the Industrial Revolution. Their shop was union- hood politics and the Santa Barbara Jazz Society. ized under the International Workers of the World Schorr suffered a heart attack at his Santa Barbara (“Wobblies”). home this past summer. Social media exploded with With his unmistakable, husky laugh and passions tributes, prayers, and memories from around the for storytelling and dancing until dawn, Schorr could world. He died peacefully on August 5, with family at be the life of any party. At the same time, he was equally his bedside. Schorr was 63. capable of hassling all he disagreed with, foe, family, On September 1, Schorr’s Santa Barbara friends held or friend. “Dana was kind, intelligent, generous, and a memorial roast at SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, funny,” Katoff said, “but he was often an obnoxious pain the same State Street site where Schorr had worked as a in the ass, a title he was proud of.” community organizer in the 1970s. “Dana was there for After a visit to the Tucson Gem & Mineral Show in me during the best and worst of times,” recalled Karen 1980, Schorr fell in love with gemstones. He took a cor- Madsen. “He was a true friend.” n
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ocTobEr 22, 2015
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17
obituaries
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Nick; son Mark Ehlen of Albuquerque and his children Forrest and Madison; and daughter Alison Galindo and her children Nico and Kenny. He is also survived by Jean’s family: Martin (Jennifer) Clarke and new baby Kaia, Teresa (Jeff) Polito and their children Ryan, Rachel, Lauren and Nicole. We will always think of Peter whenever we enjoy chocolate, train rides or family barbeques. He was happiest surrounded by gatherings of friends, family, laughter and conversation. Peter has many friends and associates who will miss him and remember what a kind, fair, positive friend and role model he was to all. A Celebration of Peter’s life will be announced at a later date. We would like to thank all his caregivers who were so gracious and loving, especially the staff at Villa Alamar for helping Peter (“Mr. Pedro”) this past year.
Dolores (Lori) Ritchie 1935-2015
Dolores (Lori) Ritchie died Tuesday at her home in Goleta. She was the last of four children born to Lloyd and Marie (Ovens) Schellhorn, and grew to early adulthood in Davenport, Iowa. After graduating in 1953 from Davenport High School, she married Robert Ritchie; they settled in Santa Barbara, where they raised two of three children to adulthood before divorcing in 1975. She joined the UCSB Library sta staff ff in 1961, retiring in 2000. She then worked another 7 years as a classroom assistant at McKinley School before the first of several illnesses drove her into full retirement. Her life was marked by her passion for the arts and an appreciation for good food and wine—which she shared with family and friends alike. She embraced diversity and was a good friend to so many. Lori was preceded in death by her son, Robbie, and is survived by her sister Betty of Moline, IL; her daughter Laurie of Goleta; her son James (Leane) of San Carlos, CA; grandchildren Amy, Lisa, Brooke, Ashley-Grace, Ashley-Mae and Bradley; and great-grandchildren Trenton, Genevieve, and Ella. She will be missed by all. 18
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Bernward Thorsch 04/27/20-10/11/15
Bernward Thorsch (Berny) was born in Dresden Germany on 27 April 1920, and he passed away on 11 October 2015, in Santa Barbara. His father Benno Thorsch (deceased) owned Kamera Werkstatten, a company that produced innovative cameras and photographic equipment. The Thorsch family left Germany in 1938 because of their Jewish ancestry. Soon after arriving in the United States, Berny was drafted. After three rounds of boot camp and teaching German to the troops going to Europe, the Air Force discovered Berny’s mechanical expertise and photographic skills. Berny developed and designed air-reconnaissance equipment, which was tested and perfected on B-17 bombers during his deployment in Panama City, Panama. After receiving an honorable discharge in 1946, Berny returned to the United States where he first worked at a photographic business in Denver, Colorado. In 1946, Berny and his wife, Doris Rhynard Thorsch (married 1945) and young son Ronald moved to California to work with his father, Benno Thorsch, at Studio City Camera Exchange on Ventura Boulevard. During 62 years as a business owner, Berny was active in the Studio City Chamber of Commerce and he was a 50-year member of the Studio City Rotary Club. His 50-year perfect-attendance pin was one of his most treasured possessions. Berny was a mountain climber, glider pilot, sailor, bicyclist, photographer and adventurer extraordinaire. Joining the Sierra Club in 1953, Berny loved the summer backpacking trips in the Sierras and throughout the western United States. Berny purchased one of the first Kelty backpacks when Mr. Kelty was selling them out of his garage. The aircraft-aluminum framed pack was the only one Berny used on all of his adventures. Berny moved to Santa Barbara to be close to his daughter Jennifer in 2008 after the death of his wife, Doris. His failing eyesight did not deter his desire for adventure and love of photography. Soon after arriving, Berny joined the Braille Institute of Santa Barbara, which became a very important part of his life. The stimulating classes, the dedicated teachers, and the enduring friendships he made enhanced his life beyond measure. In 2010, at the age of 90, Berny and his family traveled to his place of birth in Dresden, Germany, and to Sankt Gallen, Switzerland, where he attended the Institute auf dem Rosenberg from 1934-37. While in Dresden, the family visited the Technische Sammlungen, a museum dedicated to local technology and photography. The Director
ocTobEr 22, 2015
and Curator of Photography pro proposed hosting an exhibition about the Thorsch camera factory in Dresden. In September 2011, the exhibition entitled “The Picture You Will Get opened. The exhibition and warm welcome the family received in Dresden was one of the most memorable and important life events for Berny. Berny’s passion for photography took him all over the world from Africa to Tibet. Berny continued to take photographs (not pictures) with a Canon 35 mm film camera (no digital camera for Berny), even when his eyesight was nearly gone. Berny’s photographs demonstrate his unique sense of composition and ability to capture the moment when the light is perfect. In 2012, an exhibition of his work,“Insight: The Blind Photographer” was held at the Braille Institute. Berny is survived by his daughter Jennifer Thorsch (Charles Kaska) and their son Benjamin (Cynthia); his two granddaughters from his son Ronald Thorsch (deceased), Brooke Yamamura (Brian) and Carrie Thorsch; and greatgrandchildren Dylan, Tyler, Presley, Autumn and Ashland. The family wishes to thank the nurses and doctors at Cottage Hospital for their excellent care. Dr. Kyle Lemon dedicated his recent bicycle ride supporting the Arthritis Foundation California Coast Classic to Berny. We also thank Serenity House for exceptional care and compassion during his final days. Memorial donations may be made to Santa Barbara Braille Institute, 2031 De La Vina Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. Gute Reise Papa, Ich liebe dich.
Carolyn Cranston Gelles 05/05/61-10/1/15
ing a hardball as well as any of her teammates. She combined her athletic ability with a bold spirit and involved herself in skiing, river rafting, hiking, backpacking, and sky diving. She loved travel and was always up for the next adventure. She lived in Australia for a year and visited South America, China, and the Middle East, as well as made several trips through Europe. After graduating from Occidental College and later finishing graduate work at Antioch University in Santa Barbara, Carrie became a psychotherapist with a strong practice in the Santa Ynez Valley, and, over the last year, in Santa Barbara. Both as a therapist and as a caring friend to many, Carrie helped a multitude of people with their problems over the course of her life. She always had her dog by her side and was one of the early innovators of AnimalAssisted Therapy. She is survived by her mother, Carolyn Humphreys, father Harry P. Gelles, brothers Paul H. Gelles and Harrison H. Gelles, sister-in-law Iliana Gelles, and fi five nieces and nephews. There will be a celebration of Carrie’s life at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, November 1, at the Vineyard House, 3631 Sagunto Street, in Santa Ynez. Carrie adopted her last dog, Charlotte, from Old Yeller Ranch Rescue, a nonprofit fit that she strongly supported. fi If you wish to make a donation, please make it in Carrie’s name to OYRR, P.O. Box 372, Los Olivos, CA 93441.
Gust Rouhas
Gust Rouhas passed away peacefully at home October 20, 2015. He is survived by his beloved wife of 44 years, Linda; daughters Emily Medal (Luis) and Alison Rouhas; brothers Mike, Andy (Janice), Dennis (Lois) and Nick (Dina Bleakney); and many nephews and nieces. If you wish to visit the family, please do so on Sunday, October 25, between 1-4pm at their home. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Nature Conservancy and Roze Room Hospice of Ventura.
Tomi Lin Bortolazzo 01/16/62-10/13/15
Born in Phoenix, Arizona on May 5th, 1961, Carrie died in a single-vehicle accident on October 1st, 2015. She was 54 years old. Carrie will be remembered by all who knew her as a vivacious and adventurous person who loved connecting with people. Put her anywhere and she would quickly have fi five new friends. She also had a special place in her heart for animals. Growing up with cats, dogs, goats, and horses in Palos Verdes, California, Carrie would ride her pony, Sweet Pea, saying,“Hi, I’m Carrie” to everyone she met. She had a wonderful sense of humor and loved telling stories. And she was a great listener, caring deeply for friends and family and always ready to do a good deed for strangers. Carrie was also an outstanding athlete. Barely standing fi five feet tall, she was the only girl at her high school on the boys’ varsity baseball team, throw-
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Tomi Lin (“Tomi”) Bortolazzo, 53, who was born and raised in Santa Barbara and practiced medicine and surgery for 21 years, died October 13. She died unexpectedly of natural causes at her family home in Mammoth Lakes, CA. She was the daughter of Thomas Bortolazzo of Santa Barbara and Ara McDavid Fancher Croce of El Granada, CA. At the time of her death, Tomi was Chief of Staff at Mammoth Hospital in Mammoth Lakes and a member of the medical staff at Northern Inyo Hospital in Bishop. Before moving to
Mammoth, Tomi practiced for 11 years with the San Antonio Urology Medical Group in Upland. In 2002, she became the first woman and youngest person ever to serve as Chief of Staff at San Antonio Community Hospital. In addition to her career in medicine and surgery, Tomi was an instrument rated pilot and gifted athlete, and a particularly fine skier. It was her love of skiing, the mountains and the outdoors that led her to move with her husband and children to Mammoth Lakes in 2005. Besides skiing, she and her family enjoyed hiking, fishing, snowmobiling, waterskiing and motocross. Tomi was born on January 16, 1962, in Santa Barbara where she attended Cold Spring School, Marymount, and graduated in 1979 from Santa Barbara High School. She received her undergraduate degree in biochemistry and cell biology from UC San Diego in 1984, her medical degree from Chicago Medical School at the Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in 1988 and completed her residency in surgery and urology at Loma Linda University Medical Center. She was a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and was certified by the American Board of Urology. In addition to her parents, Tomi is survived by her husband Ron Malm; sons Randy and Russell; grandmother Joyce McDavid Douglas; stepfather Rich Croce; brother Aaron Bortolazzo; sister-in-law Yolon Bortolazzo and their children, Janelle, Patricia and Matthew and their families; sister Alessandra Bortolazzo; brother Keith Croce and sister Carolyn Cullins and their families; uncle and aunt Kenneth and Kathy Bortolazzo and their family; uncle Fred Rogers and his family; aunts Marcia McDavid, Marianne Daughty, Ehrin Abram and uncle Alex McDavid and their families; cousins Michelle Savoy and Ariana Barrett; and paternal relatives in Crespano del Grappa, Italy. Beyond her personal achievements, she was very proud of her family and their successes. Her son Randy, a former member of the Mammoth Ski Team, is a recent graduate of Westminster College in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her son Russell was recently named to the United States Ski Team and will be participating in the Winter Youth Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, in February 2016. A celebration of Tomi’s life will be held on Sunday, October 25, at 2:00 p.m. at the Main Lodge of Mountainside Conference Center, 10001 Minaret Rd., Mammoth Lakes, 93546. Rev. Fred C. Plumer will lead the gathering. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to the Mammoth Hospital Foundation, P.O. Box 660, Mammoth Lakes, CA 93546 (mammothhospital. com) or Mammoth Lakes Foundation, P.O. Box 1815, Mammoth Lakes, CA 93546 (mammothlakesfoundation.org). All who knew Tomi recognized the purpose, clarity and decisiveness with which she filled her days. Friends, relatives and patients admired the cool calm and confidence with which she navigated the challenges of life. Time and again, seemingly oblivious to dif difficulties and hazards, she performed while we felt privileged to act as witnesses.
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on the beat
She Walked in Love and Joy
light of my life, is dead. In all my half-century-plus in newspaper work, after many thousands of words, this is the hardest column I ever wrote and no doubt my last. Sue was the happiest woman I ever knew. She always woke up with a smile and headed out to feed her cats, put out the flag of the day, and uncovered the tarp from her curbside free library. It had been a wonderful day. We had coffee at her favorite spot, shopped for food for one of her special dishes, and spent the rest of the day on the front porch of our San Roque home she loved so much. She read on the sofa, cradled her cat, black-and-white Figaro, a stray that adopted her, and talked with her brother Peter about another of her front-yard projects. Later, as we lolled on the deck in the gloaming, we decided that it was a perfect night for our annual martini: gin, a splash of vermouth, and a tiny onion. Life seemed perfect. Sue waited until she was 50 to marry, and I was the lucky guy who’d come to do research in the News-Press library where she worked. She was impressed at the time and effort I spent, though I paid little attention to this kid in jeans. Sue was a Bishop High grad and former journalism student at Santa Barbara City College, and she was a star athlete at both
to do the work alone, but she loved it until the day she resigned. At first, Sue couldn’t cook, spoiled by the steaming Italian dinners her parents, Peter and Vivian De Lapa, served up. But gradually, thanks to her usual enthusiasm, TV shows, and dozens of cookbooks she collected, she became a highly skilled cook and tackled demanding French and Italian recipes. The results she would happily share with friends, family, and neighbors, sometimes leaving a slice or two for me. She never forgot a birthday, even when people failed to remember hers. And she always took time to respect the date of her parents’ deaths and that of her late brother, David. Sue was generous, ready to give away something a person admired, so generous that I would tell her, “One day I’ll come home and the house will be bare.” ON WINGS OF LOVE: Sue De Lapa, who was a When the garbage men rolled by or constant friend and a highly skilled cook, died our gardeners started mowing, she was last weekend. quick to put out pitchers of ice water. On Saturdays she’d set out with her schools. After that you might have seen this friend Sandy and hit the Carpinteria thrift slim, pretty woman on TV getting her head shops, returning joyfully to show off the bargains, a morning of fun for less than $10. smashed in at the roller derby. Through hard work she became head Sue dreamed of being a homeowner, a librarian. Finally, after staff cuts, she was left dream that came true after we met. I had barney brantingham
WORDS, WORDS: My beloved wife, Sue, the
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owned a home, but when it came time to sell and move on, we signed escrow papers with our friend, realtor Diane Waterhouse, and set out for a new place. Diane drove us to a San Roque home, and we got out. “That’s it,” Sue said.“A long driveway, a big garage, and a front porch.” “Don’t you even want to see the inside before deciding?” I asked. “No, that’s it.”And it was. She planted tomatoes, created a Sacred Space in the back with Peter’s help, and they later built a front-yard patio, complete with fire ring and a row of chairs, where she loved to sit and read, cat on her lap. With an opera singer father, Sue grew up with the great arias in her ears. The classical music station, KUSC, played all day. Sue was an amateur photographer, and her photos often adorned my column, although she was very modest about her work — and everything else. Late that delightful day I described, Sue suffered a fatal heart attack. (Thanks to paramedics, firefighters, and police who responded and the caring people at Cottage Hospital.) There are tears in my eyes as I write this and pain in my heart because I will never again enjoy life with this wonderful woman who relished every day. A celebration of her life may be announced later. — Barney Brantingham
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letters
Appreciate the Coyote
I
object to The Independent’s scare tactics about the coyote [independent.com/coyotescare]. I have 20 years of experience living near them. They frequently walk through my property and live near my house. Wild spaces are around where I live and several walking trails that I use daily. I often see them on my walks, and I have never been harmed, bothered by them, or seen the least bit of aggression. Once I rounded a blind corner and surprised a pack of them. They quickly scattered off away from me. I appreciate that they help the ecology in their diet of mice, rabbits, ground squirrels, other small rodents, insects, even reptiles, and the fruits and berries of wild — Nancy Hill, Summerland plants.
Jewish Lives Matter
H
ere we go again. Israel is once again being attacked by coordinated acts of violence encouraged by the leaders of Hamas and the U.S.-funded Palestinian Authority. And what are President Obama and Secretary of State Kerry’s responses? It is Israel’s fault because of increased settlements. Nonsense. The Jewish people throughout the world and Israel are being attacked by Jew-hating jihadists who want to annihilate them. The bottom line: When innocent people are attacked, they have a right to defend themselves, whether in America or in Israel. And why aren’t American leaders, especially the Jews, saying “Never Again”?
—Don Thorn, Carpinteria
Not Randy Rowse
I
disagree with your endorsement of Randy Rowse. His original appointment to City Council was the result of a messy process, the product of extremist views on the council, and at the behest of right-leaning activism. As usual, the liberal left on the council was agreeable to negotiate; the acerbic right wing would not negotiate.
Rowse had served “his” community in the appointed position of the very narrowly focused Downtown Parking Committee, which was a beneficiary of an easy slush fund of property tax diversions called the Redevelopment Agency. Rowse vigorously supported traffic calming in his Mesa neighborhood while simultaneously voting against much-needed traffic calming in other more needy and less-represented neighborhoods. He flashed an M sign and said, “Go Mesa,” an insensitive gesture given the unjust and expensive gang injunction ongoing at the time. Given Rowse’s selectivity, or his allegiances, I would not feel confident of his deliberations in the MesaWestside District 2 neighborhoods. He has a less-thanempathetic trait, something that you should not want for your district or for the city at large. When you select your new district representative, please try to select someone who can represent not only his or her own neighborhood but the entire district and all districts within the city.
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For the Record
¶ Our October 8 In Memoriam for Sojourner Café neglected to say that Edie Robertson, who was a partner in the restaurant, left it in 2008. ¶ In last week’s Best Of issue, we should have stated that Lynn Morrison owns Punch Vintage, which won Best Of for Vintage Store. Also, Evolutions Medical & Day Spa, which won Best Medical Spa, does not do liposuction or breast surgery. And the correct phone number for acupuncturist Anthony Kar, winner of last week’s Best Acupuncturist category, is 563-9977. With our deepest apologies, we add that his mother, Lonnie Wu, is alive, contrary to our statement that she was not. The Independent welcomes letters of less than 250 words that include a daytime phone number for verification. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Send to: Letters, The Independent, 122 W. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101; or fax: 965-5518; or email: letters@independent.com. Unabridged versions and more letters appear at independent.com/opinions. independent.com
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Shakespeare Set to Music O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?
November 14, 2015 8pm I November 15, 2015 3pm I The Granada Theatre Nir Kabaretti, Conductor Walton: As You Like It Suite Prokofiev: Suite from Romeo and Juliet Mendelssohn: Suite from Midsummer Night’s Dream Featuring actors from the acclaimed Ensemble Theatre Company
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County of Santa Barbara Planning Commission NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Short-term Rental Ordinance Briefing Wednesday, November 4, 2015 County Planning Commission Hearing Room 123 E. Anapamu St. 1st Floor Santa Barbara, CA 93101 The Board of Supervisors has directed the Long Range Planning Division of the Planning & Development Department to review and clarify provisions concerning the use of Short-Term Rentals (STRs) within the unincorporated areas of Santa Barbara County. On November 4, 2015, the County Planning Commission will conduct a hearing and receive public testimony. Planning & Development is seeking County Planning Commission direction to develop specific zoning ordinance amendments to the County Land Use and Development Code, Montecito Land Use and Development Code, and Coastal Zoning Ordinance for the use or prohibition of STRs within the unincorporated County. Based on Planning Commission direction, Planning and Development will prepare daft ordinance language for Planning Commission’s consideration at a future hearing date. Please see the posted agenda and staff report available on the Wednesday prior to the meeting at http://sbcountyplanning.org/boards/pc/cpc.cfm This agenda item will start no sooner than 1:00 P.M. Written comments can be sent to: Santa Barbara County Planning Commission, 123 East Anapamu Street, Santa Barbara, CA, 93101, or you may provide verbal comments in person at the Planning Commission hearings. For additional information, please contact the Planning and Development Department: Email: jmetzger@countyofsb.org | Tel: 805-568-3532 Attendance and participation by the public is invited and encouraged. In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need special assistance to participate in this meeting, please contact the Hearing Support Staff (805) 568-2000. Notification at least 48 hours prior to the meeting will enable the Hearing Support Staff to make reasonable arrangements.
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Diablo Danger Underestimated? New Seismic Mapping Shows Interconnected Fault Lines
N
by Harvey SHerback
ew studies, using state-of-the-art seismic mapping technology,
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show that fault lines threatening the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant are more complex and interconnected than Diablo’s designers could have known. This complexity negates the seismic predictions used to justify the plant’s location. Unfortunately, we now know that the network of earthquake faults nearby and underneath PG&E’s nuclear facility could be activated by a mega-thrust earthquake far to the north, at the Cascadia Subduction Zone. Subduction-zone earthquakes are the most powerful quakes in the world and can exceed magnitude 9.0. The Cascadia, which begins near Vancouver Island, is a 620-mile-long fault line that intersects the San Andreas Fault just off Cape Mendocino in Northern California. This region of powerful and unpredictable earthquakes connects directly to the Diablo Canyon site. After evaluating the U.S. nuclear power facilities in the wake of the Fukushima disaster, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has recently ranked the aging Diablo Canyon nuclear plant as uniquely vulnerable to unanticipated seismic activity, a “Group One … hazard.” In the early ’60s, Pacific Gas & Electric first chose Bodega Bay as the site for its proposed nuclear plant. The company began excavating the foundation, but then a fault line was discovered on-site, and that nixed the plan for Bodega Bay. PG&E then proposed a spot fairly close to where the Diablo Canyon plant sits today. This second location also got crossed off the list because of faults. When, finally, construction of the Diablo Canyon nuclear facility began near Avila Beach, PG&E maintained that there were no active faults within 30 miles of the facility. The plant was originally designed to withstand a magnitude 6.75 earthquake but was later upgraded to weather a magnitude 7.5 shaker. Unknown at the time, the plants’ two reactors were situated near undiscovered faults. For more than 30 years, seismologists have argued that the utility companies have underestimated the seismic threat to their nuclear facilities, especially Diablo Canyon’s redesigned structural supports. In 2011, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) ranked Diablo Canyon as the nation’s nuclear plant most vulnerable to earthquakes. In 2012, Michael Peck, who for five years was lead NRC inspector at Diablo Canyon, argued that the plant was no longer operating within its license and that it should be shut down until PG&E demonstrated that the reactors and other equipment could survive earthquakes on the newly discovered faults. In a letter sent to PG&E on May 13, 2015, the NRC revealed that Diablo Canyon is classified as one of the nation’s two “Group One” nuclear facilities “that have the highest re-evaluated hazard relative to the original plant seismic design.” Recognized only recently, the Diablo Cove Fault Line runs east to west directly under the Unit One Reactor and turbine building! The fault underneath the facility is connected to the entire network of faults. About a quarter mile west of the facility, the Diablo Cove Fault cuts across the seismically active Shoreline Fault, itself only recently discovered. The Shoreline is connected to the feared Hosgri Fault, a component of the San Andreas Fault System. Because this location is so tectonically active, and the system of faults is so complex, no one can predict safety with confidence. The Diablo Cove Fault, the Shoreline Fault, the Hosgri Fault, the San Andreas Fault, and the Cascadia Subduction Zone are all seismically linked, and the power stored within the combined network of fault systems could create n an earthquake sufficient to exceed Diablo Canyon’s safeguards.
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Terry Maas
sharks alive T he hammerhead struck from the deep blue, jaws agape,
blindsiding the spearfisherman across his left hip and forearm. For a split second, the blunt force of the impact made him think a jet ski or sailboat had hit him. When he turned to look, the narrow view through his dive mask filled with the hammerhead’s big black right eye. For another fraction of a second, he thought the eye was his own, as water often plays reflective tricks. But when the eyeball’s transparent membrane blinked, he knew exactly what he was facing. “Oh, no!” was his silent scream. Then came a violent swirl of bubbles, teeth, and blood. This shark attack, which occurred on September 20 off the backside of Santa Cruz Island, is just one of several recent close encounters between humans and arguably the world’s most-feared predator. In the past six weeks alone, with the magnetic weather and exceptionally warm water, great white sharks have buzzed stand-up paddlers in Goleta Bay and flipped a kayak fisherman at Horseshoe Reef, off Summerland. Another kayaker, near Gaviota, repeatedly thwacked an aggressive hammerhead with an oar as the shark kept circling. This spearfisherman’s run-in, however, is the closest we’ve come to a fatality since October 23, 2012, when 39-year-old Francisco Javier Solorio Jr. was pronounced dead on the sand after getting bitten by a 15-foot great white while surfing at Lompoc’s notoriously shark-y Surf Beach. Earlier this month, the spearfisherman, Matt (his last name has been withheld to respect his privacy), did agree, reluctantly at first, to tell his story to a few dozen, mostly younger spearfishermen gathered over slices and pitchers at a downtown pizza parlor. Matt’s initial hesitation dissolved when he realized his talk could save lives. He also wanted to throw a wrench of truth into the churning rumor mill. Within a few hours of the attack, wild stories had already begun to spread. In Carpinteria, a group of fishermen declared Matt had it coming after they heard that he had deliberately stalked and speared the hammerhead. Meanwhile, in Hawai‘i, his friends had gotten word that the shark wasn’t a hammerhead, but a great white, one of the ocean’s largest known species of man-eaters. Back home others speculated about the speed and comfort of his water rescue and helicopter medivac back to the mainland, when in fact he’d returned to Santa Barbara Harbor on the boat in which he had been fishing.
The True sT sTory ory oF oa
haaMM MMerhead erhead aTT aTTack ack oFFFF san anTTTaa cruz ruz island by keiTh haMM
Free Fishing
Matt has been spearfishing and foraging coastally since the mid1970s, growing up along the prolific waters of Monterey Bay. In 1981, he enrolled at UCSB, where he was a Division 1 swimmer, and started beach and boat diving along the coast and out at the islands. Now 51, he’s become a highly respected badass in spearfishing communities at home and abroad, diving about 50 days a year, mainly going after lobster, white sea bass, yellowtail, and tuna and other open-ocean species. His peers call him pru prudent and bright, a quiet leader and mentor. Like any self-respecting spearfisherman, Matt never dives with a tank of supplemental air (exhaled bubbles spook fish, anyway). He holds his breath—or free dives—propelling through open water and kelp forests with elongated swim fins and wielding the underwater equivalent of a crossbow and its razor-sharp spear tip. Breath-hold spearfishing is a primitive form of hunting which puts a terrestrial species into otherworldly oceanic territories fundamentally adverse to a relatively hairless, blubber-less air breather. There’s something to be said about a form of hunting that forces a good diver to adapt to a foreign world and discriminate by species and size before firing a single shot. The stealth, patience, and accuracy of it all take a lot of practice, but eventually some big fish will get the point.
MeeTing The haMMerhead ha
About 10 minutes before the hammerhead changed Matt’s life forever, he’d dove on a school of yellowtail, abundant this year off Southern California, thanks to El You-Know-Who. Leveling off 20 feet beneath the surface, he drew on a nice 12-pounder about 15 feet away and released the stainless-steel arrow, known as the shaft. The pierced yellow died instantly—Matt had “stoned it”— it” and he pulled hand over hand on the shooting line, which attaches the shaft to the gunstock, to haul in his first fish of the day.
conTinued h
s t o r y CourTesy Terry Maas
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HUNT/CATCH: (first page) A hunter of shadows, himself a shade, a free diver scans the kelp for his next meal. Above, Ventura’s Terry Maas holds his 398-pound, world-record Pacific bluefin tuna, set during 1982’s El Niño.
He then made a decision he would soon regret. The boat, which belonged to a friend who was also hunting nearby, was anchored about 150 yards away, up current. So instead of swimming the bloody yellow back to the ice chest, Matt strung it to his weight belt with a short length of cable called a stringer. At that point, Matt was buzzing in the advanced stages of adrenaline and perceived immortality that comes with successful apex predation: He’s alone in the vast Pacific with a homemade speargun, and he’s just held his breath, immersed himself on the fringes of a bountiful kelp forest to stalk and dispatch his next meal with bull’s-eye precision. Fulfilling that genetic imperative put a smile on his face, and with the dead yellow dangling off his right hip, he reloaded. A few minutes later, another big school of yellows arrived. Same drill, and he’d speared a second fish. But this one was still alive, swimming frantic circles tight against the shooting line as Matt ascended to catch his breath. Then it happened.
shark repellanTs
Replaying the attack over and over again in the coming days on his couch at home — pushing through the post-traumatic stress — Matt was baffled why the hammerhead had not gone for the dead fish on his stringer. It charged in from the opposite direction and “tried to take me out,” he said. During the first moments of the attack, Matt instinctually flipped through every trick in his mental book of shark repellants. Poke it in the eyes. Punch it in the gills. Ram it with the butt of his speargun. Matt had firsthand experience with these normally successful techniques from when he’d been attacked a few years ago on a trip to the tropics. In one instance, he was swarmed by a half-dozen Galapagos sharks—but never bitten. Fortunately, the hammerhead got a bigger mouthful of Matt’s wetsuit than of his flesh — he would only need a handful of stitches — but his instantaneous demotion from King Neptune’s court to someplace lower on the food chain shook him to his core — as did the crimson cloud growing around him. Like most spearfishermen, he’s used to blood in the water. But this time, it was his.
CourTesy
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Untamed Antarctica
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Mike Libecki, Climber
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SUN, OCT 25 / 3 PM UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $25 / $15 UCSB students and youth (18 & under) Join this climbing veteran for a hair-raising account of his ascent up Bertha’s Tower, a 2,000-foot spire in Antarctica’s Wohlthat Range, battling furious wind and snow. Photos: Cory Richards (Crossing ice, Climber), Keith Ladzinski (Mike Libecki portrait)
The High Frontier: Exploring the Forest Canopy Mark Moffett,
Ecologist and Photographer SUN, NOV 22 / 3 PM UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $25 / $15 UCSB students and youth (18 & under) On a mission to make people fall in love with the unexpected, this affable Ph.D., aka “Dr. Bugs,” will share photos of nature’s small wonders from the crowns of the world’s tallest trees. Books will be available for purchase and signing GETTING TROPICAL OUT THERE: At top, Brian Cabot is pictured with a bluefin tuna. Below, a fisherman holds a rare louvar at Rincon Cove earlier this summer, as Southern California ocean temps breached 70 degrees. Fishermen and divers have also been spotting sea turtles (next page), yellowfin tuna, yellowtail, and, in one confirmed case, a sea horse.
Jagged teeth snapping just inches from Matt’s upper body and face, the hammerhead kept lunging and lunging. During the struggle, Matt’s dive mask came loose and filled with water. Meanwhile, the freshly speared yellowtail below—still connected to the gun by 23 feet of shooting line — was slowly looping Matt’s legs in a loose hogtie. Now on his back, partially submerged, with the shark on top of him, its back arched and its broad tail slapping against the surface of the water, Matt didn’t dare drop his guard to reach for the knife strapped to his leg. “I felt like I was being sucked in by the energy of the shark, that the whole ocean was against me,” he remembered. “Why am I so far from the boat? Why am I diving alone? Why did I put this dead yellowtail on my stringer? Why won’t this shark stop?”
giFTs FroM el niño
That last question is a good one, answered in part by all the warm water we’re experiencing, according to Dr. Chris Lowe, director of the Shark Lab at California State University, Long Beach.“Historical records show that smooth hammerheads [common from northern Baja to Cabo San Lucas] come up here during warm-water events like the one we’re having now. But there’s less food for them up here. They’re great scroungers; they steal fish from fishermen all the time. And in almost every case where a fisherman or diver says that a smooth hammerhead was being aggressive, there was dead fish or blood in the water. But if you were just out swimming or snorkeling, it would be very rare for them to approach you.” conTinued
h
photos: Mark Moffett (Mantids); Melissa Wells (Mark Moffett portrait)
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s t o r y
The recent uptick in shark encounters should come as no surprise, Lowe added. “Shark populations are going up, we think,” in no small part to fisheries management. A boon for sharks was 1990’s Proposition 132, an initiated constitutional amendment banning near-shore gill nets, which had been inadvertently killing all sorts of sharks. Since 1994, great whites have been protected in California, and since last year, scalloped hammerheads have been protected under the Endangered Species Act. On top of that, during the past few decades, much more of Southern California’s offshore waters have been designated as marine protected areas off-limits to fishermen. And starting in 2012, our neighbors to the south shortened their historic 24-7, 365 shark-fishing season with an annual moratorium on commercial take between May 1 and July 31, when many species reproduce, according to Dr. Oscar Sosa-Nishizaki with the Center for Scientific Research and Higher Education, in Ensenada, Mexico.
The WorsT is yeT To coMe
CourTesy of Terry Maas
JaMes forTe, turnerforte.com
c o v e r
SAVED FROM THE DEPTHS: Pictured is a simulation of Terry Maas’s Freedivers Recovery Vest, which automatically inflates if a diver goes too deep or too long.
The hammerhead kept coming at Matt, now floating on his back, dive mask down around his neck. Just as he was running out of retaliatory options, Matt felt a bump against his right side. It was the speared yellowtail. As the hammerhead’s teeth snapped toward his face, Matt grabbed the wounded fish and shoved it in the shark’s gaping mouth. And just like that, the hammerhead turned away. A wave of relief flooded Matt’s pounding heart. “I’m not going to die.” Then things got really dangerous. As the hammerhead dove with the speared yellow in its jaws, the shooting line — still pierced through the fish — tightened it’s hogtie around Matt’s legs. Realizing what was about to happen, on the verge of panic, he took a deep breath just a split second before getting dragged under. Oddly, any signs of panic faded away in the absurdity of the situation. The skies were blue and the ocean calm, the early-afternoon light refracted gold through warm, clear, familiar water. Ten feet down, his chest tightening with the first signs of oxygen deprivation, Matt decided: “There’s no way I’m going out like this.” With both hands now relieved of shark-defense duty, Matt’s impulse was to fetch his dive knife to cut free the line tightening around both legs. But he quickly realized he had made another potentially deadly mistake: The shooting line was not his normal rigging of standard fishing-pole monofilament but rather the braided steel cable more common to his adventures in Mexico. His knife wasn’t gonna cut it. At this point, he’d been holding his breath for nearly 25 seconds, which, considering the situation, was a very long time. Matt tried kicking toward the surface, but his legs were bound together. He switched to a dolphin kick, both legs in unison, perfected long ago during Division 1 butterfly workouts. As Matt ascended slightly, the shark’s head jerked sideways as the shooting line deep down its throat, still attached to the yellowtail, tightened. The shark fought against it, the back-andforth jerking of its head creating brief moments of slack where Matt was able to unloop wraps of shooting line from around his legs. He tried for another, but he was now desperately out of breath. Then, in a last push to survive, Matt spun his entire body, unwrapping himself just as the darkness of unconsciousness started to creep in from the edges of his vision. At last, he burst onto the surface, sucking sweet air. Calming down, Matt grabbed his first fish off the stringer and held it by the gills, ready to shove it down another shark throat should the opportunity present itself. Then he swam as fast as he could toward the boat, screaming for his friend and any other divers that happened to be nearby to get the hell out of the water. It later occurred to Matt that this would have been a good time to blow on a whistle strapped to his wrist. Except he didn’t have it with him. Perhaps it was time for free divers — especially buddy groups — to start wearing them. 28
THE INDEPENDENT
october 22, 2015
independent.com
On the lifesaving front, veteran spearfisherman and Ventura resident Terry Maas, 71, has finally, after about 12 years in the works, created what he considers to be the latest and best version of a computer-controlled buoyancy vest that automatically inflates when a free diver has been underwater deeper or longer than his or her preset parameters. Sharks, Maas points out, are the least of a free diver’s worries. The sport’s biggest killer is drowning caused by blacking out when divers stay down too long. Often, the lights go out instantly. In the struggle with a freshly speared fish or in the scramble for lobsters, a diver’s body, which until then has been in the Zen state of the patient hunter, begins to rapidly burn up oxygen. “Just focusing on a goal so intently, TABLES TURNED: Above, the 10-foot hammerhead is our normal body functions are photographed just before release. Below, spearfisherman Matt has a newly ventilated wetsuit. ignored,” Maas said. Maas, who’s held the spearfishing world record for Pacific bluefin tuna, at 398 pounds, since 1982, lists drowning by line entanglement as the sport’s second-biggest killer.“A 30-pound fish can drag you under very easily,” he said. Boat strikes are the third culprit. Fatality by shark comes in a very distance fourth. Encounters are rare, and very seldom result in anything more than an accelerated heart rate. In the 56 years that Maas has been diving, he’s interacted with tiger sharks but never even seen a great white, though his best friend was killed by one in 1971 near Guadalupe Island, 150 miles off the west coast of the Baja peninsula. “That tragedy actually made me a better diver because I was always looking around for predators after that,” Maas said.“I would say that Matt has a couple of really good years ahead of him, looking over this shoulder.“
CourTesy phoTos
Finding saFeTy neTs
WE COULDN’T HAVE DONE IT WITHOUT YOU, OUR LOYAL AND GENEROUS SPONSORS!
The 5th Annual A SALUTE TO TEACHERS
GOLF TOURNAMENT & COCKTAIL PARTY benefiting The Teacher’s Fund With more than $90,000 raised at this year’s event!
hoMe FroM The sea
After a frantic sprint, Matt reached the safety of the boat. Small streams of blood pumped from his left hip through the jagged holes in his wetsuit. He yelled to his buddy to get out of the water. They motored to a nearby boat, frantically waving to a pair of free divers drifting nearby — a man and his 14-year-old son, who had just speared his first yellowtail. With all divers out of the water and shock still numbing Matt’s mind to the psychic repercussions of the attack, he pointed the boat back toward the scene, hoping to retrieve his speargun. He had abandoned it during his fight with the shark, but he didn’t think it would be too hard to spot. He had rigged the butt of the gunstock with a long length of buoyant rope, to which he had fastened a small red buoy. On the outside edge of the kelp forest, they spotted the buoy. Matt started hauling in the float line, effortlessly at first. Then he felt some weight on it. He looked down into the clear water. There was the hammerhead, alive, with the shooting line deep in its gullet, the swallowed yellowtail still strung by the cable and the attached spear shaft hanging out the other side of its mouth. Matt got a good look at the now-listless hammerhead that had nearly killed him. It was about 10 feet long, bigger than your typical 8-footer but well short of the big guys — 14-footers —reported on occasion. Carefully hoisting the hammerhead along the gunnel, Matt couldn’t help imagining how its jaws or even its entire head would look mounted on a wall at home. For a moment he stared into its big black eye, previously full of bloodthirsty aggression but now sedate and empty. “Then a thought came to me,” Matt remembered. “He had me. Now I have him. Let’s call it even.” He asked his buddy to hand him the cable cutters. Matt snipped the shooting line and quickly retrieved both ends of the cable and the spear shaft. The hammerhead was free. It turned away from the boat and swam slowly into the deep blue.
The Teacher’s Fund has awarded over $1.3 million dollars to assist our local public and private school teachers in Santa Barbara County with classroom materials and supplies they need to enrich their learning environment. We would like to thank the following sponsors for their generous support.
For more information on how you can donate to The Teacher’s Fund, visit teachersfund.org
h
independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
29
October 23, 24 & 25
Dance Party Climbing Wall
Spooky Stories
"Frozen” Land
Mad Scientist Lab
Candy
Scare Zone
Costume Parade Monster Crawl
TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT SBZOO.ORG!
Rain or shine. For kids 2-12 (must be accompanied by adult).
(805) 962-5339 • Just off Cabrillo Blvd. at East Beach • sbzoo.org
Are you ready? STORM SEASON IS COMING Storms can bring flooding to coastal areas as the storm system moves over land. Know the risks in your community and get insured. • • • • • • •
Keep roof gutters clean and clear. Keep yards and driveways clear of debris. Have trees pruned or removed if they are in danger to you or your neighbor’s property. Make repairs to walls, roof, and drainage systems before the rain arrives. Have heater and fireplaces cleaned and checked for safety before winter season. Stay off the roads during strong storms. Consider buying flood insurance.
For information, visit Santa Barbara County’s storm preparation website at countyofsb.org/stormprep 30
THE INDEPENDENT
ocTobEr 22, 2015
independent.com
Independent Calendar by Terry Ortega and Ginny Chung
/sbindependent
the
week
@SBIndpndnt
october
22–28
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.
10/22: 5th Annual Wine, Jewelry, Chocolate Enjoy drinks, wine tasting, chocolate treats, and confections, and shop for fabulous jewelry from 25 unique designers, all in support of CALM, dedicated to preventing and treating child abuse. 2-6pm. Montecito Country Club, 920 Summit Rd., Montecito. $15. Call 965-2376 or visit calm4kids.org. 10/22: MOMIX: Alchemia A company of dance illusionists, MOMIX is making its premiere in S.B. with this dazzling multimedia spectacle. Watch as they process the four classic elements — earth, air, fire, and water — and create a theatrical, whimsical, intriguing experience. 8pm. Granada Theatre, 1214 State St. $20-$68. Call 893-3535 or visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu. 10/22: Diego’s Umbrella The Cabin by the Sea Series presents this gypsy rock band from San Francisco who will bring an effortless blend of marching drums, shredding choruses, youth, fire, flamenco, and punk rock. 8:30pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10.
22
10/23-10/24: Home S.B. native Dana Lawton returns to her home with her contemporary dance company to explore the imagery, emotions, and ideas that encompass the concept of home through live music, visual images, and an intergenerational dance. Fri.: 8pm; Sat.: 4 and 8pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo Nuevo. $25. Call 963-0408 or visit centerstagetheater.org. Ages 18+. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb.com.
10/22: Art Reception: Spanish Colonial Style This is the first retrospective exhibition in 90 years that celebrates the monograph on the work of two architects, James Osborne Craig and Mary McLaughlin Craig. Experience the exhibit, and get your copy of the book Spanish Colonial Style: Santa Barbara and the Architecture of James Osborne Craig and Mary McLaughlin
23-24
M. Kertesz
Thursday 10/22
Craig signed by the authors. The exhibit is ongoing. 5:30pm. S.B. Historical Museum, 136 E. De la Guerra St. Free. Call 966-1601 or visit santabarbaramuseum.com. 10/22: New Diagnostic and Treatment Strategies in Breast Cancer Dr. Fred Kass, from the Cancer Center of S.B. with Sansum Clinic, will talk about new molecular tests and biologic strategies to improve the effect of therapy. Spanish translation will be available. 5:30-7:30pm. First Presbyterian Church, 21 E. Constance Ave. Free. Call 569-9693 or visit bcrcsb.org. 10/22-10/25: Will Rogers’ America Look into the unique life of famous Hollywood star Will Rogers from the perspective of Richard Hoag’s humorous and politically relevant one-man show. A BBQ buffet dinner will be served prior to the show. Dinner: 6:30pm; show: 7:30pm. Goodland Supper Club at The Timbers, 10 Winchester Canyon Rd., Goleta. $45-$49. Call 705-9598 or visit prism productions.org. Read more on p. 57. 10/22: Quiet Life, Cotton Jones Portland band Quiet Life will offer up its rambunctious Americana sounds while Cot-
10/22: Jade Hendrix, Jacob Scesney Come listen to soulful singer/songwriter and Ojairaised Jade Hendrix (pictured) as she joins saxophone player Jacob Scesney in a night of jazz. 5-7pm. Paseo Nuevo, State St. and De la Guerra St. Free. Visit paseonuevoshopping.com/events.
Dana Lawton
ton Jones, from Cumberland, Maryland, will perform indie folk mixed with dream and baroque pop and topped with ethereal vocals. 8pm. Velvet Jones, 423 State St. $10. Ages 21+. Call 965-8676 or visit velvet-jones.com.
Friday 10/23 10/23: Hort & Hops Series This weekly series will provide lectures on plant communities, beneficial and harmful insects, design, and more while you enjoy a happy hour hosted by a featured local brewery. This first class will be Gardening the Plant Community Way. 5-6:30pm. S.B. Botanic Garden, 1212 Mission Canyon Rd. $20-$40. Ages 21+. Call 682-4726 or visit sbbg.org. 10/23: An Evening of AfroCuban Soukous Music Ricardo Lemvo and Makina Loca will blend Afro-Cuban rhythms and Pan-African styles that celebrate life and will inspire the audience to dance. 8-10pm. MultiCultural
Ctr. Theater, UCSB. $5-$15. Call 893-8411 or visit mcc.sa.ucsb.edu. 10/23: Paul Berkowitz A graduate of McGill University and a professor at Guildhall School of Music in London and UCSB, Paul Berkowitz is a distinct and unique pianist who will be sharing Beethoven’s rarely performed 33 Variations on a Waltz by Anton Diabelli, Beethoven’s last major work for piano. 7:30-8:30pm. Lotte Lehmann Concert Hall, UCSB. Free-$10. Call 893-2064 or visit music.ucsb.edu. 10/23: Cut Snake, Evol Morg Australian mates since childhood, deejay duo Cut Snake (Sedz and Fish to their friends) fine-tuned their music to create an atmospheric and deepleaning sound. Getting the stage warmed up will be brothers Robby and Casey Earle of Evol Morg, with their booty tech funk, blended with rolling 808s, with hints of tech house drums. 10pm. Eos Lounge, 500 Anacapa St. $5. Ages 21+. Visit cutsnake.nightout .com.
>>> independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
31
Reclaim the real you. Limited Time Free Offer with your purchase of CoolSculpting: Receive a Series of Acoustic Wave Treatments, $1,000 Value! 10% to 40% Better Results Than With CoolSculpting Alone!
Rejuvalase MediSpa, Sculpting our Beautiful Betties and Dapper Dans!
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oct.
22-28
24
10/24: S.B. Open Streets More than two miles of Cabrillo Boulevard will be transformed into the longest public park with activity zones that will include yoga classes, a 5k, health fairs, and more. At 3 p.m., watch hundreds of zombies rise up to perform Michael Jackson’s iconic “Thriller” dance as part of global phenomenon Thrill the World, which raises funds for area charities. Go to the website to find out about learning the dance in advance and becoming a funky zombie yourself. 10am-4pm. Cabrillo Blvd. Free. Call 216-1223 or visit sbopenstreets.org.
saTurday 10/24
Before
10/24: Kirtan Chant Benefit Concert Participate in kirtan, which is a devotional tradition that involves call-and-response chanting accompanied with music. Also, dance to music by band Heart of Gold, all to benefit Amala Foundation’s upcoming Kenya Global Youth Peace Summit, uniting youths from around the world to experience growth, cultural exchange, and more. 7pm. Ayni Gallery, 216 State St. $20. Call 705-3027.
After
Before
After
Actual Patients of Dr. Keller
Join us Thurs. Oct. 22 • 12 -2pm for a CoolSculpting Event! TODAY
Receive Special Package Pricing Private Consultations Available
Please RSVP 805.687.6408
Rejuvalase Medi Spa Gregory S. Keller, M.D., FACS Rejuvalase Medi Spa 221 W. Pueblo St. Suite A Santa Barbara www.gregorykeller.com • www.rejuvalasemedispa.com 32
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ocTobEr 22, 2015
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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.
10/24: Sufjan Stevens From the banjo and guitar to the xylophone, there is nothing this indie singer and multiinstrumentalist can’t play. After achieving much fame from album Illinois, he’s released Songs for Christmas, The Age of Adz, and this year’s Carrie & Lowell. 8pm. Arlington Theatre, 1317 State St. $46.50. Call 963-4408 or visit thearlingtontheatre.com. 10/24: Inspire Dance Arts’ Imagination Celebration Join in for a fun day of art, dance performances, raffle prizes, a bake sale, dance classes for children ages 18 months to 12 years, and more. Dance attire is recommended for those wanting to take the free mini ballet and tap classes.
RSVP is required. 1:30-3:30pm. Inspire Dance Arts, 5679 Hollister Ave., Goleta. Free. Call 770-5295 or visit tinyurl.com/imagination celebration. 10/24: Poor Man’s Whiskey This band, which has released six studio albums, brings a fusion of bluegrass, Southern rock, and old-school jams and will include a set of NorCal hoedowns and an extended set covering Paul Simon’s classic album Graceland. Get ready to stomp your feet! 9pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $13-$17. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb.com. 10/24: S.B. Eco-Village Gathering #3 This gathering will include qi gong class, a meditation circle, drum circle, and a potluck dinner. Bring a towel to sit on, healthy food to share, and instruments to play while creating awareness and building a network of eco-consciousness. 4-9pm. Leadbetter Beach, Shoreline Dr. Suggested donation: $10-$20. Visit tinyurl.com/eco village3. 10/24: Goleta Sanitary District Fall Festival Open House When you flush toilets or drain sinks, the waste doesn’t disappear. Come learn about the 128 miles of underground pipes that
collect wastewater. There will also be games, prizes, and free hotdogs and hay rides. 10am3pm. 1 William Moffett Pl., Goleta. Free. Call 967-4519 or visit goletasanitary.org. 10/24: Brew Up & Hoedown Take this chance to go country in S.B., with brews, BBQ, and good ol’ country fun. There will be live music, a mechanical bull, games, whiskey tastings, keepsake mini mason jars, and more, all to raise money for the Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation. 1-4pm. S.B. Carriage Museum, 129 Castillo St. $25. Ages 21+. Visit tinyurl .com/brewupandhoedown. 10/24: 2015 Dream Luncheon The UCSB Alumni Association will honor NASA astronaut and scientist José Hernández (’86) with the Distinguished Alumni Award. As keynote speaker, Hernández will share his story about going from growing up in a migrant family and learning English at 12 years old to sending the first bilingual Twitter post from space. Proceeds go to the Dream Scholar Fund. Noon-2pm. Corwin Pavilion, UCSB. $10-$25. Call 893-2288 or visit thedream luncheon2015.eventbrite.com.
Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.
the
week
10/25: Ojai Raptor Ctr. Fall Open House The Ojai Raptor Center rehabilitates and releases birds of prey and other wildlife and provides educational programs. Be a part of this rare opportunity where community members can meet non-releasable ambassador raptors and tour the center. Enjoy a full afternoon of hawks, falcons, and owls along with stage presentations. Noon-4pm. Ojai Raptor Ctr., 370 Baldwin Rd., Ojai. $5. Call 6496884 or visit ojairaptorcenter.org. 10/25: A Celebration of Joni Mitchell featuring Kimberly Ford, Jason Spooner Come listen to singer Kimberly Ford together with musicians who share a passion for Joni’s Mitchell’s music as they perform songs from every decade of her career.
Roots-rock, folk, Americana and New England–based songwriter Jason Spooner will open the show. 7:30pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $15. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb.com. 10/25: Jasz ’n Jive Bassh Travel back in time to the 1920s! There will be gourmet jambalaya, beer, wine, and dancing. The Ulysses Jasz Band will play all afternoon long except during band breaks, when there will be dance lessons. So put on your glad rags (costumes are encouraged), and get yourself to the scene! 3-6pm. S.B. Dance Ctr., 127 W. Canon Perdido St. $20-$30. Visit tinyurl.com/ jaszjivebash.
THURSDAY
NOV
RALPHIE MAY
5
THURSDAY
10/25: Climate, Atmosphere, and Life: A Long View on the Implications of Climate Change Professor Bruce Tiffney of the Department of Earth Science at UCSB will discuss how the earth’s plate movements over time have influenced the climate and atmospheric composition and how this is affecting our evolving life. 2-3pm. Goleta Library, 500 N. Fairview Ave., Goleta. Free. Call 964-7878 or visit sbplibrary.org.
SALT N PEPA WITH SPECIAL GUEST SPINDERELLA
NOV
19
FRIDAY
NOV
SHARON CUNETA
20
10/25: Live Roller Derby Support Santa Barbara’s Mission City Vicious Veronicas as they go against Santa Maria Cal Skate Roller Derby. There will be beer from Ninkasi, good eats from Georgia’s Smokehouse, and new merch. 5pm. Ben Page Youth Ctr., 4540 Hollister Ave. Free-$8. Visit tinyurl.com/ liverollerderby.
THURSDAY
GLORIANA DAN + SHAY
A TOYS FOR TOTS BENEFIT
DEC
3
THURSDAY sean lieberMan
paul wellMan file photo
sunday 10/25
DEC
EASTON CORBIN
10
CLUB CHUM ASH
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800.248.6274
MUST BE 18 OR OLDER. CHUMASH CASINO RESORT RESERVES THE RIGHT TO CHANGE OR CANCEL PROMOTIONS AND EVENTS.
independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
33
oct.
22-28
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.
10/25: Home Free The champion of NBC’s The SingOff, this country vocal band from Minnesota will perform a high-energy show, peppered with Nashville humor and pop hits. 8pm. Lobero Theatre, 33 E. Canon Perdido St. General: $35.25; VIP: $152.75. Call 963-0761 or visit lobero.com. 10/25: Cult Babies, Child, Goldy, Soul Hex Vancouverbased psychedelic garage-rock band Cult Babies, L.A.-based heavy psych-influenced rock band Child, S.B.-based sunny and upbeat rock group Goldy, and light pop-rock friends Soul Hex will provide a night of eclectic music. 8pm. Funzone, 226 S. Milpas St. $5. Visit sbdiy .org. 10/25: Simrit Simrit’s voice has been described as haunting, hypnotic, healing, and majestic. In support of her new album, From the Ancient Storm, this show will bring her chants and evocative voice to evoke the innate power within you. 7:30pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo Nuevo. $28. Call 963-0408 or visit centerstage theater.org.
10/26: The Clothesline Project They say one in four women and one in six men will experience sexual violence in their lifetime. Decorate T-shirts with personal experiences or messages in support of the survivors of sexual violence. This display of shirts will raise awareness and empower survivors. 10am. SBCC, 721 Cliff Dr. Free.
Monday 10/26
keith ladzinski
10/26: Nadia Natali Niece of renowned pianist and composer George and Ira Gershwin, Nadia Natali talks about her life journey in Stairway to Paradise: Growing up Gershwin. Listen to her stories as she goes from star-studded parties to her new life in the wilderness filled with adventure. 7pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free. Call 687-6787 or visit chaucersbooks .com.
10/25: Mike Libecki: Untamed Antarctica Mike Libecki led a small team of accomplished climbers in an epic, 10-day climb up Bertha’s Tower, a 2,000-foot granite spire in Antarctica’s remote Wohlthat Range. Join him as he shares a gripping firsthand account of this first ascent at the bottom of the world. 3pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. $15-$25. Call 893-3535 or visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu. Read more on p. 39.
10/26-10/27: New York City Ballet Moves Established by George Balanchine in 1948 and acknowledged for its enduring contributions to dance, the N.Y.C. Ballet will feature a group of 25 performers who will perform a breathtaking program to live accompaniment. 8pm. Granada Theatre, 1214 State St. $21-$153. Call 893-3535 or visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu. Read more on p. 59.
Tuesday 10/27 10/27: Bill Dedman Have lunch with the author of Empty
Mansions, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Bill Dedman, and discuss this book. Empty Mansions is a fairy tale in reverse and a mystery of wealth and loss of heiress Huguette Clark. Guests will get a rare chance to view one of Clark’s own paintings. Lunch: noon; lecture: 5:30pm. S.B. Historical Museum, 136 E. De la Guerra St. $20-$25. Call 966-1601 or visit santabarbara museum.com. 10/27: Cat Cora First female Iron Chef Cat Cora will sign her new memoir, Cooking as Fast as I Can, in which she discusses Southern life, her Greek heritage, same-sex marriage, meals that have shaped her memories, and the difficulties and triumphs that have ultimately helped her find happiness. 7pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free. Call 682-6787 or visit chaucersbooks .com.
Wednesday 10/28 10/28: Mind-Body Healing Skills This new Breast Cancer Survivorship workshop is dedicated to enhance one’s sense of well-being during and
Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events. 34
THE INDEPENDENT
ocTobEr 22, 2015
independent.com
week 28
Julia M. Garcia
the
THU, OCT 29 / 7:30 PM / UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $15 / $10 UCSB students and youth (18 & under)
14 FILMS 10/28: Zombie Rock: The Musical Written and directed by Rick Cipes, this show will be full of an eclectic batch of songs, from moving ballads to hilarious parodies of classics such as “Kung Fu Fighting” and Rihanna’s “FourFiveSeconds.” Let these group of zombies take over, ‘cause according to them, “We will, we will Zombie Rock you!” The show runs through October 31. 8pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo Nuevo. $10. Call 963-0408 or visit centerstagetheater.org. after breast cancer treatment. Learn about meditation, stressreleasing movement, and other mind-body healing techniques. Class recurs every Wednesday until November 18. 5:30-8pm. Breast Cancer Resource Ctr., 55 Hitchcock Wy., Ste. 101. Free. Call 569-9693 to reserve space. 10/28: Katie Fritzke and Brian Mann, The Idiomatiques After meeting through an iPhone recording, Katie and Brian joined together, specializing in jazz, soul, and pop. The special guest will be gypsy jazz and swing band The Idiomatiques. 7:30pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10. Call 962-7776 or visit sohosb.com. 10/28: Cup of Culture: The Hand That Feeds When undocumented immigrant workers were confronted with sub-legal wages, dangerous machineries, and abusive managers, Mahoma López led a group of workers in a fight against these conditions. Then in 2012, it turned into a city block battlefield. The film follows this “captivating David and Goliath story.” There will be a Q&A Skype session with the filmmakers following the screening. 6-8pm. MultiCultural Ctr. Theater, UCSB. Free. Call 893-8411 or visit mcc.sa.ucsb.edu. 10/28: Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings The matriarch of the world’s No. 1 live soul act, Sharon Jones has reunited with the DapKings and will perform songs from the Grammy-nominated
album, Give the People What They Want. Don’t miss this chance to listen to danceable funk grooves, sweet soul hooks, and that voice. 8pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. $15-$42. Call 893-3535 or visit artsand lectures.sa.ucsb.edu.
A six-senses experience of art, adventure, culture and the environment in an eclectic and exciting program of 14 short films, animation and digital media. Subjects include everything from extreme mountain biking and adrenalinepacked feats of athleticism to drainage ditch kayaking!!
An Evening with
Alex Honnold Alone on the Wall
SUN, NOV 22 / 7 PM (note special time) UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $15 / $10 UCSB students and youth (18 & under)
“From time to time we come across someone who can do something so remarkable that it defies belief and, in this case, defies gravity.” 60 Minutes
Farmers market schedule Thursday Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 3-6:30pm Carpinteria: 800 block of Linden Ave., 3-6:30pm
Friday
Honnold pushes the limits of rock climbing beyond anything previously attempted. In Alone on the Wall, he recounts some of his most astonishing career achievements. Illustrated presentation. Books will be available for purchase and signing
(805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu
Montecito: 1100 and 1200 blocks of Coast Village Rd., 8-11:15am
Saturday Downtown S.B.: Corner of Santa Barbara and Cota sts., 8:30am-1pm
Sunday Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 10am-2pm
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
ATTENTION VONS EMPLOYEES: ANTICOUNI & ASSOCIATES, a Santa Barbara Wage and Class Action law firm, recently filed a lawsuit against local Vons stores. The lawsuit alleges Vons store managers changed employee time records to eliminate overtime compensation and reflect that employees took timely lunch breaks. Employees are encouraged to contact Anticouni & Associates at (805) 845-0864 for additional information regarding your rights. independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
35
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Vishad Nabili, MD, FACS
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22-28
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.
fuKiKo MiyazaKi
Announces the Arrival of His New Associate
oct.
Halloween and día de los Muertos evenTs
GreGory S. Keller, MD, FACS
10/23: Spooky Sushi Art Roll festive Halloween-inspired sushi with accomplished chef and proprietor of Studio Nihon, Fukiko Miyazaki. All materials, sushi bites, and Kirin Ichiban beer will be included, and sake will be available for purchase. Reservations are required. 6-8pm. S.B. Public Market, 38 W. Victoria St. $45. Call 770-7702 or visit sbpublicmarket.com.
10/22-10/28: Big Wave Dave’s Pumpkin Patch Check out various-sized pumpkins, bountiful squash, decorative gourds, harvest straw, and more. The pumpkin patch is open through October 31. 10am9pm. La Cumbre Plaza, 3865 State St. Free. Call 218-0282 or visit bigwavedaves christmastrees.com. 10/22-10/28: Lane Farms Pumpkin Patch Come for the hayrides, farm animals, tractors and farm equipment, corn maze, and pumpkins. The corn maze closes an hour prior to closing time. The pumpkin patch is open through October 31. 9am-9pm. Lane Farms, 308 Walnut Ln. Free. Call 964-3773 or visit lanefarmssb.com/pumpkin-patch. 10/23-10/25: Boo at the Zoo Enjoy nights of traffic-free trick-or-treating full of thrills and chills, trails, Boo-Choo-Choo train rides, storytelling, games, and more. Come in costume, and feel free to howl and roar. Fri.: 5:30-8:30pm; Sat.: 4:30-8:30pm; Sun.: 4:307:30pm. S.B. Zoo, 500 Niños Dr. $9-$15. Call 962-5339 or visit sbzoo.org.
1235 Chapala St. $5. Fright level: ages 13+. Call 962-5560 or visit sbpal.org. 10/24: Trick-or-Treat Tote Bag Craft Everyone needs a unique bag to carry all their goodies! Color and design your own trick-or-treat bag that you can use this Halloween. 2-3pm. Goleta Library, 500 N. Fairview Ave., Goleta. Free. Ages 4+. Call 964-7878 or visit sbplibrary.org. 10/24: SBCC: Día de Los Muertos Celebration The SBCC Center for Lifelong Learning will host a day of fun that highlights this colorful 4,000-year-old tradition honoring those who have passed. There will be face painting, flower making, sugarskull decorating, and special presentations. Noon-4pm. SBCC Schott Campus, 310 W. Padre St. Free. Call 687-0812 or visit thecll .org.
10/23: Hope 4 Kids Fall Harvest Costume Carnival Dress up in costume, and enjoy carnival booth activities, bounce houses, face painting, food, smoothies, community resources, and more! 3-5:30pm. Hope 4 Kids Preschool, 560 N. La Cumbre Rd. Free. Call 682-2300 or visit hope4kids preschool.org. 10/23-10/24: Asylum Haunted House Are you brave enough to see your nightmares come to life? Come face-to-face with freaky and unruly characters waiting to take you to another world. Bring your friends and test your limits as you tour this haunted circus. 7-10pm. Twelve35 Teen Ctr.,
221 W. Pueblo St. Suite A Santa Barbara • 805-687-6408 www.gregorykeller.com • www.rejuvalasemedispa.com 36
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Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.
the
10/25: Crane Country Day School’s Country Fair This S.B. tradition will feature a haunted house, cake walk, carnival games, dunk tank, face painting, home-baked sweets, and more. There will also be a safe play area for preschoolers called the Coyote Cub Corner, where kids can enjoy the petting zoo and Wahoo ride-able stuffed pets. 10am-3pm. Crane Country Day School, 1795 San Leandro Ln. Free. Call 969-7732.
10/25: SBMA: Día de los Muertos Celebration The museum will celebrate this day with a variety of family festivities including altar displays, activities, live music, dance performances, an interactive altar installation, and authentic refreshments. All around, you will find works of art inspired by the Día de los Muertos traditions. 1-4pm. S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free. Call 963-4364 or visit sbma.net. 10/28: Drink for the Boo-bies! Costumes are encouraged as you sip at area bars and restaurants during this Halloween crawl that will benefit boobs! A portion of the proceeds will be donated to the Breast Cancer Resource Center of S.B. 6:30pm. Figueroa Mountain Brewing Company, 137 Anacapa St., Ste. F. $20-$30. Ages 21+. Visit boobies.nightout.com.
Find your home in Santa Barbara | realestate.independent.com
10/24: Howl-o-Ween Block Party The S.B. Humane Society, S.B. County Animal Services, and DAWG are hosting a spook-tacular event. This afternoon will include a parade of adoptable dogs in costume, face painting, food trucks, adoption discounts, gift-basket drawing, and more. 11am-3:30pm. S.B. Humane Society, 5399 Overpass Rd. Free. Visit tinyurl.com/ howloweenparty.
courtesy
Halloween and día de los Muertos even venT Ts
week
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HIGH SCHOOL NEXT YEAR?
The Fess Parker ― A Doubletree by Hilton Resort Wednesday, October 28 7:00 to 8:30 PM 633 E. Cabrillo Blvd.
For more information call Julia Davis at 805.969.7732 x127 independent.com
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Bead Elements & D esign Show Oct 30-Nov 1
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Frederic Hepp DDS and Linda Perkins DDS 1805 State Street, Suite C | 805-569-1795 38
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living
Scene in S.B.
p. 39
I.V. YOUTH: The author as a child in Isla Vista, where his interest in UCSB’s growth began.
courtesy
History
Seniors Spin Ceramics for Empty Bowls Text and photo by Caitlin Fitch “I know hunger in America is a terrible problem, even here in Santa Barbara, and this is just a great way to raise money and awareness,” said Betsy Kain (right) while she and other Samarkand retirement community residents glazed bowls that they lovingly crafted during a weekly ceramics class. The bowls will be donated to Empty Bowls Santa Barbara for its 18th annual benefit luncheon, which each year raises thousands of dollars for the Foodbank of Santa Barbara County. The goal of the group at Samarkand was to make at least 20 bowls, which they have already surpassed. The class is not only for a good cause; it’s also fun. “There’s nothing not to like about this,” said Julie Fisher (left), who’s lived there for 15 years. “It’s creative and not too difficult.” This year’s lunch is on Sunday, November 1, at Page Youth Center (4540 Hollister Ave.). See emptybowlssantabarbara.com.
r Mike Libecki Antarctica
Climbs Untamed Lands
4·1·1
.sa.ucsb.edu.
cory richards
I
f there’s a remote rock spire or mountain unseeable on Google Earth and almost completely untouched by humans, chances are Mike Libecki climbed it. The intrepid National Geographic explorer specializes in first ascents, daring to be the first human on the world’s most isolated peaks. This Sunday, he comes to UCSB with Untamed Antarctica, the first in a series of UCSB Arts & Lectures’ National Geographic Live presentations, in which he will describe his experience scaling Bertha’s Tower, a nearly inaccessible rock spire in one of the coldest, windiest, farthest-from-anywhere locales on earth. A consummate adventurer, Libecki has made 65-plus expeditions — with another 23 already on the way— that have taken him from Greenland to Papua way New Guinea. Though passionately, even obsessively, drawn to the thrilling allure of uncharted climbs, he is equally passionate about adventuring with a broader purpose, whether it be bringing solar panels to villages in Kyrgyzstan or conducting DNA research with Adventurers and Scientists for Conservation. Libecki’s main partner in crime is his 12-year-old daughter, Lilliana, who’s already touched seven continents and 15 countries with dad, constantly learning
the value of optimism and faith in oneself. “You have to have belief, courage, perseverance, and you have to be patient,” said the elder Libecki. “All of these words apply to expeditions and everyday life.” Libecki’s presentation will center on the joys and struggles of climbing in an environment as mysterious, unexplored, and harsh as Antarctica, but he says connecting with unknown cultures is just as important as connecting with unknown lands. “What’s more important than getting to know our planet, getting to know our people?” he asked. “There is the wild, but just as important are the cultures and the people of the world that you don’t know. Anything mysterious is real adventure and education.” — Richie DeMaria
Mike Libecki’s Untamed Antactica is Sunday, October 25. Future Nat Geo Live talks at UCSB include presentations on forest canopies, big cats, and Spinosaurs. See artsandlectures
Lanny Ebenstein Pens
‘The Rise of UCSB’
L
anny Ebenstein, Santa Barbara’s long-serving education and economics buff, recently published a sweeping article called “The Rise of UCSB” in Noticias, the journal of the Santa Barbara Historical Museum. With a subdued tone pierced with some punchy language, the alum and now teacher at UCSB walks the reader through the university’s transformation from the late 1950s, when UC Regents purchased a former military base for $10 and moved the expanding Riviera campus nine miles west, to recent efforts in controlling Isla Vista, the place he believes could be a real hindrance to UCSB’s ability to attract increasingly high-caliber students. “When the college was in [the city of] Santa Barbara, it really was a liberal-arts school,” explained Ebenstein. “It has kind of transitioned from the emphasis on the social sciences to an emphasis on the natural sciences.” Among other achievements, he notes its state-of-the-art stem-cell-research lab, the campus’s role in creating the precursor to the Internet, and its amazing collection of Nobel laureates. In quick and breezy language, Ebenstein touches on the campus’s architecturally haphazard development, lamenting a “genuine architectural moment” lost, and argues the “lopsided, rushed, and inorganic growth that characterized the 1960s” continues to plague UCSB to this day. He tells short stories about the accomplishments and personal pitfalls of the university’s chancellors: Samuel Gould (talented leader whose autocratic style made him unpopular among faculty), Vernon Cheadle (credited for his academic vision but handicapped by Isla Vista eruptions), Robert Huttenback (whose arrival seemed promising but who was later convicted of using foundation funds to remodel his home kitchen), and Barbara Uehling (arrested for DUI on campus a week before her inauguration). By the time Chancellor Henry Yang showed up in 1994, which coincided with the college’s 50th anniversary, the campus community yearned for true leadership. Ebenstein paints a flattering image of Yang’s ability to attract exceptional faculty and advance knowledge, the school’s first priority. Ebenstein leaves the readers with a sense of hopefulness about Isla Vista’s future. Last week, he expressed delight that Governor Jerry Brown signed special legislation to enable the notoriously lost and forgotten Isla Vista to morph into a special district. — Kelsey Brugger
4·1·1
Lanny Ebenstein will give a short talk about the piece and his new book, Chicagonomics: The Evolution of Chicago Free Market Economics, at Chaucer’s Books (3321 State St.) on Thursday, October 22, at 7 p.m. Call 682-6787 or visit chaucersbooks.com
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Benefits
living cont’d
Parenting
Finding Camaraderie in
Hops and Pops
M
Sofia Melograno Launches Beru Kids A
fter her first year of college, Santa Barbara resident Sofia Melograno traveled to Africa on a trip that would jump-start her humanitarian journey. “I literally booked a trip, without telling my parents, to Tanzania,” she explained. “I traveled over there for the summer, and I taught English in a little government school. It was a really short trip, but it really sparked my interest in development, particularly in East Africa.” Melograno then spent much of her time at Trinity College engaging the student body in issues of African development and participating in humanitarian work. She helped start the campus’s African Development Coalition and worked on numerous projects, including building a village school in Guinea, a computer lab at a university in Sierra Leone, and a maternity ward in Tanzania for women without access to a hospital. Today, Melograno runs Beru Kids, a children’s clothing line that’s dedicated to increasing educational access for girls in the rural region of Kofele, Ethiopia. Launched in October 2014, the young company sells clothes inspired by traditional African textiles and prints, and only made from dead-stock fabric, which is the unused material left over by larger brands. To further its charitable goals, the company partners with the Tangible Hope Foundation, which is opening a community center in Kofele this fall that will provide necessary services for all residents. The center will also house the Beru Kids/Tangible Hope Women’s Sewing Cooperative, which will employ a number of women from Kofele to help create some Beru Kids products. “I knew from working and living in east and southern Africa that unemployment is incredibly high, especially for women,” said Melograno. The workers, whose daughters are enrolled in the Tangible Hope program, will be paid a salary along with a cut of online sales. The sewing center will make a number of Beru Kids items, but production for the main collection will remain in Los Angeles, where Melograno spends a lot of her time overseeing both quality and working conditions. “I really wanted to make sure we were not just focused on East Africa,” she explained, “but that we were also focused on the communities that are right here in Southern California.” Support this project by shopping at berukids.com. — Gilberto Flores
Surviving
Setsuko Thurlow Remembers
Hiroshima
courtesy
TEXTILE KIDS: A model sports one of Beru Kids’ African-inspired, Los Angeles–made designs.
y wife, Carey, and I had a baby girl eight months ago. Thanks to organizations like PEP (which stands for Postpartum Education for Parents), Carey immediately found a huge group of new mommy friends, and our social life started revolving around play dates. But when we got together, the dads didn’t have much context for developing friendships. Hands were shaken. Business cards were exchanged. Halfhearted promises to grab BEER AND BABES: The Hops and Pops crew at a recent gathering. coffee were made. But that’s about it. One member of Carey’s PEP group tried to start a dads’ That’s what I found in Hops and Pops, which meets group, but it didn’t take off, so Carey, ever the social direc- once a month at a different brewery, where dads bring tor, decided to revive the group by renaming it “Hops and their babies for easy banter over a cold beer (responsibly, Pops.” Within hours, the Facebook page Carey started had of course). Moms are welcome to join or can just enjoy the more than 100 “Likes,” and a real group for bros, brews, and much-needed break. Our next event is on Halloween with babies had begun. a “Daddy & Me” costume contest. Wait ’til you see the getup So who are we? Just a group of guys who get together that the little one and I are wearing. I’ll give you a hint: We’re over beers with our babies. No big deal, right? Wrong. It’s going to the Dagobah system. Why should moms have all amazing how many “mommy and me” type activities exist, the fun? but where’s the “daddy and me” stuff? My wife and I run See facebook.com/groups/hopsandpops or email george@ our own marketing/design firm and share equally in the creativebutter.com. — George Bradshaw parenting duties, so I needed a network of friends who were going through the same sleep-training, teething, diaper- George and Carey Bradshaw run their own marketingand-design agency called Creative Butter. See creative changing craziness that I was. butter.com.
A
t 83, Setsuko Thurlow is still full of passion and principle, but she’s had enough. “We have waited 70 years,” she said of her fellow hibakusha (atomicbomb survivors). “I think the time has come.” Thurlow survived the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima when she watched her city of 350,000 shatter into heaps of bodies and rubble. She’s since traveled the world, speaking about the terrors of nuclear weapons and fighting for disarmament. For her lifetime of efforts, Thurlow will be presented this Sunday with the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s Distinguished Peace Leadership Award. Earlier this year, she was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. She talked with me by phone from her home in Canada about why people aren’t more afraid of the big bombs, why they should be, and why the tide may finally be turning toward abolishment. You’ve said the issue doesn’t get the attention it should. Why do you think that is? Generally, people
feel powerless, helpless. They think, “Even if I oppose it, the government will do what it wants anyway.” And because it is such a dreadful issue, people consciously and unconsciously put it out of their minds. What in your message gets through to people the most? Sharing the massive destruction and death, the
skeletons and blackened corpses, that I witnessed with my own eyes — simply and honestly telling about my experience and thoughts. It never ceases to be painful. I have to brace myself every time. But I feel I need to provide a human face to the abstraction of nuclear weapons.
Setsuko Thurlow
create pressure to take action—write letters to politicians, to the president; stand up and be heard. Of the 16,000 nuclear weapons in the world, more than 90 percent belong to the U.S. and Russia. When Obama made his famous speech in Prague, he acknowledged that America … has a moral responsibility to lead toward disarmament. The world rejoiced at that, but since then, there’s been no action. What makes you most afraid? I’m afraid a majority of people doesn’t realize we’re living in a nuclear age and what that means. First we have to inform ourselves. But there is a new movement around the world; a lot of young people and NGOs are involved. I see positive things on the horizon, and I am excited. — Tyler Hayden
Read more at independent.com.
What can people do to actually make a difference?
First, they need to take their heads out of the sand. Then independent.com
4·1·1
The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 32nd Annual Evening for Peace is at the Coral Casino (1260 Channel Dr.) on Sunday, October 25, at 5:30 p.m. See wagingpeace.org. ocTobEr 22, 2015
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living | Animals courtesy
Simply The Best
of Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Bridal Show and Wedding Fair
Sunday, October 25 • 11am-3pm Santa Barbara Rockwood Women’s Club • Free Valet Parking
Register at simplythebestofsb.com for Discount • 805-965-8249 • Like us on
Presented by
Photos by Baron Spafford
Featuring Top Wedding Professionals and Show Specials!
FOUND ALIVE: After getting hit by a car, Dakota the dog fled to the foothills above Cathedral Oaks. Arlene and Len Ramirez never stopped looking and found their dog more than a month and a half later.
Dakota Comes Home Dog Found After 47 Days Missing
A
by Jean Yamamura
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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
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rlene Ramirez used to walk through the avocado orchards at the end of Poinsettia Way, where her dog was last seen, and call for Dakota through a bullhorn at three o’clock in the morning. She was determined to find the chocolatebrown Labrador retriever, a much-loved pet of her 14-year-old daughter, Marynicole, who was positive their dog was still alive though a month and a half had gone by since she’d bolted after being hit by a car. Dakota had wiggled out the gate of her home on August 27 and was headed across Cathedral Oaks when she was struck by a small SUV, an accident witnessed by the youth football team practicing at Foothill School at the time. Their coach chased after Dakota but lost her up Poinsettia. September and October were terrible months for the Ramirez family, who tried to stay positive but couldn’t avoid thinking about the heat and the coyotes. They plastered the neighborhood with posters, sent out a pet Amber alert, created Instagram and Facebook pages, and even consulted a pet psychic. A notice at the Nextdoor website resulted in several tips, but what Arlene remembers most is the concern people expressed and their assurances that they’d look for Dakota. Then, Arlene recalled, they got a phone call from a man last Monday, who said he might have seen Dakota. Without telling their youngest, Arlene and her husband, Len Ramirez, drove to the Bosio Ranch. While Arlene waited at the gate, Len and a ranch hand drove about four miles up a dirt road. The rancher waved toward the avocado orchard, and Len got out and walked toward the trees, calling for Dakota. He saw her buried under dried leaves, only her eyes and nose showing. She growled at him. Len had been talking with Animal Control officers almost daily over the past weeks, asking if Dakota had been brought in. As the days passed, their conversations turned to why Dakota might not have just headed home, and Lisa Kenyon, a shelter supervisor, told Len that often a dog who’s been injured or traumatized will hide, only coming out at night, scared by the experience of a car accident and possibly distrustful of people. Back in the orchard, Len took off his shirt and threw it to Dakota, hoping she’d recognize him by scent. She did. Dakota slowly stood up, very thin and weak, and came to him wagging her tail. Their 75-pound dog was down to 55 pounds and was missing some fur from her hind legs but had survived her “47 days in the wilderness,” as Arlene calls it. The ordeal took a toll on Dakota. She’s become nervous and shy, and the family is working with a dog trainer. Time and Scooby snacks should do the trick, Arlene said, who added that for her family, the goodwill and help from people, businesses, and Animal Control were both amazing and humbling. “Everyone was a good neighbor, a good Samaritan,” she said. As for the man who sped off in his SUV after hitting Dakota, “We’re not mad,” Ramirez said. “We know it was an n accident. He probably feels horrible.”
living | Starshine
Bring your kids an hour before the Family Fun events for balloons, face event painting, and (Best for ages 5 and up) crafts!
Best Commenters:
W
My Awards Back Atcha
hat’s a writer without readers? That
is to say, if I write a column in the forest and no one is there to post rude comments after it … did I even
make a point? Wired recently predicted the end of online comments sections, as Bloomberg, the Verge, the Daily Beast, and Motherboard have all eliminated the after-article comments features from their sites. I hope The Independent doesn’t follow suit. I often read the comments posted after my columns there to see what kinds of discussions are fueled, and if I’ve missed an important consideration in my thinking. Mostly, though, I find phrases like “giant turds” and “fat chicks” and comments like this one: “This is so stupid I could vomit.” In the past year alone, anonymous commenters have called me a bitch, boob, creep, and “hysterically hateful feminist.” They’ve publicly speculated as to whether I’m trying to hide a weight problem, whether my marriage is falling apart, and what sort of lousy school system could dole out As to a child as dumb as mine must certainly be. Even so, Santa Barbara readers named me Best Columnist last week, and I’m honored to pieces. Thank you! In celebration, I’m doling out some awards of my own — to my Best Commenters over the past year.
The Touché Award for Making a Great Point Actual Name! Kate Johannesen After a column insisting that transgender people can’t claim the pronoun “they” as their own: “To me it feels like disapproving of ‘they’ as a genderneutral singular pronoun replacement is a lot like insisting that nobody end sentences with prepositions or split infinitives. … When it comes to ‘they,’ we’ve been using it this way for years and the younger generations show no signs of stopping, so it’s here to stay. We might as well get used to it. Non-binary people aren’t really your biggest adversary there, anyway.”
Based on the idea that every child has a story to tell, this whimsical theater group uses stories written by elementary school kids as material for outrageous, side-splitting plays. (Approx. 60 min.)
Event Sponsors: Monica & Timothy Babich
Most in Need of a Copy Editor Handle: Sealion “Starshine is a proud gender bigot (feminst) [sic] who ‘rudders’ her husband and his sons in a town full of traitorous male gender bigots … She’s just a silly SB boob whose [sic] been brainwashed into oblivion by her Twisted Sisters...and is too stubborn, head strong, and closed minded to use her head for more that [sic] pretty decoration.”
SUN, NOV 8 / 3 PM / UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $16 / $12 children (12 & under) Media sponsors:
by Starshine Roshell
Best Equipped to Help Sealion with His
[sic]ness Handle: CKArmstrong “This is so poorly written I had to make an account just to make a comment about it. Half of the words in this piece don’t even need to be here. Who the hell is approving this stuff?!” Most Adorable Comment from a FirstTime Reader Handle: dongee “You’re letting your politics show with the snotty Donald Trump line. Not a good idea.” Most Inexplicably Obsessed with My Spouse Handle: Simpleton After a column about bass players being sexy: “Sounds like she’s single again.” After a column about things I’ve failed to teach my son: “Curious to learn what lessons his father taught the kid.” After a column about my husband taking our son to get a tattoo: “Other than obeying when told to get in the Vegas-bound minivan, what did ‘his dad’ think about this major decision?” After a column on people who keep “Plan B” love interests waiting in the wings: “Sucks to be Starshine’s Plan A.”
Hilarious Musical Improvisation for Kids
email: starshine@roshell.com
(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu
Best Explanation of Why I’ve Never Made the Big Time Handle: BettyBoop “I don’t understand the point of this column. It’s not funny like it’s meant to be. It’s just useless, and it illustrates well why you have never made the big time. It’s completely lacking in complexity.” Reader Who Really Gets Me Handle: dolphinpod14 “For all U know, she could be a covert member of the moral majorty [sic] posing as a lefty liberal having U all on.” The Reason I Write Handle: Shira “Thank you for the courage to say what so many of us believe” Most Delightful Exchange Handle: nomoresanity “I hope y’all realize that this particular column is really creepy.” Handle: ramey “Most of her columns are at least a little bit creepy. That might be why I like them so much”
We love fitting you in your swimwear!
Flip Flops Cover Ups Size D, DD & Custom Suits For the month of October we will be offering $30 Spray Tans every Thursday as a thank you to our loyal clientele for the past 45 years! Email: glowtansb@gmail to coordinate your time!
Starshine Roshell is the author of Broad Assumptions. independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
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THE STREETS ARE ALIVE!
This Saturday!
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October 24 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
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Marketing assistance provided by:
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sbopenstreets.org Silver sponsors:
79th annual
RUMMAGE SALE A Junior Barbara Event S a t uLeague r d aofySanta , O c t oCommunity ber 2 4 Join us at Earl Warren Fairgrounds for Santa Barbara’s Premier Rummage Sale Event!
RAOUL TEXTILES FLOOR SAMPLE SALE Starts October 24th
at the Raoul Store George Smith, Cisco & More
Two days only!
Pre-Sale Event
136 State Street
Friday, October 23, 6-9PM Tickets are $15 for adults and can be purchased at the door or in advance at www.jlsbrummage.org
and
FACTORY SALE
Rummage Sale
Saturday, October 24, 8 AM - 1 PM This event is FREE to the general public
October 24th, 9am-3pm 110 Los Aguajes Avenue Proceeds from the event help fund a number of local community programs. To learn more about the Junior League of Santa Barbara, please visit www.jlsantabarbara.org 44
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living | Sports
Tracking Baseball Play-Offs, Sans Dodgers
Bill Pintard, Vin Scully, Jessica Mendoza, and More Highlights of the Major-League Season
T
ness, emotion, and passion — and without the L.A. Dodgers. They were all dressed up with the most expensive lineup in the game, but they have nowhere to go. “The Dodgers are too pretty,” said Bill Pintard.“They’re the all-chrome team. My friend Mike Gillespie [a college coach] says,‘I want a player with a pickup-truck mentality. I don’t want a fancy car with all that chrome.’ ” Pintard looks for the same type of player every summer when he puts college ballplayers on the roster of his Santa Barbara Foresters, one of the country’s most successful amateur teams. The Dodgers have not won the World Series since Kirk Gibson — the hardnosed former Michigan State wide receiver they acquired from the Detroit Tigers — unleashed a lightning strike with the Dodgers down to their last out in the ninth inning of the 1988 opening game. In last Thursday’s deciding game of the divisional playoff series against the Mets, the Dodgers still had nine outs to go after they fell behind 3-2, but they meekly went down without a spark. Pintard was impressed by the way Mets manager Terry Collins handled his team.“He deflected all the praise to his players,” Pintard said.“He didn’t let the [crude slide by L.A.’s Chase Utley into shortstop Ruben Tejada] become a distraction. He defused the controversy.” In the National League Championship Series, Pintard said,“I like the Cubs, but I find myself rooting for the Mets.” He has a soft spot in his heart for Collins, a fellow baseball lifer in his sixties, who weathered fierce criticism earlier in his managing career. Pintard also has a soft spot for the Cubs and for the Toronto Blue Jays in the ALCS, because of Gary Woods, the Foresters hitting coach who died last February.“Woody was my best friend,” Pintard said. “He was the opening-day center fielder in Toronto, and he spent most of his career with the Cubs. There’s a lot of Woody mojo in the play-offs.” There was some wild mojo in Toronto last week in the seventh inning of the deciding game of the Blue Jays-Rangers play-off series: a catcher’s toss that caromed off a bat, allowing Texas to score a go-ahead run, followed by three Rangers errors in the bottom of the inning and a cathartic three-run homer by Jose Bautista. “There are thousands of things going on,” Pintard said. “That’s the beauty of baseball. You’re going to see things you’ve never seen before.” UNFINISHED SYMPHONY: Maybe the Dodgers were destined to fail because Vin Scully was sidelined during
John Zant’s
the postseason by a medical issue. Could they really win the championship unless Scully was there to sum it up with a witty expression? Here’s hoping he recovers fully and his voice will resonate all the way through October in 2016. I happened to listen to Scully’s play-by-play for a few minutes on August 28, when the Dodgers were playing the Cubs. It had been announced before the game that he would return for his 67th season. Between pitches, Scully playfully recited some lines he’d seen on a T-shirt displaying the “Top 10 lies told by Cub fans.” Number one was: “The Bleacher Bums drink in moderation.” Others included “Wait ’til next year,”“We’ll never have lights,” and “Harry (Caray) is not drunk.” Then Scully — never failing to remind listeners of the score and the current situation — delved into baseball research and reported that “the most significant count of an at-bat is 1-and-1.” Who else could provide such entertainment and edification during five minutes of a baseball game? MENDOZA’S LINES: Among Scully’s many admirers is Jessica Mendoza, who is making a name for herself
SOFTBALL TO BIG SCREEN: Onetime UCSB softball assistant coach Jessica Mendoza (seen here during the 2015 College World Series) was the first woman to broadcast from a nationally televised play-off baseball game when she was on ESPN during the Astros-Yankees Wild Card game.
in baseball broadcasting. Mendoza, an Olympic softball gold medalist and former assistant coach at UCSB, is the first woman to serve as commentator on a national telecast of a major-league play-off game. She worked alongside Dan Schulman and John Kruk while covering the Astros-Yankees Wild Card game on ESPN. “I grew up going to Dodgers games,” said Mendoza, a Camarillo native. “I listened to [Scully’s] beautiful combination of analysis and interesting stories. It’s an art. I never thought I would end up in the booth.” Mendoza excelled on the softball diamond. She was a four-time All-American at Stanford and played left field for the U.S. team that won the championship at the Athens Olympics in 2004. As a part-time coach at UCSB, she helped the Gauchos reach the postseason in 2006.“I enjoyed it, but I learned you can’t coach people the way you did it,” she said. “I had a ton of passion.” ESPN producers recognized her enthusiasm, and she worked on the network’s coverage of college softball and baseball. She got a break in August when ESPN chose her to replace Curt Schilling as analyst on its Sunday Night Baseball
games. Her observations during Jake Arrietta’s no-hitter against the Dodgers earned her good reviews. There were aspersions against her in social media, mainly objecting to her distinctly female voice. In various interviews, she deflected the criticisms as deftly as she slapped pitches away while batting .416 during her career at Stanford. She would welcome substantive criticisms, she said, but most of the negative noise could be attributed to people’s resistance to change. Mendoza will be back on ESPN’s baseball beat next season. She has appeared on SportsCenter during the play-offs. After the Mets’ Game 5 victory over the Dodgers, she offered a detailed analysis of the second-inning at-bat of L.A. rookie Corey Seager against pitcher Jacob deGrom. With two men on, Seager might have blown the game open with a hit, but deGrom got him to whiff on a changeup when he was n expecting a 98 mph fastball.
Presidio Sports: AThleTeS of the Week presidio sports photos
he baseball play-offs have proceeded with crazi-
phil ellsworth/espN images
by John Zant
GAme of the Week
10/24: College Men’s Soccer: Cal Poly at UCSB After his Cal Poly Mustangs defeated UCSB 3-2 in sudden-death overtime last Saturday, former national team coach Steve Sampson declared, “This has to be the best rivalry in college soccer.” A capacity crowd of 11,075 attended the match in San Luis Obispo, and this Saturday, the Gauchos and their fans get a chance to respond in kind. Last year’s match at Harder Stadium drew a turnout of 14,345, the second largest on-campus attendance in NCAA regular-season soccer history. UCSB is in need of a boost after two losses on the road last week reduced its lead in the Big West North standings to one point over the Mustangs. The teams’ strengths are represented by the Big West’s top scorer (Gaucho striker Nick DePuy) and leading goalkeeper (Cal Poly’s Wade Hamilton). 7pm. Harder Stadium. $10-$12. Call 893-UCSB (8272) or visit ucsbgauchos.com.
Sarah Yang, Renee Handley, San Marcos Tennis San Marcos Tennis Went 38-0 and helped the Royals win first the Channel League tennis title in school history independent.com
Mike Soracco, Bishop Diego Football Rushed for 191 yards on 24 carries and scored three touchdowns in a 43-20 win over Immanuel of Reedley
october 22, 2015
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DiaDeLosMuertosSBBowl TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: SANTA BARBARA BOWL BOX OFFICE / ARLINGTON THEATRE / WALMART CHARGE BY PHONE: 800-745-3000 / TICKETMASTER.COM / NEDERLANDERCONCERTS.COM / SBBOWL.COM 46
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october 22, 2015
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DÍA de LOS MUERTOS KINKY
Bomba Estéreo
Hailing from Monterrey, Mexico, Kinky was formed in 1998 as part of the Avanzada Regia musical movement and consists of Gilberto Cerezo, Ulises Lozano, Carlos Cháirez, Omar Góngora and César Pliego. The band’s music Q[ PMI^QTa QVÆ]MVKML Ja 4I\QV U][QK rock, dance and techno.
Bomba Estéreo is a Colombian band founded in Bogotá in 2005 that consists of Simón Mejía, Liliana Saumet and Julián Salazar. Their music has been described as, “electro tropical” or “psychedelic cumbia.” According to Mejía, the band’s name (which translates into English as “stereo bomb”) is a Colombian term for “a really cool, awesome, bad ass party.”
Santa Barbara Bowl
FRIDAY OCTOBER 3 0 th 2015
La Santa Cecilia
DJ Carlos Niño
Chicano Batman
Conjunto Zacamandu
La Santa Cecilia consists of Jose Carlos, Alex Bendana, Miguel Ramirez and Marisoul, whose captivating voice sings about love, loss and heartbreak. <PMQZ QVÆ]MVKM[ ZIVOM NZWU 5QTM[ Davis to The Beatles, Zeppelin to Janis Joplin and Mercedes Sosa to Ramón Ayala. Their common love of music and openness to all genres led them to the concept of La Santa Cecilia in 2007 – named after the patron saint of musicians.
Carlos Niño is an internationally celebrated producer, arranger, composer, musician, radio host, DJ, music consultant, writer, poet and M^MV\ WZOIVQbMZ ) XZWTQÅK IZ\Q[\ 6Q}W has been involved in the production of more than 100 records and has toured with various bands and as a DJ throughout Europe, Japan and the United States.
Ethnomusicologists in their own right, they are students of rhythm, globe trotting on a quest to reclaim and represent the musical roots of their past generations. Drawing from a broad range of 60s and early 70s Brazilian bossa nova and samba, spacey psychedelia, slow-jam soul with a pinch of surf-rock cumbia, the quartet uniforms their act in retro Z]NÆML \]`MLW [PQZ\[ NZWU I \PZQN\ [\WZM near you.
Conjunto Zacamandu hails from the hills of Ventura and plays Son Jarocho, the regional music of the coastal Mexican state of Veracruz. It is a blend of many different traditions; Indigenous, African, Muslim, and Spanish. This unique blend is ZMÆMK\ML QV \PM LQNNMZMV\ QV[\Z]UMV\[ that are involved in performing it.
Chinelos de Morelos
Comparsa Santa Barbara
Kalpulli Huitzilin ihuan Xochitl
Ballet Folklorico de Los Angeles
Santa Barbara H.S.
Chinelos are traditional costumed dancers that are popular in the Mexican state of Morelos. The tradition arose from the blending of indigenous and Catholic traditions, most notably Carnival, with its permission to be masked and to mock. Chinelos mock Europeans and their mannerisms from the colonial period up to the end of the 19th century. Brincale Chinelos!
Kalpulli Huitzilin ihuan Xochitl (Circle of the Hummingbird and Flower) has served the tri-county area for over 18 years by providing cultural enrichment through presentations, ceremony, music, art, dance and studies of their ancestral calendar. Their mission is to investigate their cultural traditions and promote ways of keeping their culture and traditions alive.
Ballet Folklorico de Los Angeles was founded in 2011 by Kareli Montoya. <PMa PI^M XMZNWZUML QV PQOP XZWÅTM venues such as the Nokia Theatre the Greek Theatre, the John Anson Ford Amphitheater, the Santa Barbara Mariachi Festival, and during halftime for the LA Clippers!
facebook.com/diadelosmuertosSBbowl
SBBOWL.COM
Don Riders Bike Club The Don Riders not only makes customized bikes, but support under privileged students by giving them the opportunity to excel in school and provides an alternative way to express themselves. They provide a platform where students can express their ideas, individual needs, collective education aspirations, vocational careers and develop positive action plans.
Graphics by ©printgonzalez 2015 printgonzalez.com
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october 22, 2015
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is celebraTing 10 years!! Thanks To you, we’re looking forward To anoTher 10...
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Santa BarBara Culinary arts p.49 After selling out in three months last year and raising more than $22,000 for scholarships to Santa Barbara City College’s culinary program, the team behind the cookbook Santa Barbara Culinary Arts: A Taste of Santa Barbara’s Culinary Bounty is releasing a second edition at a party this weekend. Compiled by Tama Takahashi, photographed by Linda Blue, and featuring more than 70 new recipes from chefs and caterers around town, the 176-page sequel packs even more food porn and detailed gourmet recipes than the inaugural edition. And like last year, there’s a party at the Bacara Resort & Spa to celebrate the release, with more than 20 participating chefs, wine from Westerly and the Hitching Post, and more. Among other recipes, relish the following:
Food &drink nirasha rodriguez
Take Two for
paul wellman
s partie
openings
LESS AGAVE, MORE NECTAR: Aparna and Brad Sherman decided to play up food more than drinks in evolving the longtime East Cota Street establishment.
Roasted Beet Salad with Toasted Pistachios, Strawberries, Burrata, Frisée, and Hibiscus Vinaigrette by The Lark’s Chef Jason Paluska
Sweet Yellow Corn Custard with Savory Granola, Crispy Kale, Avocado Emulsion, Aromatic Oil, and Edible Flowers by Bacara Resort’s chef de cuisine, Johan Denizot
Foie Gras Panna Cotta with Cardamom Peach Gelée, Elderflower Reduction, Toasted Sicilian Pistachio, Grilled Peach, and Brioche Toast Points by S.B. Yacht Club’s Chef Mossin Sugich — Matt Kettmann
4·1·1
The Santa Barbara Culinary Arts second edition release party is Saturday, October 24, noon-3 p.m., at the Bacara Resort & Spa (8301 Hollister Ave.). Tickets are $50. See santabarbara culinaryarts.com.
nectar: More Juicy, Less Bar
B
lue Agave was part of Santa Barbara’s night- 20 years old. People have lots of associations,” he said.“Will life for 20 years, but that’s putting it too simply. people go for change? Change is hard!” After all, where else could a bathroom line back The Shermans are also hankering to attract former fans up only for two people to emerge, both clearly of the late, lamented Soj with numerous veggie options, like having just enjoyed a shower together? (I swear I saw this Bibb lettuce pockets stuffed with red rice and a vegetablewalnut slaw. And thanks to items like a portobello burger happen.) While intoxicated group hygiene has its charms, that’s dressed with a warm goat cheese crisp, ancho tomato, arunot the direction that Brad and Aparna Sherman have gula, and sides of fries and a salad, this isn’t a “how I sufin mind for the location. fer for my meatlessness” kind of “Brad bought Blue Agave spot. two years ago,” Aparna There’s plenty of protein explained, “we met a year that once possessed eyes, too, and a half ago, and it’s been from the steak bites appetizer a long conversation about to a salmon plate that’s already whether it should remain becoming a signature dish. The Blue Agave or become a fresh fish comes atop a clever mix of couscous and quinoa—a brand-new place.” A priby GeorGe yaTchiSin tumult of texture—and swirled vate chef and ayurvedic lifestyle counselor, Aparna with aji mandarin sauce. There’s voted new place, and Nectar was born. also a rumor (okay, more than that — its photo is on Face“We both love food, friendships, and sitting around and book) of a pork ramen to come, about which Brad raved,“I talking for hours,” she said. “We want people to come here couldn’t believe what I was tasting.” and eat with friends and family and not face loud, obnox“Nectar represents this kind of juiciness of experience ious drunks.” — a nice environment, good music, great food — the juiciThe new menu, developed under the watchful eye of ness of life is to be experienced here,” said Aparna.“We want consulting chef Mattias Blom, certainly helps. It’s built people to come here and have that experience.” Brad wants around clever balances—starting with a snack of Persian Nectar to have presence and staying power for many years, cucumber, crispy and cool, dusted with zingy tōgarashi “that we become a real destination,” he explained. “Then I and zipped with lime—and the typical nudged just past will be heartily pleased.” the familiar: the now ubiquitous seared shishito peppers with Maldon salt come with grilled tiny potatoes for ballast Nectar is located at 20 East Cota Street. and heat absorption. There are also nods to Blue Agave’s Call 899-4694 or see nectarsb.com. faves, like the new lemongrass shrimp, richly buttered and redolent of garlic, which Aparna calls a “vague memory of the Blue Agave tiger shrimp.” Meanwhile, Brad—who once co-owned Sojourner, cur/sbindyfood @sbindyfood rently co-owns Aldo’s, and drums in Area 51—recognizes the challenge of this evolution.“We’re taking on something
The ShermanS revamp Blue AgAve into a Food-FirST deSTinaTion
4·1·1
AnticipA Anticip Ating A ting A pleA ple Asure cA cAn be the best p pA Art
tastings
SangioveSe from Santa BarBara © Ashleigh brilliAnt
O
Food & drink •
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201 West Mission St. • 569-2323
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Fine Ice Cream and Yogurts
Stolpman Sangiovese 2012: Aged 36 months in neutral oak,
13350
Lane Farms PumPkin Patch Open Daily 9am-9pm
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50
n a recent summer morning, the sun was strong above the rows of sangiovese that line the rolling hills of Ballard Canyon, where the earth between the vines is baked and cracked. The famous Italian wine consultant Alberto Antonini once declared that this spot “might as well be Tuscany,” but the fingers of cactus lining the roadway and a spatter of gnarled oaks are markers that this is most certainly California. Sangiovese is a tricky grape to grow — even trickier, some argue, than pinot noir. Sangio’s thin skin makes it susceptible to sunburn, and it’s prone to over-cropping. So far, it’s suffered from a spotty reputation in the New World and doesn’t fetch anything close to the prices commanded by other varieties grown in Santa Barbara County. And yet, with a little more than 127 acres currently planted to the grape, there are a handful of Santa Barbara County producers who have not only stuck with this temperamental variety but have also come to love what it produces here. “The grape is really happy here,” said Peter Stolpman, whose family has been making Ballard Canyon sangiovese for 20 years, now producing about 1,200 cases of it annually, including a carbonic version made from earlier-ripening fruit. Light and refreshing, that’s best served with a chill. Scott Cellars’ Peter Scott Fraser, who built his reputation on pinot, is also enamored. “I needed to find something I could specialize in when everyone else was already doing a great pinot,” explained Fraser, whose special attention to sangio’s reaction to different soil types is reflected on bottlings named for the dirt types rather than the vineyards. Also producing sangiovese in Santa Barbara County are Mosby, Silver, Carr, Jonata, Toccata, Coquelicot, Buoni Anni, and Rusack, though 2013 will be the latter’s last vintage. Generally speaking, the wines are richer in flavor and endowed with a depth of structure not usually noted in their Tuscan counterparts, proving distinctly Californian. Here are some bottles to find.
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the wine is brightly aromatic with notes of blue fruit, blackberries, and rose petals. Ripe fruit flavors saturate the palate without overwhelming it; the wine has a persistently light body and a freshness that keeps it on its toes. A dusting of tannins on the finish insists on another sip. $32
Makor White Hawk Vineyard Sangiovese 2011: Standing out for both a low price and restrained alcohol, this wine is light and bursting with vivid red cherry fruit and a layer of spice. Tannins lend texture but don’t cloy. Drink with pizza. $16 Palmina “Undici” Sangiovese 2012: This wine is named after
the famous Spinal Tap quote about turning it up “to eleven.” (Undici is “eleven” in Italian.) After 34 months in barrel, the wine’s aromas of black raspberry and rose petals leap from the glass. High acidity keeps it aloft, and a light body redolent of cola and dark fruit finishes with spicy tannins. $46 Scott Cellars “Sand Dune” 2012: Named after the sandy soil of
the White Hawk Vineyard, this wine is graceful and pretty. Vibrant aromas of raspberry jam hint at a wine that is light, pretty, and juicy, with a touch of spice on the finish. $36 Tre Anelli Sangiovese 2012: Sourced from the Estelle Vineyard
at the valley’s hotter end, this bigger style shows sweet baked blue fruit on the nose, nice acidity, soft tannins, and chocolate notes on — Caroline Helper the finish. $34
CHOWDER CHAMP: Reader Scott let me know that The Crocodile Restaurant and Bar in the Lemon Tree Inn won First Place for Best Clam Chowder in the 2015 Santa Barbara Chowderfest at The Fess Parker DoubleTree.
KILLER B’S IS NOW WARREN B’S: This
just in from event center specialist Warren Butler: “Hello John, I am taking over the old Tony Rays
• Wine Guide
GUY • b y
(Killer B’s) spot adjacent to De la Guerra Plaza, across from City Hall. It is called ‘Warren B’s.’ It is an event and meeting space similar to what I have done with The Butler Event Center [at the former Sizzler in Goleta] and The Montecito Event Center [at the former Café del Sol in Montecito]. It has a commercial kitchen available for caterers. It is open for business. We are taking bookings now, especially in time for the holidays. I can be contacted at 705-7488 or warren@butlerevent center.com. I have a signed lease as of 10/4/15. Great place to have an event then stroll downtown. Also Nippers Club is up and running at the Montecito Event Center the third Friday of every month. First one was sold out a week in advance.”
Food & drink •
armer Boy is back. Way back. Last year the family behind Brophy Bros. purchased Farmer Boy restaurant at 3427 State Street from Ralph Karleskint, who opened the eatery in 1958. After closing April 30, 2014, for a complete remodel, the Bennett family finally reopened the restaurant last week. Regulars will be happy to know that Farmer Boy looks much the same: A counter is still the centerpiece. Even the original hanging lamps are still there. During reconstruction, crews removed the drywall and discovered 1950s-era wood paneling with silver-colored “bow tie” ornaments. They decided to reproduce that look at the front and back of the restaurant. “We really tried to keep the integrity of what Ralph did in 1958,” said manager and co-owner Danny Quinn, who spent many years at Farmer Boy as a kid in the late 1980s and early 1990s while his mother worked at the counter. Though the menu is new, one item made a triumphant return: the popular oversized cinnamon roll. The Restaurant Gal and I ordered one on their last day in business in 2014. I plan to return with her and the Restaurant Kid (who arrived while Farmer Boy was away) to let the little one give it a try. I am told that former owner Karleskint has visited the restaurant a few times since it reopened. Customer Claudia Lash was leaving as I arrived to check out the new digs, and she told me it was her fifth day in a row to eat at Farmer Boy. Lash told me to tell you that the Chicken-Fried Biscuit Sliders with Gravy are amazing and that she ordered it the last three days in a row. Lash’s friend Pat Lupo tells me that the Chicken Club Wrap is huge and terrific. Further down the menu is a hidden gem: You get unlimited refills of genuine Green Star Coffee for just $1.50.
Dining Out Guide
T
Farmer Boy reopens F
john dickson
Dickson hn Jo
The R AURA ST N E
OH BOY! The Farmer Boy restaurant has returned after a lengthy remodel.
SILVERGREENS UPDATE: Silvergreens res-
taurant at 791 Chapala Street just started serving Kyle’s Kitchen burgers, fries, and milkshakes. “It has been great to see the community support for the Goleta restaurant,” said Jay Ferro, founder and president of Kyle’s Kitchen.“By offering Kyle’s menu, in addition to Silvergreens sandwiches, salads and bowls, we think it combines the best of both restaurants into a single location. Silvergreens has always been a destination for delicious food that’s both healthy for you and aligned with your values. We are just as passionate about REAL food as we are about supporting our local community and giving back. “Now, every time someone chooses a Kyle’s menu item at Silvergreens on Chapala, we will donate a portion of the proceeds back to our special needs community. We think the extra donations from Silvergreens can really help the local special needs organizations. At Kyle’s Kitchen, we set a goal of giving back $50,000 to the special needs community in 2015 and are almost there! “From a menu standpoint, we’re really excited about the options now available for our guests. In our quest for simplicity, we removed breakfast for the time being, lowered a lot of prices, and also make it very easy to add on proteins to different flavored salads and bowls. The old ‘Half & Half’ is now the ‘Pair It!’ like Kyle’s, but has more options. Our beverage menu now includes milkshakes, which are a favorite at Kyle’s Kitchen. The new kids menu is a great combination of favorite items from both restaurants.”
John Dickson’s reporting can be found every day online at SantaBarbara.com. Send tips to info@SantaBarbara.com. independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
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Chaucer's Books
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Local Mahi Mahi Fillet — $11.95 lb Scottish Salmon Gravlox — $19.95 lb Snapper Ceviche — $3.95 each
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117 Harbor Way, Suite A, Santa Barbara, CA 93109 | ph. 805.965.9564 | www.sbfish.com
THE BLACK SHEEP RESTAuRAnT Organic, farmers market driven menu, gastrOpub-inspired 26 E. ORTEGA • THEBLACKSHEEPSB.COM • 965-1113 52
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october 22, 2015
DEAL HUNTERS: The Seeker crew goes in search of in-store offerings at the S.B. Public Market.
Near Me” button and a forthcoming “Refer a Friend” option to unlock special “Level 2” deals. The young company also hopes to expand its service to other California cities, including Los Angeles and San Francisco, and be nationwide by — Gilberto Flores the end of next year.
yelp + groupon - puBlic = BarkBack
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n an age of online shopping and coupon hunting, most shops, restaurants, and grocery stores still offer deals every day that remain invisible outside of their building’s walls. The new mobile app Seeker intends to bring these walk-in deals to customers who otherwise don’t have the time to go into a store and ask what discounts are being offered that week. Santa Barbara resident Ryan Judy developed Seeker when he noticed that these deals, from happy hours to half-priced hamburger meat, were constantly changing but that he didn’t have an easy way to hear about them. “These retailers revolve their promotions on a constant basis, and the information on these promotions wasn’t making it online,” Judy said. “I realized that I wasn’t using anything that would allow me to find where to find a great two-for-one steak deal at either Vons or Albertsons.” So he created a simple and efficient interface that store managers, restaurant owners, and anyone in retail can use to let Seeker users know a new discount is available. His growing list of partners can upload, manage, and schedule deals through Seeker, which also employs a back-end team to consistently touch base with vendors to ensure deals are timely and relevant. Seeker deals are generally posted within the last 24 to 48 hours. The app became available in August, and those who download it will find deals organized by neighborhood and category. There’s also a “Deals
courTesY
Seeker revealS in-Store dealS
Friday, Saturday & Sunday October 23rd, 24th & 25th
independent.com
YELP WITHOUT YELPING: Barkback allows patrons to privately report problems in exchange for special deals from restaurants and other businesses.
I
f Yelp and Groupon had a baby, it would be a lot like Barkback. This new mobile app, which was developed in Santa Barbara, lets customers give private feedback to businesses in exchange for promotional offers, such as free tapas at Milk & Honey or ice cream at McConnell’s. In some cases, Barkbackers could even be rewarded with a free dinner for two at participating restaurants like Julienne. Functioning like a “private Yelp,” according to Barkback’s Teddy Ho, the app launched in 2014 to provide a platform in which “all feedback goes directly to the owner, and it’s a two-way communication.” As opposed to Yelp’s public system, which is much maligned in the restaurant biz for a variety of reasons, Barkback lets a business owner resolve issues before they become a bigger problem.
“The owner can respond and build relationships with the customer that way,” Ho said. “It was really like a way for owners to get insights in a private and direct way and really help build their community of their users in a digital way.” Barkback is now also offering a new loyalty program, which offers a digital alternative to that pesky paper punch card you always forget or lose. Simply queue up the digital punch card on your phone, show it to the merchant so they can put in a pin code, and you’re done. “We basically made a digital version so the consumer never loses it,” Ho said.“It’s all in one place, in their app, and goes wherever they go.” Thousands now use Barkback, which notched hundreds of loyalty punches in just the first week of use. Up next for Barkback is a feature that allows users to access rewards for sharing the app with — G F friends or family.
Grammy Nominee for Best R&B Album
Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings
Jeff Daniels
and the Ben Daniels Band TUE, NOV 3 / 8 PM / THE NEW VIC 33 W. VICTORIA ST.
WED, OCT 28 / 8 PM UCSB CAMPBELL HALL
Tickets start at $35 $15 UCSB students
Tickets start at $30 $15 UCSB students
“[Daniels] can make people laugh, he can make them cry, he can conjure up memories that belong to him but make them feel as if they were from someone else’s personal diary. He has that knack.” Glide Magazine
“A dozen years in, her brass-powered group is both extending and preserving tradition; it remains a national treasure and an Wine Sponsor: instant soul party.” Rolling Stone
Arturo O’Farrill and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra THU, NOV 5 / 8 PM / UCSB CAMPBELL HALL Tickets start at $25 / $10 UCSB students
“Arturo O’Farrill’s Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra is one of the best jazz orchestras in existence.” The New Yorker
Media Sponsor:
Event Sponsors: Jody M. & John P. Arnhold
Wine Sponsor:
Santa Barbara Solo Debut
Melissa Etheridge This is M.E. Solo
SUN, NOV 15 / 7 PM (note special time) UCSB CAMPBELL HALL Tickets start at $50 / $25 UCSB students
Known for her iconic voice, profound lyrics and riveting stage presence, Etheridge will share personal stories about her remarkable journey through life and the inspiration behind some of her most beloved songs.
Media Sponsor:
“Melissa Etheridge has always poured her heart and soul into her music, so it’s no surprise that the same depth of emotion permeates her shows.” Hollywood Reporter
Media Sponsor:
(805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
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53
Goleta
Montecito
Santa Barbara
Summerland
Indulge in inventive prix-fixe menus, imaginative tasting flights, culinary events, festivals, cultural performances, special lodging packages and more, from almost 60 participating businesses. Below is a taste of this year’s delicious lineup. For a complete listing of events, offers and packages visit epicuresb.com
Food Anthropology: The History of Santa Barbara as Told Through Food & Art Four-course candle-lit meal in the historic Santa Barbara County Courthouse, where art and ingredients meld deliciously into one, as the menu draws inspiration from the mural.
Jaffurs Big 3 and Small Plates
Enjoy three exceptional wines from Jaffurs Wine Cellars paired with small plates of surf, turf and vegetables at The Black Sheep restaurant in downtown Santa Barbara.
October daily During dinner hours
Mastering the Art of Modern French Cuisine
Enchanted & Wicked Evening
Join Bacara Resort & Spa’s new Enchanting libations and Executive Chef Vincent Lesage wickedly good BBQ for one night for a modern take on classic only at Belmond El Encanto. French recipes by the legendary October 28 cookbook author Julia Child. The 5:00 to 10:00 p.m. four-course dinner will be held at Santa Barbara Public Market and includes wine pairings by the Market’s Wine + Beer.
October 24 6:00 to 9:00 p.m.
October 23 6:00 to 9:00 p.m.
For a sweet stay, indulge in any of these special epicure.sb lodging packages... Bacara Resort & Spa
Hotel Indigo Santa Barbara
Belmond El Encanto
Hotel Santa Barbara
BEST WESTERN PLUS Encina Inn & Suites
Inn by the Harbor
BEST WESTERN PLUS Pepper Tree Inn
Lavender Inn by the Sea
Brisas del Mar, Inn by the Beach
Ramada Santa Barbara
epicuresb.com | #epicuresb 54
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ocTobEr 22, 2015
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coffee house SB Coffee Roasting Company 321 Motor Way SB 962‑5213– NOW WITH FREE WI‑FI! Santa 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 loca‑ tion ‑ Corner of State & Gutierrez. Gift baskets, mail order & corporate gifts avail. sbcoffee.com. ethiopian Authentic Ethiopian CUISINE Featured at Petit Valentien Restaurant 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. 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 qual‑ ity 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.
Sip this
Noon‑2:30p Lunch; Sun‑Thur 5‑10p Dinner, Fri‑Sat 5p‑10:30p.Complete Sushi Bar. Steak & Seafood Specials! Sashimi, Teriyaki, original Japanese appetizers & Combination Boat Dinner. SB’s only TATAMI Rooms reservations suggested. Beer, Wine & Sake.Take Out. Birthday customers get FREE tempura ice cream & photo on our website! KyotoSB.com
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 &
Rodney’s Grill, 633 East Cabrillo Boulevard 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.rodneyssteakhouse.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 $$$$ $26-Up
North Indian Muglai specialties. World Class Indian Chefs at your service! Traditional floor seating. Indian & Draft Beers, Local Wines. www.indiahouseusa. com irish Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant, 18 E. Ortega St. (next to lot 10) SB, 568‑0702. $$. Open 7 days 11:30a‑Close (Food ‘til 10p, 11p on Sat/Sun). AE MC V Disc. Authentic Irish food & atmosphere in downtown SB. Specialties from Ireland include Sea‑ food & Meat dishes. Informal, relaxed pub‑style atmosphere. Live music Thursday nights. Children welcome. Avail. for private parties. Pool & Darts.
Voted Santa
Santa Barbara
Wineries/ tasting rooms
Santa Barbara Winery, 202 Anacapa St. 963‑3633. Open Sun‑Thurs 10a‑6p & Fri‑Sat 10a ‑ 7p, small charge for ex‑ tensive 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
Japanese KYOTO, 3232 State St, 687‑1252.$$. Open 7days M‑F 11:30a‑2p; Sat
fl
Qupé Santa Barbara County Syrah 2012: Anyone who doesn’t know Bob Lindquist makes killer syrah simply hasn’t been paying attention for the last 30 years. This release is no exception. Organic, biodynamic, dark fruit balanced with lots of pepper and accented by lavender, this is delicious from start to finish. With three quarters of the blend (98 percent syrah and 2 percent grenache) coming from Bien Nacido Vineyards in the Santa Maria Valley and the last quarter coming from the family’s Sawyer Lindquist Vineyard in the Edna Valley, this bottle makes a strong argument for cool-climate syrah. For all its depth (pair it with pot roast, say), it’s only 13.5 percent alcohol, and while its suggested retail price is $30, you can often find it at a steal under $25. See qupe.com. — George Yatchisin
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Santa Barbara’s original artisanal pizzeria
Kevin Steele / kevsteele.com
Brasil Arts café offers Brazilian culture by way of food, drink, and dance! Come try our Brazilian BBQ plate or Moqueca (local sea bass in a coconut sauce). Enjoy our breakfast or $9.95 lunch specials or the best Açaí bowls in town. Be ready to join in a dance class! www .brasilartscafe.com 805‑845‑7656 1230 State Street
indian Flavor of INDIA 3026 State 682‑6561 $$ 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!
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ocTobEr 22, 2015
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| Sponsored by Montecito Bank & Trust
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
TRUE GRIT MON NOV 16th 7 PM
TAB HUNTER CONFIDENTIAL THURS NOV 19th 7 PM
THURS
MOMIX
OCT 22
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
MON
NEW YORK CITY BALLET MOVES
8 PM
OCT 26 8 PM TUES
OCT 27 8 PM
GRANADA UNDERGROUND
DOUBLEWIDE KINGS CAROUSEL
HAWAII
MON NOV 23rd 2 PM & 7 PM
MON DEC 7th 7 PM
OPERA SANTA BARBARA
DON GIOVANNI
THURS
NOV 5
9:30 PM
FRI
NOV 6 7:30 PM SUN
NOV 8 2:30 PM
UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
SANTO EL ENMASCARADO DE PLATA SUN - DEC 13TH 3 PM
AMAZING GRACE MON JAN 18th 7 PM
AKRAM KHAN COMPANY
1214 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 | 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 56
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ocTobEr 22, 2015
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NOV 10 8PM
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Marsha de la O releases Antidote for night
M
Antidote for Night is so rich with imagery and characters and incident. It’s a beautiful book, but it’s also very dark. Thank you! Regarding dark material, I believe that any poet writes what he or she has been given. This is my material because this is what I was given. It’s important to regard the totality of your life as a gift, and important for me personally as a writer to feel that any experience can be rendered. Along those lines, there’s a noir element to your poetry. It’s easy to imagine a character in a Raymond Chandler novel holed up somewhere reading Antidote for Night Night, a cigarette burning in an ashtray, a glass of bourbon sitting next to a loaded .38. That’s funny! I love to imag-ine that— that maybe Marlowe him-self, preternaturally alert, the book open on the divan, waiting out a long, tense night for what he knows is coming. Of course, above all Marlowe loved T.S. Eliot, and there’s no displacing The Waste Land or The Four Quartets. As for noir, it’s a literary form indigenous to Southern California, which has since spread all over the world, so why not draw from it as a natural part of our heritage? Anyone who has ever heard you read your poems aloud knows that your voice takes on
courTesy
arsha de la O (pictured) is the author of Black Hope, winner of the New Issues Press Poetry Prize, and the newly published Antidote for Night Night, winner of the Isabella Gardner Poetry Award. She and her husband, poet Phil Taggart, produce poetry readings and co-edit the literary magazine Askew.
an incantatory quality. I almost feel as though you’re going into a trance. Do you imagine the poet as a kind of seer? Actually, I don’t so much imagine the poet as a kind of seer; I think the nexus of incantation is located in language, in the poem itself, and when the poet takes up and voices those words, we all might get to a differ different place. We’ve always asked language to perform in multiple ways, specific functions that differ from the ordinary. Magic is precipitated by special language, by magic words, by incantation. And what is incantation? Well, it’s related to song, related to the power of music; cantar is right there in incantation. However, when I was an ele-
mentary school teacher, I took a series of workshops on storytelling in which each of us had to present a tale, and the storytelling leaders said, “Oh, you’re a trancer …” And I asked if that was bad. And they said, not necessarily.
It’s always interesting for me to think of you as a former schoolteacher. I don’t associate the startling immediacy and rawness that I find in your poetry with elementary school. But then again, maybe that’s shortsighted on my part? There’s a real compassion in your work, and children can be pretty honest at times. It’s not shortsighted at all. There is a fundamental contradiction between being a schoolteacher and pursuing a writing life. One subsumes the other. Teachers give 110 percent of themselves to their classrooms. It wasn’t until after I left that job that I was able to turn toward truly honing the manuscript into something that could become a book. On the other hand, I want to acknowledge that teaching g ave me insight into the courage and dignity of the lives of children and families in my classroom. Can you talk a bit about the difficult business of selling a book of poetry? Poetry is a niche community, an aural art in a visual age, but it’s also an ancient art, one that connects us to our beginnings, one that still carries potential mythic power. Yet, with the disappearance of the bricks-and-mortar bookstore, the simple act of picking up a book of poetry, opening it to a page, realizing that something there speaks personally, that essential tactile encounter can’t happen as much. That’s why I’d like to acknowledge Chaucer’s Bookstore here in S.B. It’s a cultural treasure, supports local authors, maintains shelves of poetry, and everything else. Antidote for Night is available at Chaucer’s — what an honor! —David Starkey
Ventucky string Band
ellie gOulding
Ask members of the Ventucky String Band what they appreciate in the bluegrass and country legends who inspire them, and they will say the musicianship. The new Ventucky String Band album, the expertly woven tapestry of The Band Plays On, has musicianship in spades, in the staccato punch of plucked bass and the über-tight banjo harmonies. Songs like the peppy “Careful How You Catch ’Em” are so note perfect it’s hard to believe they weren’t pulled from a time capsule. But it’s also true to form in the deeply affecting lyrics, lovelorn and honest, like on “Buenos Aires Blues,” when singer Matt Sayles sings, “Time stretched me out, and I’m feeling like a sorry old fool.” Fun, succinct, and moving, too, it’s an accomplished work from a very talented bunch. —Richie DeMaria
Since her 2010 debut album, Lights, Ellie Goulding has been a mainstay on the music charts. On November 6, the Brit pop star will drop her third studio album, Delirium, and the first track released, “On My Mind,” is already a hit. Now her second single from the upcoming record, “Something in the Way You Move,” is available for listening. The steady beat and delicate piano mixed with heart-wrenching lyrics make “Something in the Way You Move” the perfect power dance song for anyone battling recent heartbreak. Goulding encourages listeners to forget about the anguish and dance the pain away. Thanks to a catchy chorus, it is impossible not to sing along. If “On My Mind” and “Something in the Way You Move” are indicative of the album in its entirety, Delirium is sure to be another chart topper for Goulding. — Arianna Irwin
the BAnd PlAys A on Ays
‘something in the WAy A you move’ Ay
l i f e PAge 57 Tiffany israel, Brooks insTiTuTe of PhoTograPhy
Poetry of Life
Will rOgers’ aMerica at timbers Rich Hoag (pictured) owns Will Rogers in this entertaining, popular, and seriously profound show that had its premiere at Susie and David Couch’s Circle Bar B Dinner Theatre 10 years ago. Now, after a decade of living as Rogers onstage at theaters and festivals all over the country, Rich Hoag is reunited with the Couch crew for a weekend at their new Goodland Supper Club in the historic Timbers restaurant on Winchester Canyon Road in Goleta. The stakes are high whenever an actor commits to portraying a historical figure, and they are even higher when the subject is someone like Will Rogers, who was himself an unforgettable performer. Fortunately, Hoag has the craft and the brainpower to go deeper than resemblance in order to open up the way the man Will Rogers thought and felt. It’s the uncanny degree to which Hoag captures Rogers’s characteristic habits of mind that allows the show to transcend mere impersonation and recitation. In fact, it’s when Hoag improvises, riffing on the latest news for example, that he seems most like the man he’s portraying. For those whose knowledge of Rogers is limited to his oft-quoted maxim “I never met a man I didn’t like,” the experience will be a revelation. We don’t have a public figure of comparable influence in contemporary America. Rogers knew how to weave a coherent persona out of such disparate social roles as the cowboy, the entertainer, the skeptic, and the common man, and he did so with tremendous humility and generosity of spirit. If you crave an antidote to the vacuous rhetoric of contemporary culture, then Will Rogers’ America may be just what you are looking for. The buffet dinner before the show begins at 6:30 p.m., and the performance starts at 7:30 p.m. Although Friday, October 23, has sold out, there are still tickets available as of press time for the other three nights — Thursday, October 22; Saturday, October 24; and Sunday, October 25. For reservations, call 705-9598. — Charles Donelan
m o r e a r t s & e n t e r ta i n m e n t > > >
courtesy
a&e | DANCE FEATURE WINNING MOVES: The competitionbased group brought home 16 trophies from the Las Vegas Hall of Fame’s National Competition this past July.
Championship steps momentum DanCe Wins Big in national Competition
by Olivia Davi
C
laiming its rightful place in the spotlight, Momentum Dance Company is making waves in the community. The competition-based group is gaining recognition as an authentic institution after bringing home 16 trophies from the Las Vegas Hall of Fame’s National Competition this past July. Their success was greatly attributed to the woman behind the scenes, Betsy Ann Woyach. A dancer, choreographer, and master instructor of 17 years, Woyach created Momentum Dance to inspire dancers to reach new levels in their art, set goals, build self-esteem, and demonstrate true teamwork. “In short, we went to Nationals really not expecting much … and we walked away with some pretty huge titles,” Woyach said. “Our teen contemporary duet won the title of Top Teen Duo/Trio, and our Junior Hip-Hop Trio made it into the Duo/ Trio showdown.” After competing professionally for 10 years, Woyach went on to create the University of Georgia’s first hip-hop dance program while a student there. Upon graduating, she pursued dance professionally in Los Angeles, which ultimately led to her landing a job instructing the International Dance Academy in Hollywood. Woyach created the Momentum Dance Company after moving to Santa Barbara in 2013. “I started teaching in S.B. five years ago and was baffled that there were no competition studios, that everything here was performance-based,” Woyach explained. “I think of Momentum as bridging that gap between the professional competition world in L.A. and the small town of S.B.” When asked how a competitive dance company is different than a performancebased one, Woyach responded,“[The dancers] are taking away such critical life lessons at these competitions that are just unparalleled to local performance-based companies. Dancing in front of world-renowned dancerchoreographers, instructors, and performers and getting judges’ feedback and awards are just a whole other realm.” She went on to explain that the goal of Momentum Dance is to empower young dancers through dance education to prepare them for life after they leave “the studio.” “It’s teaching these dancers to believe in themselves,” she said. “We are teaching them to set
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goals and see that accomplishing these goals is possible with hard work, commitment, and self-confidence.” Momentum Dance offers training for different ages and skill levels. “We offer classes starting at age 3 and 4, but you have to be at least 5 years old to be on the competitive teams. Our recreational classes go all the way up to adult tap classes, and we have a pro competitive co mpany comprised of dancers ages 19 and older,” Woyach explained. “Each team trains in jazz, contemporary, lyrical, and hip-hop with the opportunity to learn tap, as well. I love teaching hip-hop — it became my niche — but tap is very close to my heart, and I love getting lost in the emotions of teaching or setting a lyrical piece.” Company members also have the opportunity to compete as a solo, duet, or trio if invited by Woyach to do so. “These are dancers in S.B. looking for the closest training to professional that they can receive. They train with guest instructors from L.A. that teach exclusively to the company.” Not only does Woyach draw on her dense dance background to bring Momentum to life, but she also draws inspiration from her dancers, friends, and family. “As an artist, inspiration is everywhere. The dancers themselves and their stories inspire me so much recently,” she said. “What they face and the things they go through, they help me tell their story through dance. My son [also] inspires me on a daily basis. He has been the catalyst for so many of Momentum’s dances.” Perhaps what makes Momentum Dance Company most special is that it is the product of a young girl’s fantasy. “I have dreamed about Momentum ever since I was a preteen and knew I wanted a studio,” Woyach said. “I talked about it constantly my whole life. There was never ‘if I have a studio’ but ‘when I have my studio.’ ” Momentum Dance was born 11 months after the birth of Woyach’s son.“Staying true to how I always said I would run my studio and not allowing anything but the sheer love of dance to be my guide has been my greatest accomplishment.”
4•1•1
For more information on Momentum Dance Company (316-A State St.), call 364-1638 or see momentumdancesb.com.
a&e | DANCE PREVIEW
MOVES Forward
THE ART OF FORM: “There are many young people coming into the ballet world who are moving it forward,” said N.Y.C. Ballet’s JeanPierre Frohlich. “Come out and see what’s happening, and you will understand that this art form is very much alive in this century.” Sara Mearns (top) and other members of the touring company (below) execute choreography from Moves.
NEw YOrk CitY BAllEt Performs twO PrOgrAMS on twO NightS
PHOTOS cOurTeSy ucSB ArTS & LecTureS
by Charles Donelan
A
n extraordinary season for lovers of dance in Santa Barbara continues this week as Moves, the touring company of the fabled New York City Ballet, arrives at the Granada for two nights, presented by UCSB Arts & Lectures. Each night will have a separate program, making this a kind of mini festival featuring some of the world’s greatest dancers in what is unquestionably a selection of the most interesting and important contemporary ballet choreography. Ever since Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine founded the company in 1948, the name New York City Ballet has been synonymous with both innovation and achievement on the absolute highest level. In addition to employing an incredible roster of famous dancers over the years, the New York City Ballet has been home to a number of great choreographers. Jerome Robbins joined the organization just one year after it was founded, and after Balanchine’s death in 1983, Robbins and the great dancer, choreographer, and ballet master Peter Martins became responsible for the artistic direction of the company, which makes its home in Lincoln Center’s David H. Koch Theater. The new century has been a good one for New York City Ballet and for the art form of ballet more generally. The great choreographers of the 20th century, such as Balanchine and Robbins, have been joined by a new generation with fresh ideas and the ability to create tremendous excitement in venues on multiple continents. Several of these artists are featured on the upcoming N.Y.C. Ballet Moves programs, including Christopher Wheeldon, Alexei Ratmansky, Peter Martins, William Forsythe, Justin Peck, and the company’s other ballet master, Jean-Pierre Frohlich. I spoke with Frohlich by phone from the company’s headquarters in New York last week, and he enlightened me as to the purpose and goals of the touring group Moves and gave some useful ideas about how to enjoy the pieces to be presented in Santa Barbara. The upcoming engagement in Santa Barbara includes two programs over two nights. Is that the way that you prefer to arrange things? In this instance, the primary reason for the two nights is that the
because on the one hand, you need to have him out there, and people need to perform his work in order that it live on. But on the other hand, you have to be careful about what kinds of productions you permit. It’s a bit like a marriage — the partners have to fit. One of the great things about Jerome Robbins’s work is how much dancers learn from doing it. Robbins was a master at going deep and creating dances in which the atmosphere and the intent are as important as the steps. Dancers need to experience that in order to grow as artists.
presenter, UCSB Arts & Lectures, wanted to put on both programs. I think that they are assuming that it will be essentially the same audience for both nights, and they have confidence that people who care about dance in Santa Barbara are interested enough to sustain that. Can you say something about each of the programs? Of course. On Monday, October 26, the performance will open with “In Creases,” a new piece by Justin Peck, who is the N.Y.C. Ballet’s current choreographer in residence. He’s also a soloist with the company, and he will be premiering his first narrative ballet with the company in February of 2016. “In Creases” is set to music by Philip Glass, but you’d never recognize it as Philip Glass just from listening to it. The William Forsythe piece, “Herman Schmerman Pas de Deux,” is based on Balanchine, but it’s on a different level and goes to a different extent. The Jerome Robbins suite of dances was originally created for Mikhail Baryshnikov. I understand that you are one of the people responsible for maintaining the legacy of Jerome Robbins. Could you talk about that? I was thrilled that he left this to me in his will. It’s an important job
What is the mission of N.Y.C. Ballet Moves? Well, to bring a whole company on tour is just too expensive. The intent with Moves was to create a touring annex that leaves the core elements of the company experience intact. That’s why we always have at least some dances on the program that use live music, because that is such an important element. And really the idea is that when someone sees the MOVES group in their home city, in Santa Barbara or San Diego for example, and then they travel to New York, they will have the New York City Ballet in mind as one of the things they might want to do there. What do you see as the future for ballet today? A lot of people seem to think that ballet is dead, but they are misinformed. It’s not, and there are many young people coming into the ballet world who are moving it forward. Dancers are young! They have to be, and that’s the future. Of course there are things we can do to help, like offering tickets at affordable prices and giving more lecture demonstrations and open rehearsals. But just come out and see what’s happening, and you will understand that this art form is very much alive in this century.
4•1•1
N.Y.C Ballet Moves is on Monday-Tuesday, October 26-27, at 8 p.m. at the Granada Theatre (1214 State St.). For tickets and information, visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu or call 893-3535.
independent.com
october 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENt
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“EXTRAORDINARY”
–CASA Magazine
“ABSOLUTE WINNER”
–Montecito Journal
“TERRIFIC”
Sweeney Todd
book by
THE DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET
HUGH WHEELER music & lyrics by
STEPHEN SONDHEIM
–SB Independent
FINAL WEEKEND • HIT SHOW ENDS SUNDAY
805.965.5400 • www.etcsb.org
ISOLATED An exhibition about solitary confinement by Richard Ross
September 25 – December 4, 2015 Opening Reception: Friday, September 25 | 4 – 6 p.m. | H 202
Thu OcT 22 6:30p
“The educaTiOn ideal: Creating the conditions for a brighter future for all students” The Santa Barbara/Tri-County ADL’s Civil Rights committee, in conjunction with several other valuable local groups, present this FREE community forum about how to create an ideal educational experience for all students in a diverse community — narrowing the achievement gap while raising the bar for everyone. For more info please visit http://santabarbara.adl.org/ or call 805-564-6670. Fri nOv 13 7:00p & SaT nOv 14 7:00p
“rOmeO and pirOueTTe”SBJHS and State Street Ballet’s Library Dances present this two-act performance as a blend of theatre, ballet, and comedy, as actors and dancers present an abridged presentation of Shakespeare’s famous love tragedy, immediately turning it on its head in the one act spoof by Alison Williams, “Drop Dead, Juliet!” For more info and tickets please visit www.sbjhs.org or call 805-963-7751 x4028. See you there! SaT dec 5 3:00p & Sun dec 6 3:00p “The nuTcracker” This traditional full-length production
features all of our favorite characters: Clara, The Nutcracker, The Rat Queen, The Sugar Plum Fairy and many others. For more info and tickets please visit www.goletaschoolofballet.com or call 805-328-3823. Directors Lisa and Emily Abshere have pulled together many talented people, ages 7 to adult from the Goleta/Santa Barbara community to make this production a traditional holiday treat!
did YOu knOW?
Documentary Photography as Social Change Agent, a lecture by Hannah Frieser: Wednesday, October 28 | 4:30 p.m. | A211
Alternatives to Isolation, a panel discussion coordinated by Freedom4Youth: Friday, November 13 | 4 p.m. | H202
The Luke Theatre has a fantastic and fun Twitter page! Please be sure to follow all the action at www.twitter.com/luketheatre, see you there! The Marjorie Luke Theatre – where dreams take stage! | Humanities Building 202 (805) 897-3484 | http://gallery.sbcc.edu | facebook.com/AtkinsonGallery Image Credit: Richard Ross, E.V., age 17 17, Archival Inkjet Print, 2015
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a&e | CLASSICAL REVIEWS
MAsTerpIece TheATer Carmina Burana, presented by the Santa Barbara Center for the Performing Arts. At the Granada Theatre, Saturday, October 17. Carmina Burana
Reviewed by Gustavo Uribe
david bazemore
I
n the land described in the book The Hyborian Age by author Robert E. Howard, a Cimmerian boy, born on the battlefield to a blacksmith, arose to conquer, swearing to a deity called Crom. Conan, as he was named, eventually claimed vengeance on the evil sorcerer Thulsa Doom, infiltrating the Temple of Set as the cult indulged in cannibalistic orgy. Incidentally, just as pulp-fiction writer Howard wove his tale in the 1930s of Conan — later to be portrayed by Arnold Schwarzenegger on the big screen — Carl Orff, music educator and composer, discovered the medieval sultry poem manuscript Carmina Burana, later to be turned into a 25-song epic masterpiece. Both Conan and Carmina Burana deal with themes of fate, merrymaking, love, warfare, religious worship, and satire. Musically, Orff’s Carmina Burana shares threads of Verdi’s Requiem and Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov, and later in the 1982 film of Conan the Barbarian, film composer Basil Poledouris’s music score shares the epic choir and medieval soundscape inspired by Carmina Burana. In 2008, State Street Ballet and the S.B. Choral Society premiered Orff’s full-scale masterpiece, choreographed by William Soleau, at the Granada Theatre. The two groups reunited to again present Carmina Burana on that stage on Saturday-Sunday, October 17-18, but this time they were joined by the S.B. Symphony. To depict the 25-song set in its entirety and maintain storytelling unity is a difficult task; each piece must be able to stand alone and yet flow in stagecraft and narrative continuity. This was achieved with the choir as backdrop, dressed in stage-lit multicolors; bench props rearranged for different utilities throughout the work (pillars, platform,
benches); the singing soloists dueting with solo dancers in spotlight; and exploiting the theme of the wheel of fate through clockwise choreography. The production portrayed the lyrics of Carmina Burana with a Conan the Barbarian, medieval flavor that featured hooded monks emanating creepiness, court jesters, priests, frolicking court dancers, footballfield-length dance streamers, and, of course, the choir waving Roman-chariot-like celebration ribbons for the “O Fortuna” finale. The photo-finish highlight of the work, however, was a Théodore Géricault’s The Raft of the Medusa–inspired 12th movement “Olim lacus colueram,” where the beautiful swan glides with melancholy across the stage upon a bench-made-raft platform, to be swarmed, picked, and eaten by a bunch of savages. O n fortuna…
András The GIAnT
Did you know...?
Sir András Schiff, solo piano, presented as part of CAMA’s Masterseries. At the Lobero Theatre, Wednesday, October 14.
•
In 1915 50% of Americans were toothless. Today, only 10% of people over 65 are without their own teeth.
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Paul Revere was a dentist in his spare time.
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Soda has an average pH level of 2.5. Stomach acid is only slightly lower at 2.0.
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Athletic injuries are the number one cause of tooth loss for people under 35. Most of these can be prevented by wearing a mouth guard.
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An 8 ounce glass of apple juice has an average of 26 grams of sugar. The maximum recommended daily intake of sugar for an adult man is 37.5 grams, for a woman 25 grams.
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When you brush manually, you create an average of 300 strokes per minute. Sonic toothbrushes can stroke your teeth up to 40,000 times per minute!
Sir András Schiff
Reviewed by Charles Donelan
david bazemore
T
his recital focused on four “last” piano sonatas, all by essential composers — Franz Joseph Haydn, Ludwig van Beethoven, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Franz Schubert. Far from being a lugubrious affair of funereal final statements, the program showed Sir András Schiff at his most commanding, his most searching, and his most beguiling best. By the time he returned to the Lobero stage to play one of Bach’s Goldberg Variations as an encore, the audience had made a dramatic and monumental journey with him through the highest peaks of the solo piano repertoire. Haydn never fails to restore my faith in the musical imagination, and Schiff’s deft, subtly expressive reading of Haydn’s Sonata in E Flat Major, Hob. XVI/52, L.62 was no exception. Bold, witty, and technically demanding, it foreshadowed the deeper shadows to come. Beethoven’s Sonata No. 32 in C Minor, Op. 111 remains endless to contemplation. Hearing it again, especially in Schiff’s sure hands, is all the third movement any sane person could desire. Mozart started the Sonata No. 18 in D Major, K. 576 as a vanity piece for the princess of Prussia, but she never saw the score. As with all the other works on this program, it belongs solidly to the exodus of the sonata from within the reach of amateur pianists. Schiff has been playing Schubert’s sonatas for decades, but in a recent series of concerts in London
and elsewhere in the spring and summer of this year, he has been using an extraordinary period instrument, the Brodmann fortepiano, a fully restored example of the kind of keyboard just coming into prominence when Schubert was composing this sonata in the 1820s. It’s impossible to know if this change of heart about period instruments — Schiff has in the past denigrated period “specialists”— has necessarily been the catalyst, but this performance of Schubert’s last sonata, the sprawling Sonata No. 21 in B-flat Major, D. 960, was extraordinary, and spiritual in the extreme. All kinds of new direction in music were explored, and we heard it played as well n as it is possible to be played. independent.com
october 22, 2015
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“i didn’t have to leave town for world-class health care. it’s just down the road from my house.” Claude had hip replaCement surgery at goleta valley Cottage hospital
Now he’s back on his bike.
The Art All Around Us: Illustration and Visual Culture in America Scott Anderson, Associate Professor of Art, Westmont
Claude Goleta
For a list of services and treatment options, visit Cottagehealth.org/ortho or call 1-855-3NO-PAIN to make an appointment. THE INDEPENDENT
ocTobEr 22, 2015
Free and open to the public. For information, call 565-6051. Our society understands that art shapes culture. But people may be less aware of the specific role the niche of illustration plays in affecting the world around us, from creating pop culture iconography to influencing political opinion. An award-winning illustrator with clients including The Wall Street Journal and Variety, Scott Anderson will discuss the working life of the contemporary illustrator and present a slideshow of powerful imagery that celebrates various milestones of illustration. Anderson will contend that the collective impact of illustration on our culture, while often subconsciously unnoticed, is nonetheless profound.
severe hip pain prevented Claude from riding his bike to and from work each day. Cottage Center for orthopedics affiliated physicians help people like Claude every day. in 2014, they performed over 1,000 joint replacements, more than anyone else on California’s Central Coast. Claude chose experience. ttoday, he is back doing what he loves.
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5:30 p.m., Wednesday, November 4, 2015 University Club, 1332 Santa Barbara Street
independent.com
SPONSORED BY THE WESTMONT FOUNDATION
empyrean records presents david bazemore
a&e | THEATER REVIEW
in concert to benefit One Night Only!
Friday, November 20, 7:30 p.m. Marjorie Luke Theater 721 East Cota Street, Santa Barbara Join the “Best of the Best” Santa Barbara musicians performing as Seraphonium (“songs of heaven”) for an all-star musical extravaganza showcasing the extraordinary songs of composer Monte Schulz, in celebration of the release of his new album, After Many A Summer. featuring performers from
Santana Kenny Loggins Joe Walsh Jeff Bridges and the Abiders Mary Wilson Tom Ball & Kenny Sultan Cache Valley Drifters Chris Hillman Band Tina and the B-Sides Café R&B Joe Sample Yanni Madonna
BLOODY BRILLIANT: David Studwell (left) makes a great Sweeney, and Heather Ayers balances neatly on the line between comedy and horror in her performance as the nasty baker Mrs. Lovett.
Musical MayheM Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, presented by Ensemble Theatre Company. At the New Vic, Saturday, October 10. Shows through October 25. Reviewed by Charles Donelan
F
rom the moment one lays eyes on Brian Bembridge’s masterful unit set for Ensemble Theatre Company’s terrific new production of Sweeney Todd, it’s clear that something special is about to happen. In director Jonathan Fox’s intimate interpretation, Stephen Sondheim’s masterpiece of the macabre gains in intensity without losing any of the power more typically associated with grander spectacles. The 10 performers onstage and the five-piece band cunningly hidden beneath their feet combine to create an expert realization of the complex score and the darkly humorous script. Before the night is over, viewers are thoroughly immersed in this underworld where Sweeney moves beyond good and evil. Well, okay, maybe not beyond evil. With his excellent voice and clear understanding of the character, David Studwell makes a great Sweeney. His love song to the razors he left behind is particularly chilling. When he announces that “my arm is complete again” when he holds the shining blade, you just know that he’s thinking about doing more than just shaving someone. Heather Ayers sings beautifully, as well, and balances neatly on the line between comedy and horror in her performance as the nasty baker Mrs. Lovett. Yet the real excitement generated by this talented pair of leads comes when they support and react to the other fine performances that surround them. Ayers, for example, is splendid in her scenes with Chris Kauffmann, who plays Tobias, the innocent young assistant to rival barber and initial victim the mountebank Pirelli (Justin Cowden). Norman Large gives Judge Turpin the right leering insidiousness, and Craig McEldowney nails the role of Beadle Bamford. Michaelia Leigh and Karole Foreman, as Johanna and the Beggar Woman, respectively, both find new ways to bring life to these crucial roles. Ultimately, the real star of any good production of Sweeney Todd is the music itself, and musical director Matthew R. Meckes has done a remarkable job of preparing the cast and band for this highly challenging material. In the end, one is left to contemplate not only the evil of a serial killer but also the great beauty of Sondheim’s vision as a composer. What an achievement this show is, to have reimagined the Broadway musical so thoroughly, and yet to have adhered n so closely to its underlying form.
“A sonic masterpiece”
- John Lancaster, Keyboardist, Gary Allen Band
AHA! is a non-profit organization committed to transforming the world by empowering teens to create peaceful and connected communities. Visit www.Seraphonium.com to buy tickets and enter to win a VIP Backstage Pass to hang with all your favorite musicians! Tickets also available at the door and by phone, call: 800.838.3006 $15 in Advance, $20 at the Door.
thanks to our sponsors!
empyrean r e c o r d s
A GoAl without A plAn is just A wish” “
now available at independent.com
Substance Misuse Therapy & Coaching Abstinence & Moderation CALL: (805) 966-5100
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䄀 䴀䄀匀吀䔀刀倀䤀䔀䌀䔀 伀䘀 唀一匀䔀吀吀䰀䤀一䜀 䐀刀䄀䴀䄀 䈀䄀匀䔀䐀 伀一 吀䠀䔀 刀䔀䄀䰀ⴀ䰀䤀䘀䔀 匀吀伀刀夀 伀䘀 匀䄀刀䄀䠀 䈀䄀䄀刀吀䴀䄀一Ⰰ 䈀䤀䰀䰀䔀䐀 䄀匀 吀䠀䔀 䠀伀吀吀䔀一吀伀吀ⴀ嘀䔀一唀匀⸀
嘀䔀一唀匀 戀礀
倀甀氀椀琀稀攀爀 倀爀椀稀攀 圀椀渀渀攀爀
匀唀娀䄀一ⴀ䰀伀刀䤀 倀䄀刀䬀匀 搀椀爀攀挀琀攀搀 戀礀
倀栀漀琀漀㨀 䐀愀瘀椀搀 䈀愀稀攀洀漀爀攀
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吀伀䴀 圀䠀䤀吀䄀䬀䔀刀
一伀嘀 㘀ⴀ㜀 ☀ 一伀嘀 ⴀ㐀⼀ 㜀㨀㌀ 倀䴀 一伀嘀 㜀ⴀ㠀 ☀ 一伀嘀 㐀 ⼀ ㈀倀䴀 倀䔀刀䘀伀刀䴀䤀一䜀 䄀刀吀匀 吀䠀䔀䄀吀䔀刀 吀䤀䌀䬀䔀吀匀 圀圀圀⸀吀䠀䔀䄀吀䔀刀䐀䄀一䌀䔀⸀唀䌀匀䈀⸀䔀䐀唀
a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ PREVIEW RIVER SONG: Not one to follow bro country trends, E.J. Cox keeps his country classic — and classy — on his new album, River Town.
Héctor Tobar
Deep Down Dark: The Untold Stories of 33 Men Buried in a Chilean Mine, and the Miracle That Set Them Free MON, NOV 2 / 8 PM UCSB CAMPBELL HALL
InTo the WesT
T
here wasn’t much going on for country However, piano was too big an instrument musician E.J. Cox in Seagrove, Florida. to carry off to college in Auburn, Alabama, Sure, things were nice enough in the so Cox took up guitar. He fronted a band little panhandle town, a place so leisurely and even lived in Nashville for a year. It that Cox figures it’s reminiscent of “the way was around this time that he penned “River Florida used to be 100 years ago,” but they Town,” based on his lonesome experience were slow. He wrote songs but couldn’t find of longing for a girl in another state, seeing much in the way of a receptive audience. He’d pictures of her drinking margaritas while he, tell people he was a songwriter, and they’d say, meanwhile, sat in a flooding house as a nearby “Good luck with that.” river outgrew its banks in a storm. Then came the clarion call from Justin Cox It’s songs like these that set Cox apart (no relation), a friend out in California.“Man, from his many “bro country” contempoyou gotta get out of there and come to Califor- raries who hail from the same area. Cox is a nia where things are happening,” one Cox said storyteller first and foremost, and cites musito the other. With that, cians like Johnny Cash the Floridian moved and Merle Haggard westward, and things as some of his greathave been looking up est musical heroes.“It’s ever since. difficult when you’re Fast-forward three going against this years, and E.J. Cox’s tide,” he said of being new single, “River a traditionalist in an ever-poppier counTown,” is playing by Richie DeMaria across the state, with try scene, “but I think rotations in Monterey, King City, and Bakers- there’s starting to be a curve in the road.” Traveling west has brought him closer field. He’s also playing some of his first California shows, joined by a very talented band to his old western musical roots. He visited of Santa Barbara and L.A. musicians. The band old west legend Doc Holliday’s grave in played a recent show at SOhO on Wednesday, Glenwood Springs — Holliday and Cox’s October 14, and will be playing again Friday, great-grandfather were friends — and Cox October 23, at Santa Ynez’s storied Maverick now has a song on the airwaves in Bakersfield, Saloon. Things are really starting to happen for hometown of Haggard and Buck Owens. Cox, who is finding more success in California Cox first stationed himself in Los Angeles as a country singer than in his native Deep but ultimately found the gridlock and sheer South, and making surprising connections culture shock to be too challenging.“It’s really along the way. a shame because there’s so much opportuCox was impacted at an early age by his nity down there,” he said. His frustrations grandmother, a very skilled fiddler, whom he with traffic drove him northward, where he calls the “most influential” figure of his life. explored the cliffs and coves of Big Sur and “I remember growing up going to these fairs eventually settled down into Santa Barbara. where she got to be a guest performer, and E.J. recorded his debut, River Town, at I was amazed this little old lady would tear Playback Recording Studio, working with that fiddle up,” he recalled. She tried to pass celebrated area musicians like Randy Tico her gift on to Cox, but the fiddle wasn’t the (Jeff Bridges & The Abiders), Jonathan and right fit; he settled on piano. The two would Nathan McEuen, Phil “Fiddle Phil” Salazar, play at lakeside family barbecues, joined by and Austin Beede, among others. Things have cousins on the banjo, singing traditional worked out well out west for Cox and are only songs like “Turkey in the Straw” and “Under pointing upward from here.“Anything is possible when you come out here,” he said. the Double Eagle.”
HoW
e.J. Cox
Found a neW Home In s.B.
4•1•1
E.J. Cox plays the Maverick Saloon (3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez) on Friday, October 23, at 8 p.m. Call 245-2404 or visit mavericksaloon.org for more information.
In his book, Deep Down Dark, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Héctor Tobar recounts the stories of 33 Chilean miners trapped beneath thousands of feet of rock for 69 days after the mine collapsed.
FREE
Gary Snyder An Evening of Poetry and Conversation
WED, NOV 4 / 8 PM UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $15 / $10 UCSB students
Snyder is heralded as a forerunner of a counterculture revolution in literature. His work resists categorization, though he is most associated with Beat contemporaries like Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg.
Event Sponsors: Diana & Simon Raab Foundation Record-setting Long-distance Swimmer An Afternoon with
Diana Nyad
SAT, NOV 14 / 3 PM (note special time) UCSB CAMPBELL HALL Tickets start at $25 $10 UCSB students
In 2013 Nyad fulfilled her lifelong dream of completing the 110-mile swim from Cuba to Florida. She will discuss her extraordinary quest to live life at the highest level.
Garry Kasparov Winter is Coming: Why Vladimir Putin and the Enemies of the Free World Must Be Stopped TUE, NOV 17 / 8 PM UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $15 / $10 UCSB students
A Russian-born political activist and chess Grandmaster, Kasparov urges the world’s democracies to take a forceful stand aganist Putin.
Event Sponsors: Marcia & John Mike Cohen Books will be available for purchase and signing at each event
(805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
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a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ REVIEWS
Raised On it
Jimmy Buffett. At the Santa Barbara Bowl, Thursday, October 15. paul wellman
Reviewed by Austin Murphy
B
arefooted and beaming from ear to ear, the ageless Jimmy Buffett performed at the Santa Barbara Bowl on the evening of Thursday, October 15, with his famed Coral Reefer Band. While other artists might be content seeing their fans having the time of their lives, Buffett’s wild enthusiasm made it appear that he may have enjoyed the concert more than any audience member. The 68-year-old entertainer is no stranger to Santa Barbara, and his show provided plenty of tributes to the city. With the stage decked out appropriately in cabana style, the screen behind the musicians cycled through still images and videos throughout the night — photos of the Santa Barbara Mission, the harbor, and Highway 101 popped up during select songs and proved that Buffett was happy to be back.“In the late ’80s, this was one of the biggest venues [to play],” said Buffett, “and we’ve remained faithful to the Santa Barbara Bowl.” Buffett has long been known as a touring workhorse — he has embarked on a tour every year since 1976—and his live show was nothing short of a marathon as he blitzed through 25 different songs over the course of two hours. Only twice did he allow the energy of the Bowl to dim briefly: during Robert Greenidge’s “Steel Drum Medley” mid-show and at the end of the encore with the solo acoustic “Tin Cup Chalice.” The show wouldn’t have been complete without the inclusion of the band’s most well-known hits. Guitarist Mac McAnally played the role of Alan Jackson on “It’s Five O’Clock Somewhere” early in the night, and “Mar-
Jimmy Buffett
garitaville” and “Cheeseburger in Paradise” both found their way into the set later on. Buffett also paid tribute to his musical contemporaries with covers of James Taylor’s “Mexico,” Crosby, Stills & Nash’s “Southern Cross,” and Van Morrison’s “Brown Eyed Girl.” Though one might expect these songs to lose their luster after being played out over the course of a 46-year career, Buffett’s spirit and gusto kept young and old Parrotheads alike singing and dancing along all night, and he expressed his appreciation: “Thank you to all the people who raised your children on this music; it’s n helped us a lot.”
The Call of CuBan MusiC Buena Vista Social Club, presented by UCSB Arts & Lectures. At the Granada Theatre, Tuesday, October 13. Reviewed by Gustavo Uribe
W
hen I entered high school, my mother brought me a tape from a coworker and said, “You gotta hear this.” It was the 1998 breakthrough album from the Buena Vista Social Club, and I couldn’t stop listening to it—“El carretero,”“Chan Chan,”“El cuarto de tula,” and, of course,“Dos gardenias.” The classic Cuban sounds of the ’40s and ’50s have never died in popularity. The resurgence of Buena Vista Social Club (BVSC) in the late 1990s carved another chapter in the story of Cuban music; however, with only a few living original members left, their current Adios Tour hits a bittersweet note in the international community. The generation of Classic Cuban musicians has officially passed the guard to a new epoch in Cuban music. Santa Barbarans were lucky to see them perform for one last time. The Granada Theatre was sold-out, packed, and full of a raucously clapping, multicultured bunch, bursting with catcalls, cow-calls, and Arsenio Hall arm-cranking calls. It was refreshing to see the usually sit-down Granada transform into a sea of people all standing up, and with the corner aisles teeming with dancers. While a projected backdrop displayed photos paying homage to deceased BVSC members, the band played their classics along with unexpected favorites,
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such as “Bésame mucho” and “Over the Rainbow,” and all in their trademark sensual, laidback Cuban style. The legendary version of “Chan Chan” sung by guitarist Eliades Ochoa, dressed in black with matching cowboy hat, was like a watching a Cuban Johnny Cash shoot a man in Reno just to watch him die—simply awesome. To see the diva Omara Portuondo sing her smoky piano duet in a spotlight, Casablanca-style, was life-changing. To bear witness to Barbarito Torres trilling his laúd like a boss and playing his Guajiro string machine behind his back was to know perfection. The golden-age Guajiro style will remain classic and its generation legendary primarily thanks to the contributions of BVSC. Evident, however, was a hint of merengue and timba rifts creeping in through some percussion breakdowns. With the merengue-styled song “A la luna yo me voy” performed live and featured on the album AfroCubism, a musical collaboration between musicians from Mali and Cuba, it is evident that even the culturally pure BVSC has shown signs of the evolution. Yet we have only seen the tip of the iceberg; with the Cuban embargo being lifted, it will be interesting to discover what the new Cuban guard has n in store for us.
caroline Beard
a&e | POSITIVELY STATE STREET
RAISE A GLASS: The famously fun Poor Man’s Whiskey promises to bring the party spirit upon returning to Santa Barbara this Saturday.
I WIsh I Could
Bottle up the tIme by Richie DeMaria
BACK TO THEIR ROOTS: This has been a great, if somewhat rough and tumbling, year for Poor Man’s Whiskey, who will play on Saturday, October 24, at 9 p.m at SOhO Restaurant & Music Club (1221 State St.). Now 15 years into their career, the Isla Vista and Bay Area–based bluegrass/jam-rock band is enjoying a “wild ride” of a time, with ups and downs aplenty, says singing, keyboarding, banjoing harmonica man Josh Brough. The year has brought a career highlight in a sold-out performance at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, but also some difficult personnel shifts as parenthood has moved into the picture. This year also sees the band debuting their newest cover record in their bluegrass-ified rendition of Paul Simon’s Graceland. Poor Man’s Whiskey won worldwide acclaim with Darkside of the Moonshine, an Appalachian take on Pink Floyd’s psychedelic ’70s masterpiece, which they have now performed across the globe, sometimes costumed as characters from The Wizard of Oz — they’re a wild and whimsical bunch, for sure. Also this year, the band was inspired to lend their freewheeling spirit to Simon’s consummately crafted and joyful work, which Brough called “an iconic album” near and dear to the Whiskey boys’ hearts. He hopes to tour their folky performances of Dark Side and Graceland to the origins of folk music itself, upon the emerald isles of Ireland and England, and hints that one day they make take on a bluegrass Sgt. Pepper. “I think the idea of taking on any type of song that’s ever been written with these acoustic instruments is a challenge, and it’s a fun thing to do,” he said. Fun is certainly a core value for the Poor Man’s Whiskey crew, who started as an Isla Vista jam band. “Our roots are in Isla Vista,” Brough said, reminiscing on the days when the band would soundtrack spontaneous keg parties. They don’t take themselves too seriously, and they’re known to take the stage in “circus show”–type performances with outlandish costumes or shirtless/short-shorts ensembles. Though they’re a little older now —“We’ve toned it down a bit,” Brough admitted—coming home reawakens that festive spirit they fostered in I.V. so many years ago.“It’s become a biannual tradition where it seems more like a college reunion of sorts; it’s packed, and it’s fun,” he said.“I just wish I could bottle up the time because I see so many friends I haven’t seen in so long; it’s almost sad leaving.” Well, Josh, you will always have a second home here. Feel free to play well into the night on Saturday. And you, dear reader—feel free to join them. It’ll be a rollicking good time. THOUGHTS ON SUFJAN: Also on Saturday, October 24, 8 p.m., Sufjan Stevens plays at the Arlington Theatre (1317 State St.). I can’t help but recall
the time some friends and I formed a one-off seven- or eight-piece band (funny thing, memory) named The Shredded Wheaties, assembled to perform a rendition of Sufjan’s “Come On! Feel the Illinoise!” for a DP Jazz Choir fundraiser way back when. We brought the house down, but none of us really keep in touch anymore. It’s a memory now. The memory inspires a nostalgia overdrive, for no one crafts songs of nostalgia and its associated woes like Stevens. His postcard-esque soundscapes and lyrics evoke bygone times and the delicate sorrows of childhood. His latest, Carrie & Lowell, explores new lyrical territory with further meditations on grief and spirituality. One wonders if he will wear those magnificent (or megalomaniacal?) bird wings he donned for his Illinois tour, although such flamboyance seems a little strange for such weighty n new material. All things go, all things go, even fun costumes.
PLAZA PLAYHOUSE THEATER Since 1928
UPCOMING SHOWS
Saturday, October 24 | 7:00 pm “Avengers: Age of Ultron” Friday, October 30 | 7:30 pm Whiskey Chimp w/Lemon Trees Sunday, November 1 | 7:30 pm Christopher Paul Stelling w/Brian Wright Friday, November 6 | 7:30 pm Shane Alexander & The Great Favorites Saturday, November 7 | 7:30 pm Hope & Justin CD Release w/ special guests
Plaza Playhouse Theater
4916 Carpinteria Avenue, Carpinteria For calendar and to purchase tickets: plazatheatercarpinteria.com independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
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Cabin by the Sea SeRieS:
Diego’S UmbRella Gypsy Rock, pirate polka
Friday 10/23 - 5:00 - 8:00
the $5 happy hoUR
Village Pool Supply THE ULTIMATE IN POOL & SPA SALES, SERVICE AND REPAIR PARTS • MAINTENANCE • REPAIRS • RESURFACING For all your pool and spa needs since 1972 lic.# 342321
8:30
miDnight mynx,
Johny Katz & SpeCial gUeSt Soul funk rock
Saturday 10/24 - 9:00
pooR man’S whiSKey
Performing Paul Simon’s Graceland and other PMW favorites
THE METAMORPHOSIS: Stuart Carey creates new works of art from Patricia Houghton Clarke’s photos in Metamorphographs at Montecito Aesthetic Institute.
Sunday 10/25 - 7:00
KimbeRly foRD banD JaSon SpooneR Playing the music of Joni Mitchell
Parking on Salsipuedes
Monday 10/26- 7:30
2321730R
SbCC monDay maDneSS Jazz banD Tuesday 10/27 - 7:00
SingeR SongwRiteR ShowCaSe:
zoë gUeSS, CleopatRa DegheR, SUnDay Wednesday 10/28 - 7:30
Katie fRitzKe
& the iDiomatiqUeS Gypsy jazz & hot swing Thursday 10/29- 8:00
JoSS Jaffe
“Dub Mantra” CD release w/ special guest Donna De Lory & DK Timonkey
1221 State Street
962-7776
advance ticketS available for Select ShowS
www.SohoSb.com call (877) 548-3237
art exhibits MuseuMs Art, Design & Architecture Museum – Garry Winogrand: Women Are Beautiful; Talking Back: New Acquisitions; Stephen Westfall: Stars and Candy Wrappers; Walter S. White: Inventions in Midcentury Architec Architecture, through Dec. 6. UCSB, 893-2951. 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. Museum of Contemporary Art S.B. – Then they form us; Conrad Ruiz: Bloom Projects, through Oct. 25. 653 Paseo Nuevo, 966-5373. Rancho La Patera & Stow House – Multiple permanent exhibits hosted by the Goleta Valley Historical Society. 304 N. Los Carneros Rd., Goleta, 681-7216. S.B. Historical Museum – The Story of Santa Barbara, permanent exhibition. Free admission. 136 E. De la Guerra St., 966-1601. S.B. Maritime Museum – Divergent Focal Planes on the Channel: From Darkroom to Lightroom, through Jan. 3, 2016. 113 Harbor Wy., 962-8404. S.B. Museum of Art – Looking In, Looking Out: Latin American Photography Photography, through Mar. 20, 2016; 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 – Edward S. Curtis: Luminous Portraits of American Indian Life, through Jan. 4, 2016. 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 in Motion, through Nov. 2; Legacy and Loss: Landscapes of the S.B. Region, through Feb. 1, 2016. 1511-B Mission Dr., Solvang, 686-8315.
Galleries
House Calls for Greater Santa Barbara
Dr. Andy Dainsberg, DVM call 895-4340 or visit vetacu.com for more info
68
THE INDEPENDENT
ocTobEr 22, 2015
independent.com
Allan Hancock College Library – Children’s book illustrations, ongoing. 800 S. College Dr., Santa Maria, 922-6966. Architectural Foundation Gallery – Nina Warner: Urban Space: The Parks of Santa Barbara, through Nov. 20. 229 E. Victoria St., 965-6307.
Artamo Gallery–Autumn Autumn Colors Colors, through Oct. 31. 11 W. Anapamu St., 568-1400. Arts Fund Gallery– Summer Mentorship Student Exhibition, through Oct. 24. 205-C Santa Barbara St., 965-7321. Atkinson Gallery – Richard Ross: Isolated, Isolated through Dec. 4. Humanities Bldg., Rm. 202, SBCC, 721 Cliff Dr., 897-3484. Beatrice Wood Ctr. for the Arts – Ojai Studio Artists: Small Works, through Nov. 15. 8585 Ojai-Santa Paula Rd., Ojai, 646-3381. Cancer Ctr. of S.B. – Art Heals, a permanent exhibit. 540 Pueblo St., Ste. A, 898-2204. Carpinteria Arts Ctr. – Inside Out Out, through Nov. 30. 855 Linden Ave., Carpinteria, 684-7789. Channing Peake Gallery– Alive in Wild Places, through Jan. 21. S.B. County Administration Bldg., 105 E. Anapamu St. Churchill Jewelers & Gallery – Ruth Ellen Hoag: Rain, through Oct. 31; Thomas Van Stein, ongoing. 1015 State St., 962-5815. Cypress Gallery– Angie Hamlin: The Sky's the Limit, Oct. 27-Nov. 29. 119 E. Cypress Ave., Lompoc, 737-1129. Divine Inspiration Gallery of Fine Art – Felice Willat: Lifescapes, through Nov. 28. 1528 State St., 570-2446. Gallery 27 – Brooks Institute MFA Photography: Second Nature, through Nov. 1. 27 E. Cota St., 585-8000. Gallery Los Olivos – Erin Williams: Gates of Grace, through Oct. 31. 2920 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, 688-7517. The Good Life – John Card: Potpourri IIII, through Oct. 30. 1672 Mission Dr., Solvang, 688-7111. Harris and Fredda Meisel Gallery of Art – Sicilian Translucency: Watercolor Paintings of Traveling Artists, through Jan. 1, 2016. 2415 De la Vina St., 687-7444. Hospice of S.B. – Margaret Singer: Celebrations, through Oct. 31. 2050 Alameda Padre Serra, 563-8820. Inez Gallery – Rebecca Gomez: Cast Shadows, through Nov. 10. 2446 Alamo Pintado, Ste. B, Los Olivos, 688-8884. JadeNow Gallery – Ryan and Jeff Spangler, ongoing. 14 Parker Wy., 845-4558. The Little Door Restaurant – Andreina Diaz: A Visual Taste of S.B., through Oct. 31. 129 E. Anapamu St., 882-0050. 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. MCASB Satellite – Magic Mountain, through Jan. 31, 2016. Hotel Indigo, 121 State St., 966-5373.
To be considered for The Independent’s listings, please visit independent.com and click “Submit an event” or email listings@independent.com.
oct. 22-29 MichaelKate Interiors & Art Gallery – Mood Swing, through Nov. 29. 132 Santa Barbara St., 963-1411. The Mitchell Estate Gallery – Michelle Fierro: Paintings from 1995-1996, through Nov. 5. 110 Powers Ave., 568-1700. Montecito Aesthetic Institute – Patricia Houghton Clarke & Stuart Carey: Metamorphographs, through Jan. 5, 2016. 1150 Coast Village Rd., Montecito, 565-5700. 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. Palm Loft Gallery – Heroes' Journey Journey, through Nov. 15. 410 Palm Ave. Loft A-1, Carpinteria, 684-9700. Porch – Rick Garcia: A Few of My Favorite Things, through Oct. 30. 3823 Santa Claus Ln., Carpinteria, 684-0300. Porch Gallery Ojai – Jeff Mann: A Catalogue of Unnatural Works, through Nov. 15. 310 E. Matilija Ave., 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. S.B. Tennis Club – De mi Sangre: of my Blood Blood, through Nov. 6. 2375 Foothill Rd., 682-4722. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – Morrison Hotel Gallery, ongoing. 1221 State St., 962-7776. Sullivan Goss, An American Gallery – Lockwood de Forest Brass Cutouts, through Dec. 31; Angela Perko: Earthly Delight Delight; American Details, through Jan. 3, 2016. 7 E. Anapamu St., 730-1460. Tamsen Gallery – R.W. Firestone, ongoing. 3888 State St., 687-2200. wall space gallery – Jeonglok Lee, Sungseock Ahn, Won-Chul Lee: Surveying the Landscape, through Nov. 1. 116 C-1 E. Yanonali St., 637-3898.
liVe Music classical
Faulkner Gallery – S.B. Music Club. 40 E. Anapamu St., 617-3401. sat: 3pm First Presbyterian Church –Westmont Fall Orchestra Concert. 21 E. Constance Ave., 687-0754. sun: 3pm Lotte Lehmann Concert Hall – Paul Berkowitz. Music Bldg. 1315, UCSB, 893-3230. fri: 7:30pm Page Hall –Westmont Fall Orchestra Concert. 955 La Paz Rd., 565-6000. sat: 7pm
pop, rock & jazz
Arlington Theatre – 1317 State St., 963-4408. sat: Sufjan Stevens (8pm) Ayni Gallery – 216 State St., 845-8254. sat: Heart of Gold (7pm) Brasil Arts Café – 1230 State St., 245-5615. fri: Live Music Brewhouse – 229 W. Montecito St., 884-4664. thu-sat, wed: Live Music (9pm) Campbell Hall – 574 Mesa Rd., UCSB, 893-3535. wed: Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings (8pm) Center Stage Theater – 751 Paseo Nuevo, 963-0408. sun: Simrit Kaur (7:30pm) wed-thu: Zombie Rock: The Musical (8pm) Chumash Casino Resort – 3400 E. Hwy. 246, Santa Ynez, (800) 248-6274. thu 10/22: Gloria Gaynor and Maxine Nightingale (8pm) thu 10/29: Air Supply (8pm) Cold Spring Tavern – 5995 Stagecoach Rd., 967-0066. fri: Sean Wiggins and Paul Houston (7-10pm) sat: Pocket Change (2-5pm); King Cole and friends (6-9pm) sun: Tom Ball and Kenny Sultan (1:15-4pm); Soul Biscuit (4:30-7:30pm) The Creekside – 4444 Hollister Ave., 964-5118. fri: Shades of Soul (9pm) wed: Country Night thu: Bullfrog Blues Band (8pm) Dargan’s – 18 E. Ortega St., 568-0702. thu: Traditional Irish Music (6:30pm) sat: Live Music (10pm) tue: Karaoke (9pm) Endless Summer Bar/Café – 113 Harbor Wy., 564-1200.
Acoustic guitar and vocals (6:30-9:30pm) The Fig Grill – 5940 Calle Real, Goleta, 692-8999. sat: Dos Pueblos Jazz Quartet (6-8pm) 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) Lobero Theatre – 33 E. Canon Perdido St., 963-0761. sun: Home Free (8pm) Maverick Saloon – 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 686-4785. fri: E J Cox Band CD Release Party (8pm) sat: Blues Bob (3pm); Dusty Jugz (8pm) sun: The Regulars, Sometime Boys (2-5pm); DJ Peetey (9:30pm) Moby Dick Restaurant – 220 Stearns Wharf, 965-0549. wed-thu: Derroy (5-8pm) fri-sat: Derroy (6-9pm) sun: Derroy (10am-2pm) MultiCultural Ctr. Theater– Channel Islands Rd., UCSB, 893-7609. fri: Ricardo Lemvo & Makina Loca (8-10pm) O’Malleys and the Study Hall – 523 State St., 564-8904. thu: College Night with DJ Gavin Paseo Nuevo Shops – 651 Paseo Nuevo. thu 10/22: Jade Hendrix, Jacob Scesney (5-7pm) thu 10/29: Ike Jenkins Madness Band (5-7pm) Roundin’ Third – 7398 Calle Real, 845-8383. thu, tue: Locals Night (7pm) S.B. Bowl – 1122 N. Milpas St., 962-7411. thu 10/22: Janet Jackson (7pm) Sandbar – 514 State St., 966-1388. wed: Big Wednesday (10pm) SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – 1221 State St., 962-7776. thu: Roman Street (6pm); Diego's Umbrella (8:30pm) fri: Midnight Mynx, Jonny CATZ (8pm) sat: Poor Man's Whiskey (9pm) sun: Kimberly Ford, Jason Spooner (7:30pm) mon: SBCC Jazz Band (7:30pm) tue: Zoe Guess, Cleopatra Degher, Sunday (7pm) wed: Katie Fritzke, The Idiomatiques (7:30pm) thu: Joss Jaffe CD Release, Donna De Lory, DJ Timonkey (8pm) Velvet Jones – 423 State St., 965-8676. thu: Quiet Life, Cotton Jones (8pm) fri: Slic Vic, Net Door to the Moon, Surprise Me, Glitterfish (8pm) thu: Layovr (8pm) Whiskey Richards – 435 State St., 963-1786. mon: Open Mike Night (8pm) wed: Punk on Vinyl (10pm) Wolf's Head – 432 State St. sat: DJ House Shoes + Guests (3pm) fri:
theater Garvin Theatre – The Hound of the Baskervilles. 801 Cliff Dr., SBCC West Campus, 965-5935. thu-sat: 7:30pm sun: 2pm thu: 7:30pm Ojai Youth Entertainers Studio – Rent. 316 E. Matilija St., Ojai, 646-4300. fri: 7pm sat: 2:30 and 7pm sun: 3pm The New Vic – Sweeney Todd. 38 W. Victoria St., 965-5400. thu-sat: 8pm sun: 2 and 7pm
AC ANDERSON 2
AN INTIMATE EVENING WITH
COOPER
&
ANDY
COHEN
DEEP TALK AND SHALLOW TALES
Join Cohen and Cooper for an unscripted, uncensored and unforgettable night of conversation
SATURDAY MARCH 12 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE ARLINGTON THEATRE BOX OFFICE TICKETMASTER.COM • 805-963-4408 • 800-745-3000 AC2LIVE.COM
IT’S A
SALE!
ENTIRE STORE
% BOGO 50
dance Center Stage Theater – Dana Lawton Dances: Home. 751 Paseo Nuevo, 963-0408. fri: 8pm sat: 4 and 8pm Goleta Library – S.B. Festival Ballet. 500 N. Fairview Ave., Goleta, 964-7878. tue: 4pm Granada Theatre – 1214 State St., 899-2222. thu 10/22: MOMIX: Alchemia (8pm) mon-tue: New York City Ballet Moves (8pm)
®
®
400 STATE STREET at GUTIERREZ SANTA BARBARA • 805-963-0330 *FOR LIMITED TIME, SOME EXCLUSIONS APPLY – SEE STORE FOR DETAILS. independent.com
ocTobEr 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENT
69
Last ChanCe
Harvest Dinner at Sedgwick Reserve @ New Vic Theater
33 W Victoria St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101
General tickets $35 VIP tickets $50
Saturday, Nov 7, 7pm
SVIP reception post-show
Sunday, Nov 8, 6pm
SVIP reception pre-show Buy tickets and see photos + videos at
www.invertigodance.org/reeling
A rare opportunity to visit this iconic reserve for a farm-to-table experience Saturday, November 7
BE INTRIGUED...
19TH ANNUAL HOLIDAY HOME LOOK IN
at Sedgwick Reserve • 3–9 pm Featuring Jeff Olsson from new West Catering, highlighting locally sourced menu items Zaca Mesa Winery and Vineyard providing the evening’s wines
A Special Event to Benefit the UC Santa Barbara Natural Reserve System and Sedgwick Reserve.
Bus transportation provided for those traveling from Santa Barbara
@UCSBNaturalReserveSystem
Renowned nature photographer, Rick Rosenthal, presenting on his latest work above and below the sea, including Sedgwick Reserve and impacts of El Niño on local terrestrial & marine environments
TOUR FOUR STUNNING OJAI VALLEY HOMES $30 ADVANCE / $35 TOUR WEEKEND &
SHOP HOLIDAY MARKETPLACE WITH 40 CURATED ARTISANS 703 El Paseo Rd. Ojai
tours of sedgwick, including a visit to the only observatory within the UC Natural Reserve System
FREE ADMISSION
$200/person $350/couple
- OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
•
Ticket information at nrs.ucsb.edu RSVP to Riley Leonard rileyleonard@ucsb.edu or 805.893.3764
NOVEMBER 14-15 Tickets and information: www.HolidayHomeLookIn.org Proceeds benefit the Ojai Music Festival and its BRAVO education and community program
This event is part of the UC Natural Reserve System 50th Anniversary Celebration
COUPLES
NOV 7
201 5
MARRIAGE
Therapeutic Coaching
The New Rules of Marriage Program (Terry Real)
SANTA BARBARA RAPE CRISIS CENTER
Are You In Pain About Your Marriage?
CENTRO CONTRA LA VIOLACION SEXUAL
Is Your Marriage in Crisis? WENDY ALLEN,
Ph.D, MFT 1207 De La Vina Santa BarBara 805-962-2212 www.wendyphd.com #mFC21158
70
From Marriage Tune-up to Last Chance Intensive Therapy SBCC Class: “The Secret of Men’s Depression” November 15, 2015 – 9-12pm Register: www.sbcc.edu/CLL
THE INDEPENDENT
ocTobEr 22, 2015
24-Hour Hotline: (805) 564-3696 www.sbrapecrisiscenter.org
more than rape, not only crisis
independent.com
#RunSBMarathon
Marathon
Half
Marathon Relay
Veterans Final Mile
www.sbmarathon.com
SBIFF
a&e | FILM REVIEWS
Spy vS. Lawyer
and Metropolitan Theatres Corp. present....
PLAZA DE ORO Wednesdays
Bridge of Spies. Tom Hanks, Mark Rylance, and Amy Ryan star in a film written by Matt Charman, Joel Coen, and Ethan Coen and directed by Steven Spielberg.
October 28 - THE CREEPING GARDEN
Reviewed by D.J. Palladino
November 4 - GOODNIGHT MOMMY
C
November 11 - JAFAR PANAHI’S TAXI
areless is something you never think about describing Steven Spielberg. Corny, manipulative, middlebrow, overproduced, sure. But not sloppy. This film opens with Tom Hanks as insurance lawyer James Donovan arguing in a bar against awarding insurance claims to accident victims who just happened to be in the car that Donovan’s client struck. We’re meant to see him as a slimeball, which the rest of the movie takes anxious pains to disprove. Why bother with the misleading intro? The movie that follows is engaging enough, opening with the capture of a Soviet spy in 1957 New York and then cutting to U-2 spy-plane pilots learning their mission and then drawing in Donovan, who, the film barely mentions, was also an attorney at the Nuremberg trials. Then it becomes a big Cold War comic book with little good to say about either country, though the little people on both sides have Spielbergian spunk. The second half of the film takes place mostly in Berlin, where Donovan negotiates an exchange of spies that ultimately will take place on a bridge with
5:00 & 7:30
SAVING PILOT POWERS: Tom Hanks plays an American lawyer recruited by the CIA to rescue a spy-plane pilot from the Soviet Union in Bridge of Spies.
(R) (NR)
MET Opera 2015-16 Saturday, October 31 9:00 am
snow swirling and snipers on either side pointing at Wagner’s the actors. Sounds good, but Spielberg’s true sloppiness begins here. He forgets to be suspenseful, and we know the director of Jaws and Munich can do white knuckles. Metropolitan Theatres - The Indepentdent adsource@exh Arlington Some cruel acts by East German soldiers make you wince, but the scariest sadly, isxwhen Donovan p. 888.737.2812 2colmoment, (3.667”) 6.166” Select Showtimes On Sale Now finds himself inside the East Berlin wall surrounded by www.metrotheatres.com insertion date: Friday, October 23-29, 2015 teenage punks Ad who want his coat. Juvenile delinquents from the GDRAd seemcreation/delivery ripe with potential. But Spielberg date: Tuesday, October 20, 2015 at 3:07:55 PM caind_met1 shrugs it off like Donovan does the coat. Instead of fun, we get detailed historicity. But as my son said afterward, just because a movie is slow doesn’t mean it’s burning. There are nice touches, such as twin scenes of people scaling walls in Berlin and Brooklyn, but there is no shiver in this version of Cold War legal life. n
TANNHAUSER
It’S a war of Men
Showtimes for October 23-29
Sicario. Emily Blunt, Josh Brolin, and Benicio Del Toro star in a movie written by Taylor Sheridan and directed by Denis Villenueve.
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 STEVE JOBS E H THE LAST WITCH Fri to Sun: 12:50, 2:10, 3:50, 5:00, HUNTER C 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 6:30, 8:00, 9:45; Mon to Wed: 2:10, H GOOSEBUMPS B Fri: 2:45, 7:30, 9:45 3:50, 5:00, 6:40, 8:00; Thu: 2:10, 5:00, 7:40; Sat & Sun: 12:45, 2:45, 3:50, 5:00, 8:00 H STEVE JOBS E 12:20, 1:30, 5:00, 7:40; Mon to Thu: 2:45, 5:00, 3:15, 4:15, 6:10, 9:00, 10:05 BRIDGE OF SPIES C 7:40 Fri to Sun: 12:40, 3:20, 6:40, 9:05; C BRIDGE OF SPIES SICARIO E 5:30, 8:15 Mon to Thu: 1:40, 4:35, 7:30 Fri to Wed: 12:10, 3:25, 6:30, 9:25; THE INTERN C HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA Thu: 12:10, 3:25, 6:30 Fri to Sun: 12:30, 3:35, 6:20, 9:15; 2 B Fri: 3:15 PM; Sat & Sun: 12:30, 3:15; CRIMSON PEAK E 1:00, 3:50, Mon to Wed: 1:50, 4:45, 7:45; Thu: 1:50, 4:45 Mon to Thu: 3:15 PM 6:40, 10:15 H JEM AND THE HOLOGRAMS B 2:15, 5:15, 8:00
Reviewed by Richie DeMaria
I
n Sicario, Emily Blunt plays Kate, a by-the-rules FBI officer who is recruited to lend her efforts to the drug war in Juarez. She teams with Matt (Josh Brolin) and Alejandro (Benicio Del Toro), two seasoned, severe government officials who have worked on the case for some time. Though she wants to help, her efforts are blockaded. Whenever she or partner Reggie (Daniel Kaluuya) question the methods or motives of the mission, they are dismissed, silenced, or threatened. She watches with futility as the higher-ups engage in a war with no clear rules and no clear heroes. On surface level, Sicario is about an American quest to fell a powerful Mexican drug lord, and the film packs the unnerving tension and graphic violence one might expect from a journey through cartel land. What it offers, as well, is an indictment against our nation’s shadowy tactics on the ground, told through a beautiful ensemble of fine acting, visuals, and music. Brolin and Del Toro, both excellently sinister in their gun-toting virility, upturn the usual Hollywood heroism tropes of the American soldier in their aggressively unquestionable authority and callously violent temperaments. Blunt’s simultaneously steel-strong and vulnerable Kate and Kaluuya’s admirable Reggie make great foils in their witnessing of cartel carnage and military-industrial phallus contests. And in one
(NR)
RIVIERA
H ROOM E Thu: 7:45 PM
THE MARTIAN 3D C Fri to Wed: 7:10 PM
2044 ALAMEDA PADRE SERRA, SANTA BARBARA THE MARTIAN C 12:30,
CARTEL LAND: Sicario stars Emily Blunt as an FBI agent enlisted into a drug war on the border of the U.S. and Mexico.
3:05, 6:20, 9:35
FREEHELD C 5:10 PM
of the best visual-musical companionships this year since It Follows, Icelandic composer Jóhann Jóhannsson contributes a battlefield of a score, sounding like an orchestra of warplanes and guns. Villeneuve layers the film with deep visual and thematic cues of subjugation, from the posters of missing women in Juarez to Kate’s addiction to Indian Creek cigarettes. Kate is no idealized ass-kicking Katniss, conveying instead the more likely reality of helplessness and frustration as a woman in a covertly schemed and chaotically violent man’s world. It’s an important film, a brave and artful critique in our era of gun-toting, government-issue masculinities stomping upon lives without consequence. It’s a movie against puppeteering political forces and the heroes who begin to resemble villains in their blindly principled vendettas. It’s a movie of the times: one of abject futility. See it. n
ARLINGTON
METRO 4
1317 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA
618 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA
H THE LAST WITCH HUNTER C Fri to Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 6:50, 10:05; Mon to Thu: 2:00, 5:30, 8:00 H ROCK THE KASBAH E Fri to Sun: 1:20, 4:00, 6:40, 9:30; Mon to Thu: 2:30, 4:55, 7:50 CRIMSON PEAK E Fri to Sun: 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 9:55; Mon to Wed: 2:10, 5:05, 7:30; Thu: 2:10, 5:05 THE MARTIAN C Fri to Sun: 1:00, 3:50, 7:00, 9:20; Mon to Thu: 2:20, 4:30, 7:40 H JOHN CARPENTER’S HALLOWEEN E Thu: 7:30 PM
H JEM AND THE HOLOGRAMS B Fri to Sun: 1:00, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20; Mon to Thu: 2:00, 4:50, 7:40
EVEREST C Fri: 2:00, 4:45, 7:30; Sun to Thu: 2:00, 4:45, 7:30
H GOOSEBUMPS B Fri to Sun: 1:10, 6:40, 9:10; Mon to Thu: 2:30, 4:40, 7:30
PLAZA DE ORO
H GOOSEBUMPS 3D B Fri to Sun: 4:10 PM
371 SOUTH HITCHCOCK WAY, SANTA BARBARA
WOODLAWN B Fri to Sun: 1:05 PM; Mon to Thu: 4:30 PM
H THE CREEPING GARDEN I Wed: 5:00, 7:30 HE NAMED ME MALALA C Fri to Tue: 3:00, 5:15; Wed: 3:00 PM; Thu: 3:00, 5:15 BLACK MASS E 7:45 PM MEET THE PATELS B Fri to Tue: 3:15, 5:30, 7:30; Wed: 3:15, 5:30; Thu: 3:15, 5:30, 7:30
CHECK OUT OUR NEW WEBSITE!
independent.com
FIESTA 5 916 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA
H BURNT Thu: 7:10, 9:25
THE WALK B Fri: 7:40 PM; Sat & Sun: 2:20, 7:40; Mon to Thu: 7:40 PM
H BURNT Thu: 8:15 PM
PAN B Fri to Sun: 3:30, 6:20, 9:00; Mon to Thu: 1:50, 7:20 SICARIO E Fri to Sun: 1:25, 4:00, 6:50, 9:35; Mon to Wed: 2:10, 5:00, 7:50; Thu: 2:10, 5:00 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 2 B Fri to Sun: 1:20, 3:50, 6:10, 8:30; Mon to Thu: 2:20, 5:10, 7:10
H OUR BRAND IS CRISIS E Thu: 7:45 PM www.metrotheatres.com 877-789-MOVIE
october 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENt
71
a&e | FILM
Athens in Crisis: Segregation and social distance
Movie Guide Edited by Michelle Drown
The following films are playing in Santa Barbara FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, through THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29. Descriptions followed by initials â&#x20AC;&#x201D; RD (Richie DeMaria) and DJP (D.J. Palladino) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; have been taken from our criticsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; reviews, which can be read in full at independent.com. The symbol O indicates the film is recommended.
of a girl and her sisters, who strive to be singing superstars. Fairview/Fiesta 5 The Last Witch Hunter (106 mins.; PG-13: sequences of fantasy violence and frightening images)
Thomas Maloutas
Vin Diesel stars as Kaulder, the last witch hunter on Earth, who must go up against the wicked Witch Queen and vicious ilk before they can unleash the Black Death upon the world. Camino Real/Metro 4
Sunday,
Oct. 25
Professor of Social Geography Harokopio University, Athens
2:00 pm
Karpeles Manuscript Library
Thomas Maloutas, Professor of Social Geography at Harokopio University in Athens, is a leading expert in cities and society. His lecture will be on social and ethnic segregation in Athens today. He will address the impact of the ongoing economic and political crisis on the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s social geography.
21 W. Anapamu St. Santa Barbara public parking OppOsite
The lecture is FREE and open to the public. FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Discussion will follow the lecture.
Dope
th
WWW.CLASSICS.UCSB.EDU
MADE POSSIBLE THROUGH THE GENEROSITY OF THE ALEXANDER S. ONASSIS PUBLIC BENEFIT FOUNDATION AND THE UCSB ARGYROPOULOS ENDOWMENT IN HELLENIC STUDIES.
FIRST LOOKS Bridge of Spies (141 mins.; PG-13: some violence and brief strong language)
Reviewed on page 71.
Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo
O Sicario (121 mins.; R: strong violence, grisly images, and language) Reviewed on page 71. Fairview/Fiesta 5
SCREENINGS The Creeping Garden (81 mins.; NR) This award-winning documentary explores the work of fringe scientists, mycologists, and artists who study and work with the extraordinary and often beautiful slime molds (formerly categorized as fungi).
Wed., Oct. 28, 5 and 7:30pm, Plaza de Oro
(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. FESS GE ION AL MASSA
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Fri. and Mon., Oct. 23 and 26, 10pm, Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte, Isla Vista (Double feature with Me and Earl and the Dying Girl)
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O Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (105 mins.; PG-13: sexual content, drug material, language, and some thematic elements) This film is intricately crafted, often very funny, moving in its depiction of friendships and mortality, and all about the extreme love of movies, to boot â&#x20AC;&#x201D; itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Citizen Kane gone to the prom. (DJP)
Fri. and Mon., Oct. 23 and 26, 7pm, Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte, Isla Vista (Double feature with Dope)
PREMIERES Burnt (100 mins.; NR) Chef Adam Jones (Bradley Cooper) is looking to make a comeback after ruining his career with drugs and enfant terrible behavior in Paris. He goes to London to make a new go of things and, hopefully, open a three-star restaurant. Camino Real/ Paseo Nuevo (Opens Thu., Oct. 29)
In The Palms Center
(101 exit Rose south to Gonzales)
independent.com
Sandra Bullock stars in this dramedy as a political campaign strategist who is sent to a war-torn South American country to install a new leader. Things go awry when her nemesis (played by Billy Bob Thornton) shows up and gets invoved. Fiesta 5
(Opens Thu., Oct. 29)
Rock the Kasbah (100 mins.; R: language including sexual references, some drug use, and brief violence) Bill Murray stars as a music manager who is having nothing but bad luck until he discovers an Afghani teen with the voice of an angel. He takes her to Kabul to compete in the American Idol-esque Afghan Star. Metro 4 Room (118 mins.; R: language) Based on the Emma Donoghue novel of the same name, Room chronicles Ma and 5-year-old Jackâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life confined to a 10-by-10-foot room until they decide to make a daring escape.
Paseo Nuevo (Opens Thu., Oct. 29)
O Dope
PR O
Our Brand Is Crisis (107 mins.; R: language including some sexual references)
Jem and the Holograms (118 mins.; PG: thematic material including reckless behavior, brief suggestive content, and some language) Based on the toy line/animated TV show of the same name, this musical fantasy film tells the story
Steve Jobs (122 mins.; R: language) Michael Fassbender stars as the genius CEO of Apple Inc. in this biographical version of Steve Jobs and his life at the epicenter of the digital revolution. Kate Winslet, Seth Rogen, and Jeff Daniels also star.
Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo
NOW SHOWING O Black Mass (122 mins.; R: brutal violence, language throughout, some sexual references, and brief drug use) This is a realistic film, proclaim the skin details, based on the very real life and times of James â&#x20AC;&#x153;Whiteyâ&#x20AC;? Bulger (Johnny Depp) and the way he manipulated a hometown friend in the FBI (John Connolly, played by Joel Edgerton) into giving him free reign as South Bostonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s crime mastermind. Black Mass is a powerhouse of a movie in its entertainment value, acting strengths, and decade detail. Deppâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s performance skyrockets his Whitey instantly into the ranks of a Norman Bates or Hannibal Lecter, transcendent in its terror. The fascinating film will still make you cower in its portrayal of individual evil and the coldest reaches of the soul. (RD)Â Plaza de Oro Crimson Peak (119 mins.; R: bloody violence, some sexual content, and brief strong language)
You can tell that Guillermo del Toro is having fun with Crimson Peak just by reading the title. His ingredients bespeak a kind of mad enthusiasm, too: a little David Lynch, add some Stephen King, then Edith Wharton, Daphne du Maurier, and, as a crazy topper, the best of American slasher movies. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all there and richly coated in del Toroâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s undeniable gifts at design and beautiful horrific-ness. Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s less clear is whether the audience is having fun jumping through all these genre hoops and into who knows what. Del Toroâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s women are the most appealing part, uncharacteristically strong for such brands of fiction. Mia Wasikowska is the writerly daughter of a New York plutocrat at the dawn of the 20th century, and Jessica Chastain is the spooky sister of Thomas Sharpe (Tom Hiddleston), the baronet who wants to marry the moneyed American girl. Hiddleston is smooth and has a great
gross-out scene with a fountain pen, but it’s the women who run the forces of light and dark that play across this stilted (yet bloody) canvas. It isn’t scary, and the ghosts you saw so plentifully in the credits don’t get nearly enough screen time. “They are metaphors,” says Edith (Wasikowska), speaking of ghosts in her own fiction. You might wish that del Toro had spent more time on such a consideration — that he spent as much time on scary meaning as he did on chilling atmosphere. (DJP) Camino Real/ Metro 4
Everest (121 mins.; PG-13: intense peril and disturbing images)
Everest is based on journalist Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air, the former Outside writer’s eyewitness account of the 1996 Mt. Everest disaster that killed eight people. In one scene, the movie version of Krakauer (Michael Kelly) asks the climbers why they choose to climb Everest. Most reply some version of: “Because it’s there.” That seems to be more or less why this movie was made and describes the style in which it’s told. The mighty mountain, on screen as in off, somehow winds up a bland motivational metaphor to service commercial interests, with a blindness toward the less convenient truths of why. (RD)
Arlington (2D)
Freeheld (103 mins.; PG-13: some thematic elements, language, and sexuality)
This biographical drama tells the story of a New Jersey police lieutenant, Laurel Hester (Julianne Moore), who is diagnosed with terminal cancer. She and her registered domestic partner, Stacie (Ellen Page), fight to make sure Stacie will receive Laurel’s benefits when she dies. Riviera Goosebumps (103 mins.; PG: scary and intense creature action and images, and some rude humor) Jack Black stars as Goosebumps author R.L. Stine, who, it turns out, has been keeping the monsters from his stories locked up in his books. When a fresh-faced teenager unleashes them, mayhem ensues. Fairview (2D)/Fiesta 5 (2D and 3D)
He Named Me Malala (87 mins.; PG-13: thematic elements involving disturbing images and threats)
This documentary reveals the events leading up to the attack on young Pakistani girl Malala Yousafzai by the Taliban for speaking out about girls’ education. Plaza de Oro Hotel Transylvania 2 (89 mins.; PG: some scary images, action, and rude humor)
It’s hard to get enthusiastic about anything in this mediocre sitcom love story. The main problem is its simple abandonment of rational discourse. In the end, all the problems are solved with a big war, and monster hugs are ridiculed. It’s a good-looking movie; it’s kind of a funny, scary Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein for a more cautious age. This is just slapstick and easy satire. (DJP) Fairview (2D)/Fiesta 5 (2D) The Intern (121 mins.; PG-13: some
O The Martian (141 mins.; PG-13: some strong language, injury images, and brief nudity)
Santa Barbara Recital Debut
Matt Damon plays a noble science-guy survivor with stalwart heavy breathing and knowing jokes spoken into a recording camera that can’t talk to Earth. He’s often riveting. The film isn’t deep or groundbreaking in either storyline or look. If anything, Ridley Scott has rolled back his mannerisms. But it is thought-provoking; my family talked all the way home. The Martian is a movie built for our times, our idea of the present day projected forward. Today’s Earth, we feel, would step up and save lonely victims despite all the politicians holding us back with secrets and lies. And by the end we feel good about where we are going, even if we never get there. (DJP) Camino Real (2D and 3D)/
Lise de la Salle, piano
SUN, NOV 8 / 4 PM (note special time) / HAHN HALL MUSIC ACADEMY OF THE WEST $30 / $9 UCSB students A Hahn Hall facility fee will be added to each ticket price
“She might just be the most exciting young artist in classical music right now.” St. Paul Pioneer Press Program
Beethoven: Piano Sonata in C Major, op. 2, no. 3 Ravel: Gaspard de la nuit Debussy: Selections from the Preludes Brahms: Variations and Fugue in B-flat Major on a Theme by Handel Handel, op. 24
Metro 4 (2D)
Meet the Patels (88 mins.; PG: thematic elements, brief suggestive images, and incidental smoking)
This documentary tells the true story of Ravi Patel, who is nearly 30 years old and not married. He meets the woman of his dreams and enters into a battle with his parents. Plaza de Oro
Up Close & Musical Series at Hahn Hall sponsored by Dr. Bob Weinman
Pan (111 mins.; PG: fantasy action violence, language, and some thematic material)
This prequel to J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan begins with a woman skulking though London neighborhoods, crossing Kensington Gardens, and ending up outside a foundling home where she leaves a swaddled child. Skip forward a few years, and the abandoned baby is named Peter, and he’s a hellion in a hellish Catholic orphanage. The rest gets really dodgy with an aerial fight between flying pirate ships and British fighter planes and a slagheap in Neverland, where thousands of child miners greet the incoming ship chanting “Smells Like Teen Spirit” lyrics. Still there’s actually something quite exquisite nestled in all this improvising and theft. The movie withholds Pan’s magic until the very end. Director Joe Wright plays us to the edge of frustration and then exhilarates. It’s weird and then fun. (DJP)
Fiesta 5 (2D)
O The Walk
(123 mins.; PG: thematic elements involving perilous situations and some nudity, language, brief drug references, and smoking)
The Walk is Robert Zemeckis’s new movie about French tightrope walker Philippe Petit (played by a very charming Joseph Gordon-Levitt), who in 1974 walked between the two Twin Towers on a high wire with the assistance of a team of collaborators. The film falls into two halves, with the first following Petit from childhood dreamer to adult daredevil, and the second focusing solely on the tense moments of his coup. Watching Gordon-Levitt pace deftly back and forth on the high wire really does instill a sense of inspiration. Painterly and brimming with joie de vivre, The Walk is a celebration of Petit’s grand performance and of grandiose dreams generally. (RD) Riviera
suggestive content and brief strong language)
Woodlawn (123 mins.; PG: thematic
Robert De Niro stars as a widowed retiree who decides to get back into the workforce by becoming an intern at an online fashion site. Anne Hathaway costars. Paseo Nuevo
elements including some racial tension/ violence)
In this Christian sports drama, a talented high school football player battles racial tensions on and off the field in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1973.
Fiesta 5
Kronos Quartet
David Harrington, violin John Sherba, violin Hank Dutt, viola Sunny Yang, cello
THU, NOV 19 / 7 PM (note special time) UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $Tickets start at $25 / $10 UCSB students Kronos’ distinctive concert performances draw upon hundreds of works composed for them by such visionaries as Steve Reich and Philip Glass. This season’s featured composition is the riveting multimedia piece by Mary Kouyoumdjian, who is praised by The New York Times for her “eloquently scripted” and “emotionally wracking” works.
“The ensemble has revolutionized the approach to string quartet repertory.” The New York Times Media Sponsor:
Co-presented with the UCSB Department of Music
(805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu #26602
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PRESENTING THE BIGGEST HEARTS IN SANTA BARBARA …
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Saturday 2:00–7:00 pm • Sunday 10:00 – 6:00 pm Montecito Country Club This is a FREE event and no registration is requested SCAPE (Southern California Artists Painting the Environment) joins the UCSB Celebration of the UC Natural Reserve System at 50 with a show and sale to benefit the UC Santa Barbara Natural Reserve System. SCAPE will host a reception for guests on Saturday at 4:00 pm to honor the artists and friends of the UCSB Natural Reserve System. Paintings depicting UCSB Reserves will be featured.
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a&e | Rob bRezsny’s fRee will astRology week of octobeR 22 ARIES
CANCER
LIBRA
CAPRICORN
(Mar. 21-Apr. 19): According to the online etymological dictionary, the verb “fascinate” entered the English language in the 16th century. It was derived from the Middle French fasciner and the Latin fascinatus, which are translated as “bewitch, enchant, put under a spell.” In the 19th century, “fascinate” expanded in meaning to include “delight, attract, hold the attention of.” I suspect you will soon have experiences that could activate both senses of “fascinate.” My advice is to get the most out of your delightful attractions without slipping into bewitchment. Is that even possible? It will require you to exercise fine discernment, but yes, it is.
(June 21-July 22): Terence was a comic playwright in ancient Rome. He spoke of love in ways that sound modern. It can be capricious and weird, he said. It may provoke indignities and rouse difficult emotions. Are you skilled at debate? Love requires you to engage in strenuous discussions. Peace may break out in the midst of war, and vice versa. Terence’s conclusion: If you seek counsel regarding the arts of love, you may as well be asking for advice on how to go mad. I won’t argue with him. He makes good points. But I suspect that in the coming weeks you will be excused from most of those crazy-making aspects. The sweet and smooth sides of love will predominate. Uplift and inspiration are more likely than angst and bewilderment. Take advantage of the grace period! Put chaos control measures in place for the next time Terence’s version of love returns.
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): More than any other sign, you have an ability to detach yourself from life’s flow and analyze its complexities with cool objectivity. This is mostly a good thing. It enhances your power to make rational decisions. On the other hand, it sometimes devolves into a liability. You may become so invested in your role as observer that you refrain from diving into life’s flow. You hold yourself apart from it, avoiding both its messiness and vitality. But I don’t foresee this being a problem in the coming weeks. In fact, I bet you will be a savvy watcher even as you’re almost fully immersed in the dynamic flux.
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “A waterfall would be more impressive if it flowed the other way,” said Irish author Oscar Wilde. I appreciate the wit but don’t agree with him. A plain old ordinary waterfall, with foamy surges continually plummeting over a precipice and crashing below, is sufficiently impressive for me. What about you, Capricorn? In the coming days, will you be impatient and frustrated with plain old ordinary marvels and wonders? Or will you be able to enjoy them just as they are?
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): One of the largest machines in the world is a “bucket wheel excavator” in Kazakhstan. It’s a saw that weighs 45,000 tons and has a blade the size of a four-story building. If you want to slice through a mountain, it’s perfect for the job. Indeed, that’s what it’s used for over in Kazakhstan. Right now, Taurus, I picture you as having a metaphorical version of this equipment. That’s because I think you have the power to rip open a clearing through a massive obstruction that has been in your way.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock did a daily ritual to remind him of life’s impermanence. After drinking his tea each morning, he flung both cup and saucer over his shoulder, allowing them to smash on the floor. I don’t recommend that you adopt a comparable custom for long-term use, but it might be healthy and interesting to do so for now. Are you willing to outgrow and escape your old containers? Would you consider diverging from formulas that have always worked for you? Are there any unnecessary taboos that need to be broken? Experiment with the possible blessings that might come by not clinging to the illusion of “permanence.”
Homework: Send pictures of your favorite scarecrows or descriptions of your dreams of protection to me at Truthrooster@gmail.com.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In the coming weeks, you will have a special relationship with the night. When the sun goes down, your intelligence will intensify, as will your knack for knowing what’s really important and what’s not. In the darkness, you will have an enhanced capacity to make sense of murky matters lurking in the shadows. You will be able to penetrate deeper than usual and get to the bottom of secrets and mysteries that have kept you off-balance. Even your grimy fears may be transformable if you approach them with a passion for redemption.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): New friends and unexpected teachers are in your vicinity, with more candidates on the way. There may even be potential comrades who could eventually become flexible collaborators and catalytic guides. Will you be available for the openings they offer? Will you receive them with fire in your heart and mirth in your eyes? I worry that you may not be ready if you are too preoccupied with old friends and familiar teachers. So please make room for surprises.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Are you an inventor? Is it your specialty to create novel gadgets and machines? Probably not. But in the coming weeks you may have metaphorical resemblances to an inventor. I suspect you will have an enhanced ability to dream up original approaches and find alternatives to conventional wisdom. You may surprise yourself with your knack for finding ingenious solutions to long-standing dilemmas. To prime your instincts, I’ll provide three thoughts from inventor Thomas Edison. (1) “To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk.” (2) “Just because something doesn’t do what you planned it to do doesn’t mean it’s useless.” (3) “Everything comes to those who hustle while they wait.”
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Some unraveling is inevitable. What has been woven together must now be partially unwoven. But please refrain from thinking of this mysterious development as a setback. Instead, consider it an opportunity to reexamine and redo any work that was a bit hasty or sloppy. Be glad you will get a second chance to fix and refine what wasn’t done quite right the first time. In fact, I suggest you preside over the unraveling yourself. Don’t wait for random fate to accomplish it. And for best results, formulate an intention to regard everything that transpires as a blessing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Years ago, I moved into a rental house with my new girlfriend, whom I had known for six weeks. As we fell asleep the first night, a song played in my head: “Nature’s Way” by the band Spirit. I barely knew it and had rarely thought of it before. And yet there it was, repeating its first line over and over: “It’s nature’s way of telling you something’s wrong.” Being a magical thinker, I wondered if my unconscious mind was telling me a secret about my love. But I rejected that possibility; it was too painful to contemplate. When we broke up a few months later, however, I wished I had paid attention to that early alert. I mention this, Aquarius, because I suspect your unconscious mind will soon provide you with a wealth of useful information, not just through song lyrics but other subtle signals, as well. Listen up! At least some of it will be good news, not cautionary like mine.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): When I advise you to GET NAKED, I don’t mean it in a literal sense. Yes, I will applaud if you’re willing to experiment with brave acts of selfrevelation. I will approve of you taking risks for the sake of the raw truth. But getting arrested for indecent exposure might compromise your ability to carry out those noble acts. So, no, don’t actually take off all your clothes and wander through the streets. Instead, surprise everyone with brilliant acts of surrender and vulnerability. Gently and sweetly and poetically tell the Purveyors of Unholy Repression to take their boredom machine and shove it up their humdrum.
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.
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Legals Administer of Estate NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: KATHLEEN ANNE CROW aka KATHLEEN A. CROW and KATHLEEN CROW NO: 15PR00250 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of KATHLEEN ANNE CROW aka KATHLEEN A. CROW and KATHLEEN CROW A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: JULIET MACKEY in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara THE PETITION for probate requests that (name): JULIET MACKEY 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 11/12/2015 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: LAW OFFICE OF ROBERT M. BASKIN 1849 Knoll Drive Ventura, CA 93003 ; (805) 805‑658‑1000. Published Oct 22, 29. Nov 5 2015.
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FBN Abandonment STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned:
An Exotic Affair Flowers at 1628 Cravens Ln Carpinteria, CA 93013. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 5/26/2011 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2011‑0001639. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Britt Enthoven 2020 Cravens Ln. Carpinteria, 93013. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 25 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 Andrea Luparello. for Published. Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: The Barbecue Company at 3807 Santa Claus Lane Carpinteria, CA 93013. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 10/15/2013 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2013‑0003144. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: The Barbecue Company Inc. (same address). This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 07 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 Jan Morales. for Published. Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015.
Fictitious Business Name Statement FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: RJ Industries at 1040 Cliff Drive #2 Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Ryan Yack (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Benjamin Rodrguez filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002881. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Lux By Mighty Bright, Mighty Bright at 650 Ward Drive Suite A Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Gold Crest LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Roger Edgar filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2015‑0002821. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Flying Meatloaf Records, Left Coast Consulting, Left Coast Digital at 142 Meadows Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Paul Tristan Bryant 142 Meadows Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Paul Bryant filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 24, 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: 2015‑0002815. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara 3D Printing, SB3D, Stel Design at 5785 Thornwood Dr Ste B Goleta, CA 93117; Stel, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Peter Ducato, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2015‑0002822. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Associated Pathology Services at 1157 Crestline Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Jeffery L Bradford (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Jackie Ellis, Agent filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2015‑0002824. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dijo Productions LLC at 1129 Oriole Road Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Dijo Productions LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Jerold Oshinsky filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 16, 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: 2015‑0002727. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Extended Hands, Imitator of Christ Ministries at 664 Main Street Los Alamos, CA 93440; Joyce Broome (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Merlene Ashcom. FBN Number: 2015‑0002673. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Apeel Sciences at 819 Reddick St Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Apeel Technology, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Jenny Du filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2015‑0002688. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Artisanal West at 1050 Edison St Unit G Santa Ynez, CA 93460; Rangeworks, LLC 3569 Sagunto Street Santa Ynez, CA 93460 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2015‑0002774. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Autohaus Salzburg at 517 E. Gutierrez St. Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Independent Automotive Group Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Asiri De Silva filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 22, 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: 2015‑0002785. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Simply Pies at 5392 Hollister Ave. Goleta, CA 93111; Crushfoods Inc 1315 Anacapa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Shannon Gaston filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 22, 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: 2015‑0002790. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Armony Cucine USA at 4564 Via Maria Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Thea Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Armony Cucine USA filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 22, 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: 2015‑0002787. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Stellarose Publishing at 2176 East Valley Road Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Agatha Carubia (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Agatha Carubia filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2015‑0002777. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Boxai, Yanagi, Homeopathy Kits, Homeopathy World at 411 E. Canon Perdido Ste #1 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Random Beauty Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Wayne Thompson, CFO filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 22, 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: 2015‑0002784. Published: Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Breakfast, Breakfast Worldwide, Breakfast Coffee Club, Breakfast Culture Club at 5 Saint Ann Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Breakfast Worldwide, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Morgan Maassen filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 29, 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2015‑0002842. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Nectar at 20 E. Cota St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Brad Sherman 316 1/2 W. Sola St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Brad Sherman filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 29, 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: 2015‑0002836. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Grewal Investment, GP at 765 Via Airosa Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Bikramjit Singh Grewal (same address) Harbhajan K. Grewal (same address) This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Bikramjit S. Grewal filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Miriam Leon. FBN Number: 2015‑0002780. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Breaths of Freedom, Portable Connections at 3050 Hermosa Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Lisa Schoenthal (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Lisa Schoenthal filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2015‑0002675. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Oasis Inn & Suites at 3344 State St Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Everquest Lodge Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Nicolas Teng, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2015‑0002889. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Sandyland Reef Inn at 4160 Via Real Carpinteria, CA 93013; Ventura Lodge LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Nicolas Teng, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2015‑0002888. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Never Give Up Music Company at 912 E. Cota Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Juan Turner 430 E. Figueroa St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 09, 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 Sheeif. FBN Number: 2015‑0002665. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Stone Fitness at 1428 Bath Street Apt. D Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Jason Perry Stone (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Jason Perry Stone filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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. Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2015‑0002884. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Okeanos Swimwear at 7351 Greensboro Street Goleta, CA 93117; Josephine Briones (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Josephine Briones filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 08, 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: 2015‑0002658. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: McEnergy at 430 South Fairview Avenue Santa Barbara, CA 93117; Yardi Systems, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Anant Yardi, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2015‑0002831. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015.
independent.com
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Biofeedback Institute of Santa Barbara at 1607 Chapala St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Tina Lerner 290 N Fairview Ave Unit 6 Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Tina Lerner filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 16, 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: 2015‑0002725. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Open And Shut Automated Gates at 554 Coronel #8 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Torri Marie Stewart (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Torri Stewart filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 15, 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: 2015‑0002714. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Travel Concierge at 520 W. Pedregosa Street #A Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Arianna Michelle Gilbert (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Arianna M. Gilbert filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Miriam Leon. FBN Number: 2015‑0002746. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Guarantee Painting SB at 544 Coronel #8 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Torri Marie Stewart (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Torri Stewart filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 15, 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: 2015‑0002715. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BRC Construction at 1815 San Andres St #B Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Benjamin Cruz Rodriguez (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Benjamin Rodrguez filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002845. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Illume, Illume Web Design & Development at 6650 Picasso Unit 6 Goleta, CA 93117; Andrew Farkash 6591 Seville Road Apt 5 Goleta, CA 93117; Joe Lee 6650 Picasso Unit 6 Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Andrew Farkash filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 01, 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 Sheeif. FBN Number: 2015‑0002861. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: 805 Smoke Company at 27 W Anapamu #103 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Nicholas Priedite 838 Meigs Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Michael Rousso 27 W Anapamu #103 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Michael Rousso filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 15, 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: 2015‑0002713. Published: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Salon Lucia at 1221 State St Suite 8 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Lucia Rios 5512 Armitos Ave Ave #37 Goleta, 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Lucia Rios filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 29, 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: 2015‑0002837. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015.
October 22, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Ampsense, Ampsolutions, Energyscience/Amploc at 615 La Buena Tierra Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Health Media International (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Steven D. Corry, Pres filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2015‑0002901. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dusk To Dawn at 915 Randolph Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Dawn C O’Bar (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Tara Jaysinghe . FBN Number: 2015‑0002886. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Elwood Wines at 1225‑1239 W Laurel Ave., Unit 1‑8 Lompoc, CA 93436; Elwood Family Wines, Inc 405 Misty Ridge Dr Keller, TX 76248 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Lea Fainer, Agent filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 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 Jan Morales. FBN Number: 2015‑0002846. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Los Alamos General Store at 458 Bell Street Los Alamos, CA 93440; Kaliope Kopley 1185 Patterson Ave Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Kaliope Kopley filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 07, 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 Sheaiff. FBN Number: 2015‑0002915. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015.
THE INDEPENDENt
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Pape Kenworth Paclease at 1322 White Court Santa Barbara, CA 93458; Pape Truck Leasing, Inc 355 Goodpasture Island Road Eugene, OR 97401 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Robert J. Riecke, Vice President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 29, 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: 2015‑0002840. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Distinguished Services at 1903 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Messiahic Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002909. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Rook Family Tree Chiropractic at 214 East De La Guerra Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Thomas W Rook125 East Islay Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Katryn J. Price filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0003016. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Luxe Lion Designs at 2620 Glendessary Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Margrit Gressierer (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 09, 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: 2015‑0002947. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: TR Home Real Estate Services at 54 Lassen Dr Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Tanya Magid (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Tanya Magid filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2015‑0002957. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Serrano Cleaning Services at 1719 Castillo #2 Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Juan G Serrano (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 15, 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 Sheeiff. FBN Number: 2015‑0002994. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SB Buggie at 420 East Anapamu Street santa Barbara, CA 93101; MJInvestments Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2015‑0002981. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Frutstix, Frutstix Company at 1525 State St Ste 203 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Von Hoppen Ice Cream (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: William J. McKinley, President filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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: 2015‑0002962. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Blue Point Books, BP Books at 805 Palermo Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93190; Cathy Ann Feldman (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Cathy Feldman filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 02, 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: 2015‑0002868. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SB Bone Broth at 789 Mission Canyon Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Ava Churchill (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Ava Churchill filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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: 2015‑0002952. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Bone Broth Company at 789 Mission Canyon Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Ava Churchill (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Ava Churchill filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 16, 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: 2015‑0003003. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: International English Academy Online at 5455 8th Street Unit #20 Carpinteria, CA 93013; Megan Moreno (same address) Saul Moreno (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: Saul Moreno filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 01, 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: 2015‑0002862. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015.
THE INDEPENDENT
October 22, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Meal Prep Republic at 781 Embarcadero Del Norte Apt 12 Goleta, CA 93117; Peng Xiong (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Peng Xiong filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 24, 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2015‑0002808. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Spindrift Fish And Dive Operations at 5637 Kent Place Goleta, CA 93117 (same address) Wayne H Klapp (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Wayne H. Klapp filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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: 2015‑0003010. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Maudet’s at 114 East Haley Street Suite E Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Mademoiselle Madeleine LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Benedicke Maudet filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002883. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Juris Doctor California at 735 State Street #631 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Geoff Conner Newlan 1720‑C San Pascual St Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Geoff Conner Newlan filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Oct 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 Andrea Luparello. FBN Number: 2015‑0002879. Published: Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015.
Name Change IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF CHRISTINA MENDOZA ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV02971 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: JULIEANA LIZBETH CABRERA TO: JULIEANA LIZBETH MENDOZA 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 Nov 04, 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 Sep 14, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Oct 1, 8, 15, 22 2015. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF CYNTHIA SUE M, ARGOLIS ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV02963 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
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name(s): FROM: CYNTHIA SUE MARGOLIS TO: CYNTHIA SUE MCHALE 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 Nov 18, 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 Sep 21, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Oct 8,15, 22, 29 2015. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF JACLYN MARTINEZ ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV02673 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: JACLYN DANIELLE MARTINEZ TO: JACLYN MAYA DAIGLE 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 Nov 04, 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 Sep 21, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 2015. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF LESHELLE SIMONE CLARK‑TIRRE ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV03262 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: LESHELLE SIMONE CLARK‑TIRRE TO: LESHELLE SIMONE ZYHAILO 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 Nov 18, 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 Oct 05, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Oct 15, 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF JEAN CAROL BALLANTYNE ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV03172 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: JEAN CAROL BALLANTYNE TO: JEAN CELYN BALLANTYNE 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 Dec 09, 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 Oct 02, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF DMITRII VICTOROVICH ZAGORODNOV ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 15CV02806 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: DMITRII VICTOROVICH ZAGORODNOV TO: DMITRII ZAGORODNOV CALZAGO 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 Nov 18, 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 Sep 21, 2015. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015.
Notice to Creditors NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF BETHENE ELLEN PUTTOCK, DECEASED SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA In re the matter of: The Puttock Family Trust Created November 23, 1992, By Everett Leon Puttock, Deceased and Bethene Ellen Puttock, Deceased. Case No. 15PR00416 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the creditors and contingent creditors of the above‑named decedent, that all persons having claims against the decedent are required to file them with the Santa Barbara County Superior Court, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101, and whose mailing address is P.O. Box 21107, Santa Barbara, California 93121‑1107, and mail a copy to Charter Claiborne Hughes, as successor trustee of the trust dated November 23, 1992, wherein the decedent was the settloritnistor, do Larry Laborde, Esq., Laborde & Daugherty, 21 East Canon Perdido Street, Suite 305, Santa Barbara, California 93101, within the later of four months after October 22, 2015 (the date of the first publication of notice to creditors) or, if notice is mailed or personally delivered to you, 60 days after the date this notice is mailed or personally delivered to you. A claim form may be obtained from the court clerk. For your protection, you are encouraged to file your claim by certified mail, with return receipt requested. Larry Laborde sq. Attorney for arter Claiborne Hughes, Successor Trustee Laborde & Daugherty 21 East Canon Perdido Street, Suite 305 Santa Barbara, CA 93101Published Oct 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD; SPECIAL NOTICE OF LAWSUIT (Pursuant to Labor Code section 3716 and Code of Civil Procedure section 412.20 and 412.30) WCAB No. 9988891 To: DEFENDANT, ILLEGALLY UNINSURED EMPLOYER: APPLICANT, Roberto Navarro DEEFENDANTS, Alden Fairbanks Market Ready Properties NOTICES 1) A lawsuit, the Application for Adjudication of Claim, as been filed with the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board against you as the named defendant by the above named applicant. You may seek the advice of an attorney in any matter connected with this lawsuit and such attorney should
right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the California Courts Online Self‑Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.g ov/ selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. Tiene 30 DIAS DE CALENDARIO despues de que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles legales papa presentar una respuesta por escrito en esta corte y hacer que se entregue una copia al demandante. Una carta o una llamada telefonica no lo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estar en formato legal correcto si desea que procesen su caso en la corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta. Puede encontrar estos formularios de la corte y mas information en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.courtinfo.ca gov/selfhelp/espanol/), en la biblioteca de leyes de su condado o en la corte que le quede mas cerca. Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentacion, pida al secretario de la corte que le de un formulario de exencion de pago de cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y la corte le podra quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin mas advertencia. Hay otros requisitos legales. Es recomendable que llame a un abogado inmediatamente. Si no conoce a un abogado, puede llamar a un servicio de remision a abogados. Si no puede pagar a un abogado, es posible que cumpla con los requisitos para obtener servicios legales gratuitos de un programa de servicios legales sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro en el sitio web de California Legal Services, (www. lawhelpcalifornia.org), en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California, (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/ selfhelp/espanol/) o poniendose en contacto con la corte o el colegio de abogados locales. CASE NO:1487388 The name and address of the court is: (El nombre y direccion de la corte es) Public Notices Santa Barbara Superior Court 1100 DID YOU KNOW Information is Santa Barbara, CA 93101 The name, power and content is King? Do you address, and telephone number of need timely access to public notices plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff without and remain relevant in today’s hostile an attorney, is: Bradford D. Brown, business climate? Gain the edge Esq., SBN 165913, 735 State Street, with California Newspaper Publishers Suite 418, Santa Barbara, CA 93101, Association new innovative website 805‑963‑5607 (El nombre, la direccion capublicnotice.com and check out the y el numero de telefono del abogado FREE One‑Month Trial Smart Search del demandante, o del demandante Feature. For more information call que no tiene abogado, es): Cecelia @ (916) 288‑6011 or www. DATE: Mar 13 2014. Darrel E. Parker, capublicnotice.com (Cal‑SCAN) Executive Officer, By Penny Wooff. Deputy (Delegado) Published Oct 22, 29. Nov 5 2015. Summons
be consulted promptly so that you response may be filed and entered in a timely fashion. If you do not know an attorney, you may call an attorney reference service or a legal aid office (see telephone directory). 2) An Answer to the Application must be filed and served within six days of the serve of the application pursuant to Appeals Board rules; therefore, your written response must be filed with the Appeals Board promptly; a letter or phone call will not protect your interests. 3) You will be served with a Notice (s) of Hearing and must appear at all hearings or conferences. After such hearing, even absent your appearance, a decision may be made and an award of compensation benefits may issue against you. The award could result in the garnishment of your wages, taking of your money or property or other relief. If the Appeals Board makes an award against you, your house or other dwelling or other property may be taken to satisfy that award in a non‑judicial state, with no exemptions from execution. A lien may also be imposed upon your property without further hearing and before the issuance of an award. 4) You must notify the Appeals Board of the proper address for the service of official notices and paper and notify the Appeals Board of any changes in that address. TAKE ACTION NOW TO PROTECT YOUR INTERESTS Issued by: WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD Name and address of Appeals Board: WCAB Santa Barbara 411 E. Canon Perdido Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Name and address of applicant’s attorney: Ghitterman, Ghitterman & Feld, 418 E. Canon Perdido St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101; FORM COMPLETED BY: Megan E. Compton, Esq. Ghitterman, Ghitterman & Feld, 418 E. Canon Perdido St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (805) 965‑4540. NOTICE TO THE PERSON SERVED: You are served: as the person sued under the fictitious name of: Alden Fairbanks Market Ready Properties. Published: Oct 22, 29. Nov 5, 12 2015.
SUMMONS (CITACION JUDICIAL) NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): DEVON BUNGENSTOCK and DOES 1 to 20, Inclusive YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: (LO ESTA DEMANDANDO EL DEMANDANTE): LISA HERBOLDSHEIMER NOTICE! You have been sued.The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this Summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff a letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case.There may be a court form that you can use your for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self‑Help Center(www. courtinfo.ca. gov/selfhelp), If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney
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Employment Auditions/Casting Exotic dancers and models wanted, flexible hours. Paid training for new dancers. For music videos and movies. Must be 18. 805‑561‑8352
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)
Employment Services
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)
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. Open until filled. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150495
Hospitality/ Restaurant
Professional
ASSISTANT CATERING CHEF
ASSOCIATED STUDENTS/KCSB NEWS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS DIRECTOR
SPECIAL EVENTS CATERING DRIVERS – NO EXPERIENCE? Some Looking for a reliable individual or LOTS of experience? Let’s Talk! No with excellent catering knowledge matter what stage in your career, it’s and solid culinary skills. Serves as time, call Central Refrigerated Home. a working supervisor overseeing a 888‑ kitchen area serving up to 1,500 meals 302‑4618 w w w . per shift. Special Events Catering 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 caters events for the Chancellor, (CalSCAN) high profile donors and for various departments throughout campus. General Full-Time UCSB dining web site: http: //www. housing.ucsb.edu/dining Reqs: High AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here – Get School Diploma or equivalency and trained as FAA certified Aviation four years progressively responsible Technician. Financial aid for qualified culinary experience in a high‑volume students. Job placement assistance. culinary environment with one year Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance in a supervisory capacity; or an 866‑231‑7177. (Cal‑SCAN) equivalent combination of education ATTN: CDL Drivers – Avg. $55k/yr! and experience. Knowledge of and $2k Sign‑On Bonus! Get The Respect experience with advanced culinary You Deserve. Love your Job and Your techniques. Advanced knowledge of cuisines from varying customer Truck. CDL‑A Req ‑ (877) 258‑8782 bases, including Regional American, www.drive4melton.com (Cal‑SCAN) Asian, Italian and Mexican, with ATTN: Drivers – Great Miles + Top increasing emphasis on vegetarian, 1% Pay! Family Company. Loyalty Vegan and special diets. Notes: Bonus! Quality Equipment. Pet/Rider Fingerprinting required. Maintain Program. CDL‑A Req ‑ (877) 258‑8782 a valid CA driver’s license, a clean www.drive4melton.com (Cal‑SCAN) DMV record and enrollment in the DMV Employee Pull‑Notice Program. Able to lift up to 50 pounds and work standing for up to 8 hours per day. Usual schedule: M‑F, 6:30am ‑ 3:00pm, and will include some nights Part and full‑time positions and weekends depending on event available NOW!!!!! Campaign schedule. $15.87 ‑ $18.24/hr. Full Fundraising Positions for Democratic benefits. The University of California and Progressive groups. Telefund is is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative seeking activists to call like‑minded Action Employer, and all qualified people and mobilize their support for applicants will receive consideration environmental, human rights issues, and the 2016 Presidential election. Earn $9‑$11.50/hr, plus bonuses!! Convenient S.B. location, near bus. CALL NOW: 564‑1093 Or VISIT: www. telefund.com Want A Career Operating Heavy Equipment? Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. Hands On Training! Certifications Offered. National Average 18‑22hr. Lifetime Job Placement. VA Benefits Eligible! 1‑866‑362‑6497. (Cal‑SCAN)
General Part-Time 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) Full time help wanted Customer service / Stocking / order entry for sales. $11 to $13 to star depending on experience. Will train. English & Spanish speaking preferred. Pre-employment screening & Drug test required. Come to 433 Laguna St. to pick up Application.
ASSOCIATED STUDENTS Develops and conducts training programs that cover a variety of areas in an effort to provide students and community members with opportunities to acquire media and journalistic skills, ethics and knowledge, including leadership, communication skills, motivation techniques and project conceptualization and coordination. Reqs: Expertise in a wide range of media hardware and software. A broad understanding of journalistic practice and issues of public importance and the capacity to advise a diverse group of people with a wide range of skills and interests. Ability to identify importance of historical and cultural figures and events of the past 60 years. Excellent oral and written communication skills. Experience with budgets, policy development, planning and promotion. Experience developing and presenting workshops and training programs. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Must be able to work evenings and weekends. $21.86‑$23.63/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
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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
EXCELLENCE, INTEGRITY, COMPASSION …Our core values Having a positive impact on others, and feeling fulfillment in return, is a cornerstone of the Cottage Health culture. As a communitybased, not-for-profit provider of leading-edge healthcare for the Greater Santa Barbara region, Cottage emphasizes the difference each team member can make. It’s a difference you’ll want to experience throughout your entire career. Join us in one of the openings below.
Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital
Non-Clinical
Nursing • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Bed Control Coordinator (RN) Cardio/Vascular OR Clinical Manager – ER GVCH Clinical Manager – Telemetry Clinical Nurse Specialist Clinical Quality Consultant CNC – Surgery Electrophysiology Emergency Psychiatric Employee Health RN Infection Control Practitioner Manager – Cardiology Manager – Villa Riviera Med/Surg – Float Pool MICU Mother Infant Neurology/Urology NICU Orthopedics Peds PICU Pulmonary Renal SICU Supervisor – Cottage Call Center Surgery Surgical Trauma Telemetry
Allied Health • • • • • •
Case Manager – SLO Clinic CCRC Family Consultant Echocardiographer – Per Diem Medical Social Worker Physical Therapist – Per Diem Speech Language Pathologist II – Per Diem
Clinical • Patient Care Technicians – CT • Personal Care Attendants – Full-Time and Part-Time • Radiology Technician – Per Diem • Telemetry Technician
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Benefactor Liaison Catering Set-up – Part-Time Concierge Cook Development Coordinator – Temp Environmental Services Rep Environmental Services Supervisor EPIC Clinical Analyst (Ambulatory) EPIC Clinical Analyst, Sr. (Ambulatory) EPIC Instructional Designer (Ambulatory) Floor Care Rep Infant/Toddler Program Supervisor Integration Analyst – HIE Interface Analyst (EPIC) IT Project Manager IT Project Manager, Sr. Lead Cook Manager, ISD Customer Service Manager – Nutrition Marketing Event Coordinator Research Analyst & Project Development Specialist Room Service Server Security Officers Sr. Administrative Assistant Supervisor, Utilization Review Denials & Appeals Process Systems Support Analyst – Supply Chain
Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital • Manager – Villa-Riviera (Center Administrator, Assisted Living) • Physical Therapist – Outpatient • Prospective Payment Systems Coordinator
Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital • • • • • • • • • • •
CNC – Nursing Administration CRN – Nursing Administration Patient Financial Counselor – Nights Physical Therapist RN – Emergency – Nights RN – ICU (Nights) RN – Med/Surg – Nights RN – Surgery – Per Diem Security Officer – Per Diem Sous Chef Surgical Technician – Per Diem
Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital • • • • • •
Endoscopy Technician – Days EVS Lead Manager – Nutrition Medical Social Worker – Part-Time RN – ED RN – Med/Surg – Per Diem
Pacific Diagnostic Laboratories • • • • • • •
Certified Phlebotomy Techs Clinical Lab Scientists Cytotechnologist – Per Diem Histotechnician Lab Assistant II Lead Lab Assistant Medical Lab Technician
• Please apply to: www.pdllabs.com
Cottage Business Services • Administrative Assistant – Benefits/Comp – Part-Time • Medical Receptionist – Pismo • Supervisor – Patient Business Services
• 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, 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
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Excellence, Integrity, Compassion
www.cottagehealth.org October 22, 2015
THE INDEPENDENt
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empLoyment by law. For primary consideration apply by 10/27/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job #2015055
EMBLEMATICS CLOTHING DEPT. BUYER/MANAGER
BOOKSTORE Purchases, merchandises, maintains and promotes sales of imprinted clothing that has a significant impact on branding for UCSB. Is responsible for annual and monthly budget and financial planning functions; combined yearly sales volume of approximately $2,500,000. Hires, trains, supervises 12‑18 part‑time student employees. Reqs: Management experience in a retail environment. Experience with purchasing, merchandising and promoting merchandise. Demonstrated budget planning and inventory management skills. Ability to communicate effectively with colleagues, student staff and customers. Must be able to build and nurture professional relationships with vendors. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Must be able to work some evenings and weekends. Will be a key holder with shifts for opening and closing the Bookstore according to schedule. $19.87‑$23.36/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. Apply by 10/28/15. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150554
HEALTH EDUCATION GENERALIST / CAMPUS OUTREACH COORDINATOR
HEALTH & WELLNESS DEPARTMENT Develops and maintains professional
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HEALTH EDUCATION SPECIALIST
HEALTH & WELLNESS DEPARTMENT Performs four major responsibilities; 1) Health Education Specialist ‑ responsible for one of the health topics covered in the H & W department (i.e., Well‑Being, Sex & Relationships, Healthy Eating & Living, and Alcohol and Other Drugs); 2) Evaluation manager for the department ‑ assessment, & impact evaluation for all Health & Wellness programming; 3) Special Projects Coordinator ‑ initiates innovative programs in‑line with current trends
& Best Practices in health promotion; and 4) Special Projects Advisor ‑ Identifies, develops and implements training and professional development of student leaders and interns on the implementation of Health Education and Promotion. Reqs: BA degree in Health Science, Public Health, or related field with relevant work experience or equivalent combination of education and experience. General knowledge of, or ability to quickly learn, current and emerging college age student health problems and existing methods of intervention and control. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Must be able to work some evenings and weekends. Mandated reporting requirements of child abuse. $50,177‑$57,000/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 11/01/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20150553
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the Walking company rx is the industry leader in comfort and wellness footwear, re‑defining comfort footwear with our focus on sophisticated technology and on trend styling. An exciting opportunity has arisen for energetic and enthusiastic Store Management and Sales Associates to drive revenue and build a loyal customer base in our Loreto Plaza location. You must have a passion for selling and team development as well as for health and wellness. . We are growing in the Santa Barbara Market and need leaders to help with our growth . Hourly + Commission (Bonus potential for Managers and Assistants) . Work in a fun, dynamic culture with a supportive upper management structure. The corporate office is located nearby giving you frequent exposure to our company leaders. Potential candidates should have : . Strong interpersonal skills
WeLL• Being Astrology 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)
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Empowering, practical, non‑religious alternative for anyone in recovery. SmartRecovery.org for info. Wed. 6:30pm. Vet’s Hall, 112 West Cabrillo Blvd. 805‑886‑1963 STRUGGLING WITH DRUGS or ALCOHOL? Addicted to PILLS? Talk to someone who cares. Call The Addiction Hope & Help Line for a free assessment. 800‑978‑6674
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Stress-Relieving Massage 4010 Calle Real #7 • Santa Barbara • Call 805.682.5400
Healing Touch
23 yrs exp. massage, cranial sacral and aroma therapy. Cheryl 681‑9865
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#1 MASSAGE IN SB!
Prayer Christ The King Healing Hotline EPISCOPAL CHURCH 284-4042 80
tHe INDePeNDeNt
OctOber 22, 2015
E M A I L s a L e s @ i n d e p e n d e n t. C o m
seRViCe diReCtoRy
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knowledge in four content areas of the Health & Wellness Programs (Sex & Relationships, Alcohol & Other Drugs (AOD), Healthy Eating & Living, & Well‑Being in order to deliver Health & Wellness education, and respond to campus outreach and requests, Coordinates campus‑wide wellness activities, assesses, plans and implements wellness center services, activities, & wellness events. Oversees committee budget and peer services. Develops programs and implements training & professional development of student leaders and interns. Reqs: BA degree in Health Science, Public Health, Health Promotion, or related field or equivalent combination of education and experience. Some work experience planning and/or delivering health promotion events & workshops. General knowledge of, or ability to quickly learn, current and emerging college age student health problems. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Must be able to work occasional evenings and weekends. Mandated reporting requirements of child abuse. $21.86‑$24.04/ 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 11/2/15, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150560
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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.
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. Excellent customer service and rapport building skills . Strong people management skills . Recruiting and team development skills . High energy and a passion for driving revenue . Ability to communicate professionally and effectively If you are a strong team player with an intense desire to have a successful career in the retail industry and looking for a company that offers support, recognition, with a fun work environment, then this is the position for you. The Walking Company offers an industry leading benefits program, which includes medical, dental, vision and a matching 401K plan. Please send résumés to ErikC@ thewalkingcompany.com
skilled 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) ENOLOGIST (BUELLTON, CA): Perform lab analysis & wine sampling. Interpret calculations, input data, & identify false data & outlying analysis. Complete conductivity/stability trials & microbiology to identify spoilage yeast & bacteria. Conduct bentonite fining trials, & filter wines. Perform QC monitoring, incl plating. Audit cold stability instrument that exports tank temperature data & compares it with Brix & temperature readings. Collect measurements of Brix & temperatures of fermenting lots. Conduct PH & titratable acidities. Trace & sample incoming juices for panel analysis. Perform cold & heat stability trials. Bach’s in Enology, Food Science or related reqd. Resumes: Terravant Wine Company, Attn: Marcie Voelker, 35 Industrial Way, Buellton CA 93427.
domestic services ORALIA DOMINGUEZ HOUSE AND CLEANING SERVICE. 10 yrs of exp. Local refs. If no answer, leave msg. 805‑708‑8236 or 805‑708‑8233 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 ARE YOU in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 844‑753‑1317 (AAN CAN) HELP PREVENT FORECLOSURE & Save Your Home! Get FREE Relief! Learn about your legal option to possibly lower your rate and modify your mortgage. 800‑469‑0167 (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) 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)
home services DISH NETWORK – Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) CALL Now 1‑800‑357‑0810 (Cal‑SCAN) DISH TV Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) SAVE! Regular Price
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Expert in Deep Tissue, 20 yrs exp. Work w/chronic pain, stress & injuries. 1st time Client $50/hr. Gift Cert available, Outcall. Laurie Proia, LMT 886‑8792 FOOT REFLEXOLOGY For the unsung heroes of your body. $40/ hour or 5 for $175 prepaid. Gift Certs avail. Call Janette @ 805‑966‑5104
The 3HOUR MASSAGE
1, 1.5, 2 & 3Hr appts, M‑F. Intro special $40/hr & sliding rates. Shiatzu, Deeptissue, Swedish, Sports. Ken Yamamoto, 35yrs exp. 682‑3456
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auto cAr cAre/rePAir 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)
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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) 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
ProfessionAl services
966‑1904 to start your application today! (Cal‑SCAN)
technicAl services
COMPUTER MEDIC
Virus/Spyware Removal, Install/ Repair, Upgrades, Troubleshoot, Set‑up, Tutor, Networks, Best rates! Matt 682‑0391 DIRECTV STARTING at $19.99/mo. FREE Installation. New Customers Only. 1‑800‑385‑9017 (CalSCAN) SWITCH & Save Event from DirecTV! 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
musiC music lessons
WONDERFUL TEACHER
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
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FOR ALL EVENTS. Weddings, Concerts, Parties, Churches, Recording Studios. Classical, pop, folk, jazz... Christine Holvick, BM, MM www. sbHarpist.com 969‑6698
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1‑800‑
Inside Santa Barbara’s Booming Tech Scene
TECH-TOPIA Presenting Sponsor:
Special gloSSy SecTion publiSheS
November 5, 2015 AdvertisiNg deAdliNe: Monday, ocTober 26, aT noon
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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)
Specializing In All Chinese Motor Scooters Parts & Service BEFORE You Purchase a Used Chinese Scooter, CALL US & We Will Help You Make The Proper Offer! INTERIOR MOTION | Mike 637-6691
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Contact your advertising representative today 805-965-5205 • sales@independent.com
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ReaL estate sierramountainranch.com (Cal‑SCAN)
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 ARIZONA – TALL PINE CABIN‑SITE $178 MONTH / $30K! Paved street, all utilities including sewer. Summer cool 6800’ elevation. Nearby lakes, streams. Quit & secluded. No mobiles or RV’s. Seller financing with 10% down. Call 1st UNITED for photos/maps/area info 520‑429‑0746. (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
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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 dn, guaranteed financing. Pics/topo map/ weather/ area info 1st United 800.966.6690 arizonaland.com (Cal‑SCAN) 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,
for rent APArtments & condos $1080 1BD Corner of Hope & San Remo‑N State St‑Barbara Apts Quiet NP 687‑0610 1 BD. Townhomes/Goleta ‑$1275 Incl. Parking 968‑2011 or visit model www.silverwoodtownhomes.com 1BD NEAR Cottage Hospital. 519 W Alamar. Set among beautiful oak trees across the street from Oak Park. NP. $1080. Call Cristina 687‑0915 1BD NEAR SBCC & beach @ Carla Apts NP. 530 W Cota $1080 Rosa 965‑3200
2BDS $1500+ & 3BD flat or townhouses $2220. Near UCSB, shops, park, beach, theater, golf. Sesame Tree Apts 6930 Whittier Dr. Hector 968‑2549 STUDIOS $1080+ & 1BDs $1200+ in beautiful garden setting! Pool, lndry & off‑street parking at Michelle Apartments. 340 Rutherford St. NP. Call Erin 967‑6614
misc. NORTHERN AZ WILDERNESS Ranch, $219 Month. Quiet & secluded 36 acre off the grid ranch at cool clear 6,400’ elevation near historic pioneer town & fishing lake. RV’s ok. $25,500, $2,550 dn. Free brochure with photos, map, weather, area info. 1st United Realty 800‑966‑6690. sierramountainranch.com. (Cal‑SCAN)
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 Day
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Coach Kristen Fuerst 914‑403‑4753 Ice in Paradise “The coolest place in town” • Learn to Skate • Figure skating • Developmental Hockey
Sunrise 6:18 Sunset 5:05
High
6:45 Am/ 4.4 12:20 Pm/ 2.2 6:05 Pm/ 4.7
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“O for Two” – singles only, please.
maRKetpLaCe Private Ice Skating lessons
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guaranteed financing. Pics, maps, weather, area info 1st United 800.966.6690 arizonaland.com (Cal‑SCAN)
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treAsure hunt ($100 or less) BJORN RYE LIMITED EDITION NUMBRED ETCHINGS There are 12 different etchings CALL 805‑687‑4514 (KATHY) FOR PRIVATE SHOWING ‑ $55 TO $100
WE BUY GUNS! Estate, Unwanted, Used, Consignment Please contact Daniel at Far West Guns
(805) 569-2922
Meet Sabrina
Meet Herman
Sabrina is a sweet natured little girl that Herman is Sabrina’s young son & is very was found in Oxnard. She is looking for sweet! He would love a family of his own someone to love her forever! to play with!
Cold Noses Warm Hearts (805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117
These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home
Meet Gomez
Meet Morticia
Gomez is ready for a new home. He is about Morticia could not be any cuter. She is 2 years old and is a beautiful little boy. He about 1 year, rough coat Parsons terrier. If she has any down falls, it may be that is a very happy little guy. she is a bit shy at first.
Cold Noses Warm Hearts (805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117
These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home
70 Brockovich of lawsuit fame 71 Grateful Dead bassist Phil 72 Pang of pain 73 Pineapple packager
42 L.A. hardcore punk band with the 1994 album “Punk in Drublic” 1 Place for a nap 45 Green sauce 5 Part of a sequence? 47 Moved about 10 Georgetown athlete 50 Pushing force 14 Jai ___ 51 Like corduroy and, um... 1 Pocketed, as a pool ball 15 Specialty (hey, get your mind out of the 2 Butter substitute 16 Nursing school subj. gutter!) 3 Bean mentioned in “The 17 Comment about all-soloist 52 Crucial Silence of the Lambs” concerts? 53 “Chasing Pavements” singer 4 “Do the Right Thing” Oscar 20 Critter with a pouch 54 Cautionary list nominee Danny 21 “___ Like It” 58 Aqueduct feature 5 Hereditary helix 22 “Fuel” performer DiFranco 59 “Frankenstein” helper 6 “Club Can’t Handle Me” rapper 23 Audiophile’s collection, 60 ___ contendere (court plea) Flo ___ perhaps 62 100 cents, in Cyprus 7 Old French coins 25 Slanted printing style 63 Agitate 27 Haulers that repel everyone? 8 “Hey sailor!” 64 Actress Daly 9 Biographical bit 33 Wrinkly dog 66 Disgusted utterance 10 Hawaiian pizza ingredient 34 Half a new wave group? 67 Dedicatory verse 11 Shaq’s surname 35 “Rashomon” director ©2015 Jonesin’ Crosswords 12 “Live at the Acropolis” New Kurosawa (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) Ager 39 Like fine wine For answers to this puzzle, call: 13 Overhead storage 41 Member of the peerage 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. 18 Breakneck 43 Flying solo Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit 19 “Straight ___ Compton” 44 Shaun, for one card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle #0742 24 Brush-off 46 Eugene of travel guides 26 Wants to know 48 8 1/2” x 11” size, for short Last week’s soLution: 27 Hot springs 49 Say “I guess we’ll take 28 Julia’s “Notting Hill” costar DiCaprio”? 29 S-shaped molding 52 Disappear into thin air 30 Botanical transplant 55 “Sweet” Roman numeral? 31 Marcia’s mom 56 Yes, at the altar 32 Battery’s negative terminal 57 Hit the weights, maybe 36 “___ be sweet!” 61 “At the Movies” cohost 65 “O.K., pontoon, I hear ya loud 37 Flat fee 38 Farming prefix and clear”? 40 ‘50s sitcom name 68 Succulent plant 69 Bawl out
across
Down
independent.com
OctOber 22, 2015
tHe INDePeNDeNt
81
realestate.independent.com
presented by:
R andy FReed & Kellie Roche For details, see page 2
Cover Property OPEN SUN 2-4
139 Loma Media Road, Santa Barbara
$1,385,000
NEW LISTING! Incredible ocean and island views from every room in this lovely Riviera home! Comprised of 2160 square feet, this property features 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, 2 large bonus rooms, 2 additional storage rooms, and an attached 2-car garage. This stunning home consists of two stories with an elevator, and boasts an open floor plan, gorgeous vaulted ceilings, expansive view decks, tile floors, new carpet and new paint. Live in it as-is, or upgrade this property to be your dream Riviera ocean view home!
SHOWN BY APPT.
SHOWN BY APPT.
1211 Harbor Hills Drive, Santa Barbara
$3,750,000
Live the ultimate Santa Barbara lifestyle in this stunning Mediterranean 4 bedroom, 3 bath home with panoramic ocean & island views! This gorgeous home is perfect for entertaining with expansive marble patios & a fresh water pool & spa, complemented by the chic cabana & outdoor fireplace.
20 Baker Lane, Goleta
$999,000
Built in 2005, this custom home of nearly 2400 sqft offers 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and a separate studio/office with its own private entry. Superior craftsmanship with gorgeous vaulted ceilings, wood floors, and a beautiful, open kitchen with marble center island and granite counters.
RANDY FREED & KELLIE ROCHE
805-895-1799 | 805-705-5334 Randy@RandyFreed.com ∙ Kellie@KellieRoche.com TheSantaBarbaraLifestyle.com ©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: 00624274, 01434616
G. Vince GioVannoni
bill dewey
by G. Vince Giovannoni
Make MySelF at hoMe
by Sarah Sinclair
Sparkling Summerland home
M
Based on information from, among other sources, Survivors; Santa Barbara’s Last Victorians, a publication of the Santa Barbara Historical Society.
2521 Banner Avenue is currently for sale in Summerland, listed by Jim Witmer of Village Properties. Reach Jim at 448-3921.
3
Address: 2521 Banner Avenue, Summerland Status: On the Market Price: $1,595,000
realestate.independent.com
Original Owner: Reverend Mrs. E.J. Scudder Year Built: 1888-1889 Architect: Believed to be Peter J. Barber
OCTOBER 22, 2015
B
efore the Santa Barbara Rescue Mission on East Yanonali Street, there was The Faith Mission at 409 State Street, where the Reverend Mrs. E.J. Scudder offered religious services, meals, short-term lodging, and other ways to help the less fortunate. Upon its opening in January 1890, the Weekly Independent wrote, “The Mission is doing a good work in Santa Barbara in reclaiming young men from their erring ways and pointing out to them the right path to follow to enable them to become good Christians and worthy members of society.” Though it has never officially been confirmed, it is believed to have been designed by the celebrated Santa Barbara architect Peter J. Barber, who was involved with several early designs, including Santa Barbara College, the Upham Hotel, the second Santa Barbara County Courthouse, the Arlington Hotel, and the remodeling of the Lobero Theatre. The Faith Mission was originally constructed from 1888 to 1889. The lower State Street address was centrally located in the hub of Santa Barbara’s commercial center, where the city was undergoing a building renaissance of many architectural styles. The property demonstrates a modest Victorian edifice with Eastlake overtones. That vernacular is named for Charles Locke Eastlake (1836-1906), an English architect and author whose designs flourished during the latter half of the 19th century, largely attributed to heavy ornamentation placed on sidings, doorways, windows, and ceilings. One of the most unique elements is the horizontal axis of the roofline, which is covered in galvanized steel and stamped with a decorative ornamentation, giving almost a sculptural appearance. Additional features include ornamental mounts anchored above the windows and doorways, which evoke a massive and robust quality. Within a few years, the financial constraints of running the mission proved too challenging, as Mrs. Scudder was unable to meet her current payments. In late 1895, Mr. E.H. Penfield foreclosed the mortgage, but with the aid of benefactors, the property was placed into a trust and Mrs. Scudder continued as operator. In the early 1900s, it was also home to the Associated Christian Relief Association. In years prior to World War I, the Hitchcock missionary family of Santa Barbara managed the facility. By 1929, Kenneth Ahlman was the new owner and proprietor, and in 1931, the name Hotel Savoy appeared in the city directory. During World War II, the hotel was a favorite of servicemen who sought less-than-honorable services inside the upstairs suites. In recent years, the building has served as both office suites and as various restaurant-nightclubs, today known as the Blind Tiger. It is one of the few remaining 19th-century commercial buildings still intact that has not undergone noticeable structural or location changes, and it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
independent real estate
409 State Street
y first real road trip as an adult was during my sophomore year of college. My friend Tricia and I planned a long weekend, driving my VW bug from San Diego to the Bay Area. What should have been a pretty uneventful straight shot up Interstate 5 became interesting when an unseasonably early snow caused a closure of I-5 at the Grapevine. We could have canceled our plans and gone back home, but we were ready for adventure and not easily dissuaded by a little snow. In those pre-Google, precell phone days, we stopped, looked at our map, and traced what appeared to be the most logical alternate route: cutting up the coast on the 101. This is how I first experienced Summerland. As Tricia and I trekked along, not quite sure how long this detour would take, Summerland arose before us: houses clinging to the side of the mountain, awash in shades of cute. Having grown up a sunshine lover, I pledged that I would one day live in this beach town called Summerland that we found because of snow. Flash-forward some 30 years, and while I haven’t exactly made good on that pledge quite yet, I do live close enough to often enjoy the beachy allure of Summerland. I thought about this allure as I headed toward an open house on a recent Sunday afternoon. Summerland gazes toward the ocean, skipping details like sidewalks and focusing instead on the endless horizon view. The home at 2521 Banner is on a large, prominent lot yet feels secluded. As you walk from the street toward the house, the hideaway feeling begins as you pass beneath a huge palm tree to reach the entrance. The front door itself features a speakeasy window, enhancing the impression that you’re about to step foot into a secret clubhouse. Once you’re inside, every window and door opens onto that view. Stepping into the living room, huge doors invite you out to the patio. Even the built-in shelves are “backless” and use the ocean as their backdrop. If you can tear yourself away from the view long enough to notice the details, the living room offers a huge stone fireplace, Saltillo tile floors, a balcony, and super high ceilings. The formal dining room opens to the patio, as well, and the kitchen boasts a beautiful granite countertop, stainless-steel appliances, and windows over the sink. You even get that view when you’re washing dishes. From this main floor, staircases lead to bedrooms both above and below. The three floors of living space give this home versatility and options for shared living. Downstairs there are two bedrooms and a full bath that take advantage of lush landscaping, giving it a secret-garden feel. The two bedrooms and two full baths upstairs take advantage of— of you guessed it—the view. The top floor deck provides both bedrooms with a sweeping vista all the way from Santa Barbara to Ventura. If that’s not romantic enough, imagine sunsets and sea breezes next to your private fireplace in the master bedroom suite. It feels like you’re at the top of your own faraway tree house. Snow may have led me to Summerland that first time, but now it beckons to me by sparkling in the sunshine, promising a feeling of summer vacation forever. I reluctantly left this three-story Santa Fe–style tree house and headed off to—where else?—the beach.
courtesy
Fabled GableS
818 Hot Springs Rd. | $15,000,000 beds 6 baths 9 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
4145 Creciente Dr. | $21,500,000 beds 6 baths 9 adrienne/steve 805.452.3960
888 Cold Springs Rd. | $19,500,000 beds 10 baths 6.5 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
900 Hot Springs Rd. | $18,800,000 900HotspringsRoad.com Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
4621 Via Roblada | $16,995,000 4621viaRoblada.com Riskin/Kendall 805.565.8600
1664 East Valley Rd. | $13,500,000 beds 7 baths 12 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
660 Hot Springs Rd. | $12,650,000 magnoliaHousemontecito.com tim Walsh 805.259.8808
764 San Ysidro Ln. | $11,950,000 764sanYsidrolane.com Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
308 Ennisbrook Dr. | $7,950,000 beds 4 baths 6 susan Pate 805.895.9385
2796 Bella Vista Dr. | $5,650,000 beds 4 baths 4 tomi spaw 805.698.7007
beds
975 Mariposa Ln. | $5,495,000 4 baths 4 grubb campbell 805.565.8879
705 Park Ln. | $4,595,000 705Parklane.com Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
5840 Casitas Pass Rd. | $4,500,000 beds 5 baths 6 carey/gail 805.689.6262
1045 Cima Linda Ln. | $4,295,000 beds 3 baths 4.5 michelle eskandari 805.637.8061
2882 East Valley Rd. $3,350,000 beds 3 baths 3.5 grubb campbell 805.565.8879
250 Toro Cyn. Rd. | $2,925,000 beds 4 baths 4 mitchell morehart 805.565.4546
157 Rametto Rd. | $2,875,000 beds 3 baths 2 Wendy Warren 805.585.8830
1933 Mission Ridge Rd. | $2,800,000 beds 3 baths 4 John a. sener 805.331.7402
18 W. Victoria St. | $2,600,000 beds 2 baths 3 tim Walsh 805.259.8808
18 W. Victoria St. | $2,600,000 beds 2 baths 3 emily Kellenberger 805.252.2773
2101 Refugio Rd. | $2,600,000 beds 2 baths 3 elizabeth Wagner 805.895.1467
43 Humphrey Rd. | $2,599,000 beds 2 baths 2 Jacqueline Walters 805.570.0558
401 Chapala St. | $2,550,000 beds 1 baths 2 calcagno & Hamilton 805.896.0876
1746 Prospect Ave. | $2,195,000 beds 3 baths 4 Jeff/Julie 805.895.9498
3 Las Alturas Rd. | $1,795,000 beds 4 baths 2 John Bahura 805.680.5175
405 Nicholas Ln. | $1,695,000 beds 3 baths 2 suding//murphy 805.455.8055
4261 Rancho Asoleado Dr. | $1,669,000 beds 4 baths 2.5 louis/susan 805.570.7274
more online at
villagesite.com | 805.969.8900 All information provided is deemed reliable, but has not been verified and we do not guarantee it. We recommend that buyers make their own inquiries.
From the coast to the valley
santa BaRBaRa | montecito | santa Ynez
1526 East Valley Rd. | $1,595,000 beds 2 baths 2 mitchell morehart 805.565.4546
239 Cordova Dr. | $1,549,000 beds 4 baths 2.5 toni mochi 805.636.9170
2109 Chapala St. $1,495,000 beds 3 baths 2.5 toni mochi 805.636.9170
beds
52 Olive Mill Rd. | $1,495,000 3 baths 2.5 cecilia/Donald 805.895.3834
beds
3791 State St. “D” | $1,235,000 beds 3 baths 2.5 thomas Dabney 805.689.7306
880 Veronica Springs Rd. | $1,199,750 beds 3 baths 2 John a. sener 805.331.7402
811 E. Pedregosa St. #2 | $1,195,000 beds 2 baths 2 chris Kamen 805.390.1571
beds
18 W. Victoria St. | $1,180,500 1 baths 2 Pippa Davis 805.886.0174
beds
3703 Dixon St. | $1,099,000 beds 3 baths 3 christine salvetti 805.705.4040
4082 Via Zorro | $1,095,000 beds 5 baths 3 cara gamberdella 805.680.3826
853 Jimeno Rd. | $2,495,000 beds 3 baths 4 tim Walsh 805.259.8808
718-720 W. Arrellaga St. | $1,050,000 investment Property toby/lynette 805.570.3573
507 W. Aliso St., Ojai | $1,050,000 beds 3 baths 1.5 amy J. Baird 805.478.9318
636 W. Ortega St. | $1,025,000 gorgeous Duplex Kim Dorsey 805.895.2968
733 Grove Ln. | $999,000 beds 3 baths 2 toby/lynette 805.570.3573
401 Chapala St. | $995,000 beds 1 baths 2 calcagno & Hamilton 805.896.0876
645 Costa Del Mar “C” | $979,000 beds 2 baths 3 Billy mandarino 805.570.4827
641 Por La Mar Cir. “B” | $939,000 beds 2 baths 3 Billy mandarino 805.570.4827
298 Calle Esperanza | $875,000 beds 2 baths 3 tiffany Haller 805.698.6694
6049 Paseo Palmilla | $859,000 beds 4 baths 2 Phyllis lenker 805.886.2342
1511 Meadow Cir. | $849,900 beds 4 baths 2 sally/lyla 805.450.0852
1116 N. Milpas St. | $775 ,000 beds 4 baths 3 Jeff/Julie 805.895.9498
917 Diamond Crest Ct. | $769,000 bed 2 baths 2 Kim Dorsey 805.895.2968
319 W. Valerio St. #3 | $749,000 beds 2 baths 2 cara gamberdella 805.683.7336
2740 Miradero Dr. | $729,000 beds 2 baths 2 sheela Hunt 805.698.3767
331 W. Micheltorena St. | $629,000 beds 2 baths 1 christopher W. Hunt 805.453.3407
224 Entrance Rd. #3 | $505,000 baths 2 beds 2.5 calcagno & Hamilton 805.896.0876
1632 San Andres St. | $479,000 beds 1 baths 1 calcagno & Hamilton 805.896.0876
more online at
villagesite.com | 805.969.8900 All information provided is deemed reliable, but has not been verified and we do not guarantee it. We recommend that buyers make their own inquiries.
1859 Eucalyptus Hill Rd. | $1,315,000 3 baths 2 Kevin & lesley Hall 805.451.9998
2519 Emerson St. | $1,175,000 3 baths 2 Jim Witmer 805.448.3921
From the coast to the valley
santa BaRBaRa | montecito | santa Ynez
LOCALLYKNOWN
| NATIONALLYRECOGNIZED | GLOBALLYRESPECTED
OPEN BY APPT.
4520 Foothill Rd $3,500,000 Kerry Mormann 805.689.3242 Rare & gated 4BD/5BA, 8,000 SF (assr) Mediterranean estate on 23 acres (assr) with stunning views. www.CoastalRanch.com
1721 Santa Barbara St $3,100,000 Anderson/Hurst 805. 618.8747/805.680.8216 Stunning Hamptons down-to-the-studs remodel of a classic Victorian. 5BR/4 BA. December completion. www.AndersonHurst.com
OPEN SUN 2-4
OPEN BY APPT.
OPEN SAT 1-4/SUN 2-4
1211 East Valley Rd $2,595,000 Yolanda Van Wingerden 805.570.4965 Elegant single level Montecito home effortlessly brings the outdoors to your doorstep w/ soaring wood-beam ceilings &walls of glass. 3BD + office/4BA, incl spacious att guest studio & workshop, on 1 acre. www.1211EastValley.com
222 Mesa Ln $999,000 Rose Van Schaik 805.452.2051 3BD/2BA single story home w/ 1 car garage, 7840 SF (assr). Beach access.
1006 E Canon Perdido St $949,000 Strand-Spieler/Hughes 805.895.6326 Totally remodeled. 3BD, large bonus rooms/ garage. Vista views!
OPEN BY APPT.
OPEN SUN 2-4
123 Bath St A-7 $895,000 Drew Stime 805.452.5053 Highly desirable West Beach 1BD/1½BA in small gated Spanish styled complex. Turn-key unit has been remodeled & features top of the line finishes, pool/spa, sauna, outdoor BBQ area & a gated 2 car garage. 1½ blocks to beach. www.CoastalRanch.com
517 W Quinto St #A $785,000 Brooke Ebner 805.453.7071 Cape Cod style, stand alone condo lives like a single family home. One of 3 units, 2BD/2½BA home boasts beautiful wood floors, open living space, attached garage, private yard w/Spa, 2 large bedrooms, both en suite. www.BuyTheBeachSB.com
Visit us online at bhhscalifornia.com Montecito ∙ 1170 Coast Village Road ∙ (805) 969-5026
| Santa Barbara ∙ 3868 State Street ∙ (805) 687-2666 | Los Olivos ∙ 2933 San Marcos Avenue, Suite 102 ∙ (805) 688-2969
© 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
Green your CriB
independent real estate
Hrvs Help Homes Be tight and Healthy
M
Caring for Backyard Grapevines
7
I have three grapevines in the backyard. One is green, and two are red. Both fruited early this year and were eaten by raccoons. Lately, the leaves have started to turn color and fall, but all of a sudden, I’m getting new growth and tons of new fruit clusters! What’s up capcapcap with my dormant yet fruiting grapes? Should I wait to prune them or give them therapy?
—Vine-Time Spencer, Santa Barbara
T
he Gardenator says don’t worry because “no tiene mucho trabajo la uva,” which means that grapes just don’t need a lot of work. He says that the unexpected growth is because of the excessive heat. The following is quick guide for your uvas. 1) “Dejales crecer las frutas.”
(Let the fruits grow.)
2) “Cubrelas con alambre chico para que
realestate.independent.com
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.
Gustavo the Gardenator
OCTOBER 22, 2015
any people still believe that a house can be over insulated and sealed too tightly. They are convinced that such a house will have unhealthy air and be contaminated with toxins. Such thinking confuses tightness and air quality. Houses need to be constructed as tightly as possible. However, as they become ever tighter, for energy-conserving reasons, mechanical ventilation becomes a necessity. Controlled ventilation is the best strategy for dealing with outgassing and inadequate air changes. A heat recovery ventilator (HRV) is one device that provides automatic fresh air while exhausting stale air, thereby creating a healthy indoor environment. Because the heat exchanger in these appliances transfers heat from one air stream to another, many people, even some builders, refer to these units as space heaters. They are not. During the winter, operating an HRV will actually lower the indoor air temperature as it pulls the warm, stale indoor air through the heat exchanger, transferring most of its heat to the cool, incoming fresh-air stream — but not 100 percent of it. The efficiency of the heat transfer is around 80 percent. An HRV, however, is much more effective than cracking a window in winter where any escaping air takes the maximum amount of heat with it by Dennis Allen and the incoming fresh air is not preheated in any way. While it’s true that an HRV recovers heat that might otherwise escape to the great outdoors, operating one will not lower your energy bills. The Panasonic units that I like service a home of about 2,000 square feet and cost about $350. They use less electricity than a 40-watt lightbulb (actually 23 watts), are easy to install, and operate very quietly. They are typically installed in a hall ceiling and have two four-inch ducts that run in the attic to the exterior. As a stand-alone device, an HRV uses a small amount of power, but compared to the cost of heating cold winter air that enters through a window in a home without mechanical ventilation, there is a big net saving on energy bills. Another confusion is that because an HRV brings air in from the outdoors, people think it can provide makeup air for the kitchen range-hood fan that can cause depressurization problems. Being a balanced ventilation device — providing the same rates of incoming and outgoing air — it does not add any additional air and therefore does not rectify the negative pressure created by any appliance that sucks air out of the house. An HRV can be a key component in making a tight house also a healthy one. By providing a quiet, constant flow of preheated fresh air at low cost, the HRV is fast gaining acceptance.
by Gustavo Uribe
no se les c***** los animales.” (Cover your fruited grapes with small wire mesh, so the animals don’t mess with you.) 3) “Sigue les regando.” (Keep watering like you normally would.) 4) “Podelas en enero o febrero.” (Prune in January or early February.)
And like that, your grapevines should be back to normal. Happy eating!
Gustavo Uribe is a fifth-generation agricultural specialist who has worked as a professional gardener in Santa Barbara for more than 30 years. His son, Gustavo Jr., writes this column. Send your gardening questions to Gustavo@independent.com .
Santa barbara county SaleS area
Seller
BUellton/Solvang
CaRPInteRIa
price
date
addreSS
tSeMaKHovICH SeYMon eU
CoRteZ tHoMaS eU
$697,500
10/01/15
2619 QUaIl valleY RD
BeeBe MICHael R tRUStee
BoUlDen JennIFeR
$1,000,000
10/07/15
2080 StIll MeaDoWS RD
HaIRSton aDaM B eXeCUtoR
Stage StoP PlaZa llC
$1,065,000
10/09/15
2277 alaMo PIntaDo RD
HatFIelD gaRY R eU
HoSS WInIFReD t tRUSt
$535,000
10/08/15
1080 PalMetto WaY e
ReeD CHRIStoPHeR ea
WIllIaMS lYnDa R tRUSt
$49,500
10/09/15
6166 Malva ave
BURleSon BenJaMIn ea
eDWaRDS MICHael J
$569,000
10/08/15
7606 HollISteR ave 212
DeUtSCHe BanK nat tRUSt Co
aBeRFoRD InveStMentS llC
$682,000
10/05/15
284 CoRonaDo DR
DeW JaMeS e tRUStee
BeRMan DanIl eU
$740,000
10/02/15
4755 FRaZIeR ln
DoUglaS laRRY ea
FRanK JaMeS C
$775,000
10/09/15
5116 San lUCaS WaY
MISSIon eQUItY gRoUP llC
aSHton JeFFReY a eU
$850,000
10/09/15
7313 elMHURSt Pl
SUaReZ HnRY l tRUStee
MaCDonalD anDReW J eU
$900,000
10/06/15
456 alBanY Ct
MUnDell CHaRlene tRUSt
DRaKe JaMeS tRUStee
$915,000
10/06/15
745 la BUena tIeRRa
gUaDalUPe
MoRton DIane
CHRIStoFF CHRIS R eU
$85,000
10/07/15
4505 eleventH St
loMPoC
RUano noe ea
RUano lUDIn eU
$63,500
10/07/15
1321 n oRCHID St
MonteCIto
Santa BaRBaRa
8
independent real estate
OCTOBER 22, 2015
realestate.independent.com
goleta
buyer
Santa MaRIa
ClaRKe JeSSIKa
RoDvolD DavID R eU
$169,000
10/01/15
277 vIllage CIRCle DR
WIllIS CHaRlene D
CooK CHRIStIna H eU
$225,000
10/02/15
227 S a St
KUeSteR PatRICIa l tRUStee
alvaRaDo KevIn eU
$255,000
10/02/15
1019 n e Pl
ClaRK gaRY R eU
HInoJoSa lUZ M
$257,000
10/09/15
301 n SIXtH St
URneR RonalD M ea
WRIgHt JaSon D
$291,000
10/09/15
1349 vIola WaY
WIlSon JaMeS
RaWlS tHoMaS eU
$295,000
10/08/15
1309 PlUM ave
MaRtIn JaMeS
CalDeRon JoSe e Z ea
$329,000
10/07/15
1001 e olIve ave
SlavIn StePHen eU
MoHtaSHeMI KevIn eU
$1,850,000
10/05/15
125 Santa ISaBel ln
aletHIa FaMIlY tRUSt
oK Wave llC
$2,230,000
10/02/15
919 aleeDa ln
ZaHM Steven C tRUStee
SCIBIRD RICHaRD eU
$2,550,000
10/07/15
274 MIDDle RD
MaRCotte DavID J tRUStee
FaRR tHoMaS eU
$3,295,000
10/01/15
610 el DoRaDo ln
KItnICK BaRRY a tRUStee
CangaltRI llC
$4,476,500
10/07/15
264 Santa RoSa ln
eStRaDa RUBY a
loPeZ ISaaC D eU
$265,000
10/02/15
3714 gReggoRY WaY 4
RoBInSon lYnWooD eU
PeteRSon JoHn eU
$350,000
10/02/15
414 CHaPala St
gonZaleS CaRloS X tRUStee
gonZaleS MaRK a eU
$400,000
10/01/15
810 lItCHFIelD ln
ZalaMea nIa n
SteInMetZ JIll a
$435,000
10/08/15
3639 San ReMo DR 32
aSHton JeFF a eU
SteevenS JaSon C eU
$510,000
10/09/15
1201 ReBeCCa ln e
SCott CHRIStoPHeR ea
Foote angela tRUSt
$545,000
10/09/15
817 CIenegUItaS RD
gIlBeRt JennIFeR t
lloYD MaRK l
$555,000
10/05/15
1046 MIRaMonte DR 2
natHan RUtH B tRUSt
tRaInoR gRegoRY J eU
$635,000
10/07/15
2525 State St #6
JaIMeS RoSalBa
eSPInoZa alPHonSo B
$725,000
10/08/15
326 n CanaDa St
SCHMIDt RoBeRt a tRUStee
PetRY DavID P eU
$845,000
10/01/15
1235 ManItoU RD
MtI CaPItal InC
BaRtlett ZaCHaRY M
$860,000
10/06/15
389 n HoPe ave
D'alFonSo FaMIlY llC
BeRRY KeItH C tRUSt
$862,500
10/09/15
802 n volUntaRIo St
D'alFonSo FaMIlY llC
BeRRY KeItH C tRUSt
$862,500
10/09/15
806 n volUntaRIo St
gUntHeR tHelMa eState
CollIe DanIel
$874,000
10/05/15
971 WIntHeR WaY
USHeR KInKa C tRUSt
MCIntYRe Ravena g tRUSt
$905,000
10/02/15
2634 PUeSta Del Sol
PattISon ann t eU
WaHleR RoBeRt B
$929,000
10/09/15
2866 FootHIll RD
Bell JaMeS H eU
SMIDt MaYa v
$1,025,000
10/01/15
1305 BlanCHaRD St
WeaveR tIMotHY a tRUStee
DeStInY HUnteRS llC
$1,050,000
10/07/15
643 CoSta Del MaR DR a
SIReS RonalD l tRUSt
antonov aleKSanDR g eU
$1,100,000
10/09/15
4008 PRIMaveRa RD
PeRMUt RoBeRt tRUStee
MaRCotte DavID J tRUStee
$1,176,500
10/01/15
831 vIa gRanaDa
ClaRK lInDa K tRUSt
aMHeRSt eXCHange CoRP
$1,487,000
10/08/15
1530 HIllCReSt RD
geRSHo FaMIlY tRUSt
MonteCIto eXCHange CoRP
$1,650,000
10/06/15
210 e FIgUeRoa St UnIt a
WIllIaMS FaMIlY tRUSt
leM CHRIStoPHeR M eU
$1,700,000
10/01/15
4585 CaMIno MolIneRo
BeRRY KeItH C tRUSt
BonUM eRIt SeMPeR
$1,725,000
10/06/15
1530 BatH St
FoRD g RICHaRD tRUStee
RenCUS oDeD eU
$1,886,500
10/02/15
621 aURoRa ave
HagaR MaRY e eState
langSev teRIlYnn tRUSt
$2,500,000
10/02/15
801 Sea RanCH DR
WaSSeRSteIn Santa BaRBaRa llC
CHRIStal Dean v tRUStee
$14,000,000
10/09/15
4270 CReSta ave
KIMBell PatRICK J eU
HeRReRa gIlBeRto C eU
$237,000
10/08/15
524 W FeSleR St
BaRIlone PaMela J
RUelaS eRIK J eU
$241,000
10/02/15
2141 n gaRDen DR
SanDoval JoHanna tRUSt
loPeZ elIaS
$245,000
10/01/15
3351 WIlloWooD RD
BaRKS RoDneY J eU
navaRRette BennY ea
$259,000
10/02/15
1221 n DePot DR
noDle BRanDon W
BRavo MaRCel R
$260,000
10/01/15
4364 RIDgeCReSt St
Montano RaFael
RoDRIgUeZ IgnaCIo P ea
$260,000
10/05/15
821 W PeRSHIng St
SanCHeZ HenRY C eU
BRIBIeSCa SantoS
$280,000
10/09/15
417 W agneS ave
CoRnWall MaRgaRet tRUStee
CaRRanZa leo eU
$285,000
10/09/15
2222 n gaRDen DR
DUBRanSKY Steven P eU
MaYBeRRY MaRK t eU
$300,000
10/09/15
1321 RICe RanCH RD
WeStPHal Donna M tRUStee
SHeFFIelD aleXanDeR g tRUStee
$307,000
10/09/15
833 e el CaMIno St
SeC HoUSIng & URBan DeveloPMnt
MoReno JeSSe v eU
$308,500
10/08/15
511 lUPIn ln
US BanK tRUSt n a
SantoS PaUla g
$320,000
10/01/15
812 teRRY Ct
ReeD RICHIe D eU
MICHel Joel JR
$340,000
10/08/15
4011 SanDY Ct
Bae Yoon S eU
BRoWn tRInItY l ea
$359,000
10/02/15
4165 BRIDgePoRt RD
FReItaS CaRol l tRUStee
tRevIno MICHael
$360,000
10/01/15
745 PaDRe Ct
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.
neighborhooDs
Mission Canyon
by Dusk Donahue
Extending from the Santa Barbara Mission up into the wild Los Padres National Forest, Mission Canyon is forested by ancient oak trees and dissected by winding country roads. Though just a few minutes from the convenience of downtown Santa Barbara, these single-family foothill homes range from small creekside cabins to mega-mansions with expansive views. It’s like living the country life with a cosmopolitan city just a drive, bike, or hike away.
Area highlights
The Neighbors: Hippies, farmers, con-
You’ll Love: Walking through the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden at dawn, hiking up to Inspiration Point for sunset, picnicking at Rocky Nook Park, and biking at top speed right past the Old Mission to your downtown office. Perfect For: Nature lovers, hikers, climbers, bikers, painters, and anyone who appreciates old oak trees.
Around the Area
The Chumash lived along what today is known as Mission Creek for millennia, and the Spanish quickly dammed up the creek in the late 1700s to develop the Mission and Presidio. People have been building homes there ever since, from the flatter lands near Rocky Nook Park to the hilltops along Las Canoas Road into the bohemian stretch of Mountain Drive. About 2,500 people live in the community today, including plenty of families, though many thousands more visit regularly to check out the museum,
Santa barbara county SaleS
Santa YneZ UnInCoRPoRateD
buyer
price
date
addreSS
WHItMoRe CHRIStoPHeR S
HaRMS DUStIn J eU
$445,000
10/09/15
4600 vIa nIna
Stonegate oRCUttt ventURe, llC
RelYea DavID g JR eU
$450,500
10/02/15
465 S FIRSt St
toRReS HenRY tRUStee
eDMonDSon SUe e
$452,000
10/09/15
643 glenCaIRon DR
WeInMann SHaRon tRUStee
MUto FRanK eU
$455,000
10/01/15
4394 CoaCHMan WaY
RYan tRaCIe l tRUStee
HaReS WIllIaM a tRUStee
$475,000
10/02/15
1165 olD MIll ln
CRaBtRee gaRY D tRUStee
DooleY noRa M tRUStee
$575,000
10/06/15
135 PaCIFIC St
ConCePCIonoSoS gRoUP llC
SCHaRIn JoHan C tRUStee
$575,000
10/09/15
100 n ConCePCIon ave
WellS FaRgo BanK n a
PRUe MattHeW R
$701,000
10/06/15
6055 QUaIl Ct
MUto FRanK eU
naRan PaRMIal
$740,000
10/01/15
909 n BRoaDWaY
CoMIno JoHn C tRUStee
tCH InveStMentS llC
$825,000
10/02/15
1909 S BRoaDWaY
RHH, llC
MonaeRo eBgIneeRIng InC
$1,075,000
10/09/15
2615 SKYWaY DR UnIt a
SHPIRo IRWIn tRUStee
tHoMSon tIMotHY F tRUStee
$1,875,000
10/06/15
2347 SHelBY St
Hanna JoHn t tRUStee
SanD PoInt llC
$15,455,000
10/09/15
821 SanD PoInt RD
BUtCHeR MattHeW M tRUStee
JIMeneZ aBDon eU
$1,195,000
10/06/15
2035 W 154 HWY
BeRtelSen KatHY a
RUIZ MaRIa D C
$170,000
10/09/15
321 e IngeR DR K97
novaCK leaH
BRooKS anele M
$222,500
10/07/15
1550 eagle St
agate nIColo & CateRIna tRUSt
CHRIStoFeRSon JalaIne
$226,500
10/07/15
3948 MeSa CIRCle DR
HaRDY MICHael S tRUStee
JeRMagIan aDaM eU
$235,000
10/02/15
523 venUS ave
Stone FInanCIng llC
WHIte JeRRID C eU
$305,000
10/02/15
551 MaRS ave
SneDDon loRI a tRUSt
ngUYen JaIMe
$335,000
10/02/15
625 CentRal ave D
Inga JoSePH v tRUSt
RUIZ DalIa M
$365,000
10/02/15
1333 RUBY Ct
1993 voRDale tRUSt
oRoZCo FRanCISCo eU
$370,000
10/09/15
700 CRoSBY DR
MeRKeRt RICHaRD F eU
WIlSon MattHeW S eU
$375,000
10/09/15
109 HeRCUleS ave
eagle vISta eQUIIeS llC
eaton RoBeRt a eU
$380,000
10/02/15
919 e loUISa teRR
nUno RICHaRD J
gonZaleZ MaRCoS eU
$400,000
10/02/15
1526 n WIll St
StePHenS CRaIg F tRUSt
SMl PaRtneRS llC
$425,000
10/09/15
PReISKeR
long, StePHen e
FoURnIeR MICHael e
$485,000
10/09/15
2785 aRBoRvIeW ln
CaRRIllo alFReDo eU
SIegel Steven eU
$695,000
10/02/15
3502 lInDeRo St
noll WIlFRIeD H tRUStee
FRenCH WIllIaM a tRUStee
$805,000
10/01/15
660 FoXen ln
JenSen DoRIS H tRUStee
Sell MICHael R tRUStee
$975,000
10/01/15
246 valHalla DR
KnIll ellen t
PHInneY DavID
$3,500,000
10/09/15
2225 SWeeneY RD
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.
9
SUMMeRlanD
Seller
(continued)
realestate.independent.com
area
Mission, Botanic Garden, and amazing hiking trails that start at the end of Tunnel Road. There is a catch, though, and that is the threat of wildfires, which tend to roll through the region every couple of decades. That imbues the entire neighborhood with a palpable sense of living for the moment and forces all residents to remember what really matters in life. Living alongside deer, coyotes, cougars, hawks, and the occasional black bear is just icing on this natural-lifestyle cake.
OCTOBER 22, 2015
Mission Canyon is so named because the Santa Barbara Mission sits at its mouth, and this “Queen of the Missions” provides quite a stunning transition from downtown Santa Barbara to this rural community that’s dotted with oak trees older than town. Just past the Mission is the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, a working research institution that formally celebrates the great outdoors, and then in the center of the canyon is the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, another amazing ode to nature. Taken together, the mission, museum, and garden paint a perfect picture of what to expect in Mission Canyon, where one can live in a place that blends a love of nature with the flavor of California history and pioneering homesteaders.
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servationists, artists, architects, botanists, writers — pretty much any type of person who loves the great outdoors and is willing to deal with the threat of occasional wildfires in order to live comfortably amid nature. Market: A wide range, from fixer-upper cabins on the low end to exquisite postwildfire rebuilds/remodels that fetch millions of dollars. Lifestyle: With hiking and cycling trails starting in all corners of Mission Canyon, a love of nature and solitude pervades the Mission Canyon mindset.
dusk donahue
Area Description
OPEN HOUSES Carpinteria 178 Serafin Street, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $995,000, Sotheby’s, Krista Simundson 805-453-5117 1080 Palmetto Way #F, 2BD/1.5BA, Sun 1-4, Price $469,000, Remax Gold Coast Realtors, Gloria Burns 805 6896920 1245 Cramer Circle, 6BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $660,000, Ocean View Realty, Bill Crowley 805-886-2236 1261 Franciscan Court 3, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $465,000, Pacific Coast Realty, JoAnn Pomatto-Gomez 805-705-3798
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independent real estate
OCTOBER 22, 2015
realestate.independent.com
1272 Cravens Lane 1, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4pm, $829,000, Keller Williams Realty, Cindy Blomo 805705-3606 1431 Tomol Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $729,000, Coldwell Banker, Scott Westlotorn 805-403-4313 1480 Santa Ynez Avenue, 5BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,050,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Taylor Toner 805-451-4801 3111 Padaro Lane, 4BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $14,600,000, Village Properties, Pamela Regan 805-895-2760 3553 Padaro Lane, 2BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $5,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kathleen Winter 805-451-4663 3375 Foothill Road #1114, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,200,000, Coldwell Banker, Ray Sullivan 805-6892233
Downtown Santa Barbara 18 West Victoria Street #308, 2BD/3BA, BY APPT, $2,600,000, Village Properties, Emily Kellenberger 805-2522773 18 West Victoria Street #204, 1BD/2BA, BY APPT, $1,465,000, Village Properties, Emily Kellenberger 805-2522773 401 Chapala Street #222, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 11-4, $1,250,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876 401 Chapala Street #302, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 11-4, $1,425,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876 401 Chapala Street #305, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 11-4, $1,325,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876 401 Chapala Street #312, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 11-4, $1,275,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876 401 Chapala Street #403, 2BD/2BA, Sun 11-4, $2,135,000, Village Properties, Calcagno & Hamilton 805-896-0876 1109 Olive Street, 2BD/2BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 1-4, $959,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Paul Mueller 805-315-1515 1417 Olive Street Unit B, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,045,000, Sotheby’s, Sandy Lipowski 805-403-3844 1816 De La Vina #2, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $795,000, Coldwell Banker, Hayley N. Hernandez 805-717-8868 Scott McCosker 805-687-2436
2109 Chapala Street, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $1,495,000, Village Properties, Cimme Eordanidis 805-7228480
Goleta 39 Dearborn Place #100, 2BD/1BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 12:30-4, $400,000, Keller Williams, Ruth Ann Bowe Real Estate Team 805-252-5229 216 Moreton Bay Lane Unit 5, 2BD/1.5BA, By Appt., $435,000, Sotheby’s, Mike Pearl 805-637-6888 Gail Pearl 805-637-9595 284 Coronado Drive, 4BD/2BA, Sat 2-5 Sun 1-3, $819,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Brett Buschbom 805-451-9108 Kat Hitchcock 805-705-4482
Saturday 10/24 & Sunday 10/25 1809 Cliff Drive # 2, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-3, $949,000, Village Properties, Nagel 805-689-5959
1280 East Valley Road, 2BD/1BA, By Appt., $995,000, Sotheby’s, Sasha Bondarchuk 805-565-8651
Mission Canyon
1385 Oak Creek Canyon Road, By Appt., $4,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Joe Stubbins 805-729-0778
790 Mission Oaks Lane, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-3, $1,845,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Doug Van Pelt 805-637-3684 Thomas Schultheis 805-729-2802
967 Cheltenham Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,160,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Sunnie Maxwell 805-2529524 2286 Las Tunas Road, 4BD/5.5BA, Sun 2-4, $3,795,000, Coldwell Banker, Patrice Serrani 805-637-5112
Montecito
510 Coronado Drive, 5BD/4BA, Sun 1-4, $1,029,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Stu Morse 805-705-0161
12 West Mountain Drive, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-3, $1,495,000, Sotheby’s, Frank Hotchkiss 805-403-0668
753 Cathedral Pointe Lane, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $1,130,000, Sotheby’s, Marilyn Rickard 805-452-8284
17 Augusta Lane, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1:304, $1,635,000, Left Coast Realty, Jeanne L. O’Brien 805-696-8613
835 Puente Drive, 5BD/4BA, Sun 1-4, $2,975,000, Village Properties, Brian King 805-452-0471
43 Humphrey Road, 2BD/2BA, Sat 2-5 Sun 2-4, $2,499,000, Village Properties, Marilyn Moore 805-689-0507
1064 Via Regina, 5BD/4BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $1,125,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Hristo Hristov 805-284-8471 Bob Ratliffe 805-442-6642
52 Olive Mill Road, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 2-4, $1,495,000, Village Properties, Cecilia Hunt 805-895-3834
1365 Via Veneto, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, $3,195,000, Sotheby’s, Karen Davidson 805-320-2489 5068 San Julio Avenue, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $899,900, Berkshire Hathaway, Bob Ratliffe 805-442-6642 6427 Camino Viviente, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $879,000, J. Rockcliff Realtors, Ross Harris 805-886-2264 7283 Bassano Drive, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $649,000, Century 21 Butler Realty, Julie Ouellette 805-895-1421 7608 Newport, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $969,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Chris Jones 805-708-7041
Hope Ranch 929 Canon Road, 4BD/4BA, By Appt., $4,895,000, Sotheby’s, Sandy Stahl 805689-1602 4178 Creciente Drive, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $3,995,000, Stones Real Estate, Team Eric and Mary 805-682-6090
The Mesa 222 Meigs Road Unit 19, 4BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $1,245,000, Sotheby’s, Diane Waterhouse 805-886-2988 615 Sunrise Vista Way, 4BD/3.5BA, Sun 1-4, $1,698,000, Sotheby’s, Joe Boudre 805-319-5364 1207 Del Mar Avenue, 4BD/5BA, Sun 1-4pm, $2,400,000, Keller Williams Realty, Bob Walsmith Jr. 805-720-5362 1269 Mountain View, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,199,000, Village Properties, Grubb Campbell Group 805-895-6226 1509 Shoreline Drive, 5BD/4BA, By Appt., $5,900,000, Sotheby’s, Joe Boudre 805-319-5364 1642 Shoreline Drive, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4 Sun 1-3, $2,195,000, Sotheby’s, Gene Archambault 805-455-1190 JJ Lambert 805-350-0924
62 Olive Mill Road, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $1,439,000, Berkshire Hathaway, David M. Cohn 805-214-8244 120 Tiburon Bay Lane, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $2,149,000, Sotheby’s, Jason Siemens 805-455-1165 193 East Mountain Drive, 3/5.5, Sun 1-4, $3,275,000, Coldwell Banker, Holly McKenna 805-886-8848 211 Rametto Road, 4BD/3.5BA, By Appt., $3,295,000, Sotheby’s, Maureen McDermut 805-570-5545 216 East Mountain Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,449,000, Sotheby’s, Deb Archambault 805-455-1190 235 Santa Rosa Lane, 3BD/3.5BA, Sun 1-4, $3,195,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jennifer Easter 805-455-6294 Brooke Ebner 805-453-7071 309 Avila Way 5BD/3BA, Sat 2-4, $2,895,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Phoebe Alexiades 805-455-6999
1522 East Mountain Drive, 5BD/3.5BA, Sun 1-4, $7,495,000, Sotheby’s, Wade Hansen 805-689-9682 1530 Mimosa Lane, 6BD/6BA, Sat 2-4, $7,750,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Marsha Ktolyar 805-565-4014 1709 Overlook Lane, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, $5,250,000, Sotheby’s, Mark Lomas & Kirsten Wolfe 805-845-2888 1907 San Leandro Lane, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $2,395,000, Coldwell Banker, Brad Merritt 805-450-6522 2225 Featherhill Road, 6BD/6.5BA, Sun 1-3, $6,995,000, Sotheby’s, Kara Strickland 805-708-6969
Noleta 4747 Camino Del Rey, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-5, $655,000, Coldwell Banker, Patty Colman 805-689-6517
Riviera 1 Rubio Road, 3BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,580,000, Coldwell Banker, Scott McCosker 805-687-2436 30 North Santa Ynez Street D, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $839,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Mary Whitney 805-689-0915 112 Eucalyptus Hill Circle, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,398,000, Tri-Star Realty, Carl Wuestehube 949-276-7325 116 Orizaba Road, 3BD/2.5BA, By Appt., $2,295,000, Sotheby’s, Joe Boudre 805-319-5364 139 Loma Media Road, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $1,385,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Randy Freed 805-895-1799 Kellie Roche 805-705-5334 631 Lilliebakke Court, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $789,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Karin Aitken 805-252-1205 814 Paseo Alicante, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-3, $959,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Doug Van Pelt 805-637-3684 Thomas Schultheis 805-729-2802
690 Chelham Way, 4BA/2BA, Sun 1-3, $1,695,000, Sotheby’s, Debbie Lee 805-637-7588
1006 E Canon Perdido Street, 3BD/1BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 2-4, $949,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Michelle Madril 805453-0927
923 Buena Vista Drive, 6BD/6.5BA, Sun 1-4, $5,495,000, Sotheby’s, Frank Abatemarco 805-450-7477
1889 Eucalyptus Hill Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1:30-3:30, $1,465,000, Sotheby’s, Cherie De Lisle 805-636-5373
967 Cheltenham Road, 3BD/2BA, Sat 2-4, $1,160,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Sunnie Maxwell 805-252-9524
1933 Mission Ridge, 3BD/4BA, Sun 2-4, $2,800,000, Village Properties, R.Wayne Barker 805 637 2948
1098 Golf Road, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-3, $5,995,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Cheyenne Hawks 805-618-6400
2220 Santiago Road, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 2-4, $2,995,000, Coldwell Banker, Arielle Assur 805-906-0194
1110 Oriole Road, 4BD/3BA, Sat 12-3 Sun 12-3, $3,250,000, Coldwell Banker, Patrice Serrani 805-637-5110 Eric C. Stockmann 805-895-0789
Samarkand
1211 East Valley Road, 4BD/5BA, Sun 2-4, $2,595,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Yolanda Van Wingerden 805570-4965 1220 Coast Village Road Unit 110, 3BD/2BA, Sun 11-3, $1,069,000, Sotheby’s, Marie Larkin 805-680-2525
332 West Alamar Avenue B, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 12-2, $849,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Ken Switzer 805680-4622 517 West Quinto Street A, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $785,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Tony Rodriguez 805907-0425
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history 101
What is the origin of heath ranch Park in Carpinteria? F
San Roque 222 Calle Granada, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 2-4, $1,070,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Eve Mitchell 805-705-9972 Kay Davis 805-440-7254
520 Vista Vallejo, 3BD/1.5BA, Sun 1-3, $1,295,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Tara Toner 805-451-4999 616 Calle De Los Amigos, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $815,000, Sotheby’s, Daniela Johnson 805-453-4555 715 Russell Way, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $989,000, Sun and Sea Realty, Roxann F Clark 805-636-5285 1276 North Ontare Road, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $2,049,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Gloria Easter 805-570-0403 1333 Santa Teresita Drive, 3BD/4BA, Sun 2-4, $3,095,000, Sotheby’s, Maureen McDermut 805-570-5545 1354 Rialto Lane, 5BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,474,900, Berkshire Hathaway, James St. James 805-669-8362
historical landmark, form the centerpiece of Heath Ranch Park, a memorial to the first American to call the Carpinteria Valley home.
Michael Redmon is the director of research at the Santa Barbara Historical Museum.
Saturday 10/24 & Sunday 10/25 CONTiNUED
3844 Lincoln Road, 5BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,649,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Joe Parker 805-866-5735
1123 Manitou Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,595,000, Sotheby’s, Alex Rouffaer 805-451-0023
4084 Foothill Road, 4BD/2.5BA, Sat 1-4, $949,000, Sotheby’s, Gene Archambault 805-455-1190
1268 Veronica Springs Road, 6BD/4BA, Sun 1-4pm, $1,295,000, Keller Williams Realty, Ash Berika 312566-6867
Upper East Santa Barbara 1426 Laguna Street A, 1BD/1.5BA, Sat 12-1:30, $739,500, Village Properties, Lynda Bohnett 805-637-6407 1712 Anacapa, 3BD/3BA, Sat 2-3:30, $2,295,000, Village Properties, Lynda Bohnett 805-637-6407 2025 Garden Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,750,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Rachel Brown 805-570-7160 2414 Santa Barbara Street, 3BD/3BA, Sat 1-4, $2,295,000, Berkshire Hathaway, John Comin 805689-3078 2446 Garden Street, 3BD/3BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 2-4, $2,025,000, Coldwell Banker, Joanne Tacconelli 805-570-2314 Ingrid Anderson Smith 805-689-2396
Westside Santa Barbara
3132 Calle Mariposa, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1:30-4, $1,649,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Robert Johnson 805-705-1606
927 West Valerio Street, 2BD/2BA, Sun 12-3, $789,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Hristo Hristov 805-284-8471
3531 Los Pinos Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,395,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Debbie Kort 805-368-4479
1106 Crestline Drive, 4BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $1,765,000, Coldwell Banker, Victor Plana 805-895-05911268
Santa Ynez Valley
1481 Country Lane, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-4pm Sun 1-4, $785,000, Keller Williams Realty, Pamela Love 805-7297915 2807 Gaviota Street, 4BD/3BA, BY APPT, $1,175,000, Village Properties, Nancy Rizzo 805-403-2700 3321 Camino Arroyo, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $669,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Suzy Ealand 805-698-9902
137 3rd Street, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-3, $859,000, Sotheby’s, Linda Williams 805-680-7541
Ventura County
290 Perkins Street, 3BD/3BA, Sun 11-1, $559,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Suzy Ealand 805-698-9902
135 Wormwood Street, $794,000, Sat 1-4, 3BD/3BA, Revive Real Estate Group, Mark R Tasch 818-264-9148
349 Northgate Drive D, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $579,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jamie Jo Sim 805-689-5799
3059 Seaview Avenue, $2,840,000, Sun 1-4, 3BD/3BA, Santa Barbara Estates, Christopher A Page 805-284-8422
363 Terrace Court, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $585,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Mary Bahnken 805-722-8663
11575 Oakcrest Avenue, Sat 1-4, 4BD/3.5BA, $839,000, Revive Real Estate Group, Mark R Tasch 818-2649148
511 Meadow View Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $609,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Rhoda Johnson 805-705-8707 1021 West Lime Avenue, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $352,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Bunny DeLorie 805-570-9181 1138 Via Mavis, 2BD/2BD, Sat 1:304, $353,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Karin Aitken 805-252-1205 1453 Remington Drive, 3BD/3BA, 1-3:00 PM, $1,178,500, Village Properties, Barbara Morr 805-245-0455
Submit your open house listings to gustavo@independent.com Tuesday by 3pm to be included in this directory.
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415 North La Cumbre Road, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $939,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Sue Irwin 805-705-6973
Russel Heath
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OPEN HOUSES
Barbara’s best-known architect, to design an Italianatestyle residence to be built around the adobe Heath had built on the property 20 years before. Heath lived in this house the rest of his life, dying in 1911. Three years later, after a disastrous flood that ravaged the South Coast, Heath’s son, James, sold the family farm. The property passed through the hands of a number of owners until the parcel that included the Heath home was sold for a housing development in 1968. In 1972, with the razing of the house imminent, the Carpinteria Valley Historical Society moved to save what was left of the residence. Today, two walls of the adobe structure, declared both a Santa Barbara County and a City of Carpinteria
OCTOBER 22, 2015
advantage of his time spent working for a law firm back in New York, Heath was admitted to the California State Bar in 1852 and became Santa Barbara district attorney the following year. During the 1850s, Heath would also hold down the position of county sheriff and be elected to the State Legislature. He then filled one more term as district attorney before turning his full attention to farming in 1862. In 1858, Heath bought 52-plus acres in the Carpinteria Valley for just over $300. He found clearing the land of the many oak trees a daunting task; in some cases, clearing one acre could cost up to $200. Heath persevered, and after a few years his farm boasted lemon and orange groves, thousands of grapevines, and one of the largest walnut orchards in the state. Despite the time and energy devoted to his farm, Heath remained active on the local scene, serving on the first board of the Montecito School District and helping to push through the construction of a wharf at Serena— Serena roughly where the polo fields are today—to serve the Carpinteria Valley. In 1881, Heath hired Peter Barber, Santa
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or almost 60 years, Russel Heath played a prominent role not only on the local scene but on a statewide level, holding a number of public positions. Born in 1826 in New York state, he was drawn to the West Coast by California’s gold fields in the late 1840s and early 1850s. His journey was a difficult one. First, he became seriously ill while crossing the Texas plains. Upon reaching the Pacific, he joined a group that chartered a ship to take them to San Francisco. Cholera broke out on board, and the ship became lost for weeks because the captain had no navigation charts. With food running out, the passengers forced the captain to land them near Point Conception. Heath and the others then walked to Santa Barbara, where they engaged overland passage to San Francisco, arriving there several weeks before their ill-fated ship. Heath, after laboring for two years in the Mother Lode, returned to Santa Barbara in the early 1850s. Friends dissuaded him from following through on a plan to seek his fortune in Mexico, and he decided to make Santa Barbara his home. Taking
santa barbara historical museum
by Michael Redmon